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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Feb 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Bloomberg

The New York Stock Exchange plans to move its Chicago equities exchange to Texas, the latest firm seeking a slice of the financial services industry in a state where the taxes are lower and regulation looser.

NYSE said it will reincorporate its NYSE Chicago operations in Texas and will launch the fully electronic exchange in Dallas, pending regulatory filings. The exchange will serve companies from Texas and around the world, it said. NYSE Chicago is the successor to the Chicago Stock Exchange, founded in 1882.

NYSE’s move underscores the heightened allure of Texas for corporations and financial firms seeking to benefit from a more relaxed regulatory environment than blue states like New York and California. Dallas is host to the Texas Stock Exchange, which counts BlackRock Inc. and Citadel Securities among its backers and plans to begin trading in early 2026. Nasdaq last year reorganized its listings business into three regional divisions including Texas.

“As the state with the largest number of NYSE listings, representing over $3.7 trillion in market value for our community, Texas is a market leader in fostering a pro-business atmosphere,” NYSE President Lynn Martin said in a statement.

* Illinois Department of Agriculture

The Illinois Department of Agriculture (IDOA) is issuing a 30-day suspension, effective today, Tuesday, February 11, 2025, on the exhibition or sale of poultry at swap meets, exhibitions, flea markets, and auction markets in response to the ongoing threat of H5N1 avian flu. The move is intended to reduce and prevent the spread of the disease, which has been detected in commercial and backyard flocks in Illinois.

“Prevention is our most effective tool to mitigate the spread of avian flu. By being proactive in biosecurity and limiting poultry movement and exposure, we are protecting the public as well as the poultry industry,” said Dr. Mark Ernst, IDOA State Veterinarian.

Avian flu is caused by an influenza type A virus which can infect poultry (such as chickens, turkeys, pheasants, quail, domestic ducks, geese, and guinea fowl) and wild birds (especially waterfowl). Avian flu virus strains are extremely infectious, often fatal to chickens, and can spread rapidly from flock to flock. […]

Everyone is reminded not to handle or attempt to capture wild waterfowl or other birds displaying signs of illness. Due to risk of infection to other animals, dogs, cats and other pets should be kept away from the carcasses of birds that may have died from avian flu.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* WTTW | After Madigan’s Conviction, Lawmakers Ask: Has Illinois Done Enough to Root Out Corruption?: “The time to start cleaning up Illinois government was many years ago,” House Minority Floor Leader Patrick Windhorst (R- Harrisburg) said. “That work should begin in earnest now.” Some Democrats say with Madigan four years out of the speaker’s chair, that change has already happened. In a statement, Gov. J.B. Pritzker called the verdict an “important message to anyone in government” that “if you choose corruption you will be found out, and you will be punished.”

* If you need a refresher


*** Statehouse News ***

* WAND | Attorney General Raoul joins coalition proving guidance for businesses on diversity and inclusion: The guidance comes in response to a Trump Administration executive order that targets “illegal DEI and DEIA policies.” The coalition’s guidance informs companies that efforts to seek and support diverse, equitable, inclusive and accessible workplaces are not illegal, and the federal government cannot prohibit these efforts in the private sector through an executive order, Raoul said.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Chicagoans Dissatisfied With CPD, Have No Confidence in Reform Push: Federal Court Monitor Survey: The third community survey from the monitoring team charged with enforcing the federal court order known as the consent decree found that Chicagoans’ confidence in CPD and the reform effort is exceedingly low, despite a reform push that is slated to cost Chicago taxpayers $208.8 million in 2025 alone. The survey’s results are the latest indication that CPD has so far failed to address the decades of brutality and civil rights violations that led to the consent decree, even as that binding federal court order prepares to mark its sixth anniversary.

* Block Club | Heartland Alliance Health Clinics, Food Pantries Will Close This Month, Earlier Than Planned: Heartland Alliance Health will abruptly close its clinics and food pantries in less than two weeks, far sooner than what employees were initially told last week. The community health care nonprofit will close its three food pantries Feb. 22 and its Uptown and Englewood clinics Feb. 26 due to financial issues, according to Michael Brieschke, chair of the union representing many Heartland workers.

* Sun-Times | After Sun-Times inquiries, Tara Stamps says she’ll step down as Mayor Johnson’s campaign chair : Cook County Commissioner Tara Stamps says she’s stepping down as chairperson of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s campaign fund, after facing questions about whether it was appropriate for her to be overseeing it at the same time that she’s on the payroll for the Chicago Teachers Union. “It just made sense,” Stamps said this week. “For all parties involved.” A Chicago Sun-Times reporter asked Stamps and Johnson’s aides earlier this month whether her employment with the CTU — which is in the midst of contract talks with Chicago Public Schools — presents a conflict of interest.

