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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol City Now

Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs is one of a number of state financial officers still sounding the alarm about Medicaid funding cuts just approved as part of President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill.

Frerichs — in a conference call with reporters Thursday — says at least nine rural hospitals could end up closing in Illinois, and there’s something else about that.

“Nine rural hospitals — in Dixon, Danville, Olney, Harrisburg, Hoopeston, Benton, Hardin County, Metropolis, and Robinson — are in danger of closing,” said Frerichs. “These hospitals are in Republican areas. Republicans are hurting Republicans.”

Frerichs says hospitals that stay open may have to cut staff or services, and all of it threatens to hurt the state’s economy. He says people will have to drive further to get medical care, causing them to avoid preventative treatments. Pregnant mothers, he says, will have to drive farther to give birth.

* Illinois Department of Employment Security…

The unemployment rate decreased in all twelve metro areas for the year ending June 2025, according to data released today by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and the Illinois Department of Employment Security (DES). The St. Louis metro area unemployment rate reached a record low at 3.5% for June. Over-the-year, total nonfarm jobs increased in five metropolitan areas, leading to consecutive months with year-over-year growth: Champaign (5 consecutive months); Chicago (12 consecutive months); Springfield (20 consecutive months). […]

The metro areas which had the largest over-the-year percentage increases in total nonfarm jobs were the Champaign-Urbana MSA (+1.1%, +1,300), the Chicago Metro Division (+0.7%, +28,400), and the Rockford MSA (+0.5%, +700). The metro areas which posted the largest over-the-year percentage decreases in total nonfarm jobs were the Davenport-Moline-Rock Island MSA, IL Section (-1.5%, -1,300), the Bloomington MSA (-1.3%, -1,200), and the Kankakee MSA (-0.9%, -400). Industries that saw job growth in the majority of the twelve metro areas included: Private Education and Health Services (eleven areas); Government (nine areas), Mining and Construction (eight areas), and Transportation, Warehousing, and Utilities (seven areas).

The metro areas with the largest unemployment rate decreases were the Kankakee MSA (-1.4 points to 4.4%), the Lake County Metropolitan Division (-1.3 points to 3.6%), and the St. Louis MSA, IL Section (-1.3 points to 3.5%). The Chicago Metro Division reported a decrease of -1.2 points to 5.0%.

*** Statewide ***

* Illinois Times | Illinois keeps 988 services for LGBT+ youth: In a statement emailed to Illinois Times, nonprofit Phoenix Center Springfield, which supports people of varied identities and backgrounds, celebrated the decision to continue specialized services for 988 in Illinois. “We know that LGBTQ+ youth are at greater risk for suicidal thoughts and behaviors due to factors such as discrimination, stigma and lack of support. This makes the 988 hotline crucial to those youth and their well-being. It is truly a matter of life or death,” the statement reads.

* Capitol News Illinois | Media literacy education lacks consistency across Illinois: About one-third of respondents to a survey conducted by the University of Illinois Springfield indicated they spend more than one class period but no more than one week covering the topic, while about 29 percent spend more than three weeks’ worth of class periods. Sixteen percent of schools surveyed discuss media literacy during a single class period over the course of a full school year. Illinois became the first state in the nation to require public high schools to teach media literacy, which can include lessons on accessing information, analyzing and evaluating media messages, reflecting on how media affects the consumption of information and triggers emotions, and how to engage in thoughtful conversations with people using facts and reason. The state-mandated lessons began with the 2022-2023 school year.

* Illinois Environmental Council Executive Director Jennifer Walling | Protect families from lead contamination: Yet, outside of Cook County and Springfield, many Illinois residents, especially those in disadvantaged communities, remain at risk due to the large presence of lead pipes in need of replacement. Illinois needs clear, statewide leadership to prioritize proactive tools like filter distribution. One promising pathway is the use of the federally approved 1115 Medicaid waiver, which allows states to implement cost-effective and targeted interventions not traditionally covered by Medicaid. This includes environmental health measures like certified water filter distribution, tailored to address local risks and health disparities.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Dispatch-Argus | Illinois bill would bar police, ICE agents from wearing masks: The bill, filed by state Rep. Barbara Hernandez, D-Aurora, would also require officers not engaged in an undercover assignment to display their name or badge number and the agency in which they work for on their uniform. Similar legislation has been introduced by Democrats in California, Massachusetts and New York. Democratic members of Congress have also introduced legislation that would ban ICE agents from wearing masks. The push comes after reports that ICE agents, most visibly in Los Angeles but also in other parts of the country, have worn plain clothes, donned masks and operated out of unmarked vehicles during immigration raids.

* WAND | Illinois could soon empower certified nurse midwives, address maternal healthcare deserts: The proposal could allow midwives to provide home birth services if they have a written collaborative agreement with local doctors or other healthcare providers. Advanced practice registered nurses certified as midwives would also have the ability to provide out of hospital births if they have been granted clinical privileges from a birth center. “In a healthcare provider shortage area or maternal care desert, a certified midwife can collaborate with a full practice authority,” said Rep. Yolanda Morris (D-Chicago).

* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker calls Texas GOP’s remap effort ‘cheating,’ doesn’t rule out Illinois response: The process, however, would have to go through Illinois’ legislature. “That’s not something we’re pursuing,” a spokesperson for Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, said.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Inspector General Launches New Dashboard to Track CPD Overtime Spending Amid Budget Crisis: The new database launched after WTTW News reported CPD spent $273.8 million on overtime last year, 6.5% less than in 2023 and but still more than two and a half times the $100 million earmarked for police overtime by the Chicago City Council as part of the city’s 2024 budget, according to data published by the city’s Office of Budget and Management.

