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Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Take care… Because you laughed,
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ABC Chicago…
…Adding… The Tribune’s Jake Sheridan…
…Adding… The Chicago City Council Latino Caucus…
* Rep. Eva-Dina Delgado…
* Attorney General Kwame Raoul…
* Press Release | Illinois Manufacturers Celebrate Manufacturing Month with Launch of “Makers on the Move” Bus Tour at The Will Group in Chicago: The Illinois Manufacturers’ Association (IMA) and the Illinois Manufacturing Excellence Center (IMEC) today launched the fourth annual “Makers on the Move” statewide bus tour, which will visit manufacturing facilities, educational institutions and community centers across Illinois to highlight the diverse, rewarding careers in manufacturing and offer an up-close look at today’s high-tech modern manufacturing. * WCIA | State of Illinois ‘unaffected’ by H5N1 bird flu in dairy cows, IDPH announces: The State of Illinois is now officially considered to be “unaffected” by the H5N1 strain of bird flu in dairy cattle, the Illinois Departments of Public Health and Agriculture announced on Friday. “Unaffected” is defined by the U.S. Department of Agriculture as “ongoing testing and surveillance activities demonstrate absence of disease in dairy cattle in the state.” This means that as of Friday morning, no dairy cows in the state are infected with the H5N1 strain. * Daily Herald | Transit fiscal cliff shrinks in 2026 but will grow in 2027: However, the revenue gap goes back up significantly in 2027, as all of the COVID-19 money will be used up, Dillard said. “State sales tax changes, relatively strong economic performance and cost-control efforts will produce a smaller cliff in 2026 than the $771 million projected in last year’s budget,” Communications Director Tina Fassett Smith said. Also, Metra, Pace and the CTA were asked to budget for a 10% fare increase in 2026, and the RTA allocated $74 million in discretionary funds to the CTA to delay cuts, she noted. * Crain’s | Johnson vows Chicago will fight to keep $2.1B in federal infrastructure grants: Johnson called the move “politically motivated” and said “South Siders have waited for more than 50 years for the Red Line Extension.” “Right when we are finally on the brink of moving forward, Trump just cut off the funding. From public safety to public education to public transit, this president is cutting the services that working people rely upon,” he said. * Sun-Times | ChiArts board not renewing contract with CPS citing ‘unsustainable’ deficit, sparking questions about future: In a message to families, ChiArts Board Executive Director Tina Boyer Brown and principal Néstor Corona said “increasing financial challenges” led the board to its “very difficult” decision, adding that rising operating costs have led to an “unsustainable” deficit. “This means the board will not manage the school after the end of this school year,” the message said. It assured parents that the decision will not affect the current school year. It said school leadership is “working hand in hand with CPS to secure a long-term solution that continues ChiArts’ unique conservatory model.” The school, which sits on the edge of Humboldt Park on Chicago’s West Side, enrolls about 550 students and opened in 2009. * Sun-Times | Cops accused of PPP fraud, domestic violence are the sons of two former Chicago police superintendents: Dana Hillard has been accused of defrauding the federal Paycheck Protection Program that was intended to keep businesses afloat during the pandemic, records show. Kendall Waller faces allegations of domestic battery, breaking into a home and stealing a car. Waller’s father remains a powerful figure within the police department, working as a civilian adviser to Supt. Larry Snelling. * Sun-Times | Damen Silos demolition is halted by Chicago city officials due to ‘excessive dust’: Ramirez said health officials told her that the stoppage is likely to only be temporary. Much of the demolition is already complete. The former grain silos, which have been idle for decades, and the more than 20 acres around the structures were bought by city contractor Michael Tadin Jr. and his family in 2022. * Sun-Times | Chicago’s ethnic grocery stores struggle to keep prices down and import goods: A 10-pack of the popular instant noodle brand Shin Ramyun is $10.99 at 88 Marketplace, an Asian supermarket in the Lower West Side near Chinatown. But the South Korean ramen brand’s prices could soon increase, as President Donald Trump’s trade war wages on. Jan Zhu, store manager at 88 Marketplace, said the recent 15% import tariffs on South Korean products will make it harder for the grocer to keep prices down. * AP | Protesters at ICE facility object to barricades, agents detain multiple people: Local law enforcement stepped up their own presence Friday, closing several streets around the facility and putting Illinois State Police officers wearing riot helmets and holding batons on patrol. The state police set up concrete barriers Thursday night to segregate protesters and designate spaces to demonstrate. * Daily Southtown | Orland Park new outreach coordinator resigns as Mayor Jim Dodge’s campaign treasurer: * Aurora Beacon-News | Kane County Board member, former North Aurora Village President Dale Berman dies at 91: “Dale was an incredibly special person,” current North Aurora Village President Mark Gaffino said in a news release on Thursday. “He gave his life to others and North Aurora has lost a truly beloved and valued member of our community. Dale’s love of the village was only surpassed by his love for his family.” Berman is survived by his wife of more than six decades, Mary, four daughters and many grandchildren, according to the county. * WJBD | Kaskaskia College sees enrollment growth again for fall: Vice President of Student Services Amy Zanton says enrollment and credit hours are up about three percent for the fall semester on top of a 5.2-percent increase for fiscal year 2025 that ended in June. “When we went into that COVID year, our credit hours before COVID really hit were sitting at roughly 68,000 credit hours per year,” Zanton said. “We closed out the end of this last fiscal year at just over 74,000 credit hours. We’re proud to be able to say that we’ve made our way back to those pre-pandemic numbers and going strong there.” * BND | Local U.S. attorney deals with government shutdown, partisan message on website: U.S. Attorney Steve Weinhoeft is not only dealing with a 35% staff reduction due to the federal government shutdown, but also questions about a blatantly partisan message across the top of his webpage. The message appears on U.S. attorney webpages across the country, including the one for the Southern District of Illinois. “Democrats have shut down the government,” it reads. “Department of Justice websites are not currently regularly updated.” * WAND | University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine hosting ‘Vet Med Comes to Life’ open house: There will be more than 40 exhibits and demos showcasing the science and caring behind veterinary medicine. There will also be interactive games and crafts for kids, live animals including horses, dogs, snakes, sheep, cows, and birds of prey from the Wildlife Medical Clinic. * Crain’s | Rivian plans EV door redesign to address safety concerns: Rivian plans to incorporate a manual release that’s more clearly visible and located near the electrically powered interior handles in the rear doors of its next-generation SUV, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private information. The new lower-cost model line known as R2 is slated for deliveries to begin in the first half of 2026. * AP | Lack of jobs data due to government shutdown muddies view of hiring and the US economy: The interruption in the data has occurred at a particularly uncertain time, when policymakers at the Federal Reserve and Wall Street investors would need more data on the economy, rather than less. Hiring has ground nearly to a halt, threatening to drag down the broader economy. Yet at the same time, consumers — particularly higher-income earners — are still spending and some businesses are ramping up investments in data centers developing artificial intelligence models. Whether that is enough to revive hiring remains to be seen. * Slate | MAGA’s Top “Voter Fraud” Watchdog Votes in a Swing State. He Doesn’t Live There: Posobiec has not been charged with any violation of voting laws, but both the Pennsylvania state attorney general’s office and the Montgomery County district attorney’s office were previously made aware of Posobiec’s possible residency in Maryland, a source with knowledge told us. A spokesperson for the county DA’s office said they do not comment on active investigations. A spokesperson for Attorney General Dave Sunday’s office said that the office does not discuss investigations or confirm their existence, but that, “generally speaking, our office has jurisdiction over the Pennsylvania Election Code.” * ProPublica | Trump Canceled 94 Million Pounds of Food Aid. Here’s What Never Arrived.: In the spring, the Trump administration abruptly cut $500 million in deliveries from a program that sends U.S.-produced meat, dairy, eggs and produce to food banks and other organizations across the country — about a quarter of the funding the program received in 2024. The items that were delivered through The Emergency Food Assistance Program were some of the healthiest, most expensive items that organizations distribute. […] ProPublica obtained records from the Department of Agriculture of each planned delivery in 2025, detailing the millions of pounds of food, down to the number of eggs, that never reached hungry people because of the administration’s cut.
