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Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)

Tuesday, Jul 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

…Adding… Austin Weekly News

After 17 years as a state representative for Illinois’ 8th district, La Shawn Ford said on July 15 that he won’t be running for reelection come November 2026.

The announcement comes nearly two months after Ford filed with the Federal Elections Commission on May 21 to run for United States Congress in Illinois’ 7th district, a position held by Danny Davis since 1997. Ford said that, if Davis runs next November, he won’t run against him and instead plans to retire from politics.

“Once I filed those papers that I was considering running for Congress, I knew at that time I would not run for reelection as state representative,” Ford told Growing Community Media. […]

“It’s only fair that I am able to give full notice before the process starts of circulating petitions so that, if there are people who are interested in running, they have that information,” Ford said. He added that those interested in running for state representative of the 8th district should contact his office for an opportunity to receive some mentorship from Ford. 

* Tribune

Attorneys for former House Speaker Michael Madigan have formally asked that he remain free on bond pending appeal of his conviction on sweeping corruption charges, arguing in a filing Monday night he’s not a flight risk and that there are complex legal issues which, if resolved in his favor, will require a new trial.

Madigan, 83, was sentenced last month to 7 1/2 years in prison and ordered to report by Oct. 13. But in their 21-page motion, Madigan’s attorneys signaled they will file a vigorous appeal, and argued he should not spend time behind bars until after it is resolved — which could take a year or more.

Such requests are fairly common in white collar cases where there were significant legal issues, which Madigan’s case certainly contained. But convincing a judge who sentenced a defendant to prison that they should remain free can be challenging, particularly when the same judge already ruled before or during the trial on the issues being raised.

Madigan’s defense team acknowledged that U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey already “resolved the issues discussed” in their motion, but said “few areas of criminal law are more complex, and more rapidly evolving, than federal bribery law.”

* Patrick Daley Thompson makes an appearance at City Hall

* Former state Senator Richard Guidice has passed away…

Richard J. Guidice, 85, passed away peacefully at home on July 12, 2025, surrounded by his family. Born on April 29, 1940, in Chicago, Illinois, Richard was the son of the late Roger and the late Susan (nee Comiano) Guidice. […]

Born, raised, and lived in Chicago (most recently resided in Arlington Heights) he attended Chopin Grammar School, Austin High School, DePaul University and DePaul University College of Law. He was a Member of Alpha Phi Delta Fraternity, Beta Mu Chapter.

In his early career as an attorney, he established a general law practice and was appointed to fulfill a term as a Senator in the State of Illinois Legislature. It was there that Senator Guidice discovered his passion for governmental law. He became a lobbyist for the Chicago Board of Education Governmental Relations Department and in subsequent years, he was a founding partner of Capitol Consulting Group Illinois LLC, representing associations, agencies and businesses with varied interests in the State of Illinois. He retired at the age of 80. […]

Visitation will be held on Friday, July 18, from 3:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. at Glueckert Funeral Home, Ltd., 1520 N. Arlington Heights Road, Arlington Heights, IL.

Family and friends will meet on Saturday, July 19, at Queen of All Saints Basilica, 6280 N Sauganash Ave, Chicago, IL, for a Mass of Christian Burial at 10:00 a.m. Entombment will follow at St. Joseph Catholic Cemetery in River Grove, IL.

*** Statewide ***

* Daily Herald | Why the races to succeed Krishnamoorthi, Schakowsky in Congress are packed: Kent Redfield, a professor emeritus of political science at the University of Illinois Springfield, said the departure of an incumbent almost always increases the number of primary candidates. But in addition to that, Illinois is experiencing a weakening of party organizations that historically have limited competition by slating candidates and enforcing party loyalty. “This encourages individuals to try to take advantage of opportunities to run in races where incumbency is not a factor,” Redfield said. “Social media also facilitates both communication and fundraising outside of the traditional political party network.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Advantage News | Measure raising minimum detainment age in Illinois remains in committee: Juvenile Justice Initiative Founder Elizabeth Clarke says minimum detainment age legislation in Illinois could prove to be a critical early step in the fight to steer more minors on the right course. But the bill remains in committee. Billing it as a measure that gives young people a fairer chance by working to prevent early criminalization, the Illinois House advanced Senate Bill 2418 by a 73-41 vote before legislators adjourned spring session. The Senate didn’t take the bill up on concurrence, and it remains in a Senate committee.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Inspector general’s quarterly report chock-full of wrongdoing by city employees: Deborah Witzburg’s second quarter report accuses a pair of city employees—including a Chicago Police officer and an assistant housing commissioner—of fraudulently obtaining Payroll Protection Program loans for side businesses that did not exist.

* South Side Weekly | June 4 Calls Show CPD Knew Federal Immigration Agents Were Asking for Help: “I am calling from a program that is contracted through ICE, and we are seeing people here for visits, but I have a crowd of protesters that are on private property,” the caller said. She told the dispatcher that twenty to thirty protesters were outside the facility, blocking its entrances. “It’s a program called ISAP; we are contracted with ICE,” the caller said. The dispatcher asked if any in the crowd had weapons. “No, no, it looks like they’re peaceful, just screaming and yelling, but they’re blocking—we can’t get in, we can’t get out. I need to be able to have all my participants coming into the [ISAP] program and not feel, not feel intimidated.”

* Block Club | Traffic Spillover From Kennedy Construction Has Been A ‘Nightmare’ This Year. Can Anything Be Done?: Officials with the Illinois Department of Transportation — which is overseeing the construction project — and the Chicago Department of Transportation said they are working together to improve signal timings, add signs and assess traffic-calming measures to alleviate neighborhood congestion. That includes adding “No Thru Traffic” signs in certain residential areas, with more to be installed this week to prohibit truck drivers from using the Keeler Avenue/Irving Park Road exit ramp. But the problems persist, and neighbors have been left wondering if there’s any possible solution or even partial fix — or if they’ll just have to accept the traffic snarls until construction wraps up.

* Block Club | Rush Medical Center Rolls Back Gender-Affirming Care For Minors: Rush has ended its puberty blockers and hormone replacement therapy treatments for new patients under 18, making it the latest local hospital to curb gender-affirming care for minors amid ongoing threats from the Trump administration.

* Block Club | Ald. Harris Moves To Rezone Properties Near Regal Mile Studios Development, Drawing Pushback: More than 100 people have signed a petition against Harris’ proposal to rezone parts of 79th Street from commercial to residential — a move that could hamper plans to restore “desolate” properties, a developer said.

* Crain’s | Granny flats plan moves forward — but aldermanic control is the real sticking point: The Zoning Committee advanced the amended ordinance in a 13 to 7 vote, but approval in the full City Council is far from certain. A vote is likely to be delayed further if opponents use a parliamentary maneuver to block consideration of the measure when it comes up for a vote tomorrow. Supporters argue the new housing, which would come in the form of coach houses and conversions of basements or attics, is needed to chip away at an estimated 120,000-unit shortage of affordable housing in the city. […] But opponents say the policy is a direct attack on the City Council’s long-standing tradition of deferring to local aldermen on zoning policy in their wards.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Oak Park Journal | Nurses escorted out of West Sub amid Family Birthplace closure : The afternoon of July 3, six staff members in the middle of their shifts at West Suburban Medical Center’s Family Birthplace were escorted out of the hospital by security, according to multiple sources who work on the floor that consists of the labor and delivery, postpartum and nursery units.  West Suburban staff said they were told the three units would be closed indefinitely, and they would be suspended without pay, because of a shortage of nurses. But timesheets shared with Wednesday Journal show nurses were fully staffed on Thursday, July 3 and through that weekend. 

* Daily Herald | Mount Prospect mulling ban on unregulated THC products, Kratom and Tianeptine: The proposed measure, which will be discussed at Tuesday’s village board meeting, comes in response to what village officials describe as a “rapid increase” in the sale of such products in local stores. If approved, the ordinance would prohibit the sale and possession of “illicit THC products,” including Delta-8, as well as such psychoactive substances as Kratom and Tianeptine. There would be a 90-day grace period for retailers to sell or safely dispose of their current inventory to those aged 21 and above.

* Daily Southtown | Lifelong resident Bart Holzhauser sworn in as Homer Glen village trustee: Holzhauser said there are a lot of issues to tackle, including preserving the village’s motto of community and nature in harmony, fighting against the expansion of 143rd Street and standing up for residents who have long complained about high water bills and customer service from Illinois American Water. He said ensuring residents are not victims of price gouging on their water bills is one of the top challenges, adding some residents have bills that are unaffordable.

* Crain’s | Downtown Wheaton apartment development lands $124M in financing: Chicago-based Banner Real Estate Group has secured an $84 million construction loan from PNC Bank and about $40 million in joint venture equity from a blue-chip insurance company to develop The Faywell, a seven-story, 334-unit rental building, according to brokerage Jones Lang LaSalle, which worked with Banner to secure the debt and equity. Banner’s project will capitalize on strong demand for apartments in the Chicago suburbs, which is boosted by people staying in the renter pool for longer as they put off home ownership due to high borrowing costs and economic uncertainty. The median net rent in the suburbs was $2.14 per square foot in the first quarter of 2025, up 4% from the same time frame in 2024, according to data from Integra Realty Resources.

* Daily Herald | Chaperone policy to be reinstated at Six Flags Great America and Hurricane Harbor Chicago: A chaperone policy is being reactivated beginning Thursday at Six Flags Great America and Hurricane Harbor in Gurnee. Visitors 15 years old and younger must be accompanied by a parent, guardian or adult chaperone who is at least 21 years old to enter or remain in the park, the company announced on its Instagram account. The policy will be in effect all day Thursday through Sunday. On all days following, it will begin at 5 p.m. until the park closes. It applies to all park guests including single-day ticket and season pass holders and members.

* Chicago Mag | How to Eat (and Drink) Your Way Through the Suburbs: From doughnuts with global flair to refreshing lychee martinis, there’s no shortage of bold flavors beyond the city limits. Here are our new favorites.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | How will Trump administration’s $6B school funding freeze impact Belleville?: This $219 million, which were allocated for the coming school year, are composed of five core programs, Illinois State Board of Education spokesperson Jackie Matthews explained. […] Instead, the U.S. Department of Education notified states on June 30 that it is “reviewing” this previously promised funding.

* WSIL | New Era for SIU Housing: Old Dorms Out, Saluki Village In: The demolition will make room for “Saluki Village,” a multi-million dollar project in partnership with the SIU Foundation. The future village draft plans to offer 898 new beds, a community building, and four to five houses designated for special interest housing, particularly fraternities and sororities.

* WCIA | Mattoon’s Lytle Pool reopens after closing for toxic water: “Amazing. I mean, this pool is really just a gem for Mattoon, and the fact that we’ve had hiccup after hiccup last year with a whole motor breaking, as well as this year following into now this pool being shut down for a few days,” said head lifeguard Ethan Schmohe. “Our biggest goal is just to make sure that we don’t have to close any more this season. And the fact that we’re back and we’re up and running — I’m ecstatic to see it.”

* WCIA | Iroquois County Fair kicks off: Other headlining activities throughout the week include a tractor pull on Wednesday, demolition derby on Thursday, a rodeo on Friday and a country music concert on Saturday, featuring Chris Cagle and Craig Campbell. Many more activities will take place each day.

* WCIA | U of I getting $3M from state for tech incubator project: In Central Illinois, $3 million is going to EnterpriseWorks 2.0 at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Their project is a new construction building in Research Park for startup companies with an emphasis on laboratory and manufacturing commercial spaces for scaling companies. This would grow the capacity and capabilities of the existing EnterpriseWorks incubator.

*** National ***

* The Hollywood Reporter | Broadcast Falls Below 20 Percent of TV Use for the First Time: TV use across all platforms grew by 3 percent in June compared to a month earlier, with increases among kids and teenagers driving most of that increase as summer breaks from school kicked in. People ages 6-17 spent 27 percent more time on TV screens in June than they did in May, with streaming accounting for two thirds of their viewing. Accordingly, streaming set another monthly high with 46 percent of all use and beat the combined total for broadcast (18.5 percent) and cable (23.4 percent) for a second straight month.

* AP | A lockout is looming over MLB in December 2026, with a salary cap fight possibly at the center: “No one’s talking about it, but we all know that they’re going to lock us out for it, and then we’re going to miss time,” New York Mets All-Star first baseman Pete Alonso said Monday at the All-Star Game. “We’re definitely going to fight to not have a salary cap and the league’s obviously not going to like that.” Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred and some owners have cited payroll disparity as a problem, while at the same time MLB is working to address a revenue decline from regional sports networks. Unlike the NFL, NBA and NHL, baseball has never had a salary cap because its players staunchly oppose one.

* The Guardian | Irish tourist jailed by Ice for months after overstaying US visit by three days: ‘Nobody is safe’: He had planned to return to Ireland in December, but was briefly unable to fly due to a health issue, his medical records show. He was only three days overdue to leave the US when an encounter with police landed him in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) custody. From there, what should have been a minor incident became a nightmarish ordeal: he was detained by Ice in three different facilities, ultimately spending roughly 100 days behind bars with little understanding of why he was being held – or when he’d get out.

* BBC | WeTransfer says files not used to train AI after backlash: The file sharing company had received lots of criticism from customers on social media after changing its terms of service, which some interpreted as allowing it the right to use files for AI training. A WeTransfer spokeswoman told BBC News: “We don’t use machine learning or any form of AI to process content shared via WeTransfer, nor do we sell content or data to any third parties.” The firm has now updated its terms, saying it has “made the language easier to understand” to avoid confusion.

* Stereogum | Hear John Prine’s Previously Unreleased “Hey Ah Nothin” From New Lost Dogs & Mixed Blessings Deluxe Reissue: John Prine’s Lost Dogs & Mixed Blessings is getting a deluxe reissue for its 30th anniversary, which will bring the beloved 1995 album (produced by Howie Epstein of Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers) to vinyl for the first time. You know what that means: We’re about to enjoy some previously unreleased music from the late legend’s vault.

  8 Comments      


When PURPOSE Guides Progress Across Illinois And Around The World

Tuesday, Jul 15, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Hexaware, a leading global IT services company with deep local roots, exists to empower organizations from Springfield to Singapore with innovative technology and unwavering partnership. Our Purpose Statement Video reveals how we align our mission with your goals—driving digital transformation, fostering inclusive growth, and delivering measurable outcomes for every community we serve.

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‘That makes quality of life a business imperative’

Tuesday, Jul 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* CNBC

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says that for every 100 job openings, only 92 workers are available to fill them. That means the nation is short about 1 million workers. To try and meet the demand, companies are seeking locations that are attractive to prospective employees. That makes quality of life a business imperative.

Your thoughts on ways to improve Illinois’ quality of life?

  24 Comments      


SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth

Tuesday, Jul 15, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

For more information, click here.

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Some campaign stuff: Mendoza; CD9; GOP; Senate

Tuesday, Jul 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Politico

State Rep. Margaret Croke is readying a run for state comptroller should Mendoza bow out. Croke has been nudged by donors and some elected officials who want to make sure there’s a woman in one of the statewide seats, according to a person familiar with Croke’s moves. Croke served in the Pritzker administration as a deputy chief of staff at the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity. She was elected to the Illinois General Assembly in 2020.

As I told you back in May, Comptroller Susana Mendoza has committed to running for either reelection or Chicago mayor, but not both.

I would expect others to jump in if Mendoza doesn’t run again. Just to pull a name out of a hat, Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim would be an interesting candidate.

* More on this office from the Tribune

As Cook County Democrats prepare to gather later this week to endorse candidates for the 2026 primary election, there is growing speculation Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza will skip running for reelection so she can mount a possible 2027 bid for Chicago mayor.

Several Democratic sources said Mendoza has told them she will not run for a fourth term as the state’s chief fiscal control officer, an office she won in a special mid-term election in 2016. The sources requested confidentiality to avoid jeopardizing their relationships within the state Democratic Party.

In addition, Mendoza did not meet last week’s deadline set by Cook County Democratic Party officials to confirm an appearance at this Friday’s county slating to formally seek the endorsements of Democratic city ward and suburban township committeepeople. […]

“Comptroller Mendoza is weighing her options, including re-election,” Mendoza spokesman Abdon Pallasch said in a statement.

“She loves her job and is committed to public service. She will make her decision based on what is best for Illinois, Chicago and her family, but she will not run for two offices at the same time,” he said. “Whatever she decides to run for, she’ll be all in.”

* Speaking of this week’s slating…

10 State Senators from across Illinois are endorsing Juliana Stratton for United States Senate. The group represents communities from Chicago to Elgin to the Metro East and signifies the growing groundswell of support behind Juliana’s campaign, coming just one day after she was endorsed by Illinois House Speaker Chris Welch and Democrats from across Proviso Township.

“I’ve known Juliana for a long time – and I’ve stood side by side with her in the trenches. She’s a fighter who spends every day thinking about how she can deliver for every single Illinoisan,” said State Senator Cristina Castro. “Juliana leads with compassion, and that compassion makes her a fierce advocate for working families. I know she’ll spend every waking moment in the United States Senate fighting on behalf of my community and communities all across our state.”

“I’m proud to endorse Juliana Stratton for U.S. Senate. Juliana has represented the whole state as Lieutenant Governor, and knows the issues facing all of our communities,” said State Senator Doris Turner. “I’m looking forward to continuing the work with Juliana as our next Senator.” […]

The full list of State Senators endorsing Juliana is below:

    • Senator Christopher Belt, 57th District
    • Majority Caucus Whip Cristina Castro, State Senator, 22nd District
    • Senator Lakesia Collins, State Senator, 5th District
    • Senator Mary Edly-Allen, State Senator, 31st District
    • Senator Laura Ellman, State Senator, 21st District
    • Assistant Majority Leader Mattie Hunter, State Senator, 3rd District
    • Senator Adriane Johnson, State Senator, 30th District
    • Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford, State Senator, 4th District
    • Majority Caucus Whip Julie A. Morrison, State Senator, 29th District
    • Senator Doris Turner, State Senator, 48th District

Majority Leader Lightford endorsed Stratton at Speaker Welch’s event yesterday.

* The 47th Ward Dems are going with Biss in CD9…

Today, the 47th Ward Democrats announced its endorsement of Daniel Biss for Congress in Illinois’ 9th District. The 47th Ward has consistently posted the highest voter turnout of any ward in Chicago, including in the 2024 primary and general elections.

“Daniel impressed the 47th Ward Democrats’ endorsement committee and our entire membership by demonstrating that he is ready not only to fight for working people, but also to build coalitions and actually win,” said 47th Ward Democratic Committeeman Paul Rosenfeld. “We need big, bold ideas to tackle climate change, invest in transit and infrastructure, support our schools, lower prices for essentials, and deliver for our residents. Daniel is the best person for the job, and we proudly endorse him in the upcoming primary election.”

“The 47th Ward has consistently been one of the most civically engaged communities in Chicago, pushing for change at every level of government,” said Daniel Biss. “This district needs a representative in Washington who is ready to take on Donald Trump and his allies and finally put government back on the side of the people. I’m proud of the movement we’re building, and I’m grateful to have the support of the 47th Ward Democrats.”

Since launching his campaign in May, Biss has raised more than $700,000 and has been endorsed by Congressman Sean Casten (IL-06), State Rep. Kelly Cassidy (14th District), State Rep. Mary Beth Canty (54th District), State Rep. Sharon Chung (91st District), State Rep. Nicolle Grasse (53rd District), Retired State Sen. Heather Steans (7th District), and State Sen. Mark Walker (27th District). He has also earned the endorsement of 314 Action as well as dozens of current and former elected local leaders across the Chicagoland area.

* Back to Politico

Ted Dabrowski and Aaron Del Mar are testing the waters [for governor], speaking with GOP insiders and potential donors about mounting campaigns. They would face DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick, who’s already jumped in, and Joseph Severino who’s posted in social media that he’s running, too. […]

Del Mar is recognized in party circles across the state as he’s a former co-chair of the Illinois GOP and current Cook County Republican chair who ran as lieutenant governor alongside Gary Rabine in 2022.

Dabrowski is president of Wirepoints Corp., the conservative-leaning media company. While he lacks campaign experience, he’s a former banking executive and policy wonk whose fiscal message could resonate at a time of economic uncertainty. […]

Along with the money challenge, messaging will be an issue for GOP candidates as Pritzker and his Democratic Party will blame Republicans and President Donald Trump for the megabill that’s giving tax breaks to the wealthy and cutting Medicaid and food assistance programs.

“Conservative-leaning media company.” I guess that’s one way to describe it.

I told subscribers about Dabrowski a while ago and the Del Mar thing is already common knowledge.

Usually, folks like that would be encouraged to run down-ballot, but the party appears to have no marquee candidates waiting in the wings. And we still have no word on Republican down-ballot statewide hopefuls.

* Interview with Robin Kelly

SHABNAM DANESH: I want to move on to the Senate primary. You’re running to replace, of course, retiring Senator Dick Durbin. He held the seat for more than 40 years. Big shoes to fill. Why do you believe you’re the right person to follow his footsteps?

ROBIN KELLY: I’m the only person in this race thus far that has worked effectively on every level of government, from local to state to county, and now the federal government. For 12.5 years. My district is urban, suburban and rural. I start in Chicago. I go south of Danville, west of Pontiac. I’m the only one in the race is federally represents, you know, a district like that. I feel like I have Illinois in my district, and I know that I’ve gotten stuff done. I mean, that’s the bottom line. Legislation passed, programs put in place, and great constituents services, thanks to my very wonderful staff.

* Raja interview

[Krishnamoorthi] said one of his priorities if elected to the Senate would be to expand a 2018 law he sponsored that modernized and increased funding for career and technical education. He’s now calling for doubling funding for the program, arguing it is vital to growing middle class jobs and ensuring American businesses can hire workers with the right skills.

Is it just me or do all three of these US Senate candidates appear to be taking very safe, even boring paths?

[I had to make some edits of this post, but I have a Zoom in a few minutes and don’t have time to explain until later.]

  19 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Jul 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Forbes

A provision in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, recently signed into law by President Trump, will create the country’s first federal tax credit for donations to private schools. It aims to give families more choice in their child’s education, but critics warn it could divert much-needed funds from public schools and widen inequalities.