* Crain’s | Chicago-area warehouse space is almost full. Are developers getting back to building?: The question hovering over the market now is when the new supply spigot will turn back on with any noticeable force. As of the end of June, Colliers tracked just 9.3 million square feet of industrial development projects in the Chicago area under construction, down 32% from the same time in 2024 and the lowest level of active warehouse construction in seven years. Senner said he expects more capital to start flowing into Chicago-area industrial projects over the next few quarters, especially after the market has shown sustained low vacancy.

* Block Club | Winnemac Park Neighbors Blindsided After Acre Of Natural Prairie Mowed Down: “Scientifically, there’s no objection to the fact that they did this mow. However, to mow down roughly one acre, all at the same time, during the middle of summer with no warning to the community is, understandably, very upsetting,” Williamson said. The landscaper arrived at the park a little before 8 a.m. Wednesday and was greeted by a group of neighbors who demanded to know why he was using a commercial lawnmower to cut back a large section of the park’s prairie habitat and tried to stop him, neighbor Ben Sanda and park council member Tessa Groll told Block Club.

* Daily Herald | CHSN, WCIU agree to simulcast seven White Sox games, starting with Cubs series this weekend: Chicago Sports Network and Weigel Broadcasting Co.’s WCIU, The U, have announced a new partnership to simulcast seven White Sox games this season, beginning with this weekend’s Crosstown Series against the Cubs. With five of the seven simulcast games airing on Friday nights, this agreement gives CHSN a platform to showcase the final Friday Night All Access broadcasts of the season.

* Sun-Times | A Chicago orchestra invited the public to perform — and 250 people brought instruments: “I honestly feel that this is one of the most important things the Chicago Philharmonic does,” said Scott Speck, the ensemble’s artistic director and principal conductor. “We want to be an orchestra that speaks to the people of Chicago in every community, in all the communities. And if you don’t come to us, we’ll come to you.” The Philharmonic started Side By Side 10 years ago through the Chicago Parks District’s free annual “Night Out in the Parks” program. The program grew out of the group’s high school outreach.

* Block Club | Edgewater’s Jazz In The Yard Series Turns Senn High School’s Lawn Into Concert Grounds: The series is a bright spot to come out of the pandemic, which left a void for musicians and fans alike. While looking to find a safe way to play in summer 2020, Knight partnered with bass player Justin Peterson, who lived in the same Glenwood Avenue building as Knight. The duo held pandemic-friendly practices in the building’s backyard. They eventually invited Evanston-based drummer Jeff Stitely to join in. The sound was a lure for music-hungry neighbors, and the group quickly developed an audience.

* Block Club | Sister Pat Murphy, Longtime Immigrant Rights Champion And South Side Icon, Dies At 96: Born in suburban Skokie, Murphy joined the religious order of the Sisters of Mercy in 1947, meeting Sister JoAnn Persch. The two became known as a “rabble-rousing” pair who spent decades fighting for immigrant rights in Chicago and across the country. Murphy protested into her later years at immigration detention centers and beyond, even getting arrested at the United States Capitol rotunda when she was 90. Combining faith-based activism and political resistance, Murphy used the five critical concerns of the Sisters of Mercy — immigration, Earth, nonviolence, racism and women — to motivate her mission.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Harvey layoffs to hit 10% of city workforce, ongoing financial ‘crisis’ cited: Mayor Christopher Clark said in a news release announcing the layoffs, effective Aug. 23, will cause some disruption of city services but that public safety functions, including police and fire protection, will continue. Clark said Harvey faces $149 million debt, and $12.2 million in unpaid commercial property taxes in just one year. He said some commercial property owners have piled up decades of unpaid taxes.

* Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan accepting offers for much-needed apartment building; ‘There is a severe housing shortage in Lake County’: Mayor Sam Cummingham said the proposed project could have a similar impact on the city’s downtown, and community in general, as the Genesee Theatre, which was renovated and reopened in 2004 after sitting vacant for 15 years. “Waukegan is due for this,” he said. “This is the spirit of progress synonymous with our Genesee Theatre. It is part of rebuilding Waukegan. It is what we envisioned when we updated our comprehensive plan in 2020.”

* Elgin Courier-News | East Dundee OKs spending $508,000 to remove lead water lines: East Dundee plans to spend more than a half million dollars this year removing lead service lines that bring water into village homes and businesses. The $508,000 earmarked for the first year of the Lead Service Line Replacement project will pay for the removal of pipes leading to 36 of the 300 properties known to have lead service lines, said Phil Cotter, director of public works.

* Crain’s | NASCAR wants to revive the Chicagoland Speedway: “While we currently do not have a timeline or specific series, we do hope to bring NASCAR racing back to Chicagoland Speedway at some point in the future,” the spokesperson said. The Chicagoland Speedway, which NASCAR owns, is located in Joliet, about 50 miles southwest of Chicago’s downtown.

*** Downstate ***

* NPR Illinois | Sean Grayson moved to the Sangamon County jail: “The transfer was made to accommodate ongoing medical procedures and follow-up appointments that, due to operational needs of the Sheriff’s Office, require him to be housed in Springfield,” said Sangamon County Sheriff Paula Crouch. “This decision was made after consultation between correctional and medical staff to ensure access to required services while maintaining secure custody.” Crouch added Grayson will be housed in a secure unit. “Appropriate safety precautions are in place to manage his custody and ensure the secure operation of the facility,” she said.

* Illinois Times | Last call is earlier than ever: Police say they are receiving fewer calls to break up fights and keep the peace at bars in Springfield and elsewhere in Sangamon County since last year’s elimination of liquor licenses that allowed patrons to be served until 3 a.m. But bar owners say they have suffered economically, and they believe the decisions of the Springfield City Council and Sangamon County Board were unjustified. “It definitely has had a big impact,” said Barry Friedman, owner of The Alamo, 115 N. Fifth St., in Springfield, where bars now can stay open only as late as 2 a.m.