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Pritzker defends using state troopers in Broadview (Updated x3)
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Yesterday…
* Today…
* Unified Command (ISP, CCSO and Broadview PD) update on Broadview protest arrests…
* Some videos…
* From a pal: “That feeling when you’ve lost Nomadic Warriors for Pritzker”… * Heh…
* From Gov. Pritzker…
Thoughts? …Adding… If the idea was to prevent clashes between ICE and others, it may be working in Broadview, but they appear to be a stubborn lot…
Video is here. …Adding… I’ve asked the governor’s office why these officers are masked, but have not heard back…
…Adding… The governor’s office responded…
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Roundup: Transit officials draw heat for claiming fiscal cliff reduced to $202 million in 2026; Trump freezes $2.1B for Red Line extension
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers know more. Crain’s…
* The Regional Transit Authority…
* House transit negotiator Rep. Kam Buckner…
* House transit negotiator Rep. Eva-Dina Delgado…
* Senate transit negotiator Sen. Ram Villivalam…
* Labor, transit and environmental advocates…
* Meanwhile, from the AP…
* More…
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It’s Time To Bring Safer Rides To Illinois
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Waymo is ready to bring safe, reliable, autonomous rides to Illinois – but we need your help! Waymo is designed to follow all traffic laws and obey speed limits, and the data shows Waymo’s autonomous vehicles are involved in five times fewer injury-causing collisions compared to humans (as of 6/2025, see waymo.com/safety). Let’s bring safer rides to Illinois. ![]() Waymo’s autonomous vehicles can improve access to transportation for Illinois residents with travel-limiting disabilities like vision impairment, to reach medical care, groceries, and social activities. Waymo’s all-electric autonomous vehicles also provide a more sustainable way for people to get around, preventing 315+ tons of carbon emissions with every 250K trips provided through our ride-hailing service.
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Appellate court denies Madigan bid to stay out of prison pending conviction appeal
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * That’s the day before veto session begins…
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Protect the 340B Program to Enhance Healthcare Services in Low-Income Communities
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Drugmaker requirements are making it hard for hospitals like Franciscan Health Olympia Fields to turn savings on drug costs into healthcare services for patients. The hospital joined the federal 340B program “to help serve the uninsured and under-insured community residents in Olympia Fields and Chicago Heights.” The poverty rates in both Chicago suburbs are higher than the 11.6% state average—nearly 13% in Olympia Fields and almost 25% in Chicago Heights. The hospital has put 340B savings toward healthcare services, including its:
• Medication to Bedside program that ensures medication access prior to discharge; and • Pharmacist-managed Anticoagulation Clinics and Pharmacotherapy Clinics that improve medication outcomes and reduce hospital readmissions. “The 340B program serves as a vital lifeline for safety-net providers to support critical health services in low-income or isolated rural communities, which are typically operated at a loss,” Franciscan Health said. Since 2020, drugmakers have blocked access to lifesaving medications acquired through the 340B program, making it harder for Illinois’ 100 participating hospitals to invest in healthcare services—and patients.
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Catching up with the federal candidates
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
NBC…
* In the 8th Congressional District…
* Politico…
Yesterday, 8th CD candidate Melissa Bean announced she had raised $540,000. * More…
* Journal & Topics | First Candidate To Challenge Schakowsky Persists In Crowded Field: Abughazaleh told the Journal & Topics that she wasn’t deterred by the large field, preferring to focus on the campaign. As candidates try to collect signatures to get on the ballot, she said that she is confident about her chances, and she says that she plans to hold more events and other outreach in the suburban parts of the district. […] Over the past few months, Democratic U.S. senators and representatives who tried to inspect facilities where immigrants are detained have been turned away. Abughazaleh said that, if elected, she would not be easily deterred. “I will inspect federal facilities, and I will keep coming back,” she said. “If I’m not allowed in the Broadview facility, I will be there to inspect them again.” * Press release | Citizen Action: Citizen Action/Illinois, the state’s largest public interest coalition, is launching a statewide series of six candidate forums with its first event on Monday, October 6. The inaugural Senate Candidate Forum will take place from 6:00 – 8:00 PM at Chicago State University (9501 S King Dr, Chicago, IL 60628). All Democratic candidates meeting viability thresholds of either 100 individual donations or $25,000 raised have been invited to participate. Candidates attending this Senate Forum include: Raja Krishnamoorthi, Robin Kelly, Juliana Stratton, Kevin Ryan, Christopher Swann, Adam Delgado, and Bryan Maxwell. These forums—co-hosted by more than two dozen leading advocacy organizations—will provide Illinois voters the opportunity to hear directly from Democratic candidates about the issues that matter most to working families, including healthcare access, economic justice, environmental protections, and more. […] This forum will be livestreamed on Citizen Action/Illinois’s Facebook page, with additional events scheduled across the Chicagoland area and suburban communities through November 18. Details and RSVP information can be found here.