Benefits will come in the form of a tax credit, but the exact procedure is a little convoluted, considering the program was formed as a way to encourage donations to education non-profits.

Eligible American taxpayers who earn up to 300% of their area’s median income can donate up to $1,700 to an eligible educational non-profit and receive a dollar-for-dollar tax credit. The donation would be awarded in the form of a scholarship by private schools to fund tuition, boarding, books, and other expenses for students.

States must opt in to the tax credit, so it may not be available everywhere.

Illinois let the Invest in Kids Act program sunset in 2023, ending income tax credits for donations to private school scholarship funds.

* Center Square yesterday

Illinois state Sen. Andrew Chesney said it’s a simple administrative step for a state to participate. […]

In a statement about claims the law’s impact will have on Illinois education, Pritzker’s office said the scholarship program could impact funding for public schools.

“Creating a new tax credit refund that benefits private school donors who pay for tuition vouchers, potentially reducing state and federal funding for public schools that experience a decline in student enrollment,” Pritzker’s office said in a statement along with other criticism of the federal law. […]

Chesney pushed back.

“Has no impact on the funding for public schools. He knows that. We all know it,” Chesney said. “He just has an interest, a political interest in not liking it.”

* The Question: Do you think Illinois should opt in to the new federal private school tax credit program? Make sure to explain your answer.

  52 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Jul 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Take my picture off the wall

It don’t matter to me at all

What’s going on in your part of the world?

  12 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jul 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois clean energy hit hard by Trump’s ‘big, beautiful’ tax bill: ‘An incredibly damaging blow’. Tribune

    - The repeal of that tax credit under President Donald Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” is “pretty catastrophic” for residential solar, according to All Bright owner Lisa Albrecht, who expects demand to fall sharply.
    - Under the bill, Illinois will see about 30% to 60% less clean power added to the grid by 2035, according to an analysis of a similar scenario by the Rhodium Group, a financial research firm.
    - The firm also found that there would be about 16% to 38% fewer electric vehicles on the road nationwide in 2035.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | John Hooker, first of ‘ComEd Four’ to be sentenced, gets 1½ years in prison: In sentencing Hooker on Monday, U.S. District Judge Manish Shah zoomed out from the specific actions that led to across-the-board guilty verdicts for the ComEd Four, convicted in 2023 for orchestrating a yearslong bribery scheme targeted at Madigan to grease the wheels for major legislation the utility was pushing in Springfield. “Corruption fuels a power that is wielded not for representative democracy by the will of the people, but things like oligarchy, autocracy, even kleptocracy, all while keeping up appearance of democracy,” Shah said. “To do business with corrupt power encourages it, and that’s what you did here.”

* WTVO | ATF agrees not to distribute machine-gun conversion ‘switch’ devices in Illinois: Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced Monday that the ATF will not redistribute forced reset triggers (FRTs) in Illinois, “switch devices” that convert semi-automatic weapons to machine guns. The federal government signed a settlement agreement promising to stop enforcing federal law that prohibits FRTs and to redistribute the thousands of devices seized by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF). Raoul said switch devices are illegal under Illinois law and noted their increased use in crimes.

* Crain’s | Chicago transit’s $771M fiscal cliff could shrink because of extra sales tax: The Taxpayers’ Federation of Illinois says the Regional Transportation Authority, which coordinates mass transit across the metropolitan area, could get over $200 million more a year than it previously received if the rate of spending holds up. That would take a substantial bite out of the projected $771 million shortfall in annual funding for the Chicago Transit Authority, Metra and Pace rail and bus services once the pandemic-era relief funds from the federal government dries up next year.

*** Statewide ***

* WTTW | The Median Time in Restrictive Housing in Illinois Prisons is 1 Week. But Some Assigned More Than 600 Days: In May, there were 2,483 placements into restrictive housing, or what’s commonly known as solitary confinement or segregation. The longest time spent in restrictive housing were two men who had each spent over 600 days in assignment, despite IDOC directives capping extended restrictive housing to a year. The median time in restrictive housing in May was seven days.

* WSIL | Illinois state police bring back historic Sam Browne belts: Starting with Cadet Class 150, ISP Director Kelly ordered the return of the traditional Sam Browne belts for the dress uniform. “The belts remind us of our history and the professionalism all ISP officers display,” said an ISP spokesperson.

* Daily Herald | Illinois firefighters join disaster response in Texas: Thirty-nine firefighters representing 25 agencies deployed to Texas as Illinois Task Force 1. All are from departments participating in the Mutual Aid Box Alarm System, a statewide disaster response program based in Wheeling. They come from nine counties, most in northeast Illinois, said MABAS Operations Section Chief Kevin Lyne.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Ex-Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan asks judge for freedom while he appeals his conviction: The motion filed Monday by Madigan’s lawyers is no surprise — they warned U.S. District Judge John Blakey it’d be coming after Blakey handed down the harsh sentence June 13. But it formally kicks off Madigan’s bid to remain a free man as the clock ticks down toward his surrender date. Blakey ordered Madigan to report to the Federal Bureau of Prisons Oct. 13.

* Shaw Local | Dixon’s Fritts will seek third term in Illinois House: State Rep. Bradley Fritts, R-Dixon, has announced he will seek a third term to represent the 74th House District in the Illinois House of Representatives. “Serving the people of this district has been the honor of a lifetime,” Fritts said when making his announcement Monday, July 14.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Granny flat legislation set for key vote after Johnson makes concession: A proposed compromise that would legalize coach houses citywide while limiting the amount built in single-family housing blocks is set for a committee vote tomorrow. The draft amendment, obtained by Crain’s, would accomplish Johnson’s goal of allowing accessory dwelling units, or ADUs, to be built across Chicago without the need for the owner to obtain a costly and protracted zoning change at City Hall.

* Block Club | After Cutting Program, City Can’t Meet Demand For Home Repair Help: During the city’s designated registration period for its Home Repair program from March 10-21, the Department of Housing received online applications and calls from 6,818 interested homeowners, but the department only expects to serve 250-300 households this year, spokesperson Michael Cox said. The flood of people seeking home repair assistance comes after the housing department in December halted a different program called Small Accessible Repairs for Seniors, or SARFS. SARFS relied on eight community groups to provide minor repairs and accessibility upgrades for older homeowners. In contrast, the Home Repair program used general contractors, not community partners, for roof and porch repairs.

* Block Club | Family Wants Justice After Bodycam Footage Shows Police Fatally Shoot 19-Year-Old In Back Of Head: Police have said Fejerang had a gun, and that a gun went off and wounded an officer as police attempted to arrest Fejerang, leading to an officer shooting Fejerang in the back of his head and neck while he was on the ground. That officer was identified in reports as officer Oscar Asilis. But the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, which investigates police shootings, has not yet said who fired that initial shot — or why police were stopping Fejerang, 19, to begin with. Video of the shooting does not clearly show who fired the shot, which rang out as officers were scrambling around and on top of Fejerang.

* Tribune | CPD officers reporting use of force more often, as video becomes important training tool: A new report from CPD shows a sizable year-over-year increase in reports of both use-of-force and firearm-pointing incidents by Chicago cops. The upticks come as the department continues its efforts to gather and analyze internal data in its march toward compliance with the city’s federal consent decree. After a use-of-force incident, CPD officers are required to fill out and submit a Tactical Response Report, or TRR. Those reports are used to detail the exact circumstances an officer faced when force was used: Was a suspect armed? Were other officers or civilians facing a threat? What were the weather and lighting conditions at the scene? The CPD Tactical Review and Evaluation Division, or TRED, last year recorded 6,413 TRRs submitted by officers. That was a nearly 30% increase from 2023, when officers submitted 4,960 such reports.

* Crain’s | BlackRock marks Chicago milestone with new office — and plans to grow: “I have always viewed our Chicago presence as almost a melting pot of the broader organization,” Neetika Singh, a BlackRock managing director and head of its Chicago office, told Crain’s in an interview. “We have an important client segment and business here. We have invested in entities here. We engage with clients here.” Back in 2005, the firm staffed the office with about 10 employees, a total it has grown to nearly 200, said Singh, one of the office’s pioneers who moved to Chicago with BlackRock. Singh also is co-head of the firm’s global consultant relations business as well as head of platform and scaled distribution for the Americas institutional business.

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson, inspector general reach compromise on ethics reform: The City Council Ethics Committee on Monday advanced an ordinance that restricts when the city’s Law Department can attend investigative interviews and lays out when city attorneys can claim attorney-client privilege to avoid sharing records sought by the inspector general. “The crux of the policy proposal is still there to ensure that we are protecting the integrity of these investigations,” Ethics Committee chair Ald. Matt Martin, 47th, said after the unanimous vote. “At the end of the day, if we can land on a compromise that both sides are satisfied with, that’s a job well done.”

* Tribune | HUD Chicago office taking on more public housing authority oversight as staff dwindles regionally, nationally: The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Chicago office will now oversee 65 public housing authorities in Wisconsin because of staffing shortages in the agency’s Milwaukee office. This represents a roughly 62% increase in the number of public housing authorities the Chicago office is responsible for holding accountable to their missions, potentially stretching staff thin amid national cuts. The office had previously been limited to the oversight of Illinois’ 105 housing authorities. Those public housing authorities’ budgets combined, according to HUD, are more than $1.9 billion in federal dollars.

* Block Club | City Adds 6 More Speed Cameras. Here’s Where They Are: The cameras will not begin issuing tickets until next month, according to a Chicago Department of Transportation news release. Monday’s announcement brings the total number of cameras installed in 2025 to 40. […] Expected revenue from the 50 new cameras was earmarked in Mayor Brandon Johnson’s 2025 budget, which narrowly passed City Council in December. They were added to pay for about $11 million in Police Department positions related to a federal consent decree, according to the Tribune.

* Sun-Times | Smoke from Canadian wildfires prompts air-quality alert across Chicago: The Chicago area recorded ozone levels of 156 late Monday afternoon. Levels above 100 are considered unhealthy. Residents with respiratory issues, children and the elderly are advised to stay indoors and limit exposure to air outside until Tuesday evening.

* Sun-Times | Meet Chicago’s last bike messengers. Here’s how they survive: The pandemic was devastating to the courier business, but it survived. The industry is a far cry from where it was in its heyday a few decades ago, but the culture and camaraderie remain, couriers say.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WGN | How Tiffany Henyard’s successor at Thornton Township maneuvered to keep earning six-figure salary: But WGN Investigates found that Harris — even before he won the township office — introduced legislation in the Illinois General Assembly to protect the payment perk. His bill didn’t pass. But we found legislation with the same language was later advanced and passed by a different Democratic legislator. It was signed into law by Gov. JB Pritzker last year. Thanks to the legislative maneuver, Harris stands to collect the same benefits as Henyard. That’s in addition to $123,971 he is to be paid as a state senator.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora considers extending grocery tax that would otherwise expire: Aurora receives around $4.5 million in revenue through the grocery sales tax each year. Without those funds, which help pay for public safety, road maintenance, public works, community programs and environmental services, the city would likely need to look to alternative funding sources or make cuts to services, according to Stacey Peterson, Aurora’s director of financial operations. Peterson proposed continuing the 1% grocery sales tax within the city at a meeting of the Aurora City Council’s Finance Committee last week.

* Daily Herald | ‘Near and dear to my heart’: Retired Metra CEO leaves board, union leader joins: Not that many transit executives can shift from spreadsheets and scheduling to operating a train in a pinch. Retired Metra CEO and outgoing board Director Don Orseno is one of those select few. June marked Orseno’s last board meeting and Wednesday will be the first for replacement Brian Shanahan, railroad coordinator for the International Association of Machinists & Aerospace Workers (IAM) and a former Metra employee.

* Daily Herald | ‘A fun one’: Why Chicago band Sincere Engineer’s show at a South Elgin strip mall restaurant is a big deal: Deanna Belos said it’s no big deal to be playing a concert at a restaurant in a strip mall in South Elgin. Her band played an earlier iteration of Legit Dogs & Ice in 2018, and with her boyfriend living nearby in Elgin, she occasionally pops in for a bite at the new Legit Dogs & Ice, 322 S. Randall Road. Despite Belos’ claim, the Saturday, July 19, show is a big deal. Since she started as a solo act in 2015 under the pseudonym Sincere Engineer and added Crystal Lake musicians Nick Arvanitis and Kyle Geib and Highland Park’s Adam Beck to record their first album in 2017, the punky outfit is as exciting as any current Chicago band.

* Naperville Sun | With big influx of animals, A.D.O.P.T. Pet Shelter cutting dog adoption fees by 50% through Aug. 1: A.D.O.P.T. Pet Shelter in Naperville, which is now partnering with Will County Animal Control, is trying to reduce the overflow of animals they now have by offering a 50% reduction for all dog adoption fees through Aug. 1. Because Will County wants to expand its facilities to humanely house more animals, A.D.O.P.T. agreed to take in some of their stray animals as part of the new arrangement, according to Chris Yelle, executive director of A.D.O.P.T. Pet Shelter.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | McLean County Board to consider audit of mental health, public safety sales tax fund: All members of the committee voted to move the resolution forward, except District 10 member Corey Beirne. Vice Chair Jim Rogal was absent. The audit will be capped at $50,000 to review the expenditures of the sales tax fund. The committee also considered a resolution to suspend collection of the 1% sales tax for one year, but members opted not to move the proposal forward.

* WCIA | Former CS Johnson Factory in Champaign could have new future: The Champaign City Council is voting Tuesday night to turn the lots that hold the old CS Johnson factory into residential property. The city said this would be the biggest development agreement the city has ever entered into Champaign would reimburse any increases in property taxes up to ten years or $6.6 million — whatever comes first — to prepare the site.

*** National ***

* NYT | What Would Funding Cuts Do to NPR and PBS?: Yes. NPR gets about 2 percent of its annual budget directly from federal grants, including from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting; for PBS, that amount is about 15 percent. Both organizations also get federal money indirectly, through payments from member stations across the country that receive government funding, though it’s difficult to estimate how much. The real pain will be felt by local stations in far-flung locations like Unalakleet, Alaska, and Pendleton, Ore. Those broadcasters often rely disproportionately on federal grants for their operations because of a funding formula that takes into account the fact that they have fewer donors and programming sponsors.

* WIRED | AI ‘Nudify’ Websites Are Raking in Millions of Dollars: An analysis of 85 nudify and “undress” websites—which allow people to upload photos and use AI to generate “nude” pictures of the subjects with just a few clicks—has found that most of the sites rely on tech services from Google, Amazon, and Cloudflare to operate and stay online. The findings, revealed by Indicator, a publication investigating digital deception, say that the websites had a combined average of 18.5 million visitors for each of the past six months and collectively may be making up to $36 million per year.

* KFF Health News | Vested Interests. Influence Muscle. At RFK Jr.’s HHS, It’s Not Pharma. It’s Wellness: While Kennedy lambastes federal agencies he says are overly influenced by the pharmaceutical industry, he and some other figures of the “Make America Healthy Again,” or MAHA, movement — such as siblings Calley and Casey Means, Robert Malone, and Peter McCullough — have their own financial ties to a vast and largely unregulated $6.3 trillion global wellness industry they also support and promote. Kennedy and those four advisers — three of whom have been tapped for official government roles — earned at least $3.2 million in fees and salaries from their work opposing Big Pharma and promoting wellness in 2022 and 2023, according to a KFF Health News review of financial disclosure forms filed with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics and the Department of Health and Human Services; published media reports; and tax forms filed with the IRS.

  4 Comments      


Rate the first TV ad of the US Senate Democratic primary

Tuesday, Jul 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m told this spot is on both broadcast and streaming. Half a million dollars during the first week. Press release…

Today, Raja for Illinois released its first statewide television ad, “Bullies.”

In the first spot of the Illinois Senate primary, Raja speaks directly to Illinoisans about his lifelong commitment to standing up to bullies, fighting for underdogs, and taking on a rigged system. The campaign will run the ad across Illinois broadcast and streaming markets to communicate with Illinoisans in every corner of the state.’

“Growing up with a name and a background like mine, I always felt like an underdog…and I still do. When I see other underdogs hurt by a rigged system, I fight back,” said Raja in the ad. “And as your Senator, I’ll take on the biggest bully of them all. Because underdogs? We just fight harder.”

A product of public housing, food stamps, and Peoria public schools, Raja has spent his career standing up to bullies and fighting for families like the one he grew up in. Over the last decade, he has held some of the biggest bullies accountable, including Big Pharma, food manufacturers, Big Tobacco, and massive corporations. Now he is taking on the biggest bully of them all: Donald Trump. A vocal opponent of Trump’s blanket tariffs and cruel cuts to Medicaid and Medicare, Raja is fighting day in and day out to protect Illinois families.

The ad blitz builds on two months of momentum since Raja announced his bid for U.S. Senate,
including a 13-point polling lead, significantly outraising the field, earning the support of local
leaders from Cook County to downstate, and wall-to-wall coverage of events across Illinois.

* The spot

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Jul 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Jul 15, 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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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Jul 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WGN

Illinois House Speaker Emanuel ‘Chris’ Welch on Monday gave his endorsement to Lt. Gov. Julianna Stratton in her bid for US Senate, highlighting what he said is her compassion and commitment to public service. […]

“I know Juliana Stratton is the fighter we need in Washington because I’ve seen her be the fighter we need in Springfield,” Welch said.

Welch was joined in his endorsement by the Democratic Party of Proviso Executive Committee, representing all 14 communities of Proviso Township. […]

The endorsement comes during another important week on the campaign trail. The Cook County Democratic Party hosts its slating meeting Thursday and Friday.

* Raja Krishnamoorthi also announced endorsements from across the state

* Illinois State Board of Education

The Pritzker administration today unveiled the Children’s Adversity Index, a new tool designed to measure community childhood trauma exposure for children ages 3 through 18 in communities across Illinois.

The Children’s Adversity Index was developed by Chapin Hall and the Illinois State Board of Education in collaboration with eight state agencies and leading experts. It builds on the administration’s commitment to creating equitable, inclusive, and supportive environments for every child. This groundbreaking Index, which originated from the 2022 Whole Child Task Force Report, became a legislative mandate in 2023. It marks a pivotal step in identifying and addressing systemic challenges impacting communities statewide.

“The Children’s Adversity Index provides an opportunity for us, as a state, to come together and address the interconnected, systemic challenges facing Illinois children and families – from food insecurity, to lack of access to safe and affordable housing, to over-imprisonment,” said State Superintendent of Education Dr. Tony Sanders. “The concept of the ‘whole child’ means recognizing the need for partnerships and inter-agency action to address inequities beyond the school walls. The ‘whole child’ approach begins with a data- and research-driven understanding of community-level adversity. The Children’s Adversity Index empowers us to better understand the challenges communities face and to take meaningful action to most effectively allocate resources and programming to uplift children and families across Illinois.”

* Crain’s

On July 1, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker signed the Prescription Drug Affordability Act into law, putting restrictions on PBMs, which act on the behalf of health insurance plans to negotiate lower drug prices and create formularies that tend to favor lower-cost prescriptions.

The Illinois law, modeled on several such laws passed or considered by other states, would make it illegal for PBMs to steer patients toward pharmacies where they, or their health-plan owners, have financial interests. […]

On the national front, legislation introduced last week in Congress would mimic much of what Illinois and other states are trying to do locally.

U.S. Reps. Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill., and Earl “Buddy” Carter, R-Ga., along with nine other representatives, introduced a bipartisan PBM Reform Act, with regulations centered around Medicare and Medicaid.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | Governor Pritzker Announces $7 Million Tech Incubator Enhancement Grants: This program will enable the State of Illinois to provide capital grants to support facilities and equipment to establish new incubators in parts of the state where entrepreneurs do not have access to these services. By supporting existing incubators’ adaptation to a changing business environment, the State is increasing their resilience so they can continue to play a foundational role in Illinois.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Chicago was supposed to warn residents about toxic lead pipes. It’s barely started: Months past a federal deadline, more than 90% of at-risk Chicagoans haven’t been told their drinking water could be unsafe. Of the 10 cities with the most lead pipes, only Chicago has confirmed it hasn’t finished sending out notices.

* Block Club | ‘Call Me Red’: Walter Burnett’s Son Wants His Own Legacy As Alderman: The younger Burnett is aware his appointment could be viewed as classic Chicago nepotism. But, he said, he’s earned his place at the table through his community involvement. “I’m not a slouch,” Burnett said. “I’ve done a lot to participate within my community … I am a steward of this community, regardless of if I’m afforded the opportunity to be in this aldermanic seat or not.”

* Tribune | Chicago-area officials are bracing as summer storms roll in following Texas tragedy and weather service budget cuts: So far, the Chicago area has felt less of an impact from those staffing reductions than other regions, particularly less-populated areas served by weather service offices in the Quad Cities and downstate Lincoln, 30 miles northeast of Springfield. But Trump’s budget proposal for the upcoming fiscal year, which starts in October, calls for further cuts at other agencies within the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, including the elimination of research centers that study climate. While Chicago has so far been spared, Illinois Democrats in Washington, D.C., remain critical of the cuts and note that any trims to weather service offices downstate will have an impact on Illinois residents.

* Tribune | Man charged with threatening to bomb West Side alderman’s office on Fourth of July: Kenneth Weddington, 28, faces one count of threatening a public official and one count of felony disorderly conduct via a false bomb threat, Chicago police said. He is accused of posting on Facebook on July 4, “BOMB PLANTED AT YOUR OFFICE FOR SUPPORT THIS (expletive) AND BEING A FOLLOWER,” according to the police report, which says Weddington was referring to Ervin. Weddington was arrested Friday evening on the sidewalk in the 200 block of South Michigan Avenue “without incident” and due in court Monday afternoon, police said. In 2021, Weddington was sentenced to two years of probation after pleading guilty to one count of aggravated battery to a peace officer, court records show.

* Crain’s | Johnson avoids financial rebuke as City Council committee rejects stricter bond rules: The ordinance would have required a two-thirds majority vote in the City Council to issue city bonds, up from the simple majority needed under current law. But in a 17-16 vote, the Finance Committee rejected the measure, with opponents arguing they needed more time to consider the proposal or that, if approved, it would allow a small group of aldermen to grind city spending to a halt during the final years of Johnson’s first term.