* BND | Granite City schools see big changes: restructuring, class hours and admin shuffle: Starting in fall 2025, the district’s elementary schools, at minimum, will serve grades kindergarten through six, with two schools serving pre-K students as well. This comes with shifting boundaries and, at some schools, new administration. The reconfiguration is part of the district’s ongoing effort to create more educational consistency between its schools, Manager of District Communications and Transportation Chris Mitchell said.

* WSIL | Mine Rescue Teams Suit Up for Life-Saving Competition in Southern Illinois: This week, miners from across the tri-state region gathered in Marion, Illinois, not for work, but for something that could one day save lives. Ten elite teams from Illinois, Indiana, and Kentucky put their skills to the test during the annual Mine Rescue Competition, hosted by the Illinois Mine Rescue Association. The event simulates underground emergencies to assess rescue team response in high-pressure, high-stakes conditions. “They’ve gotta be benched to make sure there’s no leaks, no defects in it— and it’s gonna protect their life when they’re working in a low environment,” said Shawn Batty, President of the Illinois Mine Rescue Association. “But unfortunately, there are times they get called out.”

* Illinois Times | Baseball stadium may get new owner: Robin Roberts Stadium, the century-old baseball stadium on the city’s north end, has been a political hot potato for the last several years but appears to be on the cusp of new ownership. The ownership of the Springfield Lucky Horseshoes contends the facility has been poorly maintained and has become an embarrassment to the community. The Springfield Park District board counters that it spends hundreds of thousands of dollars every year to maintain and improve the facility. For months, lawyers have been meeting behind closed doors trying to hammer out an agreement to end the Park District’s ownership of the facility.

*** National ***

* AP | Trump administration canceled a $4.9B loan guarantee for a line to deliver green power: The Trump administration on Wednesday canceled a $4.9 billion federal loan guarantee for a new high-voltage transmission line for delivering solar and wind-generated electricity from the Midwest to the eastern U.S., but the company indicated that project would go forward anyway. The U.S. Department of Energy declared that it is “not critical for the federal government to have a role” in the first phase of Chicago-based Invenergy’s planned Grain Belt Express. The department also questioned whether the $11 billion project could meet the financial conditions required for a loan guarantee.

* Texas Tribune | Texas Republicans, including Gov. Abbott, were reluctant to redraw the state’s congressional maps. Then Trump got involved: Trump’s involvement underscores the immense power he holds over Texas Republicans and shows how far the president will go to protect his Washington trifecta that has handed him sweeping legislative wins, even if that means irritating those who are voting to approve his agenda in Congress. If Republicans lose control of the House in next year’s midterms, Trump’s agenda would be stalled and his remaining two lame-duck years in the White House would likely be replete with Democratic-led investigations.

* Fox Business | Hershey raising chocolate prices by double-digits as cocoa costs soar: report: Due to an “unprecedented” increase in the cost of cocoa, prices of the chocolate maker’s products will rise by a percentage roughly in the double-digits, a Hershey spokesperson said Tuesday, according to Reuters. The increase accounts for both a higher list price and changes to the weight and amount of candy in its products’ packaging, Bloomberg News reported.

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IDFPR still hasn’t implemented 2023 doctor shortage law, but now there’s a new issue

Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times in April

The [state] law, passed in 2023, created a limited license that allows doctors trained abroad to practice for two years under a supervising physician. They must either treat an underserved population or practice in an area of “unmet medical need.” After the two years, they’re given a provisional license for another two years, which allows them to mostly work independently, while still supervised. Then, they’re granted a full, unrestricted medical license. […]

The Migration Policy Institute predicts the state will be short 6,200 doctors by 2030. Meanwhile, over 12,000 Illinois residents have an international medical degree they can’t use, according to Upwardly Global, an organization that helps immigrant and refugee professionals find work in the U.S.

* Unfortunately, IDFPR is doing its usual (subpar) IDFPR job

The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, which will be issuing the limited licenses for international doctors, has received about 200 inquiries since December from people asking about them, a spokesperson said.

The agency has not begun accepting applications or issuing licenses as lawmakers and department officials are still working out the administrative rules for the licensing process. The spokesperson didn’t know when they will start taking applications.

* Anyway, from the Cato Institute

In recent years, several states have revised their medical licensing laws to let residents benefit from the skills and experience of immigrant physicians who trained and practiced abroad. These states grant provisional licenses that allow foreign physicians to work under the supervision of a licensed doctor for a set period, rather than repeating a residency program, as most states require. After passing the same standardized licensing exam that American physicians take, these doctors receive unrestricted licenses to practice.

Tennessee was the first state to enact this reform in 2023. Recently, Texas became the twelfth state to enact such a reform.

These reforms will not eliminate the shortage, but they will definitely help people, especially those in rural and underserved areas, get better access to care. That is, if Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) doesn’t stand in the way.

A news report by Isabel Keane in The Independent contains a video that shows masked ICE agents stopping an immigrant doctor in his car on the way to drop off his child at a day care center in a Portland, OR, suburb. He provided identification to the ICE agents, who grew impatient when he asked them to “wait for three minutes” for his wife to arrive and take the baby from the car. With the baby out of the vehicle, the agents smashed the car’s windows, pulled the man out, and arrested him.

Witnesses described the ICE agents as “heartless” and “unnecessarily violent and inhumane.” […]

Incidents like this not only traumatize families but also send a chilling message to the very professionals our health system desperately needs. As states take overdue steps to reduce licensing barriers and address a looming physician shortage, harsh immigration enforcement risks undoing that progress. If we truly want to expand access to care—especially in the communities that need it most—we must stop treating immigrant health care providers as threats and start recognizing them as vital contributors.