* The Newberry | Newly Digitized: E. Winston and Ina D. Williams NAACP papers: The Newberry has launched a new digital collection featuring photographs, brochures, correspondence, and more documenting the Chicago chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). The E. Winston and Ina D. Williams NAACP papers—made up of over 1,000 individual items—are the latest of the Newberry’s holdings to be made freely available online for study and re-use by researchers worldwide.

* Block Club | Isadore Channels, 1920s Trailblazing Athlete, Was ‘Queen’ Of The Courts: In Chicago, Channels began a new era as another kind of pioneer, clinching titles and setting records on the basketball and tennis courts before quietly retiring from sports to become a nurse. Channels “may have been Chicago’s first trash-talker, pre-dating Chicago Bulls star Michael Jordan by more than 50 years,” according to the Black Fives Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to preserving the history of Blacks in basketball. Yet, Channels’ story and legacy as “one of the greats” has gone largely unrecognized, Pruter said.

* WBEZ | Chicago History Museum workers want to join an arts industry unionization wave: About two dozen workers at the Chicago History Museum have signed a letter saying they plan to unionize. In the letter, issued Wednesday morning, the employees said they are seeking clear communication from management and competitive wages. The move is one in a wave of similar organizing efforts at other Chicago cultural institutions. The workers are organizing with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, or AFSCME Council 31. Workers from the Art Institute of Chicago, the Field Museum and Newberry Library, among others, have joined that same union in recent years.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Elgin moves to ban sale of THC products: Saying they couldn’t wait any longer for the state to provide guidance, Elgin City Council members on Wednesday granted preliminary approval of a citywide ban on sales of synthetically derived THC products. The ordinance, which needs final approval during an upcoming city council meeting, would ban the advertisement, display, sale and delivery of Tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, products without a state license.

* WBEZ | Ravinia announces a $75 million renovation plan for the Highland Park venue: The Ravinia Festival in Highland Park will undergo a $75 million, multi-year transformation of its 36-acre music campus over the course of the next several years, leading up to the outdoor venue’s 125th anniversary in 2029, it was announced Thursday. This marks the first such all-encompassing renovation since the iconic park, with its Prairie School architecture and sprawling lawn/picnic areas, opened in 1904 as a summertime “high-end amusement park” and music-venue escape from the congestion of Chicago at the turn of the century.

* Shaw Local | Plainfield playground dedicated to Muslim child killed in alleged hate crime: On Wednesday, the Plainfield Park District’s Board of Commissioners passed a resolution honoring the memory of Wadee Alfayoumi, 6, by naming a sensory playground at Van Horn Woods in his remembrance. […] In a statement, Carlo Capalbo, executive director of the park district, said the district is “honored to dedicate this playground to Wadee’s memory.” “Our hope is that it will serve as a space where all children, regardless of ability, can experience the joy of play,” Capalbo said.

*** Downstate ***

* CBS | Residents describe interactions with Illinois sheriff’s office tied to Sonya Massey’s death: “I was terrified”: When Billie Greer saw the video of Massey, her reaction was that she thought it could have happened to her. In 2022, Greer got a knock on her door by a different Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy than the one who shot Massey. When she declined to accept court paperwork for a relative, she said a longtime deputy followed her to an elderly neighbor’s home where she was delivering food and arrested her.

* Press Release | Southern Illinois University Carbondale officially among top research schools in the U.S.: Southern Illinois University Carbondale today (Feb. 13) has officially entered the ranks of the top research universities in the nation: It has been designated Research 1, or R1, in the Carnegie Classifications of Institutions of Higher Education. The prestigious designation by the American Council on Education and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching confirms SIU Carbondale is in the same league as elite private and flagship universities across the country. Less than 5% of the nearly 4,000 classified institutions are designated Research 1: Very High Spending and Doctorate Production.

* WCIA | Popular true crime Netflix show filming in Kankakee Co.: The third season of “Monster” has taken over downtown Momence. And, according to the Momence Police Department, crews were filming on Wednesday, beginning around 9 a.m. The scene took place on Washington St. and involved a large number of men, armed with rubber/plastic prop firearms. The firearms are “non-operational” according to police. But, for safety reasons, police inspected the weapons before filming.