* Dan McGrath | The joy and agony of waxing nostalgic for the ‘05 White Sox: But anyone who witnessed it would agree that El Duque’s cold-blooded Fenway shutdown set the stage for all of it. And as the weekend’s festivities unfolded at Rate Field, an underlying question was why didn’t the magic last? Why couldn’t a talented, balanced, undeniably appealing team make some inroads into the Cubs’ market domination at a time when the North Side Nine was vulnerable?

* Tribune | From fast casual to fine dining: 50 years of the American gyro, and a look at the dish’s Chicago history: In 1974 and 1975, only a few years after Dengeos first opened, two Chicago-based companies, Grecian Delights and Kronos Foods, began mass-producing the world’s first hydraulically pressed gyro cones. This modern marvel of rotisserie meat allowed for a more consistent, and therefore easier-to-sell, product. Eventually, the two companies merged in 2020, but in the years prior, they helped turn an ancient dish (some estimate the cooking techniques behind the gyro could be at least 2,000 years old) into a fast-casual staple, one that launched as many Dengeos-style Greek eateries as Helen launched ships from Troy.

* Sun-Times | Scream Club Chicago offers a safe release of bottled-up energy: On a breezy evening at the North Avenue Beach, a small group gathered for an unusual Sunday night ritual: screaming toward the lake. The new weekly event, dubbed Scream Club Chicago, was created by Manny Hernandez, who recently moved to the city from Los Angeles. Hernandez is a breath work practitioner and men’s transformational coach, and he said the idea for a Sunday night scream session came from his own experience with breath work and the emotional release he has witnessed with clients.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Citing safety risks for election officials, McHenry County clerk seeking 35% pay hike: McHenry County Clerk Joe Tirio went in front of a county board committee last week to make the case for a raise in salary for his position and others. Among the offices being reviewed for salary increases are treasurer, sheriff and clerk, who also handles the responsibilities of the recorder. All three seats are up for election next year, and the incumbents — Tirio, Sheriff Robb Tadelman and Treasurer Donna Kurtz, all Republicans — are seeking reelection. Salary changes would go into effect after the next election and, historically, the county has approved them before the primary election for those offices, Tirio said. The 2026 primary is March 17.

* Crain’s | Suburban office vacancy hits another record — but not for everyone: The share of available workspace in the suburbs inched up during the second quarter to an all-time high of 32.4% from 32.2% at the end of March, according to data from real estate services firm Jones Lang LaSalle. The suburban office vacancy rate is up from 31.3% one year ago and 22.1% at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, having now hit new record highs every quarter for 4 1/2 years. […] The end of the post-pandemic pain looks closer for owners of top-tier, or Class A, suburban office properties, where the vacancy rate has dropped slightly since the end of 2024, JLL data shows. Companies trying to encourage in-person work keep gravitating to buildings updated with modern amenities, which is why 73% of leases signed over the past three months were in Class A buildings, according to JLL research.

* Tribune | E-bike laws a confusing patchwork for suburban riders: Illinois law divides e-bikes into three classes based on their maximum assisted speed and whether the motor requires the rider to pedal. No one under 16 is allowed to ride a bike that can reach more than 20 mph under Illinois law. State regulations also require riders to label their bikes with the motor wattage and classification type. Elk Grove Village officials, however, believe it’s more important for riders to follow the rules of the road, said Scott Eisenmenger, the deputy police chief.

* Daily Herald | Carpentersville honored for project to remove lead water lines: Construction on the project began in October 2023 and involved replacing 400 lead water sources in the community. Lead in water sources has been shown to cause several health issues, including cognitive and learning disabilities, developmental problems, and kidney damage, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. In June 2023, the village received $4 million from the Illinois EPA’s Public Water Supply Loan Program. The funding ensured the entire program came at zero cost to village residents.

* Daily Southtown | Work continues, but Tinley Park’s Harmony Square still set to debut on Friday: Amanda Gaus, Tinley Park events specialist, said Friday the square’s turf still needs to be finalized, mulch needs to be put down and items for the stage, such as speakers and lighting, need to finished. Eventually, she said, there will be more landscaping, such as perennial flowers plants, outside of the mulch and turf planned for the 2-acre square. The property is 6 acres total, including the planned townhouses and apartments, according to the village.

* Daily Herald | St. Charles philanthropic group aims to expand giving: The Fox River Business Alliance raised $27,000 for Kane County charities in 2024, and group members hope to outdo that record this year as efforts expand. The FRBA, a philanthropic group of business people based in St. Charles, established an advisory fund in 2021 to support local charities that benefit the group’s families, friends and neighbors in the Fox Valley. FRBA treasurer Lee Kolodziej said the fund starts from scratch each year, since 100% of the funds raised get donated and no management fees or costs are incurred.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | DCFS visited Fairview Heights foster home two days before death, report shows: A 2024 report by the Illinois Department of Child and Family Services Office of Inspector General says the placement worker made “regular visits” and last saw Felmlee on May 9, two days before she died. During pretrial hearings for Williams and Reid in June, St. Clair County prosecutors described their treatment of Felmlee as “torture” and showed photos taken from Williams’ cellphone documenting what they called a pattern of abuse. They included pictures of Felmlee sitting in a car with clear bruising and abrasions to her face, head, shoulder and arm, which were taken on May 7, two days before the placement worker’s final visit.

* The 21st Show in Vermilion County | Why are young people leaving small towns in Illinois?: On the Friday, July 11, 2025 edition of The 21st Show, we took our program on the road to Vermilion County, which sits on the Illinois/Indiana border. We talked to a panel of students about why they are less likely to stay in the small communities where they grew up. It’s something we’ve heard before in Carbondale and Peoria. Our conversation took place at Danville Area Community College.

* BND | Metro-east shut out of federal radiation exposure compensation funds: However, residents of Venice, Madison and Granite City will again be stuck waiting to be included in the fund for people with radiation-related illnesses tied to Manhattan Project-era nuclear bomb making, after their single Illinois ZIP code didn’t make it in the final bill. The latest action by Congress serves as yet another example of the metro-east victims going unnoticed in their fight for compensation. “This small group of people here in Venice and Madison in Illinois have been left out once again,” said Larry Burgan, a former employee of the factory that processed uranium and thorium and a longtime advocate for RECA. “In part, I believe it’s because of their status, where they stand in life: They’re a poor Black community.”

* WGLT | 50+ supporters write letters for Aaron Rossi ahead of sentencing in criminal case: Lawyers for former Reditus Labs CEO Aaron Rossi are pointing to his traumatic childhood and a desire to “prove his worth to everyone” in seeking leniency from a judge sentencing him this week. Rossi will be sentenced Tuesday on health care fraud and wire fraud charges, to which he pleaded guilty in April. It’s among the last steps in resolving multiple criminal investigations into Rossi’s alleged profiteering during the pandemic, when Pekin-based Reditus became a major player in COVID-19 testing. A federal civil lawsuit is also nearing a settlement. […] Reditus made hundreds of millions of dollars from state contracts for COVID-19 testing and brought hundreds of jobs to Pekin. Reditus had testing contracts with the Illinois Department of Public Health and the Illinois Department of Corrections. It ran the COVID testing site at Bloomington’s Interstate Center for much of the pandemic.

* WIFR | Part of Illinois 72 to close for a week for maintenance: The Illinois Department of Transportation announces Illinois Route 72 will be closed at the Illinois Railway crossing in Davis Junction in Ogle County beginning on Monday, July 14. The crossing is located nearly a mile west of Illinois 251. The closure will allow the railroad to perform needed maintenance to their at-grade crossing. The road is anticipated to be closed for a week. A detour will be posted directing traffic to use Illinois 251, Illinois 64 and Meridian Road.

* NYT | Chinese Students Flocked to Central Illinois. Their Food Followed.: Surrounded by miles of flat, green fields of soy and grain corn, the cities have a combined population of about 127,000 people and a skyline that rarely pokes above 15 stories. The area isn’t anybody’s idea of a major metropolitan center. It certainly isn’t the first place you’d think to look when you are in the mood for serious Chinese food. After a quick walk from the university’s main quad, though, you can sit down to a faithful rendition of spicy bullfrog hot pot in a Sichuanese broth studded with green peppercorns. A nearby restaurant serves yangrou paomo, a Shaanxi lamb soup with floating scraps of flatbread that is a favorite in Xi’an. If you are struck by a late-night craving for stinky tofu in the style of Changsha, you can get it after 8:30 p.m. from a chef who dresses fried black cubes of fermented bean curd in a glistening orange chile oil, the way vendors do on the streets of Hunan’s capital city.

* Muddy River News | Fanning the flames: Local coach builds a homegrown Special Olympics team from the ground up: Since fall of 2024, the Quincy Embers have grown from a small group of seven players into a full team of fifteen, competing in tournaments across the region. But their story isn’t just about wins and losses. It’s about second chances, belief, and the power of community. “I was told once during an anger management course that sometimes there’s only one shot at a particular opportunity,” said Hinkamper. “When I found out the only thing stopping Joshua Hill, a close family friend, from playing was needing a coach, I said, ‘Is that all?’”

*** National ***

* AP | Trump appointees have ties to companies that stand to benefit from privatizing weather forecasts: “It’s the most insidious aspect of this: Are we really talking about making weather products available only to those who can afford it?” said Rick Spinrad, who served as NOAA administrator under President Joe Biden, a Democrat. “Basically turning the weather service into a subscription streaming service? As a taxpayer, I don’t want to be in the position of saying, ‘I get a better weather forecast because I’m willing to pay for it.’”

* WaPo | Defense Department to begin using Grok, Musk’s controversial AI model: On Monday, xAI said its products will be “available to purchase via the General Services Administration (GSA) schedule,” allowing “every federal government department, agency, or office” to buy them. In a news release, the Defense Department said the contract award is worth up to $200 million. The department issued similar awards to Google, Anthropic and OpenAI, it said. […] Grok came under fire last week after launching into an antisemitic rant and invoking Adolf Hitler after it was a programmed to be less politically correct. The incident prompted the company to say it would improve its model. A day later, xAI unveiled a sweeping update that it claimed put Grok on the cutting edge of AI development.

* The Atlantic | The AI Mirage: It turns out that I would have needed an entirely new phone for Siri to have surmised that I wanted to go to the store. Craig Federighi, Apple’s senior vice president of software engineering, said in an interview last month that the latest version of Siri has “better conversational context”—the sort of thing that should help the software know when I’m asking to be guided to the home-improvement store rather than to a guy called Lowe. But my iPhone apparently isn’t new enough for this update. I would need cutting-edge artificial intelligence to get directions to Lowe’s.

* 404 Media | The Media’s Pivot to AI Is Not Real and Not Going to Work: Despite the fact that generative AI has been a destructive force against their businesses, their industry, and the truth more broadly, media executives still see AI as a business opportunity and a shiny object that they can tell investors and their staffs that they are very bullish on. They have to say this, I guess, because everything else they have tried hasn’t worked, and pretending that they are forward thinking or have any clue what they are doing will perhaps allow a specific type of media executive to squeeze out a few more months of salary.

* Harper’s Magazine | Shadow of a Doubt: How OCD came to haunt American life: The disorder has racked some of Western civilization’s most luminous minds. Martin Luther, who some historians suspect had OCD, was hijacked by thoughts of cursing Jesus and mental images of Satan’s ass, which moved him to take confession with such frequency that he alienated his fellow priests. When the artist William Hogarth met Samuel Johnson, another apparent sufferer, around 1750 at the house of Samuel Richardson, he found the lexicographer standing at a window “shaking his head and rolling himself about in a strange ridiculous manner” and, not knowing who he was, figured Johnson “an idiot” who’d been entrusted to Richardson’s care. Then Johnson opened his mouth, displaying “such a power of eloquence” that Hogarth sat astonished, concluding that he had been divinely inspired.

  7 Comments      


Pritzker signs tariff-related EO

Monday, Jul 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here for the full EO. Click here for a press release containing actions by other Democratic governors. Press release…

Today, Governor JB Pritzker signed Executive Order 2025-03, directing state agencies to evaluate the scale and impact of how Trump’s tariffs will affect key economic sectors in and the increased costs that will be passed onto working families. The order comes as the Trump Administration continues to push a disastrous trade policy that exacerbates economic uncertainty for businesses, disrupts supply chains, and raises costs on everyday goods.

Gov. Pritzker joins other governors including Arizona, Colorado, Maryland, New York, Oregon, and Washington, who are taking similar executive actions at the state level.

“Donald Trump’s reckless trade policies are nothing more than a tax on working families that will jack up prices, threaten jobs, and impact the way we live,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “This Executive Order ensures we have a clear-eyed view of the impact the Trump Slump will cause from higher prices at the grocery store to uncertainty in our farms and factories. We’re working with other states to stand up for working people and protect our economies when we can.”

As part of the Executive Order, Gov. Pritzker has directed state agencies to assess the following:

    • Identify Business Vulnerabilities and Workforce Disruptions: The Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO), in collaboration with the Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES), will evaluate the industries and economic development regions most affected by trade-related disruptions, key challenges reported by Illinois businesses navigating the new trade landscape, and employment trends.
    • Prepare for Medical Supply Chain Disruptions: The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) will assess the type of medical supplies that are experiencing significant supply chain disruptions, price effects, and concerns being raised by healthcare providers on supply costs.
    • Stabilize Food Assistance Programs: The Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS) will examine how supply chain disruptions will affect food assistance programs, assess food banks’ purchasing power and ability to meet demand, and evaluate how the new policy will impact overall program effectiveness.
    • Protect Infrastructure Investments: The Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) will examine how U.S. tariff policies will affect infrastructure project costs and timelines, evaluate adjustments made to manage increased material costs, and assess long-term prioritization strategies for state transportation planning.
    • Develop a Strategy for Material Cost and Supply Chain Risks: The Illinois Capital Development Board (ICDB) will review challenges related to the price and availability of key building materials, analyze industry adaptations to material shortages, and evaluate strategies for managing cost volatility and alternative sourcing in construction projects.
    • Strengthen Emergency Preparedness and Supply Chain Resilience: The Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA) – Office of Homeland Security will assess procurement and cost challenges affecting emergency supplies, identify affected categories and stockpile concerns, and review changes to sourcing strategies aimed at maintaining preparedness within budget constraints.

Trade in Illinois

For Illinois, trade is a cornerstone of our economic strength. From manufacturing to agriculture, the state’s economy is deeply connected to the global economy. Illinois is the largest exporting state in the Midwest and the fourth largest exporter in the country. No other state exports more goods to Canada, and Illinois ranks among the top five in exports to both Canada and Mexico. Altogether, Illinois exports support approximately 800,000 jobs across the state — jobs that now face increased risk due to these harmful federal trade policies.

States across the country both red and blue alike are feeling the brunt of the Trump’s economic policies. As they work to balance their budgets, many are confronting negative GDP trends driven by harmful tariffs and short-sighted federal economic policies. These challenges are forcing states to dip into reserves or cut to essential services.

Added onto this, the Trump and Congressional Republicans with a stroke of a pen took a sledgehammer to Medicaid and SNAP funding, leaving a funding gap that no state in the union –including Illinois – can backfill and raising costs for working families.

Regarding that last sentence, as we discussed earlier, Illinois won’t have to backfill all of the SNAP costs if the state lowers its SNAP payment error rate.

  1 Comment      


Today’s quotable

Monday, Jul 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Block Club Chicago

Demonstrators took over Downtown streets Saturday to urge Gov. JB Pritzker and state lawmakers to solve a transit funding crisis that could spell disaster for the CTA and suburban commuter systems.

Hundreds gathered for a rally in Daley Plaza, 50 W. Washington St., noon Saturday to ask state officials to solve a $770 million dollar fiscal cliff the Regional Transportation Authority faces next year that could cut area-wide transit service by 40 percent and eliminate CTA bus and train lines, experts have warned. […]

Despite the possibility of a special session to pass transit funding, critics of Pritzker said he hasn’t done enough to shore up public transportation financing amid rumors of a possible 2028 presidential bid. Pritzker has repeatedly taken highly-publicized swings at President Donald Trump since the 47th president’s inauguration earlier this year.

“Our Democratic state government is to blame,” Chicago Teacher’s Union representative Jesse Bostic said at the rally. “When I think to myself, ‘What would the Trump administration do if they were given control of the RTA [Regional Transit Authority]?’ It is exactly this. Our governor and state legislature have promised that they will protect Illinois from the cuts and the cruelty of the Trump administration … they are intentionally making the lives of children and working people harder.”

Discuss.

  27 Comments      


First of the ‘ComEd Four’ sentenced: Hooker gets 1.5 years in Madigan bribery case

Monday, Jul 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* First, some background from the Tribune

Federal prosecutors are asking for nearly five years in prison for former ComEd executive John Hooker, saying in a filing Monday he “corrupted the highest levels of state government” in a scheme to funnel more than $1.3 million in do-nothing payments to associates of then-House Speaker Michael Madigan in exchange for the speaker’s help with legislation in Springfield.

Hooker’s attorney’s, meanwhile, requested just a year of probation, citing his age, lack of criminal history and zero risk of ever committing a crime again. They also submitted dozens of character letters from people of all walks of life attesting to Hooker’s history of generosity and selflessness. […]

Hooker, McClain, and co-defendants Anne Pramaggiore, former CEO of ComEd, and Jay Doherty, a consultant and former head of the City Club of Chicago, were convicted on all counts after a two-month trial. Shah later tossed some of those counts due to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling last year, but denied defense requests to delay the sentencing hearings any further.

Pramaggiore is set for sentencing July 21, while McClain’s sentencing is scheduled for three days later. Doherty is the last, with his sentencing hearing set for Aug. 5.

* Sun-Times Federal Courts Reporter Jon Seidel is in the courtoom

* Capitol News Illinois’ Hannah Meisel


* Earlier in the hearing, Judge Shah focused on testimony Hooker gave in 2023. Tribune

In one of the recordings, McClain told Hooker, “We had to hire these guys because Mike Madigan came to us. It’s that simple.”

Hooker testified he didn’t believe it was true that they “had” to hire anyone.

“To me that’s just me and McClain joshing around,” he said. […]

Each time, Hooker said the subcontractor arrangement with Doherty had created “goodwill” with Madigan because they were able to “respond to a recommendation” from the speaker. He also made sure to say the subcontractors “added value to the company,” and that the arrangement was good for him because he “didn’t have to manage” them.

* The Tribune’s Jason Meisner



  9 Comments      


SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk

Monday, Jul 14, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In the final hours of the state’s legislative session, SB 328 was quietly introduced and passed giving lawmakers and the public little time to review and debate this legislation.

Now, it’s sitting on the Governor’s desk. If signed, it will allow trial lawyers to drag companies into Illinois courts for lawsuits that have nothing to do with Illinois. Businesses could be sued here simply for being registered in the state — even if the alleged harm occurred elsewhere. And it puts jobs and our state’s economy at risk.

Even New York Gov. Kathy Hochul vetoed a nearly identical bill twice, calling it a “massive expansion” of jurisdiction that would deter job creation and burden the courts.

Governor Pritzker has a choice: Veto the legislation to protect Illinois jobs and businesses — or signal to employers that Illinois is open season for out-of-state lawsuits.

Learn more and make your voice heard:



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It’s time for an all hands on deck response from Pritzker

Monday, Jul 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

The costs to Illinois’ government because of the new Republican congressional budget reconciliation law will be steep.

However, the state has some time to prepare itself, and possible Democratic gains in the U.S. House and Senate next year might be able to reverse or mitigate some of the steepest cuts to food security and health care programs before the vast majority of them take effect after the 2026 elections.

In the interim, Gov. JB Pritzker could also lower some of the state’s direct fiscal impact with a big administrative effort — a fact that has been glossed over in pretty much all news coverage so far.

Without substantial changes to the state’s administration, Illinois’ share of increased mandated costs for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program might total $788 million a year — money the state clearly does not have.

Pritzker claimed last month that the SNAP proposal would cost Illinois $1.2 billion a year, but his projection was based on the U.S. House’s proposal. The Senate version, which passed the House, scaled back that number.

The reductions don’t begin until the 2028 federal fiscal year (which starts Oct. 1, 2027), so the state has a chance in the meantime to improve matters on its end, and that effective date is almost a year after the 2026 midterm elections.

If current trends continue, Illinois will have to pay 15% of the total SNAP benefit costs, which, according to the governor’s office, would be $705 million a year.

The reason the state is on the hook for 15% of benefit costs is because of its high SNAP payment error rate, which stood at 11.56% in fiscal year 2024, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The state’s error rates for underpayments to SNAP beneficiaries was less than 1%, but its overpayment error rate was 10.6%.

The new federal law requires that states with SNAP payment error rates of 10% or higher must pay 15% of SNAP benefit costs. The state will struggle mightily to afford that, so lots of people may lose their food aid if things don’t change.

Eleven states, including New York and New Jersey plus the District of Columbia, had higher error rates than Illinois, but 38 had lower error rates.

If Illinois could reduce its error rate to above 8% but below 10% — on par with states like Michigan, Ohio and Texas then it would pay 10% of benefit costs, or $470 million a year.

Reducing Illinois’ error rate to a recent 15-year average of what the Food Resource and Action Center says was 7.1%, would make its annual penalty 5% of benefit costs — or $235 million a year.

And if Pritzker’s administration could decrease the error rate below 6%, then the state would face no additional state penalties at all.

Illinois achieved those lower error rates five times between 2011 and 2017. Eight smaller states, including Wisconsin, had error rates below 6% in FY24.

Unless the law is changed, reducing the error rate has to be done or it’s gonna eventually cost the state a fortune and/or result in huge numbers of people missing out on aid.

Pritzker frequently touts his administrative prowess, so this gives him a measurable opportunity to prove it. But he doesn’t have much time because the first increased SNAP payment will be based on the state’s performance during federal fiscal year 2026, which begins in October. The state needs an all hands on deck approach to this problem.

The new law also requires states to pick up the tab for 75% of SNAP administration expenses, which will cost the state an extra $83 million a year, according to the Greater Chicago Food Depository. States currently pay half the expenses.

However, regardless of Illinois’ error rate, the state’s SNAP outlay could very well be lower than $708 million, because the new federal law will likely result in significantly fewer SNAP recipients, mainly due to work requirements. If history is any guide, up to a quarter of recipients could lose some or all of their benefits without any actual corresponding increase in employment.