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What Illinois Can Learn From Texas On Battery Energy Storage
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] As Illinois confronts skyrocketing electric bills, legislators are on the hunt for solutions that provide relief as quickly as possible. Battery energy storage is our best and most cost-effective solution. But last session— without evidence —opponents attempted to claim that battery energy storage wouldn’t work. Try telling that to Texas, where the rapid deployment of battery storage has already prevented blackouts and saved consumers billions. Called “Ground Zero for the US Battery Boom” by Bloomberg, Texas added enough storage in 2023 to power 3 million homes and drop grid emergency risk during peak hours from 16% to less than 1%. The result? Storage saved consumers an estimated $750 million in 2024. Texas has proven that storage is the quickest, cheapest, most reliable way to get consumers relief from skyrocketing, demand-induced price spikes. Storage is a nimble way to address growing populations, power-hungry data centers, and meet other electrification-related power needs. These are benefits Texas saw from storage even as the state reduced its gas generation capacity by 166 MW last year. Illinois lawmakers should follow Texas’s lead and pass the Clean and Reliable Grid Act this fall to deploy 6GW of energy storage by 2035. Click here for more information.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: President Donald Trump cancels $583 million in energy projects for Illinois, one of many blue states affected. Tribune…
- U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, an Illinois Democrat, said in a statement that the cuts aim to eliminate 33 awards in Illinois, totaling more than $673 million, but that $90 million of that amount had already been spent. That translates to a loss of approximately $583 million. -The money was slated for transportation electrification, solar energy, “green” buildings and a range of other energy initiatives, according to a document released by Duckworth’s office. * Related stories… Sponsored by Ameren Illinois
* Tribune | Metra, CTA awarded federal grants that could require cooperation with immigration enforcement: The CTA was allocated $15.7 million in transit security money this year, spokesperson Manny Gonzales confirmed. The region’s commuter rail system, Metra, received a grant of about $688,000, said agency spokesperson Michael Gillis. Gillis said Metra was still deciding whether or not to take the grant, which would be used by the Metra Police Department to test out the use of drones to respond to threats and emergencies, he said. * WMBD | Illinois soybean farmers in ‘danger of bankruptcy’ due to tariffs: The Trump administration has considered giving a bailout for farmers, but Costello said this would be a one-time payout that wouldn’t make up for the lasting damages from tariffs. U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen, who represents areas of Peoria and the Twin Cities, said Trump prioritized Argentina over American farmers. “Instead of giving a bailout to a self-imposed disaster, how about some common sense: stop blowing up critical trade relationships,” he said on Facebook. * Tribune | State, local officials establish ‘unified command’ to address safety concerns outside Broadview ICE building: At the request of Broadview police, Illinois State Police and the Cook County sheriff’s office — with assistance from the state and county emergency management agencies — have established a “unified command” to address public safety concerns outside the holding facility, according to a news release from state police Thursday evening. Officials are setting up designated areas “where people can safely exercise their rights,” according to state police. The areas stretch along either side of Beach Street down to Lexington Street with a safety lane in between to allow for emergency vehicle access, according to a state police map. There is also an additional designated “restricted area” along existing fencing outside the facility, the map shows. * Crain’s | RTA cuts 2026 transit gap in half — but funding fight remains: The RTA previously estimated the region’s three transit agencies — Metra, Pace and the Chicago Transit Authority — faced a collective $771 million fiscal cliff beginning next year when federal COVID-19 relief funding expires. That number will be lowered to somewhere south of $300 million at a meeting tomorrow of the RTA committee created to tackle the crisis, according to sources familiar with the situation. The RTA is meeting with the transit boards today to finalize the estimate. * Capitol News Illinois | Here’s what’s in Illinois’ $50.6B six-year infrastructure plan: The plan spans all 102 counties and includes $32.5 billion over six years for roads and bridges, including $25.7 billion for the state system and $6.8 billion for the local system. It covers 8.4 million square feet of bridges and 7,107 miles of state roads, according to the Illinois Department of Transportation. The local funding will cover 1,654 lane miles and more than 1.3 million square feet of bridge deck. * Crain’s | Business groups turn up heat ahead of transit reform negotiations: With the Regional Transportation Authority set to unveil a revised forecast of its looming fiscal cliff, groups representing retailers, hoteliers, manufacturers and downtown landlords are turning up the pressure on Springfield to act. They’re calling for greater transparency from the RTA and its service agencies — and a clear plan for efficiency, security and fare hikes — before new tax revenues are approved to keep trains and buses running. The RTA board committee created to address the crisis meets tomorrow and will release a new projection of the funding required to avoid the region’s three regional transit agencies collectively barreling over the cliff expected in 2026 when federal relief dollars are exhausted. * Tribune | Chicago Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin will pay $30,000 to settle ethics cases: The Chicago Board of Ethics found in April 2024 that Conyears-Ervin violated the city’s ethics ordinance 12 times and issued the maximum fine of $60,000, or $5,000 per breach. In keeping with its rules, the ethics board did not name Conyears-Ervin at the time, but the Tribune identified her as the subject of the board’s ruling. The board found that Conyears-Ervin used city time and resources to plan, schedule and coordinate appearances at four churches to “further (her) personal and political objectives, including but not limited to promoting the candidacy of two individuals for state office,” according to the settlement agreement released this week. * WGN | Chicago arrest video sparks claims of excessive force by federal agents: While the Department of Homeland Security says the incident stems from a theft, witnesses told WGN-TV that what they captured on video differs from what DHS said took place. Maurice Woodard is the organizing director of Equity and Transformation Chicago. It was at the organization’s headquarters near California and Congress where Woodward says he witnessed the unsettling scene unfold on Tuesday around 2:30 p.m. “The federal agents had shut down traffic on all four ways. As they were doing that, they had a guy down on the floor surrounded, and they kind of picked him up by the neck, roughed him up – a lot more than roughed him up – put him in their vehicle, and held him there until [Chicago Police Department] arrived,” Woodward said. * The Triibe | New details emerge surrounding incident that led to a Black man being ‘choked’ by the feds in Chicago: The CPD spokesperson added that “at no point did CPD coordinate or assist federal authorities with immigration enforcement.” However, it remains unclear how or why federal agents apprehended the Black man. In a separate video shared with The TRiiBE, an agent says to a witness recording the scene, “Just so you guys know, this is not an immigration enforcement action.” The agent goes on to say that they are responding to a robbery in progress. * ABC Chicago | Solution possible for ‘chronic safety issues’ with US Postal Service vehicles parked in Lincoln Park: He says, as of now, there is only one entity capable of legally ticketing or towing these mail trucks, leaving Chicago police legally powerless. “Strangely enough, frustratingly enough, only the post office police force could do this… and obviously that wasn’t going to happen,” Quigley said. “Talk about frustration, the inability of the federal government to coordinate… there was almost nothing we could do besides embarrass them.” * Over in Wrigleyville…