The guy who was busted by ICE received his training in the United States, so this isn’t a great comparison. But it is illustrative of how the federal government’s strong emphasis on immigration enforcement can clash with states’ policy objectives

The budget reconciliation bill dramatically boosts funding to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which currently has an annual budget of approximately $10 billion. It pumps more than $45 billion into expanding detention capacity nationwide, while funneling more than $29.9 billion toward the agencies’ enforcement operations through 2029.

In a statement, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said that the funding would “further deliver on President Trump’s mandate to arrest and deport criminal illegal aliens and MAKE AMERICA SAFE AGAIN!” […]

The Trump administration has set a goal of 75 arrests per day in each field office — more than seven times the standard from the past four years at the agency’s Salt Lake City office, which oversees Nevada, Utah, Idaho and Montana. […]

The bill would also fund 10,000 new ICE agents, expanding an agency that has 20,000 total personnel. Even though there’s no publicly available data on the number of ICE agents stationed in Nevada, Michael Kagan, director of the UNLV Immigration Clinic, said that the nationwide increase in agents will likely still have an impact on the state.

* Back to the Sun-Times story

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Madigan confidant Mike McClain sentenced to 2 years in corruption case

Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

The feds say a man who once had an “unbreakable” bond with former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan should be sentenced to nearly six years in prison, partly for serving as Madigan’s “agent, messenger” and “henchman” in a lengthy conspiracy involving ComEd.

Prosecutors said [Earlier this month] that Michael McClain’s “tight connection” with the former speaker led to McClain “making demand after demand of ComEd to fulfill Madigan’s directives,” as a jury concluded in May 2023. […]

But McClain’s attorneys say he should get probation when he’s sentenced July 24. They said the 77-year-old former lobbyist once operated in an Illinois Capitol where favors were “not perceived by the vast majority of legislators and lobbyists … as being in any sense illegal.”

* Tribune

Earlier this week, former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore was given two years in prison, while John Hooker, the utility’s former top internal lobbyist, received a year and a half behind bars at a hearing last week.

Consultant Jay Doherty, the former head of the City Club of Chicago, will be sentenced next month. Prosecutors on Tuesday asked for a 15-month prison term for Doherty, saying his “discreet handling and willingness to conceal the true nature” of subcontractor payments to Madigan associates were “vitally important” to the scheme.

* The Tribune’s Jason Meisner


* McClain’s lawyer urged Judge Shah to be “very careful” and give “the least amount of incarceration that is necessary”…

* Prosecutors have revised their sentencing recommendation for McClain, now asking for 36 months instead of the nearly six years originally recommended


* John Seidel

* Judge Shah’s sentence


McClain is due in prison October 30th.

…Adding…


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Study shows Chicago homicides down 33 percent from last July, down 25 percent from summer of 2019

Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Council on Criminal Justice

On Thursday (July 24), the Council on Criminal Justice will release its Mid-Year 2025 Crime Trends report, examining changes in 13 offenses across a sample of 42 American cities, including Chicago. The analysis shows that:

    • Homicide and other violent crimes continue to drop below pre-2020 levels, before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and nationwide social justice protests.
    • Reported levels of 12 of the 13 offenses were lower in the first half of 2025 than in the first half of 2024, with domestic violence the lone exception. Motor vehicle theft is the only offense that remains higher than mid-year 2019 levels.
    In Chicago: Homicide decreased 33% from mid-year 2024 to mid-year 2025 and is down 25% from mid-year 2019. Motor vehicle theft decreased 29% from mid-year 2024 to mid-year 2025, but remained 80% higher than mid-year 2019.

In the cities studied, homicides were down 17 percent from July of last year through the end of June this year. Homicides decreased nationally by 14 percent from July of 2019 through June of 2025. So, Chicago is about double the decreases in the other states.

* Percent change in homicide in 29 cities, January to June, 2019-25

Homicides in Chicago are also down 13 percent from July of last year through the end of June this year. New York City homicides increased by 17 percent during the same time period.

Chicago homicides increased every July-June 12-month period starting in July of 2020 through June of last year: 30 percent 20-21; 39 percent 21-22; 27 percent 22-23; 4 percent 23-24.

* Background

This report updates CCJ’s previous studies of crime changes in larger American cities. The series began during the early months of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, and this report extends the analyses with data through June 2025. The 42 cities included in this study were selected based on the availability of data at the time of data collection in early July 2025 (see the Appendix for the full list). They range from Cary, NC, the smallest, with about 182,000 residents, to New York, the largest, with around 8.3 million residents. The mean population of the cities for which crime data were available is approximately 822,000, while the median population is roughly 510,000.

Lots more at the link.

* And more from the NY Times

The Real-Time Crime Index, published by Jeff Asher, a New Orleans-based crime analyst, tracks a much larger number of cities than the council does. That index, which follows more than 400 police agencies, shows that murders are down 20 percent through May, compared with the same period in 2024. […]

In addition, the Major Cities Chiefs Association, an organization of police executives from 69 of the largest cities in the U.S., reported double-digit declines in four violent crime categories in most of the cities they represent in the first three months of this year as compared with last year. Homicides and robbery were each down 20 percent, while rape fell 14 percent and aggravated assault was down 11 percent. […]

That the trends have been national in scope has challenged assumptions that local factors, like policy decisions or funding for safety programs, are the most important. “It feels like what’s happened over the last five years has upended some long-held beliefs about crime,” [Adam Gelb, the president and chief executive officer of the Council on Criminal Justice] said. “In particular, that levels of crimes and patterns are very locally driven and determined.” […]

“The theories and credit-taking claims are abundant,” Mr. Gelb said. “And a lot of the arguments have familiar contours. The right says it’s tougher enforcement and penalties. The left says it’s better programs and community investment. The bottom line is it’s likely a blend of both.”

Except penalties have not increased in Illinois since 2019. Some might say the same about enforcement.