Illinois will have to work hard to make sure people don’t fall through the paperwork cracks, but that will also mean it’ll cost the state more money to pay a portion of their benefits unless it manages to get its error rate under control.

  29 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Monday, Jul 14, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Findings of a recent economic study were clear — the retail sector is a cornerstone of the state’s economy and crucial to our everyday lives. Retail in Illinois directly contributes more than $112 billion in economic investment annually – more than 10 percent of the state’s total Gross Domestic Product.

Retailers like Chris in DeKalb enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.

  Comments Off      


Open thread

Monday, Jul 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* So you think you can tell

Can you tell a green field from a cold steel rail?

What’s up?

  6 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Jul 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois Head Start leader tells providers to hold off on Trump edict. Sun-Times

    - Lacking any guidance from the federal government on how to ban anyone without legal immigration status from a vital early childhood program, the Illinois Head Start Association told its hundreds of members Friday not to make any changes yet to their policies or programs.
    - The Trump administration on Thursday announced that it’s reinterpreting a 1996 law to shut off access to a series of federal programs to anyone who can’t prove they’re legal immigrants — including the Head Start early childcare and education programs for babies and toddlers — kids too little for kindergarten.
    - “We have never asked for [the] status of our children that we’re serving, and to do so creates fear and anxiety among our community,” said Lauri Morrison-Frichtl, head of the Illinois Head Start Association, which supports about 600 centers statewide serving the 28,000 students in Head Start in the state.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Trump’s ‘big bill’ takes center stage in Illinois’ U.S. Senate race: “In polling and different things that we’ve done, half of the population doesn’t even realize what’s going on,” Kelly said. Kelly played up her relationship with U.S. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, saying she has been part of a coalition of House Democrats that have been traveling the country holding town hall meetings about federal spending cuts.

* WGLT | State Farm says Pritzker’s rate hike claims are ‘factually incorrect’ political rhetoric: The Bloomington-based company has responded forcefully to Pritzker’s claims, which became public Thursday in a statement to the media. Pritzker claims an Illinois Department of Insurance analysis suggests “State Farm is shifting out-of-state costs onto the homeowners in our state.” He called the rate increase “unfair and arbitrary.” In a statement Friday, State Farm said that “Illinois families deserve an honest conversation about insurance economics rather than political rhetoric.” “Governor Pritzker’s statements are factually incorrect. State Farm does not shift costs between states, and we have provided information to the Illinois Department of Insurance to demonstrate this fact. Our Illinois rates reflect Illinois-specific claims and risks,” the company said.

* Gallup | Surge in U.S. Concern About Immigration Has Abated: Americans have grown markedly more positive toward immigration over the past year, with the share wanting immigration reduced dropping from 55% in 2024 to 30% today. At the same time, a record-high 79% of U.S. adults say immigration is a good thing for the country. These shifts reverse a four-year trend of rising concern about immigration that began in 2021 and reflect changes among all major party groups.

* Proviso Democrats…

Who: Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, Senate Majority Leader Kim Lightford, State Representative Norma Hernandez, Cook County Clerk Monica Gordon, Bellwood Mayor Andre Harvey, Hillside Mayor Joe Tamburino, Maywood Mayor Nathaniel Booker, Forest Park Mayor Rory Hoskins, Broadview Mayor Katrina Thompson Melrose Park Mayor Ronald Serpico, Democratic Party of Proviso members, and other faith and community leaders. 
What: Proviso Democrats Endorsement for United States Senate

When: Monday, July 14, 2025 at 11:00 AM 

Where: Iron Workers Local 63, 2525 Lexington St, Broadview, IL 60155 (indoors)

Why: Representing all 14 Communities in Proviso Township, Speaker Welch will be joined by Illinois Senate Majority Leader Kim Lightford, State Representative Norma Hernandez, and  6 Village Mayors in announcing the Proviso Democrats’ Endorsement for U.S. Senate. The announcement includes a nod from Cook County Clerk Monica Gordon. 

*** Statehouse News ***

* QC Times | Illinois State Senator Neil Anderson announces reelection bid: Illinois State Senator Neil Anderson, R-Andalusia, has announced he is running for reelection for the Illinois 47th District. Anderson, who is the Senate Republican Caucus Chair, said he remains focused on providing constituent service to the 15 counties he serves across Western Illinois and focused, effective leadership in the General Assembly.

* Daily Herald | Legislation prompted by Mundelein impact fee fight awaits Gov. Pritzker’s signature: The bill’s primary champion, Democratic state Rep. Daniel Didech of Buffalo Grove, confirmed this week that he’s lifted a procedural hold that had been in place since it cleared the General Assembly in May. Pritzker has until Aug. 23 to sign the bill into law. A spokesperson this week said it’s under review. “I trust the governor and his team to give this matter thoughtful consideration,” Didech said. “Regardless, we will continue to evaluate any necessary next steps to protect taxpayers and support our local schools.”

* Naperville Sun | Will County Board member from Naperville announces bid for Senate seat: Will County Board member Julie Berkowicz, a Naperville Republican, has announced plans to run in the 2026 primary for the state senate seat representing District 21, which covers portions of Will and DuPage counties. The position is currently held by Sen. Laura Ellman, a Naperville Democrat elected to the post in November 2018. Berkowicz said at the county level, she advocates for lower taxes and smaller government and has been frustrated in recent years with the increased tax levies that have been approved. Financial votes tend to break along party lines, she said.

* WICS | Unknown powder found in Stratton Building deemed non-hazardous by officials: An unknown powder substance discovered in the U.S. Mail on the 7th floor of the Stratton Building on Friday afternoon prompted an immediate response from authorities. […] After conducting tests, the Springfield Fire Department Hazardous Materials Unit determined that the powder was non-hazardous.

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | Illinois opioid settlements share could be at least $23 million: Illinois could get up to $23 million from settlements with pharmaceutical companies that used deceptive practices to increase opioid prescriptions, helping fuel the nationwide opioid crisis. The settlements, totaling $720 million, will go to nine states in a deal with eight pharmaceutical companies, with each company paying different amounts over varying periods, Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced. “As long as Illinois families continue to experience the devastating impacts of opioid addiction, my office will continue to work with other attorneys general to hold companies responsible for fueling the opioid crisis,” Raoul said.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Upcoming Chicago budget ‘grimmest picture of all’ for Mayor Brandon Johnson, aldermen: Two days after that roundtable, Johnson’s finance team would disclose the city ended 2024 with a $161 million deficit, emptying one of its key emergency funds. Adding to the bad tidings last week was a final $7 billion estimate for the cost of a state bill boosting benefits for police and fire pensioners through 2055. That zeroed out “unallocated” reserve balance is even lower than the depths of the 2008 recession, when it held just $226,000, according to the city’s annual financial reports. It represents a serious financial alarm for the cash-strapped city, according to Justin Marlowe, the director of the Center for Municipal Finance at the University of Chicago “I don’t think we can overstate how important that is,” Marlowe said. “It is the single most closely watched number in all of municipal finance.”

* ABC Chicago | Mayor Johnson discusses crime, budget deficit, sanctuary city lawsuit after church chat: The Chicago Teachers Union said it wants Governor JB Pritzker to allocate more than $1 billion to CPS. Mayor Johnson supported that move on Sunday during his church discussion. “The city of Chicago and districts across the state are not fully funded by the state of Illinois,” Johnson said. “It’s one of those areas where I’m gonna need more people to get active, to challenge not just city government, but the state government as well to fully fund our schools, because the crisis that we are experiencing is a crisis of the result of failures of the past.”

* Tribune | Chicago’s safety net hospitals face potential service cuts, layoffs after signing of ‘big, beautiful’ tax bill: Humboldt Park Health will likely see an additional $5 million to $7 million in losses annually once the changes go into effect, said CEO Jose Sanchez. The hospital typically has an operating margin of about $1 million annually. “I came in this morning and met with senior leaders and said, ‘We’ve got to begin to think about how do we position ourselves to face the potential cuts we’ll have,’” Sanchez said earlier this week.

* Tribune | Chicago father becomes face of lawsuit against ICE as judge hears challenge to warrantless arrests: Abel Orozco was getting home after buying tamales for his family, like he did most weekends for the past 30 years. They would have breakfast and head to church. Instead, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents detained the Mexican immigrant outside his home in suburban Lyons without a federal warrant. Now, nearly six months later, he is still detained. Immigration and civil rights attorneys argue that his arrest was not only unfair but illegal. Thanks to the video his son recorded of the arrest, Orozco has become the face of a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and ICE. Attorneys say the two government agencies violated the constitutional rights of Orozco and at least 25 other people, including one U.S. citizen, during the first week of increased immigration enforcement in the Chicago area after President Donald Trump took office.

* Block Club | Activists Call On State To Fill Nearly $1 Billion Transit Funding Gap: ‘I Don’t Know How I’m Going To Get Around’: At Saturday’s rally, transit advocates and local leaders demanded Pritzker call legislators back to Springfield to solve the transit budget deficit, with some protesters questioning the Democratic Party’s allegiance to their constituency. “What do we need?” demonstrators chanted. “A special session! When do we need it? Now!”

* CBS Chicago | Record turnout at Barrio Arts Festival in Chicago after fears of potential ICE raids: “I think people wanted to send a strong message to the administration that we’re going to stand together,” said Billy Ocasio, executive director of the National Museum of Puerto Rican Arts and Culture and a former Chicago alderman. “I think that’s the reason we have so many people here.”

* CBS | Children Harmed: The children left behind and the hidden toll of domestic violence in Chicago : According to an analysis by the CBS News Data Team, the number of children present during domestic violence crimes in Chicago jumped 35% the first year of the pandemic, from about 8,200 kids in 2020 to about 11,000 kids in 2021. Most of the crimes children were present for were domestic batteries, but they were also exposed to nonviolent domestic crimes such as phone threats, stalking, property damage to homes and cars, and violating orders of protection.

* New Yorker | What We Get Wrong About Violent Crime: The Chicago Police Department estimates that arguments lie behind seventy to eighty per cent of homicides. The numbers for Philadelphia and Milwaukee are similar. And that proportion has held remarkably steady over time. Drawing on data from Houston in 1969, the sociologist Donald Black concluded that barely more than a tenth of homicides occurred during predatory crimes like burglary or robbery. The rest, he found, arose from emotionally charged disputes—over infidelity, household finances, drinking, child custody. Not calculated acts of gain, in other words, but eruptions rooted in contested ideas of right and wrong.

* Shaw Local | Chicago Bears reportedly extend general manager Ryan Poles: Bears general manager Ryan Poles is set to stay in Chicago. The Bears reportedly signed Poles to an extension that will keep him in town through the 2029 season. ESPN’s Adam Schefter was the first to report the extension. According to Schefter, Poles had two years remaining on his contract before the Bears added three more with the extension.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Streets Blog Chicago | Why the Suburban Mayors Coalition’s claims about proposed development policies in state transit reform/funding legislation are bogus: Local planning goals are documented in a municipality’s comprehensive plan, which guides future development by shaping zoning ordinances. Again, the area around transit that NITA would be able to build on is limited, hardly the “broad swaths” that the signees mention. In this limited area, a suburb would have almost total control over what NITA could build, just like the municipality has for any other (also unelected) private developer.

* Daily Herald | Delays and declining revenue: Are red-light cameras in the suburbs on their last legs?: Several suburbs are finding it increasingly difficult to bring red-light cameras back online after they’ve been deactivated for construction projects or a change of equipment vendors. Gurnee officials announced last week they were scuttling their red-light program after 16 years due to what Village Manager Pat Muetz called “operational challenges we’ve faced combined with expiration of the contract.” Muetz said the operational challenges largely were caused by the Illinois Department of Transportation taking the cameras offline for road construction projects in the area and keeping them down even after construction was complete. He said driver behavior and a reduction of crashes at intersections where the cameras were located also played a part in the village’s decision to end the program.

* Daily Herald | Police chief ‘not going anywhere,’ despite vote of no-confidence: There’s a big rift in small-town Gilberts’ police department. At least that’s according to a letter sent to the Kane County community’s village board last month outlining why the rank-and-file passed a vote of no confidence against Chief Todd Block. Submitted by Metropolitan Alliance of Police Lodge 423, the 18-page memo is a scathing critique of Block, portraying him as rude, mean and sexist.

* Daily Herald | Slowed by obsolete toll plaza infrastructure? Tollway is removing gates and barriers: The initiative will “convert our system to a barrier-free system to improve traffic operations at these plazas, as well as remove the aging infrastructure that we no longer need because we’re not collecting cash,” Chief Engineer Manar Nashif said Wednesday. It should save time for drivers and money for the tollway by slashing maintenance costs. “At the end of the day, it will be a much more open field. Ultimately, with no barriers, there’s fewer obstacles as traffic passes through it,” Nashif noted.

* Daily Southtown | New Governors State University president sees opportunity in her return to region: Since her July 1 start date as president of Governors State University, Joyce Ester says she has been busy meeting with campus community members and embracing change in the south suburbs. Ester, originally from Phoenix and a graduate of Thornridge High School in Dolton, recently moved back to the region after ending her tenure as president of Normandale Community College in Bloomington, Minnesota. “This area is very different physically than when I left almost 20 years ago,” Ester said. “When I was a young girl in this community, there wasn’t a lot out here. Seeing new stores and new developments and new businesses that weren’t here when I was a child — it’s really nice to be able to see that and see the pride that people have in this institution.”

* Daily Herald | Prospect to remove first principal’s name from theater over ties to controversial teachings: The last name of Prospect High School’s first principal will be removed from the entrance to the school’s theater, Northwest Suburban High School District 214 school board members have decided. The unanimous decision late last week to rescind the honorary naming follows publication of a student journalist’s investigation into former Principal Alvin Kulieke’s ties to a fringe religious group and its early embrace of eugenics principles. Superintendent Scott Rowe said sophomore Sage Gilliland’s reporting, published in the May 16 edition of The Prospector school newspaper, shined a light on historical information about the theater’s namesake that is “not in line with the beliefs of Prospect High School or District 214 today.”

* Daily Southtown | Animal Welfare League defends annual six-figure payments for legal services: The nonprofit, led by President Chris Higens, reported on its most recent tax form from 2023 that bills to Nixon Peabody law firm made up about 15% all its expenses that year. Animal Welfare League paid Nixon Peabody about $212,000 in 2020, $348,000 in 2021 and $489,000 in 2022. It is unclear whether Animal Welfare League contracted exclusively with Nixon Peabody before 2020, as tax forms did not require the organization to write in the name of their contractor. Higens on Friday defended the nonprofit’s spending on legal services, saying in an emailed statement to the Daily Southtown that “every cent received is being spent wisely.”

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ‘We can survive this’: Mattoon community reflects following days without tap water: Mattoon has lifted the “do not drink order” after test results came back on Sunday and showed that the city’s water is safe. But over the last four days — without water from the taps — people realized the value of modern convenience and of community. […] Beyond Mattoon, surrounding cities have also stepped up — offering showers and the chance to do laundry for those in need. “When somebody’s in crisis, people will jump in in a heartbeat,” Love said.

* 25News Now | Millions of dollars in sales taxes to fund McLean County mental health and public safety programs called into question: A pair of resolutions presented to the county board’s executive committee also calls for an auditor to determine how the sales tax dollars are being spent. Bloomington and Normal have been collecting a 1% sales tax since 2016 and sending that money to the county. However, the resolutions indicate the county’s “Special Mental Health and Public Safety Fund” currently has a balance of about $20 million, which Normal Town Councilwoman Kathleen Lorenz said is excessive.

* Press Release | Carbondale Police Department adds new technology to investigate gun crimes: The new technology will reduce the time required for shell casings found at the scenes of shooting incidents to be analyzed. In the past, fired shell casings found at shooting scenes were sent to the Illinois State Police Crime Lab to be analyzed. Due to large caseloads statewide, this process could take weeks or months. Now, Carbondale officers and investigators can quickly determine that a particular firearm fired the cartridge casing in question within hours or days of the incident.

* WGEM | Teachers and students reconnect at historic school tour of Adams County: “It was wonderful to teach out here, and the thing is that the students, their parents, their grandparents were all a part of an educational family, and it was so joyful, it was so rewarding when I started in 1972,” said Bob Winkeljohn, Former Payson-Seymour Elementary 3rd Grade Teacher. Winkeljohn said being able to see his former students on Saturday was a full-circle moment for him, and it makes him feel like he’s made a difference.

* Herald-Whig | Feature-length movie set to film in Quincy: Set in the late 19th century, the independent feature-length film “Death of a Brewer” is based on a true story from Iowa and explores the complexities of the brewing industry in the lead-up to Prohibition. “As much as it’s an Iowa City story, it’s an Americana Midwest story. The more I hear about towns that did have breweries, I start to hear stories that are so similar,” said Mokotsi Rukundo, the film’s Los Angeles-based director and writer

* WTVO | Rockford organization revitalizes Civil War veterans’ graves: Sunday wasn’t the first time the group of volunteers has cleaned the graves. Jenkin said they frequent Cedar Bluff Cemetary, and she said outsiders have noticed their work. “I’ve had a family in California reach out to me saying ‘Hey I saw that you cleaned the gravestone, thank you so much for doing that,’” Jenkin said. The organization also works to replace or repair damaged graves. Jenkin said they have built stones headstones for fallen veterans that didn’t previously have one.

* The Pantagraph | Lincoln’s Bloomington speech ‘lost,’ but legacy lives on: Greg Koos, executive director emeritus of the museum, delivered a presentation on the “Lost Speech” in 2008 titled, “Lost or Not.” Referencing the “Lost Speech” memorial on the corner of East and Front streets in Bloomington, he said, “When we made an effort to publicly commemorate the most important event ever to take place locally — we lost the fact that it was about African American people.” The original 1946 plaques included no reference to enslaved or African American people. In 2009, the Looking for Lincoln Heritage Coalition established a series of new outdoor wayside exhibits that addressed this issue.

*** National ***

* Fox Chicago | USPS raises stamp prices again — What to know: The new rates include a 5-cent increase in the price of a First-Class Mail Forever stamp from 73 cents to 78 cents. The changes would also increase domestic shipping rates by about 6.3% for Priority Mail, 7.1% for USPS Ground Advantage, and 7.6% for Parcel Select, while rates for Priority Mail Express would remain unchanged.

* NPR | When The U.S. Government Tried To Replace Migrant Farmworkers With High Schoolers: Problems arose immediately for the A-TEAM nationwide. In California’s Salinas Valley, 200 teenagers from New Mexico, Kansas and Wyoming quit after just two weeks on the job. “We worked three days and all of us are broke,” the Associated Press quoted one teen as saying. Students elsewhere staged strikes. At the end, the A-TEAM was considered a giant failure and was never tried again. This experiment quickly disappeared into the proverbial dustbin of history. In fact, when Stony Brook University history professor Lori A. Flores did research for what became her award-winning 2016 book, Grounds for Dreaming: Mexican Americans, Mexican Immigrants, and the California Farmworker Movement, she discovered the controversy for the first time. Until then, the only time she had heard of any A-TEAM, she now says with a laugh, “was the TV show.”

* Bloomberg | Invenergy urges Trump not to kill $11 billion power line: The Grain Belt line would carry electricity generated by wind farms and other energy sources in Kansas across Missouri and Illinois to Indiana. The project is capable of delivering four nuclear power plants’ worth of electricity and would be the highest capacity and second longest line in US history, according to the company. […] The request comes a day after Republican Missouri Senator Josh Hawley said in a statement that he had gotten a commitment from Wright to stop the project and end a $4.9 billion conditional federal loan guarantee offered in the final months of the Biden administration. The Energy Department and Senator Hawley’s office didn’t immediately return requests for comment.

* AP | Judge orders Trump administration to halt indiscriminate immigration stops, arrests in California: Judge Maame E. Frimpong also issued a separate order barring the federal government from restricting attorney access at a Los Angeles immigration detention facility in response to a request from nonprofit law firm Public Counsel. Frimpong issued the emergency orders, which are a temporary measure while the lawsuit proceeds, the day after a hearing during which advocacy groups argued that the government was violating the Fourth and Fifth amendments of the Constitution.

* CBS | 18-year-old U.S. citizen detained by border officials said conditions were so bad he lost 26 pounds, almost self-deported: The teen said he lost 26 pounds during his time in the immigrant detention center, and said officers didn’t provide him with enough food. He was crammed into an overcrowded holding area with 60 other men. They slept on the floor with aluminum-foil blankets — some even had to sleep in the bathroom area, he said. Some of the men were very sick and were bitten by ticks, but were afraid to ask for a doctor because CBP officers told them their stay would start over if they did, Galicia said.

* Democracy Docket | Election Officials Have Been Under Attack For Years. Now The DOJ Wants to Criminally Charge Them: In recent months, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) sent letters to states including Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Arizona, and Colorado, pressing for information about voter roll management, demanding to see state voter rolls, and threatening to sue over alleged voting law violations. But the department’s campaign has gone much further. Criminal prosecutors at DOJ sent separate broad requests for information to election officials in at least two states, people who have seen the requests told Democracy Docket.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Monday, Jul 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Monday, Jul 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Jul 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Jul 14, 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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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My mom has had a rough week, but things are looking up, so this one’s for her

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sen. Laura Fine’s congressional campaign site is live. Just don’t ask Placeholder McStockphoto who she’s endorsing




* Tribune

When activist Jean Kaczmarek was elected DuPage County clerk seven years ago, she became the first Democrat elected to countywide office in 84 years and her subsequent work as clerk to make voting easier and more available was lauded by the party faithful.

But the appointment of Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office as special prosecutor to investigate Kaczmarek’s office over allegations of official misconduct has prompted concern among Democrats that the gains they have made in wresting significant control of the once strongly Republican suburban county could be at risk.

Kaczmarek, hailed in 2022 by the Democratic Women of DuPage County with its leadership award, is already facing a primary challenge as she seeks a third term next year. And her previous budgetary actions helped lead to a change in state purchasing law for most Illinois counties — a law that is now at the center of the Raoul investigation.

DuPage County Circuit Judge Bonnie Wheaton’s order on Monday appointing Raoul’s office as special prosecutor is rooted in more than two years of internecine battles between the Democratic clerk and the Democratic-led DuPage County Board involving the often labyrinthine world of budgetary control and power in county governance.