* WJBD | Lincoln Unlocked brings new digital experiences to presidential library: Museum visitors can point their phones at exhibits to see historic figures spring to life. They can take themed tours to dive into the roles of women and African Americans during Lincoln’s life. And they can hear “Lincoln” deliver the Gettysburg Address or listen to a music box owned by Mary Lincoln. It’s also an accessibility aide, offering content in six languages and enriching visits for people who are Deaf or visually impaired.

* News-Gazette | After 12 years of work, it’s showtime for Hoopeston’s Lorraine Theatre: When the lights go down today for the first showing of the new film “Captain America: Brave New World” at the Lorraine Theatre, the president of the Save the Lorraine Foundation will be thinking about all the volunteers, hours of work and donors and community members who made it a reality. Alex Houmes said reaching this historic night has involved more than 12 years of fundraising, renovations and equipment upgrades at the more-than-100-year-old theater at 324 E. Main St., Hoopeston.

*** National ***

* Chalkbeat | Linda McMahon invested in dozens of bonds funding public school projects across the US: Based on her holdings, it’s likely McMahon earns at least $900,000 a year in interest payments from investing in those public education-related bonds in two dozen states, a Chalkbeat analysis found. That’s based on the minimum value of the bonds and assumes a conservative 2.5% yield on the investments. […] A representative for McMahon could not be reached for comment. But McMahon has said she would divest from 78 bonds that fund public education projects, the ethics forms show, including 64 bonds issued to K-12 school districts or agencies.

* WaPo | Animal owners used these chips to track pets. Then the company went dark: For years, animal shelters and veterinary clinics have implanted grain-of-rice-size microchips in cats and dogs meant to help reunite them with their owners. Clinics scan the implant to get its unique number and call the chip company to find a lost pet’s family. But what happens when the microchip company disappears, taking its pet-owner information with it? That’s the situation facing potentially thousands of pet owners who used devices from pet-chip maker Save This Life, which has stopped responding to all entreaties even as its data has disappeared, according to animal shelters and others in the industry.

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What is a Credit Union?

Thursday, Feb 13, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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The jury reached a partial verdict. Now what?

Thursday, Feb 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here to check out yesterday’s coverage. US Attorney’s Office

A federal jury in Chicago [yesterday] convicted former Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives MICHAEL J. MADIGAN on conspiracy and bribery charges for using his official position to corruptly solicit and receive personal financial rewards for himself and his associates. […]

A sentencing hearing has not yet been scheduled. Each wire fraud count is punishable by a maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison, while each bribery count is punishable by up to ten years. The maximum for conspiracy to commit an offense against the United States and each count of using interstate facilities to promote unlawful activity is five years.

* Tribune Court Reporter Jason Meisner


* ABC Chicago explained what will happen in the forfeiture hearing

While Madigan’s defense team will undoubtedly appeal the verdict, he still faces a forfeiture hearing during which the judge will determine how much money he will need to fork over to the federal government.

And then, there is the sentencing. That is likely still several months away, but it is expected the judge will sentence him to serving at least some time in prison. How much will depend on a variety of factors, including how much of an example the government wants to make of him, but also his age. […]

He remains free on bond pending sentencing.

Yesterday when Madigan attorney Todd Pugh was asked about a potential appeal he said it was “too soon.”

* Courthouse News Service

Acting U.S. Attorney Morris Pasqual said “no decision has been made” on whether prosecutors would try to retry Madigan or McClain over the jury’s deadlock.

Presiding U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey, a Barack Obama appointee, in his own comments to attorneys prior to the verdict, said prosecutors could “let the dust settle” on the deadlocked counts before deciding if it’s worth it to retry them.

“Maybe it isn’t,” the judge quipped.

* Tribune

In addition to deciding whether to retry Madigan on the deadlocked counts, prosecutors are scheduled to retry a related case against former AT&T Illinois boss Paul La Schiazza in June, after a different jury also failed to reach a verdict in his trial last year.

Also, a decision on whether the “ComEd Four” defendants — which includes McClain — will get a new trial is expected to come down any day.

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AG Raoul says more attorneys needed for Trump admin lawsuits

Thursday, Feb 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WBEZ on Monday

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul is suing to block President Donald Trump’s administration from cutting off billions of dollars in federal funding to medical and public health institutions nationwide, a move that Chicago experts warn would have “catastrophic effects” on critical research.