* Sun-Times | New barricades erected near Broadview ICE facility in effort to limit protesters from blocking street: Barricades will be placed on each side of Beach Street, from Lexington Street to nearly the silver wire fence that the feds erected Sept. 23 across Beach Street, to keep protesters off the roadway and to allow vehicles to pass through. The barricades will “protect the health and safety of all individuals, including nearby Broadview residents and businesses, and enable the peaceful expression of First Amendment rights,” the Cook County sheriff’s office said in a news release Thursday. * Chicago Reader | DHS shops local: The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is shopping local for some of the various so-called “crowd control” weapons that agents are using to brutalize protesters. The federal government has approved $1.7 million in purchases this year from United Tactical Systems (UTS), the Lake Forest–based company behind PepperBall, which sells the namesake projectiles along with launchers and tactical gear. According to USASpending.gov, the federal government has paid UTS $14.3 million since 2008. Almost all federal purchases have come from the DHS, which oversees Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection. * Block Club | Veterans Speak Out Against ICE’s ‘Mob Tactics’ In Broadview: ‘Our Democracy Is Being Crushed’: “They know that they can’t arrest us just simply for protesting. So instead, they drag us away onto their property and give us felonies for trespassing. That’s how they’re silencing us,” Demi Palecek, a veteran and candidate for Illinois’ 13th Congressional District, said at a Thursday news conference. The brief criminal complaints allege that the people facing charges resisted arrest, threatened and assaulted officers from a number of federal law enforcement agencies who were trying to push back crowds from the facility. * Naperville Sun | Criminal eavesdropping charges won’t be filed against Naperville D203 board member: No criminal charges will be filed against Naperville District 203 School Board member Melissa Kelley Black as a result of the eavesdropping complaint filed by the district with the Naperville Police Department and the DuPage County state’s attorney’s office. The complaint stemmed from comments Kelley Black publicly made at a June 2 meeting in which she alluded to recording a Citizens Finance Committee meeting in May. […] No charges will be filed and the investigation into the complaint is now closed, Naperville police Cmdr. Rick Krakow said. The department was unable to establish whether an audio recording was ever made, he said. * Daily Herald | Work begins to replace century-old railroad bridge in Naperville: Construction has begun to replace a 110-year-old railroad bridge over North Aurora Road in Naperville. It is the final stage of construction for the North Aurora Road Improvement Project, a 20-year effort to reduce congestion and crashes on North Aurora. Naperville, the Naperville Township Road District, and the city of Aurora signed an agreement in 2006 for the project, with Naperville taking the lead. The plan was revived in 2015. * Aurora Beacon-News | Four job resource kiosks opening in Aurora, with more to open in Kane, Kendall and DeKalb counties: The job kiosks are an initiative by workNet Batavia, which serves Kane, Kendall and DeKalb counties and aims to be a “one-stop career resource center offering services for both job seekers and employers,” according to a news release from Kane County and workNet Batavia. There are 15 kiosks in all that will be placed throughout Kane, Kendall and DeKalb counties, but the four in Aurora are meant to be a sort of pilot program, according to Jasmine Walker, a Workforce Development Board manager with Kane County. The Workforce Development Board oversees job training and employment services in Kane, Kendall and DeKalb counties. * WCIA | Sean Grayson, former deputy accused of killing Sonya Massey, opts for jury trial: “I am glad that they decided to go with a jury trial as opposed to a bench trial. I think the community and the world wants to see this played out,” community activist Teresa Haley said. The defense and prosecution made it clear, there were no plea offers or negotiations made on his charges. Grayson faces up to 60 years in prison for first degree murder and an additional 25 to life if he is found guilty of using a firearm to commit that murder. * WICA | ‘There’s no victory here’: Lawyer for driver involved in deadly YNOT crash speaks after investigation concludes: “We knew all things considered that she was not driving recklessly,” he told WCIA Thursday. “She was not doing anything out of the ordinary. She was returning home from work like it would have been when she suffered this unforeseen seizure.” Hanken also said this conclusion comes with some relief but would not characterize his client as winning. “There’s no victory here,” Hanken added. “This is a tragic situation, and if people could go back in time and change it, they would.” * Illinois Times | Losing health care coverage: Dr. Janet Albers is sad that thousands of Springfield-area patients could lose Medicaid coverage and delay care because of Republican President Donald Trump’s “One Big, Beautiful Bill.” Albers, a family physician, told Illinois Times that she saw many previously uninsured patients get screened for cancer and chronic health conditions, then obtain lifesaving treatment, after the expansion of Medicaid eligibility in Illinois in 2014 allowed more low income people to be covered by the program, which is jointly funded by the state and federal government. Because of the Affordable Care Act, 90% or more of the cost of the expansion has been covered by the federal government. * WCIA | ‘Helps us make ends meet’: Electric prices drop by 31% as October starts: Central Illinois’ largest electric utility company’s prices are going down by more than 30%, leaving people and business owners excited. Ameren customers have reported receiving bills that were double their usual price. Now, they’re hoping this drop is here to stay. * News-Gazette | City of Champaign Township board frustrated at not being kept in loop on shelter proposal: Additionally, board member Kathy Shannon expressed concern that the proposal for Strides — which officials estimate will run out of funding by mid-February or early March 2026 — was created without the board’s input. “I think that this town board has asked repeatedly to be updated on things, to be involved in things, and the fact that we are finding out about this so late after it happened feels like more of the same,” Shannon said. * WGLT | Illinois Supreme Court will not hear Jamie Snow and Barton McNeil murder cases: The Illinois Supreme Court has denied requests to hear a pair of high-profile McLean County murder cases. Jamie Snow and Barton McNeil have both had their appeals to the state’s highest court turned down. Both men were convicted of murder in the 1990s and have maintained their innocence. They each have representation from the University of Chicago Law School’s Exoneration Project. McNeil also has support from the Illinois Innocence Project. * WSIL | Mayor announces $4M+ in funding for Du Quoin road project: The Mayor said he secured a $2,529,000 grant from the Delta Regional Authority and a $680,000 Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) from Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO). Additionally, an $800,000 loan was obtained from IDOT at zero percent interest, with yearly payments starting in September 2026. “Just yesterday we received notification from Gov. Pritzker’s office that our request for full loan forgiveness has been approved,” the Mayor said. Downs said more than $4 million in grants and loans have been secured without directly impacting Du Quoin taxpayers. * WICS | Congresswoman Budzinski demands action on deteriorating Springfield hotel: In a letter to Tower Capital Group General Manager Al Rajabi, Budzinski expressed concern over the property’s mismanagement, which she said has “directly undermined the city’s growth and prosperity.” She emphasized that Springfield deserves a “vibrant, thriving downtown business