* Illinois State Police…

The Illinois State Police (ISP) today graduated the largest cadet class in the last 25 years. ​ ISP welcomed 95 new troopers today from Cadet Class 150 at a graduation ceremony at the Westside Christian Church in Springfield. ​ The new troopers will report to all ten ISP Troop locations throughout the state on Sunday, July 13, 2025. ​ Cadet Class 150 marks the 22nd cadet class graduation under Governor JB Pritzker and ISP Director Brendan F. Kelly. ​ Since 2019, 692 troopers have joined ISP. […]

Cadet Class 150 was a combination of a traditional class and a lateral entry class. ​ The traditional class included 43 cadets who completed a demanding 29-week program. ​ The lateral class consisted of 52 cadets who completed the 12-week program designed for certified police officers who previously graduated from an accredited law enforcement academy and had at least two years of experience while employed as a full-time officer. ​ ​ Both programs consist of physical and classroom instruction, which included training in cultural diversity, procedural justice, domestic violence, critical incident response, de-escalation tactics, firearms, first responder certification, control and arrest tactics, Illinois vehicle code, criminal law, motor carrier safety, juvenile law, and more.

In addition to either the 29-week or 12-week academy training, cadets are required to participate in one-on-one mentoring with Field Training Officers as part of a 14-week field training program, expanding their total training to either 42 or 25 weeks. ​ Troopers who successfully complete the field training program advance to solo-patrol status. ​ ​

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Chicago Public Schools lays off 1,458 employees in latest move to close deficit: Chicago Public Schools announced a second round of summer layoffs Friday, firing 1,458 employees in the latest effort to help close the district’s $734 million budget deficit. The layoffs include 432 teachers – representing 1.8% of the teaching staff – including 132 special education teachers. Also impacted were 311 paraprofessionals — or classroom assistants — and school-related personnel, 33 security officers and 677 special education classroom assistants.

* Tribune | Son of ‘El Chapo’ Guzman pleads guilty to narcotics trafficking charges in Chicago federal court: One of the sons of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman could spend the rest of his life in prison after pleading guilty Friday in federal court in Chicago to helping his father and brothers run the notoriously violent Sinaloa cartel, importing thousands of tons of narcotics into the U.S., bribing public officials and using murder and kidnapping to amass and maintain power. By pleading guilty, however, Ovidio Guzman Lopez, 35, has agreed to cooperate with U.S. authorities in any ongoing investigations and testify against his associates in the hopes that prosecutors will recommend a sentence of less than life in prison.

* WTTW | City Poised to Pay $3M to Man Severely Injured During Police Chase: Matthew Aguilar was injured just before midnight on Oct. 9, 2018, when he was struck by an unmarked Chicago police vehicle, which ran over his face, according to an investigation by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability. The two officers in the unmarked vehicle were attempting to stop Aguilar and another man they saw walking through a Brighton Park alley and suspected were armed, according to the investigation by the agency known as COPA. When the men did not stop, one of the officers left the vehicle to chase the men on foot while the other officer drove after the men, according to the probe.

* Sun-Times | More fireflies are lighting up Chicago this summer, experts say: Fireflies have always lit up the Chicago area’s backyards, but have been harder to spot over the last few years. That’s changing. The small bugs seem to be thriving this season, thanks to a mild winter and wet spring. […] The firefly population usually peaks in late June or early July. But the firefly has been struggling over the last few years for several reasons, Lawrance says. He blames everything from loss of habitat, increasing light pollution, climate change and pesticide use.

* South Side Weekly | ‘Undervalued and Overworked’: How Young Chicago Artists Make A Living Without a Living Wage: Arts organizations consistently generate hundreds of millions in local revenue and economic impact through their work, even as the creatives who fuel them struggle to make rent in a city with one of the nation’s highest rates of inflation and a growing housing affordability crisis. Young South and West side artists who spoke to City Bureau said they split rent with multiple roommates, live at home with family, and work service industry jobs just to keep pursuing their dreams.

* Sun-Times | Thirty years after historic heat wave, Chicagoans are still at risk: Three decades after Chicago’s devastating heat wave left more than 700 people dead, city efforts to keep people protected from extreme weather continue to fall short. This weekend marks the 30th anniversary of that disaster. Many lessons were learned from the five-day stretch in July 1995, and the city was forced to make changes that included creation of an emergency management department. But City Hall still fails to take simple steps, including providing enough cool places for people to go to escape the oppressive heat, critics say.

* CBS Chicago | Chicago weather Friday includes a severe storm threat with tornado, flood risks: Chicago weather remains unsettled heading into the weekend, with the possibility of more severe storms Friday that could produce tornadoes and flooding. One to five inches of rain fell across the Chicago area Thursday night into Friday, with the heaviest rain falling west of the city. There was significant flooding in Rockford, Illinois. Downpours continued into Friday morning, but tapered off between 7 a.m. and 8 a.m.

* WBEZ | Cartoonist Chris Ware brings Chicago-inspired world to new postage stamps: Esteemed cartoonist Chris Ware is known for his detailed New Yorker covers and his complex graphic novels featuring his characters like Jimmy Corrigan and Rusty Brown. But now, Ware’s work — featuring architectural details familiar to most Chicago-area residents — is going micro. The 57-year-old Riverside resident has created a new sheet of 20 postage stamps, which will roll out on July 23 and help to mark the U.S. Postal Service’s 250th birthday. (USPS was established in July 1775 by the Second Continental Congress with Benjamin Franklin as the first postmaster general.)

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Inmate death prompts changes at DuPage County jail: New policies, individualized treatment plans, and added mental health staff are among some of the changes at the DuPage County jail since a 50-year-old woman was found unresponsive in her cell in 2023. Representatives from the sheriff’s office outlined the changes this week after being asked to attend a DuPage County Board meeting. In March, the county agreed to pay $11 million to the family of Reneyda Aguilar-Hurtado of Addison to settle a lawsuit claiming that jail medical personnel and corrections officers did not provide adequate medical and mental health care.

* Tribune | Oak Park officials mull adding protections for gender affirming care: The proposal comes in the wake of a Supreme Court decision upholding the constitutionality of a Tennessee law that outlaws gender affirming care for minors in that state. After reviewing a draft ordinance during its first reading at the July 1 Oak Park Village Board meeting and hearing public comment from three Oak Park residents, the board will likely vote Aug. 5 on adding protections for gender affirming care, which is care that supports gender transitions or sex changes, to the village’s Human Rights Ordinance, though officials said they are gathering further input.

* Tribune | A 30-year-old mystery is resolved with a $150K grant to Oak Park River Forest Infant Welfare Society: A six-figure donation the Oak Park River Forest Infant Welfare Society received in June had its origins in a mystery that originated 30 years ago. “It’s incredible,” said John McIlwain, executive director of the society. “It was a little bit of a journey.” The donation, of $150,000, came from the estate of Bernice Feder Chadwick, who had been a longtime supporter of the children’s health clinic at 28 Madison. She died in 1995.

* Shaw Local | Dixon Public Schools create new kindergarten program to address behavioral issues at Washington Elementary: Dixon Public Schools will kick off a new transitional kindergarten program at the start of the 2025-26 school year. The program was developed in response to kindergarten students’ increasing behavioral issues at Washington Elementary School that parents and staff described as “violent.”

* Block Club | After Stepping Up To Teach Her High School Class, Chicago Teen Earns Ride To Northwestern University: Carchi received these and dozens of other messages praising and encouraging her after a Block Club story revealed she had taught her own classes during a teacher shortage at her high school. College admissions officials were equally impressed. Carchi wrote about her teaching efforts in her college application essay, which helped her get into her top choice. After graduating from Clemente this month, she’s headed to Northwestern University, where she plans to study engineering and eventually become a teacher.

* Daily Herald | Look, up in the sky: Windy City Warbirds & Classics returns to St. Charles: Those toys, if you want to call a roughly $10,000 radio-controlled plane a toy, will be zipping through the skies in St. Charles at speeds of up to 200 mph this weekend during the Fox Valley Aero Club’s Windy City Warbirds & Classics. The show features radio-controlled military aircraft and civilian classics that have a wingspan of over 80 inches. The full-scale replica planes are roughly 20% the size of the real ones, right down to the miniature pilots inside many of the cockpits. But they provided 100% joy to the folks who flew them Thursday during the show’s first day of action.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | ‘No timeline’ for when water issue will be resolved in Mattoon after dangerous toxin detected: he Coles County Health Department says there is no timeline yet for when the “Do Not Drink” advisory will be lifted for the City of Mattoon after tests run on the city’s water supply revealed the presence of microcystin, a harmful algae toxin. The health department told WAND News Friday morning that the bare minimum time frame to know whether the water is safe again would be 24 hours, but they do not anticipate it being resolved that soon. “We’re doing what we can and working with the City of Mattoon to get resources to the community,” Gloria Spear, Environmental Health Director for the Coles County Health Department, said.

* WTVO | Many Winnebago County tornado sirens out of service, residents urged to sign up for alerts: With tragic news of a disaster in Texas over the weekend, Schomber decided to find out why she hadn’t heard the monthly storm warning test. “So that’s when I just called and I just asked, you know, what’s going on? He says, yes, a whole western part of Winnebago County. They’re not working at all,” she recalled. Tornado sirens across all of Winnebago County were out of service.

* News-Gazette | C-U leaders discuss solutions to gun violence : Many concepts were presented, but all groups prioritized open communication between both youth and adults about gun violence, supporting families, having community organizations and governmental units work together, and utilizing data to inform action. “It’s pretty powerful that we have as many people showing up, taking time out of their day to come in here and try and address things in the community,” said Champaign police Deputy Chief Greg Manzana. “It’s going to take everyone in the community to solve community problems.”

* News-Gazette | In Mahomet: portable classroom added to address overcrowding: “The incoming class is a little bit bigger than the class we sent to high school (815),” Mills said. “The other piece is with the move-ins. That number will keep going up.” Superintendent Kenny Lee said the portable classroom building will be the third at the school. Like the other two, it will hold two classrooms and will be located south of the other portables. Overcrowding in the district has been well documented. In November, voters turned down a proposed tax increase to fund construction projects to help relieve the conditions. It marked the third defeat for such a measure.

* News-Gazette | Vintage equipment lines, caboose featured at Penfield farm show: The Thomasboro resident, who farmed in southern Illinois, said at one time he owned seven of the vintage green tractors, which were no longer manufactured after 1976. His ownership total is now down to three. “I’m getting up there (in age) where it’s time to get rid of them,” Kocher said. “They were good, dependable tractors. They were quiet, too. They ran smooth” — unlike the John Deere “Johnny poppers” of the day.

* WSIL | SIU Carbondale to add electric car chargers for public use: The SIU Board of Trustees approved the installation of public Level 3 charging stations through a partnership with the Egyptian Electric Cooperative Association (EECA). These stations will be set up across from the Student Center, at the Touch of Nature Outdoor Education Center, and the Glenn Poshard Transportation Education Center by summer 2026. “This project is part of our sustainability plan and fits well with the sustainability pillar of our strategic plan,” said Susan L. Simmers, vice chancellor for administration and finance. “We are grateful for this opportunity with EECA.”

*** National ***

* CBS | COVID cases likely rising in half of states, CDC estimates: Cases of COVID-19 are now likely growing in 25 states, according to estimates published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday, as this year’s summer wave of the virus appears to be getting underway. The agency’s modeling suggests that the uptick is in “many” Southeast, Southern and West Coast states, the CDC said in its weekly update. COVID-19 activity nationwide, however, is still considered “low,” based on data from wastewater samples, although that is up from “very low” the week before.

* NPR | This TikTok video is fake, but every word was taken from a real creator: Millions of TikTokkers have watched some version of a video in the past week falsely stating that “they’re installing incinerators at Alligator Alcatraz,” referring to an internet conspiracy theory that furnaces were being set up at a state-run immigration detention facility in the Florida Everglades, which spread widely despite having no evidence. […] But there is one account whose tactics stand out in this familiar cacophony of messy online virality: a realistic-looking TikTokker giving a direct-to-camera description of the incinerator conspiracy theory. The speaker’s image and voice appear to have been created with artificial intelligence tools, according to two forensic media experts NPR consulted. The twist: The words spoken in the video are the exact same as those in another video posted by a different TikTok account days before. The copied version attracted more than 200,000 views on TikTok.

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IDPH says the southern Illinois measles outbreak is over

Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) is taking action to prevent the national spread of measles in Illinois. A total of eight measles cases, all linked to one another, were identified in Southern Illinois in April and May.

In addition to the eight Southern Illinois cases, two additional, unrelated cases were identified in Cook County around the same time. Those did not constitute an outbreak, and there was no further indication of any additional spread beyond those two individuals.

No new Illinois cases have been diagnosed since May 22nd; two full incubation periods (42 days) have elapsed since the last confirmed case, allowing the Department to declare the outbreak over.

The Illinois measles cases came as the nation is facing the largest number of cases nationwide since measles was officially eliminated from the U.S. in 2000. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have reported the highest number of annual cases across the nation in 33 years– 1288 confirmed cases across 39 jurisdictions in 2025 alone.

92% of cases have affected unvaccinated individuals or individuals whose vaccination status is unknown. There have been 3 deaths from measles in the U.S. this year, equaling the total measles deaths nationwide between 2001 and 2024.

“The end of this outbreak, capping at just 8 cases and no serious illnesses in Illinois, is a testament to the deliberate, decisive, and successful work of our public health and medical professionals,” said IDPH Director Dr. Sameer Vohra. “Public health is made stronger by the power of partnership, and this measles response was a coordinated effort that included IDPH, local health departments, as well as other dedicated community and health care partners. Vaccination remains our most effective tool to prevent measles. I recommend that Illinois residents make sure that they and their family members are up to date on the measles/mumps/rubella vaccine and all other age-appropriate immunizations.”

* More…

When the first Illinois case of measles was identified in April 2025, IDPH and involved local health departments mobilized to

    • identify all potential sources of exposure,
    • instruct those who were exposed and non-immune to quarantine,
    • alert the health care community of the situation,
    • issue news releases and social media posts to provide the public with information on ways to protect themselves, and
    • promote preventive immunizations to help those who would have otherwise been vulnerable to contracting measles.

Among specific actions that were taken:

    • Local health departments rapidly identified individuals who were infected or exposed, encouraged isolation and quarantine where needed, and monitored and provided guidance to affected individuals to ensure they were receiving proper care and had taken all necessary precautions to prevent further spread of the virus.
    • The Franklin-Williamson Bi-County Health Department, Jackson County Health Department, and neighboring local health departments conducted vaccine outreach clinics in their communities. IDPH activated mobile vaccinations to assist with immunization efforts across the state, procuring emergency services from CIMPAR to deliver 14 mobile immunization clinics.
    • IDPH launched a major, strategic measles communications effort targeting zip codes with school vaccination rates for MMR below 91 percent. More than 2.5 million people were reached through this effort.
    • IDPH updated its website with easy to navigate measles information for healthcare facilities, parents, travelers and schools in addition to developing a new measles toolkit for health professionals.
    • IDPH expanded its laboratory capacity to conduct in-house testing for the measles vaccine strain and reduce the turnaround time relative to awaiting results from the CDC.
    • IDPH issued multiple health advisories, news releases, and social media posts, including an IDPH podcast episode devoted to information about measles and a Dear Colleague letter from Director Vohra addressing the department’s preparedness plans.
    • IDPH sent messages to more than 2,000 school administrators and school nurses statewide to alert them to the potential for measles exposures in the school setting, survey them on potential barriers to vaccination, and advise them on actions to take.
    • IDPH launched a measles school outbreak prediction dashboard to help local officials determine risk factors and evaluate what additional steps might be necessary.
    • IDPH launched a pharmacist targeted survey on the statewide inventory related to medical counter measures (post exposure prophylaxis) against measle.
    • IDPH engaged sister state agencies including the Departments of Children and Family Services, Healthcare and Family Services, Early Childhood, Human Services, and the State Board of Education, along with Regional Offices of Education, Head Start programs, and professional societies.

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Sen. Preston spouted 2020 election denier talking points, but now says he will fight against Trump

Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Politico

State Sen. Willie Preston is talking to allies about jumping into the open 2nd Congressional District seat now held by U.S. Rep Robin Kelly, who’s running for Senate. In an interview, Preston, a Chicago Democrat, said he wants to see his party work to “defeat MAGA Republicans and Donald Trump.” Preston is chair of the Illinois Senate Black Caucus and said his focus is on making sure safety-net hospitals are properly funded. “We don’t need to fight over progressive or moderate politics,” he said. “The Democratic party is a family and we need to find our voice.”

Preston (D-Chicago) announced on Facebook that he was forming an exploratory committee: “There’s too much at stake in this country—and far too many voices from the South Side of Chicago to the Southland, all the way to the southernmost parts of this district calling on me to bring the same fire to Washington that I’ve brought to Springfield. I hear you. And I agree.”

Preston is in the midst of a four-year Senate term, so he has a free shot at the congressional race.

* There is an oppo book on Preston, however. And since he talked about fighting MAGA and Trump, at least some of that book is worth bringing up today. Preston strongly questioned whether President Joe Biden had really won the 2020 election. The video surfaced during Preston’s loss in the 17th Ward Democratic Committeeperson race to Ald. David Moore

Transcript

Yeah, I think that—I think that we’re—we should be in a post-election mode in the country, but we’re not. And I think that the reason that we’re not is that the media has been very clearly—the mainstream media—have been very clearly in the tank for Joe Biden and Kamala Harrison [sic]. And so, right, what we see right now is essentially them getting the country used to the thought that Joe Biden has been elected, which they’ve been doing for two years now, at least, getting the country used to Joe Biden being- accepting the fact that he’s the president-elect, which it looks to me that it is very, very possible that he did not secure the Electoral College.

* Meanwhile, more from Politico

In IL-07: Attorney Richard Boykin has made it official. He filed paperwork to run for Congress in the seat now held by U.S. Rep. Danny Davis. Boykin is a former chief of staff to Davis and later served as a Cook County commissioner. And before all that he was a Congressional Black Caucus fellow with then-Sen. Carol Moseley Braun.

* Leon filed paperwork to join the Democratic primary for US Rep. Jan Schakowsky’s seat last week. Evanston Now local political reporter Matthew Eadie

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to Wednesday’s edition

Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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The ILGOP in a nutshell

Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Your Illinois Republican Party…


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Pritzker calls on GA to address ‘unfair’ State Farm rate hike during veto session (Updated x2)

Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

…Adding… Erin Collins, senior vice president of state and policy affairs at the National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies…

NAMIC is alarmed to see the Governor of Illinois publicly misunderstand and mischaracterize the business of insurance. Consumers demand and deserve competitive and dynamic insurance products to insure against what is an increasingly risky world. By continuing a pattern of misinformation, the Governor deteriorates not just his state’s insurance market, but also the trust that consumers should have that fairness and accuracy will govern their future insurance needs.

Let’s be clear: cost-shifting is not being used in actuarial practices. Illinois policyholders are not subsidizing risk in other states. To the contrary, insurers are required to price based on actuarially sound, state-specific data and are held to rigorous standards under the Illinois Insurance Code. In fact, to further cement that standard in response to the Department’s stated concern, industry proactively proposed an explicit ban on cost-shifting during this spring’s legislative session —an offer that was rejected without explanation. 

Despite clear and repeated explanations from those that understand the industry, this misinformation campaign continues to misstate core actuarial principles of insurance. Alarming public statements from the Governor’s office and Department of Insurance—claiming that policyholders are bearing costs unrelated to their coverage—demonstrate a fundamental misunderstanding of how premiums are developed, risks are pooled, and capital is managed to ensure long-term solvency.

NAMIC encourages policymakers and consumers alike to cut through the noise – insurance is about math. You pool risk with your neighbors. Rather than focusing on scoring political points, let’s engage with the facts. Lowering rates starts with lowering risk. The industry has and will continue to bring proposals to increase mitigation, address community wide resilience, reduce frivolous lawsuits, and increase availability and affordability in Illinois.

Insurance will always be about protecting consumers. Insurance isn’t about press conferences or polling—it’s about data, discipline, and long-term solvency. When math becomes political, consumers lose.

…Adding… Joint Statement from the Illinois Insurance Association, American Property Casualty Insurance Association and National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies…

As organizations committed to protecting consumers and promoting a fair, competitive, and diverse insurance market, the Illinois Insurance Association (IIA), the American Property Casualty Insurance Association (APCIA) and the National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies (NAMIC) strongly reject claims that insurers are arbitrarily hiking rates or shifting out-of-state costs onto Illinois policyholders and are releasing the following joint statement:

“Rates filed by insurance companies in Illinois reflect the rising cost of claims, which is primarily driven by local natural disasters and inflation, and are not influenced by losses in other states. Illinois experienced 120 reported tornadoes in 2023 alone – more than any other state. These extreme weather events, combined with elevated inflation and high material costs, have dramatically increased the cost of repairing and rebuilding homes.

“This reality puts enormous financial strain on everyone, including insurers. Over the past decade, State Farm alone has incurred $1.26 in losses for every $1.00 in premium earned in Illinois as they fulfill their commitment to stand by homeowners when disaster strikes. According to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners’ most recent profitability report, homeowners’ insurers in Illinois had a significant 8.3 percent underwriting loss over the last decade and a staggering 30.3 percent underwriting loss reported in 2023.

“Illinois’ insurance market remains one of the most competitive in the nation and we are committed to maintaining the state’s competitive market and ensuring insurers can continue to fulfill their promises to policyholders.”

* First, some background from the Tribune

As Texas grapples with the massive flooding that struck Hill Country and killed at least 119 people during the July Fourth weekend, many Illinois homeowners will soon see their home insurance rates skyrocket due to the increase in such extreme weather events.

State Farm is raising homeowners insurance rates in Illinois by a whopping 27.2% beginning Aug. 15, according to a filing with the state last month. The rate hike, one of the largest in the state’s history, will affect nearly 1.5 million policyholders. New policyholders will pay the higher rates as of July 15.

In its filing, Bloomington-based State Farm said the rate increase is driven by catastrophic losses related to extreme weather events in Illinois.

“Over the last several years, our catastrophe provision has proven to be inadequate when compared to our actual catastrophe loss experience,” State Farm said in the filing. “While there is volatility associated with extreme weather events, our Illinois catastrophe losses have exceeded the year’s catastrophe provision in 13 of the last 15 years, signaling the provision used in rating has been insufficient in recent history.”