Raoul announced the lawsuit Monday along with 21 other Democratic attorneys general who argue “cutting-edge work to cure and treat human disease will grind to a halt” if courts allow the Trump-led National Institutes of Health and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to slash grant funding. […]

The University of Illinois system relies on about $67 million in NIH funding annually — dollars that last year helped develop an updated drug to treat blood cancer in children, Raoul said. NIH grants “have led to innumerable scientific breakthroughs,” their lawsuit states.

This is the fourth multi-state lawsuit Raoul has joined since President Trump’s inauguration.

* Rich dug into Raoul’s lawsuit against the federal government’s funding freeze last month

Last Monday night, the White House announced a sweeping new policy that would’ve at least temporarily defunded trillions of dollars of government spending on everything from the national school lunch program to Head Start to cancer and sleep disorders research, and on and on through 50 small-print pages. […]

The White House withdrew the order, but then the White House press secretary insisted that the cuts would still happen even without the directive. Another lawsuit, filed by Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and several colleagues from across the country, began to move forward.

That process came to a head on Friday when a federal judge issued a sweeping temporary restraining order blocking the Trump administration from doing anything that could reduce spending already approved by Congress. Judge John J. McConnell even quoted a ruling that Trump-appointed Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh handed down when he was a circuit court judge, “even the President does not have unilateral authority to refuse to spend the funds.”

The state could similarly be in for years of court fights over this current federal-spending battle, and likely more in the future, while, as under Rauner, the institutions and people down below try to survive.

There’s no way that this state government can adequately plan for what might happen next because nobody knows what will happen next. I mean, who could’ve predicted perhaps the most aggressive challenge ever to the U.S. Congress’ constitutional-appropriations powers would be launched last week?

* On Monday, Peter Hancock asked Raoul how his office is handling the surge of lawsuits

And while Raoul admits the cost of those cases is stretching the resources of his office, he said he is not yet ready to ask lawmakers for additional funding to cover those costs. […]

In an interview with Capitol News Illinois, Raoul said the volume of litigation has become so intense, he would like to add new attorneys who would focus solely on litigation battling the Trump administration.

“The role of state attorneys general has expanded from what it used to be. It has happened on both sides of the aisle,” Raoul said. “There’s been more involvement of state attorneys general, like during the Obama administration. Republican state attorneys general were very active trying to respond to the administration’s executive orders and suing over the Affordable Care Act and numerous other things. So during Trump’s first term, likewise, Democrat attorneys general were involved in trying to protect against federal executive branch overreach.”

Raoul noted that his office’s budget has grown since he was first elected attorney general in 2018. According to the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability, it has more than doubled in six years to just under $194 million in the current fiscal year.

Thoughts?

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It’s just a bill

Thursday, Feb 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Illinois, whose notoriously high property taxes are a constant source of grief for property owners, should look into abandoning the concept and relying more on income taxes for revenue, according to a bill introduced in Springfield last week.

It’s an ambitious five-year plan. Research should start forthwith to “determine the feasibility of eliminating, by no later than January 1, 2030, the property tax system in the state,” says HB3338, introduced Feb. 7 by Rep. Thaddeus Jones, 29th-Calumet City. […]

The Jones bill is more specific about the direction the state should go than a law passed by both houses last year and signed by Gov. JB Pritzker in August. That measure requires the Department of Revenue to undertake a “comprehensive review” of the property tax system, but doesn’t mention shutting it all down.

The 2024 law is similar to a law Pritzker signed in August 2019 creating a property tax relief task force. The report that resulted recommended reforming the assessment process, reorganizing school funding and other measures, but didn’t call for ending the state’s property tax system that dates to the early 1900s.

* WAND

Illinois House Democrats have a new bill that would allow migrants with federal work permits to become firefighters.

Under current law, anyone applying to become a firefighter has to be a U.S. citizen.

State Rep. Barbara Hernandez (D-Aurora) said she wants to be clear that undocumented immigrants will not be allowed to take the job.

“They automatically think I’m helping undocumented individuals or I’m allowing them to be firefighters. That is not the case,” Hernandez said. “This is only for individuals that have federal approval to work here.”

Migrants that apply for the job will still have to go through the same recruitment and training process that is required of every firefighter.

* Rep. Kam Buckner filed HB3256 earlier this month

Creates the People Over Parking Act. Provides that, except as otherwise provided in the Act, a unit of local government may not impose or enforce any minimum automobile parking requirements on a development project if the project is located within one-half mile of a public transportation hub. Limits the concurrent exercise of home rule powers. Defines terms. Effective June 1, 2025.