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Catching up with the federal candidates

Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The International Association of Fire Fighters Local 742 has endorsed Biss for the 9th Congressional District…

The International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF) Local 742, representing Evanston’s fire and EMS personnel, announced its endorsement of Daniel Biss for Congress in Illinois’ 9th District, the first labor union endorsement in the race.

“We’re proud to support Daniel Biss, a proven champion for our members,” said Billy Lynch, President of IAFF Local 742. “His experience, leadership, and collaborative approach are exactly what firefighters and EMS professionals need from their elected officials. We look forward to working with him in Congress to secure the resources and protections our communities rely on.”

“I’m grateful to earn the support of IAFF Local 742,” said Daniel Biss. “Our firefighters and public service workers put their lives on the line every day. They deserve a representative in Washington who will fight for their rights and ensure they have the tools they need to keep us safe.”

Local 742 is affiliated with the International Association of Fire Fighters and the Associated Fire Fighters of Illinois.

* Daily Herald

Democratic U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood of Naperville has a massive fundraising lead over the perennial Republican candidate hoping to capture her 14th District seat in 2026, federal records show.

Underwood’s campaign committee ended June with nearly $1.2 million in the bank — roughly 60 times what the GOP’s Jim Marter of Oswego had put together as of the same date, according to quarterly financial reports filed last week with the Federal Election Commission. […]

The Lauren Underwood for Congress committee started April with about $1.1 million in the bank.

Underwood subsequently collected nearly $520,294 during the quarter, including an estimated $428,392 from individuals. Donors from Illinois have been Underwood’s top supporters this election cycle, followed by those from California and Massachusetts, FEC data shows.

Additionally, the Underwood campaign $60,300 from political action committees, including three donations from organizations representing farmers specializing in sugar production: $5,000 from the American Crystal Sugar Co.; $1,000 from the Florida Sugar Cane League; and $2,000 from the Southern Minnesota Beet Sugar Cooperative.

* US Term Limits

U.S. Term Limits (USTL), the leader in the non-partisan national movement to limit terms for elected officials, praises 2026 U.S. house candidate for Illinois, Christ Kallas, district 8, for signing the pledge for an amendment to term limit Congress. Previously, candidate Junaid Ahmed also signed the pledge.

U.S. Term Limits has the support of more than 150 pledge signers in Congress. USTL President Philip Blumel commented on Kallas’s and Ahmed’s pledges saying, “Christ’s and Junaid’s strong support of term limits shows that there are individuals who are willing to put self-interest aside to follow the will of the people. America needs a Congress that will be served by citizen legislators, not career politicians.”

The U.S. Term Limits amendment pledge is provided to every announced candidate for federal office. It reads, “I pledge that as a member of Congress, I will cosponsor and vote for the U.S. Term Limits amendment of three (3) House terms and two (2) Senate terms and no longer limit.”

* WSIU

Navy veteran and Illinois DOC retiree Chip Markel is jumping into the race to unseat IL representative Paul Jacobs.

Markel made the announcement last week. Markel unsuccessfully ran against US Representative Mike Bost in 2022.

He says he has formed his campaign committee and will begin circualting petitions in early August.

At the top of Markel’s list is to tackle local property tax burdents and to help expand the use of residential solar energy.

* Politico

In IL-07, Richard Boykin, the former county commissioner, will kick off his campaign for Congress with businessman Willie Wilson at his side. Details here.

* More on Boykin from the Chicago Crusader

Having served as chief of staff to U.S. Representative Danny K. Davis (D-Ill.) for nearly 10 years, attorney Richard Boykin, a former Cook County Commissioner, has launched an exploratory committee to run for the Seventh Congressional District—but only if Davis retires.

In an interview with the Chicago Crusader, Boykin said, “I did get his blessing, and he said it was OK to file my paperwork.”

Rep. Davis made it clear on Sunday, July 13, during a WVON talk show that Boykin, whom he said is “like my son,” is not running against him and that, like several other potential candidates, all Boykin is doing is convening an exploratory committee. Davis said he would make his announcement in a couple of weeks. […]

Referring to a myriad of issues affecting the district, Boykin said he has the knowledge to deal with policies such as Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security, resource allocation, and federal transit funding that has been earmarked for the district.

* Windy City Times

With U.S. Sen. Dick Durban set to retire after nearly three decades in office, [Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton] told Windy City Times the moment calls for “new voices, new energy, new perspectives” in Washington.

“In 30 years, this is the first time this seat is open—and it matters who’s in the seat,” Stratton said. “What I’m hearing from Illinois every day is they’re looking for a fighter, and I’m proud that I can look them back in the eye and tell them that I am that fighter.” […]

Stratton pointed to the rollbacks of federal protections, including the removal of LGBTQ+ resources from the national 988 crisis line and restrictions on gender-affirming care, as evidence of the danger facing LGBTQ+ communities.

“These aren’t just rhetorical. These are putting lives in danger,” Stratton said. “I’m not going to sit idly by and just watch this happen.”

Stratton—like [US Rep. Robin Kelly]—vowed to only confirm federal judges who support LGBTQ+ rights and pledged to fight back against the attacks on transgender people at the federal level.

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Rate Croke’s Comptroller launch video

Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Press Release…

Today, State Representative Margaret Croke formally announced her campaign to serve Illinois as State Comptroller. After nearly five years in the General Assembly fighting to make Illinois the best place to live, work, and raise a family, Representative Croke is running for Comptroller to work on behalf of Illinoisans in every corner of the state. As a mother of three and a dedicated public servant, Representative Croke is focused on shaping and protecting a responsible future for all.

Watch Representative Croke’s Launch Video, “Rule of 3” HERE

“Our State Comptroller can’t control what happens in Washington, but they can ensure Illinois’ finances are managed with efficiency, transparency and oversight. With the chaos coming out of the Trump Administration, strong leadership at the state level is more important than ever before,” said Representative Croke. “Throughout my career, I’ve focused on delivering results that make life better for working families, and I’ll bring that same approach to this office to ensure we are balancing our books, investing in our people, and leading with integrity.”