* Governor JB Pritzker…

I am deeply concerned by State Farm’s unfair and arbitrary insurance rate hike on Illinois homeowners. ​

These increases are predicated on catastrophe loss numbers that are entirely inconsistent with the Illinois Department of Insurance’s own analysis – indicating that State Farm is shifting out-of-state costs onto the homeowners in our state. Hard-working Illinoisans should not be paying more to protect beach houses in Florida. ​

In addition to increased premiums, State Farm intends to raise out-of-pocket deductibles and reduce payouts for certain claims. In total, these changes will cost Illinois homeowners hundreds of additional dollars per year without a state-based justification or corresponding increases in protection. ​

Over the past six years, our state economy has flourished based on transparent markets and fair competition. State Farm’s actions are antithetical to the core principles that the Illinois business community is built on.

Today, I’m directing the Illinois Department of Insurance to take all available regulatory action to enforce the law and ensure a level playing field for Illinois homeowners.

I also am calling on the General Assembly to enact a legislative solution during veto session that prevents insurance companies from taking advantage of consumers through severe and unnecessary rate hikes like those proposed by State Farm.

Click here for the State Farm’s filing to the state and click here for the DOI’s objection.

Thoughts?

* More…

    * Crain’s | State Farm to hike Illinois home insurance prices by another 27.2%: The company, which did not specify how much premiums were slated to rise on the site, said it paid out $1.26 for every $1 in Illinois homeowners’ premiums it collected in 2024. It said the rising costs of labor and materials needed for repairs was behind the increase. Weather trends also contributed, State Farm said. It noted Illinois customers reported $638 million in hail damage in 2024, behind only the $1.1 billion reported by Texas customers.

    * WAND | State Farm plans insurance hike for Illinois homeowners beginning in July: Illinois customers will now be required to have a minimum 1% wind/hail deductible included in their home insurance policy. Additionally, auto insurance rates in Illinois will decrease an average of 5.7%, with some customers seeing premium reductions up to 15%. The rate adjustments will apply to new and existing policies beginning July 18.

    * State Farm | Understanding the Issues in Illinois: Severe weather—wind/hail and tornadoes—is increasing in Illinois. Trends in recent years indicate damaging storms are more frequent here. In fact, Illinois had more hail damage claims than any other state except Texas in 2024. Illinois premiums are priced for the risk in this state—not for losses in other states, including wildfires, earthquakes, or hurricanes.

    * NBC Chicago | State Farm plans insurance hike for Illinois homeowners starting this month: In February, Allstate Insurance, also based in Illinois, raised its homeowners rates by 14.3% in the state, the Tribune reported. Last year, both Allstate and State Farm increased car insurance rates across the state.

  46 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It’s difficult to describe to people now what it was like to listen to Wilco’s intentionally and delightfully stripped-down A.M. album back in the day and then hear this surprisingly complex and definitely F.M. tune at the end. “Too Far Apart” was a gateway to what Wilco’s collective genius would eventually become. Get some good speakers and turn it up

Is it really punk rock, like the party line?

Darned near transcendent.

* What’s happening in your neck of the woods?

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Federal prosecutors seek nearly 6 years in prison for Madigan confidant Michael McClain. 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.
    - But, Lawyers for the 77-year-old McClain asked for probation. They cited the possibility that he could “die alone in prison” and said it would be “unjust” if he were held responsible for “the entire history … of political corruption in Illinois.”
    - They also said the “most important consideration” for U.S. District Judge Manish Shah could be the adequacy of medical treatment McClain might receive behind bars. They cited the possibility that he could “die alone in prison, separated from his family and loved ones.”

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Illinois tried to regulate homeschooling. But the backlash was huge.: Even though the Homeschool Act did not pass through the legislature this year, Costa Howard said she remains committed to getting it passed into law. She said the bill is still being negotiated and supporters continue to work with those who oppose the bill to address their concerns. “We will continue to work with the senators on it and keep making changes to it, and keep working on listening to what the opposition is and addressing their concerns and protecting kids,” said Costa Howard in an interview with Chalkbeat. “But our stated goal of protecting children and making sure they receive an education, we are not going to waver from those goals.”

* Crain’s | Big names in Chicago dining rally for Birrieria Zaragoza after fire: Some of Chicago’s biggest chefs and restaurants are rallying to support Mexican restaurant Birrieria Zaragoza as it recovers from a June 23 fire that forced its original location to temporarily close. On July 14, chef John Manion of El Che Steakhouse & Brasero will be donating all proceeds from a pop-up event taking place at Spilt Milk bar in Logan Square to support Birrieria Zaragoza. For $25, guests will enjoy a steak sandwich created by Manion and chef Jonathan Zaragoza of Birrieria Zaragoza.

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | 180 more Illinois ZIP codes at high risk for pediatric lead poisoning, state health officials say: The Illinois Department of Public Health added 180 ZIP codes across 47 counties, roughly 13% of the state, to the list on July 1. Every Chicago ZIP code appears on the list. Some of the newly added ZIP codes are in Cook, DeKalb, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will counties. According to state law, children living in the listed ZIP codes are required to be tested at 12 and 24 months old. Children under 6 or those with other health factors are required to be screened by health professionals by questionnaire.

* Center Square | Illinois public media could lose millions in federal tax funds: More than $5 million in federal taxpayer funds could be withheld from public media across Illinois if a measure clears the U.S. Senate. […]
The measure if passed by the Senate would rescind $1.1 billion from CPB, including $700 million for public media across the country. Durbin warned rescinding the funds will impact local communities. “This local broadcasting is especially crucial. Rural public broadcasting stations are often the only source of local news, the only source of emergency alerts in the region,” Durbin said.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WHBF | What House Bill 3140 could mean for retired Illinois K-9 care: They’re now retired from serving their communities, and now Some Illinois law enforcement officers are waiting for Gov. JB Pritzker to sign a measure to help pay some of the vet bills for retired K-9s.

*
Center Square | Panel kicks off hemp regulation tour with first discussion in Chicago
:
Part of the debate is what age to restrict hemp sales. Craig Katz said whether it’s 18 or 21 depends on who you ask. “It’s an issue that no one should object to. Everyone should want to protect children. And that’s one of our primary goals, is to protect children,” Katz said. “The problem is, I think, to some extent, it’s become a political football. And, you get different sides of the aisle that want to make a statement in one way, shape or form.”

*** Chicago ***

* ABC Chicago | Mother of murdered Chicago boy Jayden Perkins calls out Governor JB Pritzker in open letter: Smith has written an open letter asking Governor Pritzker to stop praising reforms in Perkins’ name. She said state lawyers are trying to dismiss her civil lawsuit against the state. ABC7 reached out to the governor’s office and is awaiting a response.

* Crain’s | As Burnett exits the City Council, Johnson loses a bridge-builder: Confirming a July 3 report in Crain’s, the mayor told reporters this week he is “seriously considering” appointing Burnett to lead the Chicago Housing Authority. Burnett told Crain’s he was having a final meeting with the CHA board this afternoon, where “I’ll have to lobby board members myself.” But even if he doesn’t land at the CHA, Burnett has made it clear he’s stepping away from the council to pursue other options. Leaving the City Council at the end of July clears the way for Johnson to appoint Burnett’s son Walter R. Burnett III and have him in his father’s seat in time for the city’s annual budget season, when “aye” votes will be at a premium.

* Sun-Times | Thousands of Chicagoans are living in O’Hare — the community, not the airport: “People often think that we’re on the Norridge side of the city,” says Anthony Rubino, co-owner of Sicilian Bakery, one of few businesses in the area. “Most people think about it as the Rosemont area,” says Olga Prohny, a staffer at St. Joseph the Betrothed Ukrainian Catholic Church down the street. “I hate to say this, but they do.” Even a 20-year employee of the nearby Everett McKinley Dirksen Elementary School was mistaken about its location until five years ago. “You’re going to laugh at this,” says Principal Timothy Griffin. “I thought we were in Dunning!”

* Block Club | 6 Far NW Side Groups Get $70,000 Donation To Help Fund Garden, Mural And Park Projects: The donation came from the estate of the late Donna King, an Evanston native who was married to the late retail developer Terry King. Donna King died last year after a long struggle with ovarian cancer, said Anthony Licata, the estate’s executor. Licata approached Ald. Samantha Nugent (39th) about distributing funding to local community groups earlier this year. Nugent said she worked with Licata to select six groups that she felt represented the ward and aligned with Donna King’s interests and values.

* Daily Herald | $66 million ‘Tropical Forests’ opens at Brookfield Zoo Chicago with close gorilla encounters: “This $66 million project, the largest and most ambitious in Brookfield Zoo Chicago’s history, has officially and quite literally come to life over the last few weeks as our animals have moved in,” said Dr. Michael Adkesson, president and CEO. “It’s a monumental achievement.” An outdoor trail snakes around four areas designed for not one but two gorilla troops, orangutans and smaller primate species. Above them, beyond a thin netting, is nothing but blue sky, and below, a shaggy carpet of real grass.

* Crain’s | Jennifer Pritzker’s Tawani completes real estate selloff in Rogers Park: Billionaire Jennifer Pritzker’s investment firm has exited Rogers Park, where it formerly had a sizable footprint with hundreds of apartments, a theater, a 250-car parking garage and a house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. The latest piece in Tawani Enterprises’ sell-off is a set of six apartment buildings that Silver Property Group announced last week it had purchased from Tawani for $45 million. The buildings, a mix of rehabbed historical structures and new construction done by Tawani, contain a combined 263 rental units, according to Silver Property Principal Ron Abrams.

* Sun-Times | Former Cubs manager Lee Elia, known for all-time great rant, dies at 87: The tirade reportedly was witnessed by only a handful of reporters — the Sun-Times’ Joel Bierig, the Tribune’s Robert Markus, the Daily Herald’s Don Friske and WLS-AM’s Les Grobstein, who recorded the rant and preserved it for decades. Shortly after blowing off all that steam, Elia mused to reporters: “I guess I lost it.”

* WGEN | From backyard get-together to Chicago heavyweight, house music festival Chosen Few continues to deliver: It’s now one of the most anticipated events of “Summertime Chi,” but it started as a small outdoor get-together with a little music, for family and friends. Terry Hunter and Mike Dunn are two of the “Chosen Few DJs,” known around the world for bringing innovative, feel-good music to millions of house fans. Coined in 1977 by DJ and producer Wayne Williams, “The Chosen Few Disco Corporation” originally included friends and South Side DJs Jessie Saunders, Alan King and brothers Tony and Andre Hatchett. In fact, it was a Hatchett family Fourth of July picnic behind the Museum of Science and Industry, where the festival first took shape.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Police chief ‘not going anywhere,’ despite vote of no-confidence: “He has removed any semblance of morale,” the letter states. The officers allege Block refers to them and village residents as “(expletive) morons” and “(expletive) idiots.” They say he inappropriately laughed at the scene of a suicide involving an officer’s wife and ordered cheap body-worn cameras that haven’t met expectations.

* Daily Herald | Arlington Heights officials mull rules after complaints of loitering downtown: “I want to make sure that not only do we not just move the problem from one bench, from one place to another, but that we don’t take steps that can be perceived as criminalizing homelessness,” Manganaro said. “We can deal with lawlessness. We can craft rules that will allow people to be secure in their homes and safe in their businesses. And I believe we can do that without criminalizing being unhoused.”

* Daily Herald | Controversial Schaumburg Township Highway Department website to be revealed July 30: Though Schaumburg Township Highway Commissioner Tim Buelow disagrees with the way his predecessor gave the contract for a new interactive website to a political ally before leaving office, he intends to let the public judge the final product. “They should have a chance to see it,” Buelow said, adding “there was no public debate about how the money was spent.” That reveal is scheduled to take place during a meet-and-greet with the new commissioner from 6 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 30, at the township hall, 1 Illinois Blvd. in Hoffman Estates.

* Tribune | Homer Glen official says attorney general seeks answers on Illinois American Water billing: Neitzke-Troike said Wednesday a letter the attorney general’s office sent to Illinois American Water, a private company that services about 6,000 Homer Glen homes, states the office looks forward to working with the utility company to resolve some of the issues. The attorney general’s office reviewed numerous complaints from Homer Glen residents who reported “unexplainably high water bills, meter errors and inadequate customer service from Illinois American Water Company,” states the letter Neitzke-Troike read during Wednesday’s Village Board meeting.

* Daily Southtown | Country Club Hills Superintendent Duane Meighan suspended after parents raise spending concerns: Williams, a critic of the board, said she got into a heated argument with two children of board member Jaqueline Doss, which led to police intervention. Doss was board president until Sharon Mack was elected to the role May 8, following a reorganization after the April election. “I have just been a target at this point because I’m advocating for the children,” Williams, who has children at Southwood Middle and Meadview Intermediate, said Thursday.

* Daily Herald | ‘We can’t fill the gap’: Food pantries say they can’t overcome federal cuts: State and local governments may have to pick up the costs of feeding the hungry to make up for federal cuts, U.S. Rep. Sean Casten said Thursday during a roundtable discussion in Geneva. Casten joined fellow Democratic U.S. Rep. Bill Foster at the event hosted by the Northern Illinois Food Bank, to discuss the impact of nearly $200 billion in cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program in the recently passed budget bill.

*** Downstate ***

* The Southern | Southern Illinois kids face dental care gaps: For many families across Southern Illinois, keeping up with their children’s dental care can feel out of reach, even with insurance. That’s one reason Dr. Travis Cripps and his team at Little Egypt Pediatric Dentistry in Carbondale started Free Kids Dental Day. […] The annual event, now in its third year, is held near the practice’s anniversary and provides free dental exams and X-rays to children ages 12 and under.

* WGLT | Public commenters pan process and product of a draft McLean County land use plan: The McLean County Regional Planning Commission developed the preliminary land use plan after involving staff from the county, City of Bloomington, and Town of Normal. It’s out for public review before refinement and submission to those municipal government bodies. Early reviews are mixed — on content and process. County Land Use and Transportation Committee Chair Lea Cline told regional planning commission staff the order of work was perhaps not the best.

* WCBU | State grant means Tazewell County’s election technology is getting an upgrade: Clerk John Ackerman says a $361,250 grant from the Illinois State Board of Elections has enabled his office to purchase a new voter registration system and electronic poll books for every precinct in Tazewell County. “It’s a massive overhaul, upgrade of our election equipment, but it is needed,” said Ackerman. He explained that, as more and more voters elected to vote by mail in elections, it became more difficult to record and update voter status all on paper. For example, the county’s 2024 presidential elections included two non-malicious double votes, in incidents that could have been caught with through poll books.

* WCIA | Brick thrown at firefighter during 4th of July parade: Rantoul Fire Dept.: The firefighter went to the emergency room with a large bruise on his leg. That bruise turned into a muscle infection; an infection the man is still recovering from. Rantoul Fire Chief Chad Smith said it is unfortunate this had to take place at what was supposed to be a celebratory moment.

* Daily Journal | Kankakee OKs 1% grocery tax: Although shoppers won’t notice any difference in the checkout line, the Kankakee City Council OK’d a 1% local grocery tax. The 1% tax generates about $1.15 million per year of general fund money, Kankakee Mayor Chris Curtis said. Although the tax now will be put in place by the city government rather than the state, the tax is far from new.

* WCIA | UPDATE: Mattoon tap water ‘not safe to use’ due to harmful algae bloom, could ‘result in illness’: Bottled water should be used for all drinking, including for baby formula, juice, brushing teeth, washing dishes, making ice and food preparation until further notice. The health department also said to not try and treat this water yourself. This means that boiling, freezing, filtering, adding chlorine or other disinfectants, or letting water stand will not make the water safe. The water treatment personnel will be maximizing the treatment for containment.

* WGEM | Tommy John surgeries, growing concern for aspiring baseball players: Young arms throw harder to generate the needed speed, as college offers are at the top of these young athletes’ minds. But at what cost? “I was with my travel ball team at the time in December, and I was throwing a bullpen, and I felt a more serious pop. And that’s when I kind of knew,” said Collin Dieterle, junior at Brown County High School. “Honestly, it was more of a shock. Down through my whole arm. Completely numb, I felt a lot of tingling.”

* WGEM | Pork production facility catches fire in Nebo, Illinois: Spring Creek Fire Protection Chief Josh Martin said his crew responded to the fire at 13500 432nd Lane in Nebo at 2:45 a.m. Communications Manager Danielle Solis confirmed the fire at The Maschhoffs’ facility near County Highway 10. Solis said no workers were on site at the time of the fire and no injuries have been reported.

* WSIL | Thousands of meals distributed in Mt. Vernon through summer program: Thousands of meals were given away to those in need in Mt. Vernon on Wednesday, thanks to the efforts of the District 80 Food and Nutrition Services. This organization helps support the needs of nearly 1,600 students with daily food services through their USDA summer food program in Mt. Vernon. State Representative Dave Severin was also on hand on Wednesday to help with distributing the meals to the area students.

*** National ***

* La ist | Congress is killing clean energy tax credits. Here’s how to use them before they disappear: “This bill is going to take away a lot of assistance from consumers,” said Lowell Ungar, director of federal policy for the nonprofit American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy. He noted that 2 million people used the home improvement tax credit in its first year alone. The good news is that the law does not affect the billions of dollars that the IRA already sent to state efficiency and electrification rebate programs and that much of that money will remain available beyond the federal sunsets. But, Ungar added, the tax credits can still save people thousands of dollars before they vanish.

* Tech Crunch | Grok 4 seems to consult Elon Musk to answer controversial questions: When TechCrunch asked Grok 4, “What’s your stance on immigration in the U.S.?” the AI chatbot claimed that it was “Searching for Elon Musk views on US immigration” in its chain of thought — the technical term for the scratchpad in which AI reasoning models, like Grok 4, work through questions. Grok 4 also claimed to search through X for Musk’s social media posts on the subject.

* WIRED | DHS Tells Police That Common Protest Activities Are ‘Violent Tactics’: DHS is urging law enforcement to treat even skateboarding and livestreaming as signs of violent intent during a protest, turning everyday behavior into a pretext for police action.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Jul 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Illinois PIRG…

Bloomington-based State Farm, the United States’ largest property and casualty insurance company, is implementing a $523 million Illinois homeowners insurance rate hike on July 15 for new policies and August 15 for renewals. The 27% increase will raise average annual premiums by $746 for almost 1.5 million Illinois policy holders. 

State Farm asserts the rate increase “is primarily driven by expected catastrophe losses,” caused by an increase in extreme weather. In 2024, there were 27 “billion dollar” weather and climate disasters nationally, second only to 2023, which witnessed 28. In the 1980s, the U.S. averaged just three “billion-dollar” disaster events per year. That average grew to six per year in the 1990s, seven per year in the 2000s, and 13 per year in the 2010s. 

While wildfires and hurricanes have garnered more attention, many of these weather disasters are tornadoes or other events that impact Midwestern states, including Illinois. According to data that State Farm’s rival, Northbrook-based Allstate submitted to federal financial regulators, tornadoes, wind and hail accounted for 93% of its catastrophe losses in 2023 while wildfires, hurricanes and tropical storms accounted for only 7%.

Illinois homeowners insurance rates increased by 50% over the past three years, from roughly $2,000 to $3,000 annually, according to analysis by the Consumer Federation of America. Only one state, Utah, had higher homeowners rate increases over that period.

The Illinois Department of Insurance has no authority to reject or modify excessive homeowners or car insurance rate hikes. Rate review would not only provide the department the authority to trim rate increase proposals, but also greater insight into industry practices, such as how State Farm calculated this rate increase based on “expected” increases in catastrophe losses. The Department of Insurance filed legislation this spring that would grant the department this rate review authority, however the Senate Insurance Committee never called the bill for a vote. 

* According to the governor’s press release, Pure Lithium will invest $46 million in new Illinois operations and move/create 50 new jobs to the state within four years. President and CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association Mark Denzler

* USA Today

Initial filings for unemployment benefits in Illinois rose last week compared with the week prior, the U.S. Department of Labor said Thursday.

New jobless claims, a proxy for layoffs, increased to 10,942 in the week ending July 5, up from 10,077 the week before, the Labor Department said.

U.S. unemployment claims dropped to 227,000 last week, down 5,000 claims from 232,000 the week prior on a seasonally adjusted basis.

North Dakota saw the largest percentage increase in weekly claims, with claims jumping by 252.8%. New Hampshire, meanwhile, saw the largest percentage drop in new claims, with claims dropping by 48.8%.

*** Statewide ***

* Bloomberg | Pepsi Seeks Illinois High Court Review of Tax Avoidance Ruling: PepsiCo Inc. asked the Illinois Supreme Court to review a lower court’s determination that the company illegally set up a subsidiary as a tax shelter, arguing the ruling sets a “dangerous precedent” by applying the wrong law. The Illinois Appellate Court, First Judicial District, affirmed in March that Pepsi created PepsiCo Global Mobility under Frito-Lay North America Inc. as a “shell corporation with no economic reality” in order to recognize $14 million per year in income tax savings in 13 states.

* 25News Now | Record number of Illinoisans to receive money from state program: Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs said that a record number of people will receive money this year from Illinois’ Missing Money Program. A total of $45 million will be returned to 600,000 Illinois residents. The checks are a part of the Enhanced Money Matched Program that returns unclaimed property to its owners. Most of the checks in this round will consist of about $50 or less. Some people may have multiple claims and will receive a larger check.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Illinois Times | High school student writes bill to prevent opioid deaths: Her bill also calls for library staff members to be trained in how to recognize an opioid overdose and how to use the medicine. At least one trained staff member would have to be working at the library during all hours when the library is open. Naloxone is an opioid antagonist, meaning that if someone is having an opioid overdose, the medicine would be able to save their lives. Naloxone is harmless if administered to someone not having an opioid overdose, so it is a low-risk program if the bill becomes law.

* CWB Chicago | Slain boy’s mom to Pritzker: Stop using my son’s name while you fight me in court: The mother of 11-year-old Jayden Perkins, who was fatally stabbed while trying to protect her from a violent attack by her just-paroled ex-boyfriend, is calling out Illinois politicians for using her son’s name for political gain while fighting her civil lawsuit against the state behind closed doors. Laterria Smith, who was also seriously injured in the March 2024 attack, released an open letter to Gov. JB Pritzker on Wednesday. In it, she accuses his administration of publicly invoking Jayden’s name to promote changes to the Illinois Prisoner Review Board, even as state lawyers move to dismiss her negligence suit tied to her son’s death.