district” and criticized the owners for “repeated failures, unkept promises, and allegations of misconduct.” * Inside Climate News | EPA Moves to Prioritize Review of New Chemicals for Data Centers: While the Environmental Protection Agency, which made the announcement last month, has prioritized new chemical reviews for some industries in the past, advocates said the new EPA effort and an accompanying executive order, “Accelerating Federal Permitting of Data Center Infrastructure,” signed by President Trump go well beyond data centers and benefit the fossil fuel, nuclear and semiconductor industries, among others. They include what advocates said is unprecedented language that calls for the EPA to “ease” and “reduce” regulations. * CNBC | Apple removes ICE tracking apps after Trump AG pressure: ICEBlock has been downloaded more than 1 million times since it was introduced this year, according to data provided to NBC News by the app tracking firm Appfigures. The app hit a high of nearly 114,000 downloads in a single day on July 1, a day after a CNN article about the app sparked criticism from the Trump administration. * NYT | Kennedy Fires N.I.H. Scientist Who Filed Whistle-Blower Complaint: Three weeks after a leading scientist at the National Institutes of Health filed a whistle-blower complaint against the Trump administration, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy fired her, according to her lawyer and a copy of the termination letter. Her dismissal was the latest in a series of steps the Trump administration has taken against government scientists and environmental experts after they warned that administration policies were endangering public health and safety. * New Yorker | The Hidden Harms of CPR: There are times when these risks are worth taking. CPR can save lives when patients are relatively healthy, and when the cause of their death is reversible or unclear. Damar Hamlin, the Buffalo Bills player whose heart stopped during a nationally televised game in January, typifies the person for whom CPR was invented: young and fit, and the victim of a sudden, treatable injury rather than a progressive disease. Still, less than ten per cent of people who receive CPR outside a hospital survive. Inside hospitals, where CPR begins quickly, the odds are slightly better, but only for those who aren’t in the last stages of life. A mere two per cent of adults over sixty-seven with severe chronic disease, including cancer, are alive six months after CPR, and they often deal with pain, physical debility, and post-traumatic stress disorder. Reversing a death is not the same as restoring a life.
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Open thread
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on?…
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Oct 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Friday, Oct 3, 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
Thursday, Oct 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
Illinois recipients were awarded 33 grants. Dollar figures are not yet available. * Sun-Times…
* WGLT | Illinois Grain Tour examines state of soybean industry amid international trade war: Jerry Costello, director of the Illinois Department of Agriculture, said the trade war was an impossible topic to ignore during the tour. “It’s the 800-pound gorilla in the room — especially having buyers from China that are here,” Costello said. “China, last year, bought $1.4 billion worth of soybean off the state of Illinois alone. They have yet to take one single soybean delivery from the U.S. — let alone the state of Illinois — as we sit here today nine months into the year.” * IPM Newsroom | Central Illinois farmers face severe drought with low yields for harvest season: Rainfall has been below average in recent months, according to Illinois State Climatologist Trent Ford. There was plenty of rain in July, which was great for corn. But soybeans depend on rainfall in August, which was a very dry month. […] In mid-September, Ford noted that 2025 had been the 12th driest on record in Champaign County and had been the driest year to date in Champaign-Urbana since 1988. * Crain’s | Soaring downtown office vacancy still hasn’t peaked: The office vacancy rate in the central business district jumped to an all-time high of 28% over the past three months from 27% midway through the year, according to data from real estate services firm CBRE. The share of available workspace has now more than doubled from 13.8% at the beginning of the public health crisis and has hit new record highs for 13 consecutive quarters. * Sun-Times | FAA imposes sweeping drone restrictions over Chicago as feds step up immigration arrests: The Federal Aviation Administration set sweeping restrictions against private drone use Wednesday at the request of DHS, an FAA spokesperson said in a statement. An FAA alert on the restriction says the restrictions are for “special security reasons” without further explanation. The restricted flying zone, which expires Oct. 12, covers a 15-nautical-mile radius emanating from downtown Chicago, reaching as far north as suburban Winnetka, west beyond Interstate 294, and as far south as Dolton. * ProPublica | Chicago Cop Who Falsely Blamed an Ex-Girlfriend for Dozens of Traffic Tickets Pleads Guilty but Avoids Prison: A former Chicago police officer facing trial for perjury and forgery has admitted he lied under oath dozens of times when he used an audacious alibi to get out of numerous speeding tickets and other traffic violations. Over more than a decade, he repeatedly blamed an ex-girlfriend for stealing his car and racking up the tickets — and each time, the story was bogus. […] Kriv’s plea deal was filed in Cook County court on Sept. 24, about a week before his case was scheduled to go to trial. Prosecutors for the Cook County state’s attorney’s office told ProPublica this week that Kriv had 56 of his own traffic tickets dismissed after providing false testimony to judges. That’s more than the 44 tickets that prosecutors had previously indicated in court records. The fines for those tickets would have been $4,515, the amount he was ordered to pay in restitution. * WBEZ | A new John Candy documentary offers a deeper understanding of the comedian and his Second City influence: The historic Chicago Theatre is a fitting location to celebrate Candy, a Canadian native and alum of The Second City Toronto, who also brought improvised shows to Chicago. […] “He packed a lot of life into his years and made a difference,” said Kelly Leonard, vice president of creative strategy, innovation and business development at The Second City. “The film and the reaction to the film show that this guy was beloved, and still can make us laugh and will for decades. I put him up there with W.C. Fields, Abbott and Costello and the Marx Brothers.” * Block Club | Chicago Could Break Heat Records This Weekend As 80s, 90s Expected: Friday is expected to hit 84 degrees and be sunny, according to the National Weather Service, while AccuWeather is predicting a high of 89 degrees. That’s significantly warmer than the high 60s that are average for Chicago at this time of year, said AccuWeather meteorologist Dan Pydynowski. * WTTW | CTA Brings Out 1920s Vintage Railcars to Celebrate Transit Agency’s 78th Anniversary: The Chicago Transit Authority brought out the oldest trains in its vintage fleet to celebrate the agency’s 78th anniversary. The CTA, created by state legislation, began operating on Oct. 1, 1947, after it acquired the properties of the Chicago Rapid Transit Company and the Chicago Surface Lines, according to the agency’s website. * Aurora Beacon-News | Pierog gives financial outlook for county during State of Kane County address: Kane County is currently facing a budget shortfall in its general fund for the fiscal year beginning Dec. 1, according to past reporting. Since 2023, the county has dealt with gaps in its annual budgets by dipping into its cash reserves, according to past reporting. Last year the county balanced its budget with roughly $27 million in reserve funds. Per the county’s most recent audit, the general fund’s cash balance was around $55.6 million as of Nov. 30, 2024. The county aims to keep at least three months’ worth of operating expenses in cash reserves, which would amount to about $34.7 million. * Daily Herald | Legionnaires’ disease investigation tied to Bloomingdale nursing facility: Public health