Representative Croke brings more than a decade of experience in government and politics, including leadership roles in Governor JB Pritzker’s administration and campaign, before first being elected to represent Illinois’ 12th House District in 2020. Representative Croke has always governed with the belief that fiscal responsibility and protecting vulnerable communities go hand in hand, and she will bring that commitment to the Comptroller’s office.

A leading voice in Springfield for passing balanced budgets and promoting economic development, Representative Croke knows that responsible stewardship of resources is key to delivering real results. She has taken up that mantle throughout her career, both as a legislator and as Deputy Chief of Staff at the Illinois Department of Commerce and Opportunity, managing large teams and working to bring new businesses to the state.

During her time in the state legislature, Representative Croke has quickly emerged as a trailblazer for women and families and a prominent voice in Illinois’ next generation of leaders. Learn more at crokeforillinois.com.

* The video

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Open thread

Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Michael McClain, lobbyist and Madigan confidant at the center of the ComEd bribery scandal, finally faces sentencing. Tribune

    - Now, more than two years after McClain’s conviction in the historic “ComEd Four” bribery case, McClain is scheduled to learn his fate Thursday at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse, where he faces sentencing in what has become one of the biggest bribery scandals in state history.
    - McClain, 77, will be the third of the four defendants to be sentenced in the case, and as with the others, U.S. District Judge Manish Shah will have wide latitude in deciding a punishment.
    - Earlier this week, former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore was given two years in prison, while John Hooker, the utility’s former top internal lobbyist, received a year and a half behind bars at a hearing last week.

* Governor Pritzker will attend the Jesse White Building Dedication Ceremony at 1:30 pm at 115 S. LaSalle Street in Chicago, honoring Illinois’ longest-serving Secretary of State. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker calls Texas GOP’s remap effort ‘cheating,’ doesn’t rule out Illinois response: Gov. JB Pritzker is leaving the door open to changing Illinois’ congressional maps to “counterbalance” an attempt by Texas politicians to add more Republican seats to the U.S. House. The Texas legislature is meeting in special session this week with 18 items on their agenda, including redrawing the state’s congressional maps after President Donald Trump urged the state to redraw district boundaries ahead of the 2026 midterm election in hopes of adding five more Republicans to Texas’ congressional delegation and insulating his party against any seats they might lose elsewhere in the country.

* Illinois Times | NPR Illinois celebrates 50 years: NPR Illinois delivers a combination of locally produced programs and syndicated National Public Radio shows such as All Things Considered, Morning Edition and Fresh Air. The station covers local topics in unique ways through programs such as Community Voices and State Week, and recently launched the J-Corps citizen journalist initiative where regular people report on issues in their communities. A 50th anniversary exhibit and programming will commemorate NPR Illinois’ milestone year. But with the imminent withdrawal of government support for public media around the country, will NPR Illinois still be broadcasting for the next 50 weeks, let alone the next 50 years?

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | AG Raoul issues statement on court affirming nationwide injunction against unconstitutional birthright citizenship order: “No president can arbitrarily pick and choose which children born in the United States are allowed to be citizens of this country. Birthright citizenship has been enshrined in our Constitution in unambiguous language for more than 150 years, and no president has the authority to override the Constitution. The district court could not have been more right in February when it deemed the president’s order as being ‘blatantly unconstitutional.’

* Shaw Local | State Sen. Don DeWitte will not seek reelection: State Sen. Don DeWitte, a St. Charles Republican, announced that he will not seek reelection next year. DeWitte plans to serve out his current term, which ends in January 2027, according to a news release. DeWitte said in a news release that that his decision is not a retirement from public life but rather a redirection of his energy.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | ‘No cuts are going to be good cuts’: CPS parents, community frustrated with budget deficit woes: Reductions of nearly 2,000 educators and staff members in the past month have already affected Griffin’s life. While his sons do not communicate in the same way most people do, they are happy and developing, Griffin said, something he partially attributes to the district’s specialized programs and educators. CPS partially attributes the shortfall to several factors, including historic pension obligations, increasing costs of maintaining CPS buildings, and the rising needs for required services for students with disabilities. To minimize the budget gap, the district is now weighing decisions that have the potential to shift the trajectory of student education across the district for years to come.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago school board president says borrowing could solve CPS’s budget woes — but not in ‘isolation’: Chicago school board President Sean Harden laid out a case Wednesday for borrowing as “a viable option” for closing the district’s $734 million budget deficit. But he said it must be paired with long-term solutions to solve CPS’s larger financial crisis. “The centerpiece is children and education, and if the tool that we have to protect that is borrowing, then that’s the tool that we’ll use,” Harden said in an unrelated interview with Chalkbeat. “But we’re also saying: ‘Give us different tools, and then we will use that.’”

* Sun-Times | City to invest $40 million to modernize shelters for unhoused people: With 750 permanent shelter beds in seven neighborhoods slated to become “fully accessible,” Mayor Brandon Johnson called a new initiative “the most significant step forward in the history of Chicago in our mission to make housing a human right.”

* Sun-Times | A third crooked Bridgeport bank employee sentenced to home confinement, ordered to help repay $27 million: Cathy Torres, an ex-loan officer at Washington Federal Bank for Savings, faced five years in prison, but a federal judge agreed with a recommendation from prosecutors for a lighter sentence because of her cooperation.

* Fox Chicago | American Airlines has canceled hundreds of Chicago flights this August: report: Flight schedule data from Cirium, shared with the newspaper, showed American has removed about 800 flights out of O’Hare for August, cutting roughly 76,000 seats. Among the routes most-affected by flight cuts are Detroit, Newark, Cleveland, Albuquerque — and Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport. An American Airlines spokesperson told The Arizona Republic that the reductions reflect the airline’s finalized schedule, which is typically set 100 days in advance. Airlines often start with a placeholder schedule nearly a year ahead and then adjust based on demand and operational factors like staffing, the spokesperson said.