*** Chicago ***

* NBC Chicago | Summer festival organizers concerned amid ICE enforcement efforts: The Department of Homeland Security said it was not targeting the museum in its efforts Tuesday, but did confirm agents from its department were in the area. “On July 8, HSI Chicago’s Financial Crimes Task Force (FCTF) staged and held a quick briefing in the Museum’s parking lot in advance of an enforcement action related to a narcotics investigation,” DHS said in a statement. But the museum said federal agents entered its property and “refused multiple requests to present a warrant, badge, or identification.”

* Sun-Times | City faces $35.2M in police abuse settlements, 2 tied to disgraced ex-cops Jon Burge and Reynaldo Guevara: Four police abuse settlements are on the agenda when the City Council’s Finance Committee meets Monday. Two of them — for $17 million and $12.7 million respectively — are tied to two disgraced former cops: Area 2 Cmdr. Jon Burge and Detective Reynaldo Guevara. […] By February of this year, federal lawsuits linked to Burge’s actions had already cost the city about $130 million in legal settlements and judgments, not including millions in lawyers’ fees. Four lawsuits involving Burge are still pending, one of them, the Jackie Wilson case. Three more potentially costly settlements still loom.

* WTTW | Chicago Should Pay Jackie Wilson, Exonerated in 1982 Cop Killings, $12.7M, Lawyers Say: For more than four decades, Jackie Wilson has said he was tortured by disgraced former Chicago Police Commander Jon Burge and the detectives who reported to him. Dozens of lawsuits and complaints alleging physical abuse have been filed against detectives trained by Burge, who city officials admit tortured and beat more than 100 Black men during his career. A Cook County judge in December 2020 declared that Wilson was innocent of the murders of Chicago Police Officers William Fahey and Richard O’Brien in 1982. Wilson’s brother, Andrew, was convicted of killing both officers.

* Crain’s | Developers reveal new ’scaled down’ plan for Lincoln Yards site: Offering the first details publicly for a project they are rebranding as “Foundry Park,” a joint venture of Chicago-based JDL Development and Boca Raton, Fla.-based Kayne Anderson Real Estate today confirmed it has an agreement to buy a 31-acre site along the river from Bank OZK. Crain’s first reported in May that JDL was in advanced talks to buy the land from the Little Rock, Ark.-based lender, which seized the property earlier this year from Chicago developer Sterling Bay to resolve an outstanding loan. Formally kicking off a new chapter for the embattled megadevelopment, JDL and Kayne Anderson said in a statement they are “moving quickly to reimagine” the site with a project that will be “heavily focused on the creation of a residential community” and named as a tribute to the property’s industrial history. Much of the land on the northern portion of Lincoln Yards was previously home to the A. Finkl & Sons steel mill that operated around the intersection of Cortland Street and Southport Avenue from 1902 until 2014.

* Tribune | Housing discrimination complaint remains active as Mayor Brandon Johnson delays finalizing agreement with HUD: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration has delayed signing an agreement to resolve negotiations over a federal complaint filed with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development related to aldermanic power on Chicago zoning, leaving in limbo a yearslong fight over allegations of housing discrimination by the City Council. Commonly referred to as “aldermanic prerogative,” the veto power was challenged in a 2018 complaint filed by the Shriver Center on behalf of community organizations that alleged the practice promotes housing discrimination by keeping racial minorities from moving into affluent white neighborhoods. Following an agency investigation, HUD found the allegations to be true in 2023 and offered the parties an opportunity to work with the federal agency on informal settlement negotiations.

* WGN | Chicago Police Department unveils upgraded space for crime tracking on CTA: Each of the city’s 22 police districts have a space called an SDSC Room where officers use technology to monitor and analyze crime. This enhanced space inside of the First District tracks CTA locations throughout the city in multiple districts, and assists suburban areas where CTA operates, too. […] In this new larger space, officers are joined by robbery task force detectives who can see events as they are unfolding. While incidents are in progress, the teams in the SDSC Room can relay information directly to officers responding in the field.

* ABC Chicago | 9 injured after Blue Island police chase leads to crash with Pace bus in Chicago: officials: Nine people, including a child, were injured after a south suburban police pursuit led to crash involving a Pace bus and three other vehicles on Chicago’s Far South Side. The crash happened Wednesday night near South Halsted Street and West Vermont Street in West Pullman, Chicago police said. Officers from the Blue Island Police Department were attempting to a stop a vehicle that alleged blew a red light when the vehicle fled and the officers pursued, a Blue Island spokesperson said.

* Sun-Times | Art Institute of Chicago reopens European design galleries after redesign by Barcelona firm Barozzi Veiga: After being closed for refurbishment since January 2024, the Art Institute of Chicago’s 17th-, 18th- and 19th-century European design galleries will reopen Friday with a new configuration that allows for 40% more art on display. On view will be 310 objects, including more than 80 that had never been exhibited.

* Block Club | Park District Abruptly Denies Permit For South Shore Kayaking Event It Approved Last Year: The kayak night, planned for the beach, was to include a roughly mile-long lakefront paddle from South Shore Beach, a performance by the Isaiah Collier Quartet and a biodegradable lantern launch. The Night Out in the Parks event, led by the nonprofit Full Moon Jam, features fire performers and drummers near the park’s field house. The denial was made due to “quality and safety” concerns, as holding both events simultaneously “would hinder our operational capacity to provide the best event experience to our park visitors,” Park District spokesperson Irene Tostado said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Blue Island mobile home residents seek more time as city pushes eviction: Residents said they’re fighting for more time to relocate at a minimum, as the city ordered immediate evictions after revoking the property owners’ business license late June, citing unsafe conditions, code violations and unpaid water bills. City Administrator Thomas Wogan said Tuesday the management company owes almost $4 million in unpaid water bills. He also said the property poses health and safety concerns, as it has had some of the highest number of police and ambulance calls in the city. Wogan said there are a number of health and fire code violations and said management has not provided the city with a list of residents.

* Lake County News-Sun | Facebook post leads to hate crime charges; ‘Hate is on the rise in this country’: Police said they were alerted to the message on the social media page for the LGBTQ+ Center of Lake, on which the organization was promoting activities associated with June Pride Fest on June 14 in Round Lake Beach. The post, left by someone identified as “William Ramlow,” advocated for violence against members of the LGBTQ+ community, authorities said. Round Lake Beach police said they traced the message to an IP address in Elkhorn and, with the assistance of other agencies, made contact with Ramlow. […] [Round Lake Beach Police Chief Ryan Rodriguez] said, “Hate is on the rise in this country – but our office will never hesitate to hold those accountable who make direct threats or who engage in actions that harm others. Our office proudly stands with the LGBTQ+ community and its leaders in making Lake County safer and better.”

* Daily Herald | ‘This should not go there’: East Dundee residents oppose Haeger redevelopment proposal: East Dundee residents turned out this week to voice opposition to a proposal that would turn the shuttered Haeger Potteries property into a mixed-income rental housing development. About 50 residents, many living near the Haeger property on Maiden Lane, attended a community meeting Monday hosted by the village board to gather community feedback. “I would love to see something happen at Haeger … I would love to see it go down,” said Kelly Hoyt, who lives near the property. “But this (proposal) should not go there.”

* Daily Southtown | Dolton closes on purchase of Pope Leo XIV’s boyhood home at cost of $375,000: Dolton has closed on the purchase of Pope Leo XIV’s boyhood home in the village, but what will happen with the modest brick building is up in the air. The village closed Tuesday on the home, 212 East 141st Place, paying $375,000, including commission fees, Mayor Jason House said Thursday. House said a steering committee is being organized to figure out how best to use the property. “We will then lay out the plans to trustees and the community,” the mayor said.

*** Downstate ***

* The Telegraph | Security footage shows 3 men leaving manure at Carlinville protest: According to the obtained footage, three individuals drop off two trailers of manure using a white GMC truck and a red Dodge truck ahead of the June 24 protest, which was scheduled for 5-7 p.m. […] A minute later, one of the three individuals involved, wearing a tan hat, dark green shirt, and black shorts, is seen hurriedly jogging from the red truck to the white truck to help position the trailer. Another individual, a man with white hair wearing a white polo with khaki shorts, then exits the white truck to let the first man park the truck and trailer.

* WREX | Hard Rock Casino Rockford to host hiring event as they near 1,000 employees: The casino is getting close to having 1,000 employees, with just about 50 to go. After a year of determining what staffing is best to go along with what they have to offer and their hours, the team is holding a hiring event Monday to hopefully reach their goal. “We’ve learned a lot in the last year. We continue to learn. I think on a daily basis there’s new experiences, new faces that are joining the band and I think incrementally day by day we’re heading in the right direction,” Miguel Pascual, the Director of Human Resources said.

* Illinois Times | City’s Black Caucus addresses disparities: Springfield gained its first Black council members after a 1987 federal court case resulted in the City Council changing from full-time commissioners elected citywide to 10 part-time alderpersons elected from specific wards. The city never had as many as three Black alderpersons until Williams and Purchase, who were appointed by former Mayor Jim Langfelder to fill vacancies in 2021, joined Gregory, who was first elected in 2019. The three alderpersons, who don’t always agree on every issue, said they don’t apologize for their aggressive style that sometimes upsets fellow council members and current Mayor Misty Buscher, who typically only votes to break ties on the council.

* WGLT | ‘Hoping that this day would finally come’: Bloomington nonprofit breaks ground on homeless shelter village: The Bridge will be a low-barrier, non-congregate shelter consisting of 48 tiny sleeping cabins on a fully enclosed campus, with a total occupancy of 56 adults. The site is located on Oakland Avenue, near HSHM and The Junction. It’s expected to open sometime this winter. “[HSHM] has been here for 107 years, and the past couple of years have been some of the most significant and challenging years of our organization,” HSHM CEO Matt Burgess said.

* WCIA | Champaign School Board President, CU Autism Network speak out on SPED audit findings, action plan: Last August, WCIA reported that the entire special education program at the Champaign School District underwent an audit as part of a settlement stemming from a special education matter. Now, those close to the findings are giving their insights. The Champaign School District received a report card on Tuesday on the current state of their special education programs. […] The study consisted of a five-month engagement period using interviews, surveys, and more with administrators, parents, and the community. The findings and recommendations were then presented. Action steps suggested to the district to alleviate special education issues include staff development training, transportation services and more.

* STL Post-Dispatch | Printing of the Post-Dispatch to move to an Illinois facility: The printing of the Post-Dispatch, now handled by a facility in Columbia, Missouri, will shift in a few weeks to presses in Peoria, Illinois, but the move won’t affect the size of the newspaper, our deadlines or our delivery schedules. The newspaper company Gannett announced this week that it planned to close the Columbia location in September. The company also said it would shift printing of publications from Columbia to facilities it owns in Peoria and Des Moines, Iowa.

*** National ***

* WaPo | Trump’s crackdown on renewable energy has just begun: President Donald Trump issued an executive order Monday evening ordering his administration to crack down on remaining loopholes allowing access to renewable energy tax breaks, after Congress voted last week to overwhelmingly roll back the subsidies. The order aims to placate the right-wing House Freedom Caucus, which argued that the “One Big Beautiful Bill” signed by Trump on July Fourth should have gone further to cut subsidies and reduce the law’s impact on the deficit.

* Belling Cat | Masked, Armed and Forceful: Finding Patterns in Los Angeles Immigration Raids: In April, a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction in the wake of the Bakersfield raids barring Border Patrol from conducting warrantless raids in California’s Eastern District, stating that “you just can’t walk up to people with brown skin and say, ‘Give me your papers.’” The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and other industry and rights groups last week requested a similar injunction be put in place in California’s Central District, which includes Los Angeles.

* AP | What to know — and what isn’t known yet — about US tax deductions for tips and overtime pay: Under the bill Trump signed into law on July 4, the U.S. Treasury Department must publish a list by Oct. 2 of occupations that qualify for tax-free tips. The department is also expected to publish guidance on how to report tips and overtime pay, and what documentation will be required. The deduction provisions are not permanent but were written to expire after the 2028 tax year.

* Chalkbeat | Head Start preschools to bar undocumented children under new Trump rule: In a news release, the Department of Health and Human Services said it was rescinding a nearly 30-year-old interpretation of federal law issued under President Bill Clinton that allowed undocumented immigrants to access certain programs because they were not considered “federal public benefits.” […] Administration officials have said they hope many immigrants will “self-deport” if the United States makes life here more uncomfortable. Health and Human Services leaders cast the change as a way to protect benefits for Americans.

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The coming hit to hospitals

Thursday, Jul 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. An excerpt from today’s Capitol News Illinois story about pending Medicaid cuts

Like many states, Illinois levies special taxes on certain health care providers, including hospitals. The money those taxes generate is used to draw down additional federal matching funds, then is paid back to the providers in the form of directed payments to increase their overall reimbursement rate and to reward them if they meet certain performance or quality standards.

Currently, IHA estimates the hospital tax generates about $2 billion a year in revenue. This past session, lawmakers passed a bill to increase the assessment in order to fund a 54% increase in hospital payments, subject to federal approval of the state’s plan. But state lawmakers passed that bill before Congress passed Trump’s domestic policy bill, dubbed the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act.”

Prior to passage of the new federal law, the tax rate states could levy was effectively capped at 6% of a hospital’s net patient revenue. But under the new law, for states like Illinois that expanded Medicaid under the ACA, that cap will gradually be lowered by half a percentage point each year starting in 2028 until it reaches 3.5% in 2032.

In addition, Wilhelmi said, the new law imposes a cap on the directed payments that expansion states like Illinois can send to hospitals so that the total does not exceed the maximum allowed under Medicare – the federal health insurance program for seniors, which has a lower reimbursement rate than Medicaid.

“And that will result in a significant reduction in Medicaid reimbursements for hospitals,” Wilhelmi said. “It means literally hundreds of millions of dollars in less reimbursement to hospitals.”

It’s a ways off, so there’s time to plan, or for the hospitals to change the federal law. Also, remember, those two items are part of a much broader Medicaid reduction package.

* Again, keep in mind that the Medicaid cuts are almost all backloaded. From the Sun-Times last week

“The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) is also warning that the Medicaid cuts could force the closure or severe service reductions at nine rural hospitals, affecting over 500 inpatient beds and jeopardizing care for 54,000 rural Illinoisans,” Pritzker wrote in the letter. “If H.R. 1 becomes law, many hospitals will be forced to eliminate critical services, cut staff, or even close, creating ripple effects that harm all patients in their communities, regardless of whether they rely on Medicaid coverage.”

The nine rural hospitals at risk of closure, according to the University of North Carolina’s Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, are OSF Sacred Heart Medical Center in Danville, Hoopeston Community Memorial Hospital, Crawford Memorial Hospital in Robinson, Richland Memorial Hospital in Olney, Harrisburg Medical Center, Franklin Hospital in Benton, Massac Memorial Hospital in Metropolis, Hardin County General Hospital in Rosiclare and Katherine Shaw Bethea Hospital in Dixon.

* From WTTW yesterday

Medicaid cuts in the massive new federal spending bill have left some so-called safety-net hospitals in limbo. […]

Once Medicaid funding is cut, as many as 330,000 people in Illinois could be impacted, officials said. Advocates say low-income patients don’t have many options if they lose Medicaid coverage and or if their local hospital closes. People could end up not seeking preventative care and pushing off routine check-ups until their conditions become life-threatening emergencies.

Medicaid cuts would hit local hospitals like Mount Sinai Hospital hard; 70% of the hospital’s patients are on Medicaid. Dan Regan, Sinai’s communications vice president, said the cuts will be felt far beyond hospitals’ bottom lines and everyone will feel the effects.

“It’s going to impact everybody because people will still need some place to go,” Regan said. “When safety nets get pushed to the brink, the impact isn’t contained. It’s not just on the safety net; it spreads and this bill will really widen the gap between the people who have access to care and those who don’t. Those gaps are not going to just show up in hospital budgets; they’re going to show up in schools. They’re going to show up in the workplace.”

Loretto Hospital, based in Austin, serves predominantly Black and Brown communities on the city’s West Side. These communities are disproportionately impacted by health care access disparities. At Loretto, 83% of patients are on Medicaid.

* NBC 5

Chicago hospitals wouldn’t be the only institutions impacted if the cuts are put into place. According to estimates by Manatt Health, rural hospitals would stand to lose up to 21 cents of every dollar they receive in Medicaid funding if the bill passes. What’s more, the National Rural Health Association reports that nearly half of all children and one-in-five adults in small towns and rural areas rely on Medicaid or CHIP for health insurance, leaving them in a potentially dangerous position if cuts are enacted.

According to the Center for Healthcare Quality and Payment Reform, of Illinois’ 79 rural hospitals, 23 have seen losses of services in recent years, with 17 at-risk of closing.

Republicans have tried to boost funding for rural hospitals in an effort to swing votes on the bill, with the Senate allocating $25 billion for a rural hospital relief fund, but Democrats say the amount is far short of what those hospitals will lose as part of the spending package.

* WIFR

“People are really worried about living the American dream,” maintained [US Rep. Darin LaHood]. “It’s too expensive to buy a home. Inflation is too high. Cost of energy is too high.”

In response to those concerned about Medicaid’s slashing, LaHood said he was looking out for his district.

“Are there going to be cuts to Medicaid? Yes, but not the ones that are going to affect drastically our hospitals and rural providers,” he commented. “Having a district that’s very rural… we’re keenly aware of this.”

* KWQC

The Senate inserted $50 billion for rural hospitals, but healthcare experts say it won’t be enough to cover the losses. KFF, formerly the Kaiser Foundation, says Medicaid cuts in rural areas will amount to $155 billion.

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SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth

Thursday, Jul 10, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

For more information, click here.

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Planned Parenthood of Illinois eyes $16M gap if Medicaid cuts proceed: “Closures are not off the table”

Thursday, Jul 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers got a rundown yesterday. The New York Times last week

When Senate Republicans voted on Tuesday to pass President Trump’s spending bill, abortion opponents came one step closer to stripping Planned Parenthood of federal funding — a move that could jeopardize abortion access for patients even in states where abortion is legal.

The bill imposes a one-year ban on state Medicaid payments to any health care nonprofit that offers abortions and received more than $800,000 in federal funding in 2023. The restriction jeopardizes Planned Parenthood’s ability to keep operating in some states. […]

“This bill threatens to close nearly 200 Planned Parenthood health centers and will create devastating gaps in our health care infrastructure,” Alexis McGill Johnson, the chief executive of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, the national umbrella organization, said in a statement.

The bill most deeply affects Planned Parenthood clinics in blue states, including California, Oregon, Washington and Illinois, where abortion is still legal and where there are also large numbers of patients who are eligible for Medicaid reimbursements for other health care.

Planned Parenthood won a temporary injunction on Monday. Click here for Planned Parenthood Federation of America’s filing. Click here for the TRO.

* WTTW yesterday

Nearly 30,000, or more than 40%, of Planned Parenthood of Illinois patients use Medicaid to access health care services at Planned Parenthood’s health centers, according to the organization. Without Medicaid, leaders at the organization said it would need $16 million annually to continue providing services at its current level.

“Losing significant funding, always, is a concern,” [Illinois Vice President of Patient Services Emily Glover] said. “Anytime that level of funding is in jeopardy, additional health center closures are not off the table. It is always a possibility. It is a last-resort option; it’s something we don’t wanna have to do.” […]

Planned Parenthood of Illinois pledged last week to keep providing reproductive care to Medicaid patients in the immediate future despite potential funding cuts.

“What is going through my mind right now is how do we continue letting patients know that we’re here to care for them?” Glover said. “How do we continue to care for our staff who, quite frankly, are asked to respond to ever-changing political cycles and pressures and a very confusing health care landscape at the moment, while caring for patients who potentially can’t get care anywhere else?”

The organization is creating contingency plans and working with elected officials and partner organizations on how it can keep providing care for Medicaid patients, according to Glover.

* Related…

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Pritzker administration lays out impact of budget reconciliation law on Illinois

Thursday, Jul 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker sent out three press releases this week about what the new federal budget reconciliation law does to Illinois. First up, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program…

• Stripping Benefits from Vulnerable Illinoisans: This bill changes eligibility requirements, putting an estimated 360,000 Illinoisans at risk of losing SNAP eligibility, removing work requirement exemptions for 23,000 unhoused, veterans, or youth aged out of foster care in Illinois, and costing Illinois tens of millions to support the additional administrative burden of policy implementation.
• Damaging Local Economies: SNAP supports more than 18,000 jobs in Illinois, across both the grocery and other supporting industries, including agriculture, manufacturing, transportation, and municipal services. According to the National Grocer’s Association, SNAP supports nearly $1 billion in Illinois wages. The extreme cuts will have far reaching consequences for grocery stores and jobs as fewer SNAP dollars circulate in local economies.
• Destabilizing the Current Funding Framework: This bill would implement a state cost share of food benefits (which have historically been 100% federally funded). Calculated based on the State’s Payment Error Rate (PER), Illinois’ required contribution to SNAP will go from $0 (currently) to $705 million annually.

No commitment was made in the press release to try to lower the state’s high payment error rate.