authorities are investigating a cluster of two cases of Legionnaires’ disease in individuals who were at or near the Alden Valley Ridge Rehabilitation and Health Center, a skilled nursing facility in Bloomingdale. Both have recovered from their illnesses, the DuPage County Health Department announced Thursday. * Oak Park Journal | River Forest public works union settles contract: After working for five months without an agreement, River Forest public works employees have a new three-year contract with the village. Although negotiations with the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150 took longer than recent bargaining sessions with the unions representing employees in the River Forest Police and Fire departments, agreement between the village and the public works union was reached more quickly this time than the previous contract negotiations, when employees worked for over a year and half without a contract. The new three-year contract was approved unanimously by the five trustees present at the Sept. 22 village board meeting. Trustee Lisa Gillis did not attend. * NPR Illinois | No criminal charges will be filed in Chatham YNOT crash: Sangamon County State’s Attorney John Milhiser announced Thursday that evidence from deadly crash at an after-school camp in Chatham this spring does not support filing criminal charges. […] “The evidence from the Illinois State Police investigation indicates that it was most likely a medical episode (seizure) that caused the driver of the Jeep to veer off the road and into the YNOT building,” said a statement from Milhiser’s office. * Illinois Times | Frank talk about police misconduct: Last September, Farley had just opened her new business and was riding with her then-boyfriend, Trevor Hopkins, on his Kawasaki motorcycle when the two collided with a car driven by newly retired Springfield police sergeant Michael Egan. […] The SPD underwent an internal investigation and four officers were found guilty of wrongdoings at the scene. One of them received a six-day suspension and retraining was all for the rest of them,” Farley said. “I do not believe the punishment was severe enough for the failure they provided me as a Springfield resident.” Farley said there was not enough accountability for, or amongst, police. * WSIL | New fire station for Gorham thanks to $350K grant: “We cannot thank the Office of the Illinois State Fire Marshal enough for providing the opportunity and funding to make a new fire house in Gorham a reality,” said Village of Gorham Fire Chief Ron Guetersloh. The program awards grants of up to $350,000 through a competitive process, offering financial support to fire departments, fire protection districts, and township fire departments across the state. * WCIA | ‘They could still be alive’: After losing her sons, Tuscola mother creates transitional home for men experiencing drug addictions: September is National Recovery Month, and Scribner is expanding her mission in the Tuscola community. After purchasing land, she’s recently established “PJ’s Place,” a transitional home for men recovering from substance use disorders. Once it’s fully renovated, eight men will temporarily live there 24/7 as they adjust back to a “new normal.” “You can have the best day of your life, and then when you go to bed and think about things, you get depressed. When you’re struggling with substance use, that’s how you self-medicate, and I want it to be a controlled environment,” Scribner said. * 404 Media | Earth Is Getting Darker, Literally, and Scientists Are Trying To Find Out Why: It’s not the vibes; Earth is literally getting darker. Scientists have discovered that our planet has been reflecting less light in both hemispheres, with a more pronounced darkening in the Northern hemisphere, according to a study published on Monday in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The new trend upends longstanding symmetry in the surface albedo, or reflectivity, of the Northern and Southern hemispheres. In other words, clouds circulate in a way that equalizes hemispheric differences, such as the uneven distribution of land, so that the albedos roughly match—though nobody knows why. * Crain’s | Rivian reports 32% sales surge on expiring EV tax credit, but cuts 2025 delivery outlook: Rivian Automotive reported a 32 percent surge in third-quarter deliveries compared with a year earlier to 13,201 vehicles as U.S. buyers took advantage of the expiring federal EV tax credit. But the Irvine, Calif., automaker cut the high end of its 2025 delivery outlook. Rivian adjusted the full-year forecast to between 41,500 and 43,500 vehicles from 40,000 to 46,000 previously. * NPR | Air traffic controllers helped end the last government shutdown, and may again: “You have the reality of human beings, many of [whom] are living paycheck to paycheck,” said Dennis Tajer, a longtime pilot for American Airlines and a spokesman for the union that represents its 16,000 pilots. “It doesn’t take long before the system slows down. The safety margin is always protected. But what happens is we meter the amount of aircraft that the system can hold.” That’s what happened on Jan. 25, 2019, when a shortage of air traffic controllers forced the FAA to limit traffic at LaGuardia Airport in New York, along with other major airports from Newark, N.J., to Orlando, Fla.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in… (Updated x5)
Thursday, Oct 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign and seniority report
Thursday, Oct 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Today’s numbers: Wagering in Illinois
Thursday, Oct 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * COGFA’s latest wagering in Illinois update…
Discuss.
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Question of the day
Thursday, Oct 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Gallup…
Full results are here. I’m assuming that trust is higher here because most of y’all are news junkies. But, let’s see how this goes. * The Question: In general, how much trust and confidence do you have in the mass media — such as newspapers, TV and radio — when it comes to reporting the news fully, accurately and fairly — a great deal, a fair amount, not very much or none at all? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
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Illinois counties lose bid to dismiss class action lawsuit over property tax sales
Thursday, Oct 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Crain’s last year…
This is about selling homes over unpaid property taxes when the equity in those homes was worth more than the debt. The argument is that homeowners were unconstitutionally stripped of that excess equity. * Crain’s today…
* From Judge Rosenstengel’s opinion…
* Back to Crain’s…
Thoughts? * Related…
* Evanston RoundTable | Cook County’s annual tax sale to be postponed for 7 months: At Pappas’s urging, the Illinois General Assembly last week passed legislation that allows the Treasurer to postpone the annual tax sale previously set to be held this August. The legislation also provides that during the delay no additional interest will be charged on delinquent bills subject to the sale. Once the legislation officially becomes law, she will be allowed to delay the sale until March 2026.
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When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
Thursday, Oct 2, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Findings of a recent economic study are 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 Diana Hamann in Evanston enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.
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Catching up with the congressionals
Thursday, Oct 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Former U.S. Rep. Melissa Bean touts fundraising haul in 8th District comeback bid. Press release…
* Politico…
* Moving on to the 2nd CD. Sen. Robert Peters…
* Meanwhile… Crain’s…
* More…
* Block Club | Learn About The Candidates Running For Rep. Jan Schakowsky’s Seat At Edgewater Town Hall: An Edgewater group is hosting a town hall this weekend to allow neighbors to hear from more than a dozen candidates vying to be the next representative for Illinois’ 9th Congressional District. […] Thirteen of the candidates will speak at a town hall 2-4 p.m. Saturday at Episcopal Church of the Atonement, 5749 N. Kenmore Ave. You can RSVP here.