* WGN | Infleqtion plans $50M quantum computer at Illinois Quantum Microelectronics Park on South Side: “This technology has extraordinary potential,” said Gil Quiniones, CEO of ComEd. “It could lead to breakthroughs in major economic sectors from energy, health care, cybersecurity, finance and more.” The biggest announcement from happenings at the event came from Infleqtion, one of three tenant companies at the 128-acre Illinois Quantum Microelectronics Park (IQMP) on the South Side. The company announced it will build the first utility scale quantum computer based on neutral atom technology—a $50 million investment in the IQMP’s growing infrastructure.

* Sun-Times | Joffrey Ballet will remain at Lyric Opera House an additional seven years: Chicago’s Joffrey Ballet will remain the resident dance company of the Lyric Opera House for an additional seven years, the companies announced Wednesday. The Joffrey’s current lease was slated to end following the 2027 season, but this extension will keep the city’s top ballet company at the massive downtown opera house through 2034. Joffrey first began performing under Lyric’s roof in October 2021, after a delay caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. “Joffrey’s move to the Lyric Opera House, a partnership between two of Chicago’s leading cultural institutions, has opened the door to bigger, bolder storytelling,” Joffrey’s President and CEO Greg Cameron said in a statement.

* WGN | Report: MLB to officially announce Wrigley Field as 2027 All-Star Game host: Crain’s Justin Laurence reported Wednesday that Major League Baseball is set to officially recognize Wrigley Field as the host of the 2027 MLB All-Star Game on Aug. 1. Sources told Laurence MLB commissioner Rob Manfred and city officials will be in attendance for an event making the announcement official in Chicago. The Score’s Bruce Levine first reported Wrigley Field would host the 2027 MLB All-Star Game back in late May, with the official announcement to come later this summer.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Chicago Reader | Cook County state’s attorney stops maintaining lists of discredited cops: Reporters learned in May that O’Neill Burke had abruptly discontinued use of the disclosure list after previously providing it in February, according to her office’s responses to public records requests filed by the Invisible Institute and the Reader. And, instead of retaining Foxx’s publicly available do not call list, O’Neill Burke replaced it with a shorter, internal list of officers who were stripped of police powers by local law enforcement agencies. Although the vast majority—but not all—of the officers on Foxx’s do not call list had been relieved of their police powers, that list and O’Neill Burke’s internal list vary substantially from one another.

* NBC Chicago | Hollywood Casino Joliet riverboat to close after 30 years on Des Plaines River: Hollywood Casino Joliet’s parent company, PENN Entertainment, Inc., announced the July 29 closure comes amid preparations for the new $185 million land-based property opening August 11, pending customary regulatory approvals. All gaming operations at the riverboat property will maintain normal operating hours until closing at 5:59 a.m. July 29 and the hotel near the casino property will accept reservations up to July 26, according to the announcement.

* Sun-Times | Amazon sued, accused of bias by former Matteson warehouse worker: Mario Willis, an African American with a disability, was an Amazon packer at a warehouse in south suburban Matteson who was fired in May 2023. He said Amazon discriminated against him and retaliated after he saw a female worker sexually harass and grope another female colleague, according to a complaint filed July 9 in Cook County Circuit Court. “Amazon egregiously punished an employee who tried to do the right thing by standing up for his co-worker,” said Heidi Karr Sleper, a lawyer at Workplace Law Partners who represents Willis. “Not many warehouse employees and lawyers have the resources to fight back against a corporation the size of Amazon.”

* Tribune | Charges dismissed against Kees Firearms owners: After more than two years in court, Will County prosecutors moved Monday to drop several criminal charges, first filed in 2023, against two New Lenox business owners, after a circuit court judge denied their request to reschedule the trial date. Jeffery Regnier, the owner of Kee Firearms and Training in New Lenox, and Greta Keranen, with Kee Construction, will not face charges of theft by deception, burglary, loan fraud, wire fraud or burglary fraud, unless the state decides to refile the charges.

* Daily Herald | Buffalo Grove spurns apartment proposal after developer suggests increasing density: Village board members expressed frustration during Monday’s meeting as David Schwartz of SFP Properties suggested to trustees he needed to update the plan by either increasing the density of the project, perhaps adding a building, or going to an originally proposed townhouse concept. “You kind of threw us a curve,” Village President Eric Smith said. The proposal for the apartments, which would be located just west of the Riverwalk Place Apartments, targeted primarily young professionals and empty nesters, with rents projected as high as $4,000.

* Daily Southtown | Orland fire district, firefighers union, debate ambulance service level after unit taken offline: Firefighters in Orland Park and the president of the Orland Fire Protection District Board are at odds over whether paramedic service and response times in the district have suffered since an ambulance was taken out of service early last month. […] Board President Beth Damas Kaspar, in a statement Tuesday, insisted that in reviewing data since the ambulance was taken offline, paramedic services have not suffered and the ambulance “is not needed to maintain the excellent services provided by the District.” Orland Professional Firefighters, the union representing firefighters, insists the president is wrong, and said the ambulance taken out of service had covered the “busiest area of Orland” and that there is a “dire need for additional ambulance staffing.”

* Daily Herald | Demolition of massive former Sears HQ in Hoffman Estates reaches completion: “Of course, we will continue crushing concrete and asphalt for reuse as fill as we get the site pad ready,” said Katy Hancock, vice president of public relations for Dallas-based Compass Datacenters. “All of this will be completed by end of August 2025, slightly ahead of schedule.” That’s when the 273-acre site at the west end of the village will transition to a construction site for Compass’ five hyperscale data centers, each more than a quarter-million square feet.