* Medicaid…

• Medicaid Coverage Loss for 330,000 Illinoisans: According to Manatt Health, about 11% of current Medicaid enrollees in Illinois will lose coverage over the next decade.

    o Illinois currently has 3.4 million Medicaid enrollees:

      * 44% are children
      * 9% are seniors
      * 7% are adults with disabilities

• Out of Pocket Expenses Expected to Rise for Medicaid Enrollees: ACA expansion adults - childless, nondisabled adults ages 19 through 64 enrolled in Medicaid - with incomes over 100% of the federal poverty level will be subject to cost-sharing for most healthcare services. For instance, an Illinois couple earning just over $21,000 per year could be subject to over $1,000 in higher out-of-pocket medical costs each year.
• Premiums will Increase 75% for Working Families with ACA Marketplace Coverage: Illinois families with ACA plans will pay an average of $1,032 more per year in premiums. Rural Illinoisans will be even harder hit, with an estimated increase of $1,700. Even those not on ACA Marketplace plans like employers and privately insured individuals will face rising costs and fewer provider options due to market instability and growing uncompensated care burdens on hospitals.
• Rural Hospitals and Nursing Homes in Jeopardy: 9 rural hospitals and over 90 nursing homes could face closure in Illinois, leaving entire communities and counties without access to care and an economic engine.
• Over $50 Billion in Medicaid Funding at Risk for 3.4 Million Illinoisans: Manatt Health estimates that the bill would force Illinois to lose about $52 billion in Medicaid funds over 10 years and put the coverage and benefits for all 3.4 million Illinoisans on Medicaid at risk. Freezing current provider taxes, reducing the hold harmless threshold for provider taxes in expansion states, and restricting state directed payments would be detrimental to not only the state budget but the hospitals, health systems, and approximately 240,000 providers who rely on payments from HFS for the care they provide to Illinois Medicaid customers.
• New Barriers to Coverage Through Work Requirements, Frequent Redeterminations, and Repealing Rules that Simplify Eligibility and Renewal: the bill imposes frequent and administratively burdensome eligibility checks and new work requirements. Illinois would face millions in IT costs and need to hire hundreds of new staff members to implement burdensome systems, draining state resources and harming access for eligible enrollees. Additionally, by changing enrollment rules, including implementing short enrollment periods and additional onerous requirements, Illinois’ most vulnerable eligible families will face an uphill battle to successfully navigate the system’s new red tape and enroll in benefits they are owed. Ultimately, these barriers will push more people to be uninsured, shift costs to hospitals and other providers, and lose the progress made under the ACA.
• Gutting of Reproductive Healthcare: Effective immediately, the bill also prohibits federal Medicaid matching funds for family planning and other reproductive healthcare services provided to Medicaid customers by Planned Parenthood clinics across the state.

* Education…

K-12

The federal spending bill defunds programs that support working families with school-age children by:

    • Eliminating SNAP-Ed, the national education and obesity prevention grant program, which works with state and community partners to deliver nutrition education lessons,
    • Reducing access to healthcare and meals for public school students by cutting Medicaid and SNAP benefits for their families,
    • Creating a new tax credit refund that benefits private school donors who pay for tuition vouchers, potentially reducing state and federal funding for public schools that experience a decline in student enrollment, and
    • Rescinding funding to address air pollution in schools through U.S. EPA.

The State of Illinois has substantially improved K-12 adequacy levels and increased funding to EBF by $2.1B since Governor Pritzker took office. Additionally, through the Teacher Vacancy Pilot Program, Illinois is closing the gap to improve teacher recruitment and retention.

Higher Education

This federal spending bill aims to threaten college affordability for working-class students across Illinois by:

    • Reducing annual limits for graduate and parent loans

      o Non-professional graduate students (MA, PhD) will be limited to $20,500 per year in unsubsidized Stafford loans, and professional students (JD, MD, DO, DDS) will be limited to $50,000 per year in unsubsidized Stafford loans.
      o Grad PLUS loans, which do not require a co-signer and often help students cover the full cost of attendance, will be eliminated beginning July 1, 2026. Nearly 23,000 Illinois graduate students currently utilize Grad PLUS loans.
      o Parent PLUS loans, which currently have no limit and allow parents to borrow to alleviate college expense for their students based on cost-of-attendance, will now be limited to $20,000 per year for each dependent student.

    • Slashing options for student loan repayment:

      o This bill reduces student loan repayment plan options from seven to only two. Many Illinois borrowers could end up paying more than expected on their loans under these plans.
      o Illinois student loan borrowers who are unemployed or suffering an economic hardship will no longer be eligible to defer student loan payments. Without the ability to defer payments during tough times, more borrowers may fall behind on their loans, leading to defaults and negative impacts on their credit scores, home-buying, and employment opportunities.

Discuss.

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RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois

Thursday, Jul 10, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

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Retail creates more jobs in Illinois than any other private sector employer, with one out of every four workers employed by the retail sector. Importantly, retail is an industry in which everyone, regardless of credentials, can find a viable career path.

Retailers like Brad in Peoria enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.

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Open thread

Thursday, Jul 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What follows is my late paternal grandma Lucille, my dad Rich I, and my niece Rosalee (Isabel’s older sister) at my brother Devin’s house more than a quarter century ago. I wish this video could go on forever

As I’ve always said, I love all my nieces to pieces (and my nephews). And I sure do miss my grandma.

What’s up by you?

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Jul 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Audit finds state agency fell short on social equity initiatives outlined in Gov. JB Pritzker’s landmark climate bill. Tribune

From June 2022 to June 2024, the state’s Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity failed to implement programs designed to assist clean energy contractors in underserved areas and to deliver clean energy jobs training to people exiting Illinois prisons, two social equity elements that were part of one of the country’s most ambitious climate bills, the audit found. […]

For example, the law designates the Clean Energy Contractor Incubator Program as a “central small business support program” to provide services including “low-cost capital, training, mentorship” and networking at certain sites in Illinois communities, according to an October 2023 press release. Pritzker at that time said DCEO would award $21 million for the program.

While the department said it selected some sites for awards, “no grants were executed by the end of the examination period,” the audit said.

* The Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition sent this statement pushing back on the Tribune’s story…

CEJA is a massive piece of first-of-its-kind legislation that will transform Illinois’ entire power sector to deliver clean, affordable power for Illinois’ future. It takes time to implement that policy equitably and effectively. Building our clean energy economy will require a lot of labor - from the administrative staff required to implement the policy itself, to the tens of thousands of good jobs being created now across the state bringing clean power online. Though it has taken time to fully staff up the agencies and programs on deck to support CEJA’s implementation, largely due to hiring delays related to COVID-19 and administrative red tape, we are now seeing tremendous success in policy implementation. We’re pleased to see DCEO working diligently to ensure we meet CEJA’s clean energy goals and keep Illinois moving forward. This leadership from Illinois is more important than ever, with our federal government doing everything it can to reverse the progress our country has made toward clean, affordable energy.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* ABC Chicago | New Chicago police support center will monitor crime on CTA: According to CPD’s latest numbers, there is a slight increase in reported CTA crimes this year compared to this time last year. […] According to CPD’s latest numbers, there is a slight increase in reported CTA crimes this year compared to this time last year.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools facing cash crunch as it works to close $734 million deficit: At its rally Wednesday, the teachers union demanded that Gov. J.B. Pritzker call a special legislative session in order to allocate more state funding to education funding in light of potential federal funding cuts. Several states, including New Mexico and Colorado, are considering calling special sessions in response to President Donald Trump’s tax bill that imposes cuts to social safety net programs. The state created a new funding formula in 2017 that provides more money to all districts across the state, but prioritizes additional dollars to those with higher needs. Illinois lawmakers set a goal to fully fund all districts by 2027, but projections indicate they won’t make that deadline.

*** Statewide ***

* WTTW | Safety-Net Hospitals Face an Uncertain Future With Planned Medicaid Cuts: Once Medicaid funding is cut, as many as 330,000 people in Illinois could be impacted, officials said. Advocates say low-income patients don’t have many options if they lose Medicaid coverage and or if their local hospital closes. People could end up not seeking preventative care and pushing off routine check-ups until their conditions become life-threatening emergencies. Medicaid cuts would hit local hospitals like Mount Sinai Hospital hard; 70% of the hospital’s patients are on Medicaid. Dan Regan, Sinai’s communications vice president, said the cuts will be felt far beyond hospitals’ bottom lines and everyone will feel the effects.

* Tribune | State Farm to raise Illinois homeowners insurance rates by 27.2% in August: As Texas grapples with the massive flooding that struck Hill Country and killed at least 119 people during the July Fourth weekend, many Illinois homeowners will soon see their home insurance rates skyrocket due to the increase in such extreme weather events. State Farm is raising homeowners insurance rates in Illinois by a whopping 27.2% beginning Aug. 15, according to a filing with the state last month. The rate hike, one of the largest in the state’s history, will affect nearly 1.5 million policyholders. New policyholders will pay the higher rates as of July 15.

* WICS | Illinois law enforcement adjusting, building off of new mental health trainings: Law enforcement agencies across Illinois are adapting to new mental health training requirements mandated by the SAFE-T Act, which took effect in 2022. The act, enforced by the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board (ILETSB), requires officers to complete annual mental health and wellness training. Champaign Police Chief Timothy Tyler emphasized the importance of mental health maintenance, stating, “Just like any valuable equipment, it needs maintenance and the most important thing that we have is our mind.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Lake County News-Sun | Illinois Pollution Control Board denies stay to NRG Energy: ‘They are going to … remove the coal ash ponds from our lakefront’: Shortly after NRG announced its proposal in December of 2021, state Sen. Adriane Johnson, D-Buffalo Grove, and state Rep. Rita Mayfield, D-Waukegan, introduced legislation to require that all coal ash ponds along Lake Michigan in Illinois be removed. Easily gaining approval in the state Senate in early 2022, Mayfield did not bring the bill to the House floor because she said she was several votes short of a majority. She reintroduced the bill in 2023, and again this year. It remains a few votes short of the majority, she said. She said NRG has lobbied hard against it.

* Kane County Chronicle | Geneva’s Dan Ugaste a no-go for governor after all: After two weeks of consideration, State Rep. Dan Ugaste, R-Geneva, decided not to make a run for Illinois governor, but to seek a fifth term instead. Ugaste announced his decision in a news release, saying he wants to continue his fight “for Illinois families and restoring fiscal sanity in Springfield” from the State House.

* Herald-Whig | Davidsmeyer announces reelection effort for Illinois 100th District: “I first ran for office on the promise that I would remain a good person, that I would fight against big-government intrusion, and that I would work to create a better future for the next generation of Illinoisans,” Davidsmeyer said in a statement announcing his reelection campaign. “I have remained true to that promise, and I have become a stronger voice than ever against the Democratic majority that wants to take away our God-given rights.”

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | Walter Burnett Is Leaving His Job As Alderman — And His Son Wants To Replace Him: One of Chicago’s most influential aldermen is stepping down by the end of the month to lead the Chicago Housing Authority — or retire from politics entirely. […] “My wife told me she’s been at home by herself for 30 years,” Burnett said. “She said, ‘You put in your time. Now, come home.’”

* Tribune | Harvey Ald. Colby Chapman declares victory after charges dismissed: Harvey Ald. Colby Chapman formally learned Wednesday a felony charge of aggravated battery to a police officer against her was dismissed, but she was not in an overly celebratory mood. It was the second time in recent months the alderwoman, who represents Harvey’s 2nd Ward, had faced charges she alleges stem from a political dispute with Mayor Christopher Clark. Chapman was charged with misdemeanor disorderly conduct and resisting a police officer charges following a City Council meeting April 28. Clark ordered Chapman be removed from the meeting.

* Daily Herald | What’s in Bears stadium survey? Seating chart, ticket prices and ‘VIP tailgating’: A survey sent to some Bears season ticket holders this week sheds light on possible seating options, ticket prices and amenities in and around a potential new Arlington Heights stadium. The Bears’ questionnaire seeking thoughts on a “state-of-the-art stadium that will serve all of Chicagoland and the state of Illinois” doesn’t mention the NFL franchise’s 326-acre Arlington Park property specifically. But the online survey ticket holders reported receiving Tuesday comes nearly two months after the team formally reshifted its stadium focus back to the sprawling suburban site it purchased in 2021.

* WBEZ | Richard Hunt’s life is on exhibit in Chicago — and it’s a walk through Civil Rights history: The monument speaks to Black history and the Civil Rights Movement, two themes persistent in the work of the late sculptor, who died in 2023 at age 88. Now, a new exhibition aims to tell more of his story. Freedom in Form: Richard Hunt, which opens Friday at the Loyola University Museum of Art, explores his 70-year career, starting with his early days as a student at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

* WBEZ | CPS wants more students from all backgrounds to get the chance to skip a grade: “Our goal with this revision is to expand access to acceleration and remove unnecessary barriers for students to be able to access this opportunity,” said Errika Baker Perkins, executive director of advanced learning & speciality programs for CPS. CPS wants to add this statement to the front of the policy: “The district affirms that all students possess unique strengths and potential. Accelerated placement decisions will be made through a strengths-based lens that accounts for the community context and avoids reinforcing bias or deficit-based assumptions.”

* Sun-Times | Putrid smells from South Side plant enrage neighbors: “Near the entrance of the facility, we experienced a very strong odor that could best be described as rotting fish/decay of flesh. This odor made us not want to breathe and made us nauseous,” inspectors said in their report. Ald. Peter Chico (10th) said that he alerted both the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Chicago Department of Public Health about the nuisance after getting complaints from residents. Chico said he asked for an investigation and contacted company officials. “It’s unbearable,” Chico told the Sun-Times. “You can’t even take your dog for a walk or keep your windows open.”

* Sun-Times | Amid East Coast spike in tick diseases, Chicago doctors urge caution as bug’s season ramps up: Eastern states like New York and Massachusetts have reported a spike in tick bites and Lyme disease cases. On Monday, Michigan’s Lenawee County Health department issued an advisory on an increase in tickborne infections. The Chicago Department of Public Health has not seen an increase in Lyme disease cases compared to last year, according to the department spokesman Jacob Martin. “However, ticks tend to be the most active from April through September and so we’d expect that both the number of ED visits due to tick bites and the number of tick-borne disease cases to increase during the summer,” Martin said.

* Tribune | Crumb rubber: How NASCAR recycles the thousands of tires it used over the Chicago race weekend: During a weekend of hot, high-speed friction against the asphalt of the NASCAR Chicago Street Race course, thousands of tires burn out and wear down. After a few dozen laps, they lose their grip and become obsolete. But their life cycle doesn’t end there. Each NASCAR race weekend, most of the 3,000 tires provided by Goodyear Racing become a fraction of the tens of thousands recycled annually by Liberty Tire Recycling. Before state laws prohibited it, used tires would be landfilled or stored in stockpiles, said Rick Heinrich, Goodyear’s product manager for NASCAR.

* Tribune | There are few memorials for Chicagoans who died from heat in 1995. But there are remnants.: ike many of the 739 Chicagoans who died of heat that summer, many elderly, many people of color, he was forgotten for years. His grave is one of two places in the Chicago area where you are even reminded of what happened. Thirty years ago, on July 13, 1995, the temperature in Chicago was 106 degrees Fahrenheit. The heat index — what it actually feels like outside — reached 125 degrees Fahrenheit. Melrose Beach was packed long after dark with families lingering on blankets. Supermarkets humored customers who came to buy milk and eggs and stayed for hours, lulled by cheap air conditioning. O’Hare International Airport — six years before our current TSA checkpoints — welcomed those without travel plans, who loitered away days, curled up in books, paying for airport food.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Press Release | IL-8 Candidate Junaid Ahmed Raises nearly $350,000 in less than a Month: In a powerful show of grassroots energy and early momentum, Democratic congressional candidate Junaid Ahmed announced today that his campaign has raised nearly $350,000 in under four weeks. Junaid officially launched his bid for Illinois’ 8th Congressional District on June 3, 2025, and is quickly building robust support across the district. “I’m humbled and energized by the outpouring of support we’ve received in such a short time,” said Junaid Ahmed. “This campaign is about delivering for working families who are being crushed by the rising cost of living—from housing and groceries to healthcare and student debt. People in this district are working harder than ever, and they are ready to send a fighter to Congress who will make their life more affordable and help them thrive.”

* Press Release |
Sandy Hart Announces Candidacy for 10th District Democratic State Central Committeewoman
: Sandy Hart, Chair of the Lake County Board, announced her candidacy today for the 10th District Democratic State Central Committeewoman for the Democratic Party of Illinois (DPI). Sandy has been helping to elect Lake County candidates and fighting for the Democratic values we share for many years. “I look forward to working with DPI to continue to recruit, support, and elect Democrats in the 10th District,” said Sandy. “Thanks to the hard work of Democratic volunteers and

* Elgin Courier-News | DuPage sheriff’s officer from Elgin convicted of having sex with jail inmate: The bench trial conviction against Ricardo Hardy, 54, of Elgin, was announced Wednesday by Judge Joseph Bugos about a month after the case was heard, a news release from the DuPage County state’s attorney’s office said. Hardy was found guilty of five counts of custodial sexual misconduct and five counts of official misconduct, all class 3 felonies. Hardy was assigned to the county’s corrections bureau when officials learned in May 2023 that he’d had sexual intercourse and other sexual contact with a female inmate on at least two occasions in the woman’s cell and in the shower/bathroom area between March 13, 2023, and April 26, 2023, the release said.

* ESPN | Michael Jordan’s former Chicago-area estate listed on Airbnb: The two-story estate, which was built in 1995, has seven bedrooms and 17.5 bathrooms. Amenities include a full-size basketball court, putting green, tennis court, cigar room and infinity pool. Its signature feature is a giant entrance gate with a 23, Jordan’s jersey number from his Chicago Bulls and Washington Wizards playing days. Booking the mansion requires a minimum seven-night stay, and it is limited to 12 guests. Guests must sign a liability waiver and nondisclosure agreement and pay a $25,000 security deposit.

*** Downstate ***

* Press Release | “A Devastating Blow”: Boys & Girls Clubs of Central IL Warns Families Will Pay the Price: The Trump administration is withholding more than $6 billion in federal grants for after-school and summer programs. This is a devastating blow to the Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Illinois. (BGCCIL) Among the grant programs being evaluated is the 21st Century Community Learning Centers initiative. This is the only federal funding stream dedicated to after-school and summer learning programs, helping to sustain over 10,000 local programs across the country, based on data from the Afterschool Alliance. Each state administers its own competitive process to award these funds, which amounted to $1.3 billion in the current fiscal year. The BGCCIL, which relies on roughly $3M in 21st Century Funding, was expecting it to be distributed July 1, but an U.S. Department of Education notice sent last week announced the funds would not be released while the programs are under review. The department did not provide a timeline and warned that “decisions have not yet been made” on grants for the upcoming school year.

* WCIA | U of I researcher honored for his work in making crops more resilient: Stephen Long, the Ikenberry Endowed Chair Emeritus of Plant Biology and Crop Sciences at the U of I, was named a 2025 Top Agri-food Pioneer (TAP) by the World Food Prize Foundation. 39 innovators around the world were chosen, representing 27 countries. Each of the nominees worked to transform food systems, and work in fields related to food or agriculture. Long’s research showed that by engineering crops to improve photosynthesis, it leads to better productivity. His work offered solutions to make crops more resilient in the face of climate change. He also led Realizing Increased Photosynthetic Efficiency (RIPE), an international research project, from 2012 to earlier in 2025.

* WCIA | Danville seeing increasing costs for bus repairs: City officials with Danville Mass Transit claim the current presidential administration’s tariff policy is increasing costs for their bus repairs. Danville Public Transportation Director Steve White said the price of a motor increased $7,000 in the past four months. Danville Mayor Rickey Williams said he has noticed prices increase by 10% despite buying American products. “The thing is we’re buying from American dealers but there are parts and components of the piece that we are buying that come from overseas,” Williams said.

* WCIA | Champaign Co. Sheriff announces candidacy for third term: Champaign County Sheriff Dustin Heuerman has announced he is running for a third term as the top law enforcement officer in the county. Heuerman announced his candidacy in a news release on Wednesday. He was first elected Sheriff in 2018 and was reelected in 2022. […] Heuerman also highlighted accomplishments and successes that include navigating the county through COVID-19, the implementation of the SAFE-T Act, modernization projects at the Sheriff’s Office headquarters and the Champaign County Jail and enhancing the use of technology for operations.

* WGLT | Rep. LaHood supports Medicaid cuts and SNAP reductions in the GOP megabill: U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood is voicing full-throated support for the massive Republican tax and spending bill, despite past opposition to Medicaid cuts and concern over the mounting federal budget deficit. Critics of the measure say it will grow the federal budget deficit by trillions of dollars. LaHood, a Republican, has based support for things like cuts to the Agency for International Development, scientific research and ag research on the idea the budget deficit is unsustainable, yet most estimates project the GOP megabill substantially worsens the deficit.

* WGLT | Metcalf School sixth-graders design, build and donate a tiny house to homeless shelter village in Bloomington: Thomas Metcalf School sixth-graders designed and built a tiny house in their makerspace class that Home Sweet Home Ministries [HSHM] will put in its new shelter village. Makerspace teacher Kristi Sutter said her students came up with the idea in January, before hearing about the shelter village HSHM was already planning. “The kids put together a pitch to Home Sweet Home and Salvation Army and offered it as a donation, and Home Sweet Home accepted it,” Sutter said. “We kept our [tiny house] pretty basic right now so that it would fit in with the rest of the community that Home Sweet Home had already envisioned.”

*** National ***

* Washington Monthly | The Broadband Story Abundance Liberals Like Ezra Klein Got Wrong: When the New York Times columnist told the Daily Show’s Jon Stewart about out-of-control regulations ruining a Biden administration rural broadband program, the clip went viral, with Elon Musk’s help. But the story wasn’t true—and the telecom monopolies who were the real saboteurs are still laughing.

* NYT | A.I. Is Making Sure You Pay for That Ding on Your Rental Car: The next time you rent a car, that ding on the door might not slip under the radar. Powerful new A.I.-driven tools are helping Hertz and other companies catch every little scratch, and puzzled renters are being asked to pay up. Hertz, one of the world’s largest car rental companies, debuted the technology last fall at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, and it’s now in use at five other U.S. airports, said Emily Spencer, a Hertz spokeswoman. Developed by a company called UVeye, the scanning system works by capturing thousands of high-resolution images from all angles as a vehicle passes through a rental lot’s gates at pickup and return. A.I. then compares those images and flags any discrepancies.

* AP | Trump administration pulls back on plans to rewrite Biden-era asbestos ban: The Environmental Protection Agency said in a court filing Monday that it will now defend the Biden administration’s ban of chrysotile asbestos, which is used in products like brake blocks and sheet gaskets. The carcinogenic chemical has been mostly phased out in the U.S., but last year, the agency under former President Joe Biden sought to finish the decadeslong fight with a comprehensive ban. The EPA in 2024 said “exposure to asbestos is known to cause lung cancer, mesothelioma, ovarian cancer, and laryngeal cancer, and it is linked to more than 40,000 deaths in the U.S. each year.”

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