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Protect the 340B Program to Enhance Healthcare Services in Low-Income Communities
Thursday, Oct 2, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Drugmaker requirements are making it hard for hospitals like Franciscan Health Olympia Fields to turn savings on drug costs into healthcare services for patients. The hospital joined the federal 340B program “to help serve the uninsured and under-insured community residents in Olympia Fields and Chicago Heights.” The poverty rates in both Chicago suburbs are higher than the 11.6% state average—nearly 13% in Olympia Fields and almost 25% in Chicago Heights. The hospital has put 340B savings toward healthcare services, including its:
• Medication to Bedside program that ensures medication access prior to discharge; and • Pharmacist-managed Anticoagulation Clinics and Pharmacotherapy Clinics that improve medication outcomes and reduce hospital readmissions. “The 340B program serves as a vital lifeline for safety-net providers to support critical health services in low-income or isolated rural communities, which are typically operated at a loss,” Franciscan Health said. Since 2020, drugmakers have blocked access to lifesaving medications acquired through the 340B program, making it harder for Illinois’ 100 participating hospitals to invest in healthcare services—and patients.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Oct 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Illinois federal workers heavily stressed as government shutdown yanks paychecks. Sun-Times…
- More than 153,000 federal workers lived in Illinois last year, according to the 2024 U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey. - Federal workers for Immigration and Customs Enforcement were on the job at a suburban Broadview facility Wednesday. When asked if they were getting paid Wednesday, one agent shook his head. He didn’t share his thoughts on the shutdown when asked, but said it “happens all the time.” * Related stories… Sponsored by Ameren Illinois
* SJ-R | New program looks to address lawyer shortage in Illinois: The Illinois Supreme Court has greenlit a commission to develop a program that would allow people who are not lawyers to offer limited legal advice, citing a shortage of lawyers. With the Community Justice Program, the top court in the state looks to address the shortage as well as a lack of affordability for many Illinoisans. * WCIA | Insurance company seeking $4M reimbursement for ‘fraudulent’ claim made by Wyndham Hotel: In a counterclaim filed in federal court on Sept. 4, Affiliated FM Insurance said that a lightning claim filed on March 14, 2024, by Al Rajabi, owner of the now-closed Wyndham Hotel, was both “minimal” in damages and “fraudulent.” As a result, the insurance company is seeking the $4,054,000 payout they made to the hotel, as well as $12.162 million plus attorney fees under Illinois insurance fraud statute, which is triple the damages. * Crain’s | Illinois counties on thin ice with property tax sales, judge says: A federal judge’s opinion this week made the ice even thinner under Illinois’ already precarious method of recouping delinquent property taxes, which has been under fire since a 2023 Supreme Court decision found the method unconstitutional. Hanging in the balance is the millions of dollars — or more — that Illinois counties could be required to repay former property owners, if the opinion by U.S. District Judge Nancy J. Rosenstengel of the Southern District of Illinois leads to a court decision against the counties. Her decision allows a proposed class-action lawsuit to move forward, against the request of the treasurers of five Illinois counties. * Press release | AG Raoul leads lawsuit against DOJ to protect services for crime survivors: Attorney General Kwame Raoul, along with New York Attorney General Letitia James, Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser and Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha, led a coalition of 22 attorneys general in filing a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) to block new restrictions on federal funding that supports survivors of domestic violence and other violent crimes. * WBBM | Pritzker spells out potential support for Bears stadium: During an unrelated event Wednesday at the UIC School of Public Health on Chicago’s West side, the Governor said he hadn’t looked over details of the proposal, but said he was open to state assistance for those kinds of projects. “The state will help where we can on infrastructure and other things that are the job of the state,” the governor said. “We do that for businesses all over the state.” * WTVO | Bill to reduce energy costs in Illinois faces renewed scrutiny: “We need to be careful about it. We need to take our time. We need to make sure that we have an entire regulatory framework before we just wholesale let all of these data centers locate in Illinois,” said Jennifer Walling, executive director for the Illinois Environmental Council. * WQAD | Illinois ranks second nationwide in sports betting taxes: Since a 2018 Supreme Court decision opened the gates for sports betting at a state level, Americans have wagered well over $500 billion through licensed sportsbooks. That activity has generated more than $9.3 billion in state taxes, fueling general budgets, public services and infrastructure projects nationwide. Jack Caporal, research director at The Motley Fool, said Illinois is the first state to adopt a progressive sports betting tax. Rates start at 20% and rise to 40% for the highest-earning sportsbooks. On July 1, the state also added a new per-bet fee: 25 cents on the first 20 million wagers each year, and 50 cents after that. The fee alone generated more than $5 million in its first month, prompting FanDuel to add a 50-cent surcharge to every Illinois bet. Most of Illinois’ betting tax revenue flows into the state’s general revenue fund, which supports schools, healthcare and pensions. * WMBD | Property taxes are forcing senior citizens out of their homes, a state bill could change that: A Democratic plan in Springfield could help some senior citizens. The proposal would allow more people to get into the Homestead program. This program allows seniors in Illinois to freeze their property tax rate. However, that exemption only applies to people who earned $65,000 or less a year. This bill would increase that exemption to $80,000. While that sounds like a small jump, there are a significant amount of the elderly population who fall into that price bracket. “I think this is a way to at least keep them in their homes, which is I think, very, very important,” said Dave Vella, a Rockford Democrat who’s championing the bill. * NYT | Drones, Helicopters, Hundreds of Arrests: Trump’s Immigration Crackdown in Chicago So Far: And early on Tuesday, federal agents, using drones, helicopters, trucks and dozens of vehicles, conducted a middle-of-the-night raid on a rundown apartment building on the South Side of Chicago, leaving the building mostly empty of residents by morning and neighbors stunned. “It felt like we were under siege,” said one bystander, Darrell Ballard, 63, showing videos on his cellphone of officers entering the apartment building in the dark. * Tribune | Mother and children detained in Millennium Park released from ICE custody, father flown to Texas detention center: ‘We’re praying for a miracle’: The move came after a federal judge ordered that the family, including Noemi Chavez and their 8 year-old daughter and 3-year-old son, are protected from deportation or removal from Illinois while the government responds to a habeas corpus petition filed by attorneys with the National Immigrant Justice Center. However, the children’s father, Jaime Ramirez, remains in a Texas immigration facility after being transferred from Illinois earlier this week. * Sun-Times | Massive immigration raid on Chicago apartment building leaves residents reeling: ‘I feel defeated’: Dan Jones was jolted awake around 1 a.m. Tuesday to the sound of federal agents trying to break