* Daily Southtown | Oak Lawn bans kratom and THC products, though won’t enforce for now: Despite the Oak Lawn Village Board voting Tuesday to prohibit the sale of kratom and THC products, Mayor Terry Vorderer says the village will wait to enforce the law. The prohibition of kratom and THC products, including Delta-9, was added to the tobacco retail regulation ordinance. But Vorderer said he learned from attorneys after the vote the ordinance may need to be reworked.

* Daily Herald | Fox Lake enacts rules for e-bikes and e-scooters to enhance safety, promote responsible use: Fox Lake has become the latest community to enact rules regulating electric bikes and electric scooters on village roads and sidewalks. The village board Tuesday approved an ordinance to address growing concerns over safety, speed regulation and appropriate areas for e-bikes and e-scooters to be used. “We have been having a lot of incidents of careless operators,” said police Chief Dawn DeServi. She said general safety and a desire to get ahead of the situation before anything disastrous occurred was the reason for the action.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Sean Grayson files new motions claiming self-defense in shooting of Sonya Massey: Grayson and his attorneys filed three motions on Wednesday, asking that Judge Ryan Cadagin admit evidence showing two things about Massey: her existing state of mind and alleged propensity for violence. The third motion was a cease-and-desist order, asking that the Massey Commission end alleged activities in Peoria County, where Grayson’s trial will take place. In their motions, Grayson’s lawyers claimed that Massey was “purported to have been mentally troubled” in the days and hours before her death, and that in the days before, she was involved in acts of violence with neighbors.

* WICS | Former deputy’s defense files motions in Sonya Massey case: Grayson’s team claims that events leading up to Massey’s death indicate a propensity for violence and describe her as “mentally troubled.” According to the first motion, on June 27, Massey texted a car salesperson, stating she was “not okay” and feared she was “about to die” at St. John’s Hospital. On July 5, a day before her death, Massey’s mother, Donna, took her to the hospital after calling 911, reporting that Massey was having a mental breakdown and had broken her car window.

* WICS | Former Springfield officer sentenced for sexual misconduct: Taylor Staff, a former Springfield police officer, has pleaded guilty to multiple charges, including aggravated criminal sexual abuse, two counts of official misconduct, custodial sexual misconduct, and criminal sexual abuse. […] The charges stem from incidents involving three separate victims that occurred while Staff was on duty between January and July 2020. Staff was arrested in 2021.

* WCIA | Mattoon taking the next steps to prevent algae appearing again: Last week WCIA reported that the city was taking steps to prevent that toxic algae bloom from popping up. They applied for a permit to use algaecide…a chemical to kill it… but were waiting for approval. Although there’s still a lot to be done, the EPA did approve it. Now, the hope is Mattoon will continue making progress.

* WGLT | McLean County Democrats leader will seek state party position: Patrick Cortesi, chair of the McLean County Democratic Party, has announced his candidacy for Democratic state central committeeman in Illinois’ 16th Congressional District. Each congressional district in the state has two central committeemen, who work as the governing body of the state party. The 34 members elect the executive director and chair of the state party. Cortesi said the position would be in addition to his role in the county’s Democratic Party and it would not impede on his other duties.

* WGEM | Quincy Public Schools report $12 million operating budget surplus: QPS Chief of Business Operations Ryan Whicker revealed Quincy Public Schools is under budget with a $12 million surplus in their operating funds. “It’s probably the biggest one we’ve had since I’ve been here, which is 10 years,” Whicker said. According to Whicker, the funds come from the third and final round of Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief funds that started during the COVID Pandemic.

* BND | What’s up with the barricades at the Market Square Building in Belleville?: The city of Belleville has set up barriers and caution tape on the sidewalk in front of a downtown building because a decorative section of the roof’s cornice fell off. One piece of the rigid foam material from the Market Square Building at the corner of East Main and North High streets was spotted on the ground Friday morning and another piece was removed later in the day, according to city Building Commissioner Steve Thouvenot.

* WSIL | Several Franklin County organizations step up to host school supply drives and giveaways: The Southern Illinois Back to School Expo in Marion has been one of the largest school supply drives and “one-stop shops” for getting kids ready to start the school year strong in years past. However, the expo’s officials say due to funding issues, they had to cancel. Now several Franklin County organizations are stepping up to fill in the gap. Take Action Today, Benton’s Fire and Police Departments, and Ziegler’s Fire Department are stepping up to make sure the kids have what they need to go back to school.

*** National ***

* AP | Why are data nerds racing to save US government statistics?: After watching data sets be altered or disappear from U.S. government websites in unprecedented ways after President Donald Trump began his second term, an army of outside statisticians, demographers and computer scientists have joined forces to capture, preserve and share data sets, sometimes clandestinely. Their goal is to make sure they are available in the future, believing that democracy suffers when policymakers don’t have reliable data and that national statistics should be above partisan politics.

* NYT | Alden Global Capital Makes a Play for The Dallas Morning News: MediaNews Group, the newspaper operator owned by the investment firm Alden Global Capital, put in a bid on Tuesday to buy The Dallas Morning News, a last-minute twist in the sale of a publication that has been locally owned for 140 years. This month, the media conglomerate Hearst agreed to acquire DallasNews Corporation, the parent company of The Dallas Morning News, in a deal valued at $75 million, or $14 a share. That deal has been approved by the boards of each company and was expected to close later this year.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Thursday, Jul 24, 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 »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* IDFPR still hasn't implemented 2023 doctor shortage law, but now there's a new issue
* Madigan confidant Mike McClain sentenced to 2 years in corruption case
* Study shows Chicago homicides down 33 percent from last July, down 25 percent from summer of 2019
* Catching up with the federal candidates
* Rate Croke’s Comptroller launch video
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Yesterday's stories

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