through his apartment door. They couldn’t get past his double lock, so he went back to bed. But when he woke up hours later for work, he walked out and found broken doors littering the hallway — and his neighbors missing. * Crain’s | Logan Square homeowner takes unusual route to getting new affordable housing built: In Logan Square, where rapidly rising housing costs threaten to price many long-term residents out, one homeowner chose an unusual way of ensuring new affordable units are added to the neighborhood. He bought the run-down three-unit building next door to his three-flat, demolished it and donated the land — for which he had paid $575,000 — to a community land trust that will build six new units of affordable housing. * Sun-Times | ICE’s Broadview facility has become a de facto detention center, minus the rules and oversight: For sleeping, crowded cold floors or scant plastic chairs for dozens of men. For eating, sandwiches and water. For bathroom needs, a toilet out in the open, no soap or toothpaste. “The cell is gross, extremely dirty, I never lay down on the floor, it was so filthy,” Yushell, 38, said from Mexico City, days after he was grabbed by immigration officers in Mount Prospect on Sept. 24 on his way to work from an exercise class. “Still, sleeping while sitting on the floor was impossible. * Tribune | Black babies die suddenly, unexpectedly at 14 times the rate of white babies in Cook County, report says: In all, 208 infants in Cook County died suddenly and unexpectedly while sleeping between 2019 and 2023, with 99% of those deaths occurring in sleeping situations that are considered unsafe for babies, such as sleeping with another person, or sleeping with soft bedding items including pillows, blankets or stuffed animals, according to the report. * Evanston RoundTable | Northwestern says it will fund research through end of 2025: As the university’s federal grants remain frozen by the Trump administration, Northwestern said Tuesday it will continue to fund student and faculty research on its own “at least through the end of the calendar year,” according to a press release published on the university website. […] In April, the federal government froze $790 million in grants and government contracts previously allocated to Northwestern. That same week, the university announced that it would continue to fund existing projects as long as it could. * Daily Southtown | Tinley Park District 146 reaches tentative contract with teachers’ union without strike: A spokesperson for the District 146 Educators Council declined to provide information on the agreement ahead of a vote by union members Wednesday and Thursday. The union earlier this month voted to strike as early as Sept. 22 if an agreement could not be reached, with 230 of 232 members voting in favor of the authorization. “We are so glad that we can now put this process behind us,” District 146 Educators Council President Eileen Von Borstel said in a statement through the Illinois Federation of Teachers. “It took longer than expected” to reach a fair contract. * Tribune | Chicago-area contractor gets 7½ years in prison in ‘staggering’ scheme to bribe Amtrak official in Philadelphia: The owner of a Chicago-area construction company was sentenced Wednesday to 7½ years in federal prison in a scheme to bribe a corrupt Amtrak official overseeing a $58 million contract to renovate a historic train station in Philadelphia with hundreds of thousands of dollars in lavish gifts, including trips, meals, jewelry and a German shepherd puppy. Mark Snedden, 69, of Munster, Indiana, the founder and president of Dolton-based MARK 1 Restoration Co., pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia earlier this year to one count each of conspiracy to commit federal program bribery and making a false claim. In addition to a 90-month prison term, U.S. District Chief Judge Wendy Beetlestone fined Snedden $250,000 and ordered him to pay just over $2 million in restitution, according to the U.S. attorney’s office. * The Southern | Southern Illinois doctor warns of federal healthcare policies impact: A Southern Illinois doctor says recent federal health policies will make it harder for patients to get care and could push small hospitals in the region to the brink. Dr. Jeff Ripperda, a local physician, is urging residents to speak out, including at a demonstration scheduled for Oct. 1 at noon outside U.S. Rep. Mike Bost’s Murphysboro office. * WGLT | Normal Township supervisor addresses concerns in town hall, will step down from McLean County Board: The head of Normal Township told constituents at a town hall meeting Wednesday that her primary focus is getting its general assistance fund spending under control. Supervisor Krystle Able said expenditures for the township’s public aid fund obligations far exceeded their revenue when she took over in May. “There have been townships that have gone bankrupt because they have paid general assistance without having the funds to actually pay it,” she said Wednesday at the Normal Activity and Recreation Center [ARC], which is operated by the township. “We don’t want to get into a situation like that here.” * WSIL | Eldorado embraces agrivoltaics with massive solar project: Sol Systems has announced its largest project to date, the 342MW Eldorado Solar project in southeastern Illinois. The project, built in partnership with Nextracker and SOLV Energy, includes a pioneering agrivoltaics initiative. The initiative involves a collaboration with the American Farmland Trust to plant Kernza, a perennial grain, beneath the solar panels. This approach seeks to demonstrate how solar and agriculture can coexist and thrive. * WCIA | Piatt Co. non-profit raising awareness about domestic violence: “We help in crisis and long term safety planning, leaving a domestic violence situation, and everything in between,” Willow Tree Mission’s Director of Services, Andrea Kocher, said. The store is opening in a timely way. October is National Domestic Violence Awareness month. “We’re able to utilize it as a platform to get our mission out, that we truly are here to support people going through a domestic violence situation,” Kocher said. * WSIL | Vienna High School expands breakfast program with $10K grant: Vienna High School has received a School Breakfast Expansion Grant of $10,000 for the second consecutive year. The grant supports Project Better Start, an initiative aimed at providing students with healthy breakfast options. […] Last year, the funds were used to establish a coffee bar. This year, the grant will create a grab-and-go breakfast nook for students with limited time. * Politico | Trump targets states that voted for Harris in shutdown fight: Russ Vought, director of the Office of Management and Budget, said Wednesday the Trump administration is cancelling nearly $8 billion in funding for energy programs he characterized as part of “the Left’s climate agenda.” The cuts will impact 16 states — all of which voted for former Vice President Kamala Harris in last year’s presidential election. Vought did not identify exactly which programs would be cut in the social media announcement. * Slate | There’s a New Lawsuit Against “Kavanaugh Stops.” It’s Absolutely Devastating.: Perhaps the most comprehensive account of Kavanaugh stops so far arrived last Thursday, in the form of a new lawsuit against the Trump administration brought by victims of racial profiling in the District of Columbia. The plaintiffs, a group of citizens and legal residents, describe ICE and Customs and Border Protection agents detaining them for hours—or even overnight—because they happen to be Latino. These accounts make a mockery of Kavanaugh’s insistence that these stops are brief and painless for those who have a right to live in this country.
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Open thread
Thursday, Oct 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, Oct 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Thursday, Oct 2, 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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