* WICA

Illinois judicial campaigns have become very expensive, with interest groups and wealthy donors throwing around lots of cash to get their favorite judge on the bench. This has raised questions about the fairness of the election and money’s influence on the campaign.

Sen. Rachel Ventura (D-Joliet) filed a bill looking to reduce the influence of private donors in Supreme Court and Appellate Court races. This will allow candidates to use public funds instead of interest group funds. She filed the bill in response to the record-breaking amount of money spent in the 2022 Illinois Supreme Court Elections. […]

“The goal is to allow all judges to have the same opportunity, “ Ventura said. “And to get rid of that kind of off-putting feeling that someone is donating to a judge who may then later be making decisions that harm or hurt them or help them.” […]

The bill proposes a public financing program for Supreme Court and Appellate Court candidates through the Judicial Election Democracy Trust Fund.

* SB1874 from Sen. Patrick Joyce

Amends the Public Utilities Act. In provisions regarding a certificate of public convenience and necessity, makes changes to the limitations on the construction of a nuclear power reactor. Provides that, beginning January 1, 2026, construction may commence on an advanced nuclear reactor (rather than a new nuclear power reactor with a nameplate capacity of 300 megawatts of electricity or less) within the State under specified conditions. Defines “advanced nuclear reactor”. Makes other changes.

* Rep. Jed Davis…

State Representative Jed Davis (R-Yorkville) recently filed three bills aimed at supporting students with disabilities, offering more resources to their parents, and promoting new disability training for teachers, staff, and administrators in Illinois schools.

“These bills are a game-changer – giving students with disabilities, their families, and educators the real support they deserve,” said Rep. Davis.

    - House Bill 1097 allows parents or guardians to record audio during meetings regarding their child’s individualized education program (IEP).
    - House Bill 1106 lets school districts create volunteer Special Education Advisory Committees when parents request them.
    - House Bill 1107 requires school staff training to better understand and support students with disabilities.

Rep. Davis concluded, “These bills tackle multiple weak spots in current Illinois law addressing students with disabilities. Together, we can create a framework for children, parents, and educators to ensure all Illinois students succeed.”

These are three of the twelve bills included in Rep. Davis’ Protecting Kids Bill Package.

* Meanwhile… In Indiana. The Post-Tribune

A bill aimed at attracting the Chicago Bears, or another sports franchise, to Northwest Indiana passed out of the Indiana House Ways and Means committee Tuesday with two amendments.

House Bill 1292 would establish a Northwest Indiana professional sports development commission, which would study plans to attract one or more professional sports franchises.

The commission would be tasked with creating a comprehensive master plan for building the facilities needed to attract one or more professional sports franchises in the region.

The House Ways and Means Committee amended the bill Tuesday to remove language about paying any state employee on the commission travel expenses and non-state employee commissioners the minimum salary per diem and reimbursement for travel outlined in state code.

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RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois

Thursday, Feb 13, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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 Andrea and Fran 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, Feb 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Alabama Shakes is reuniting and playing at the Salt Shed on July 16. Isabel and I have tickets. Anyone want to join us? We could make it a blog group outing.

From a long time ago when they were still doing party barge shows

Anyway, what’s happening by you?

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Feb 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Jury foreman grew up thinking Madigan was ‘good person,’ but in the end was convinced of his guilt. Sun-Times

    - Jury foreman Timothy Nessner and other jurors interviewed by the Sun-Times said the jury managed to keep its cool as they reviewed months of testimony and evidence, including video secretly recorded by the FBI.
    - “We re-listened to the tapes over and over, ad nauseam,” one juror, a 44-year-old suburban educator, said.
    - Another juror said she was “shocked” when Madigan was called to the stand, but in her eyes, it “really humanized him” in both a “good and bad way.”

* Subscribers received more details about the trial this morning.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* NYT | A Lost Silent Film About Lincoln Was Unearthed by an Intern: Standing in the vault during the final week of his internship last August, Martin could have picked his next stack of films from any number of shelves. The one he happened to select included a remarkable discovery: five film cans containing 16-millimeter film of “The Heart of Lincoln,” a 1922 picture that was one of more than 7,000 silent films considered lost by the Library of Congress.

* WIRED | The GSA Plans to Sell Hundreds of Its Federal Government Buildings: According to the list, the buildings destined for the block include the John C. Kluczynski Federal Building in Chicago, which houses satellite offices for the Department of Labor, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Internal Revenue Service, a probation office, and offices for Democratic Illinois senators Tammy Duckworth and Dick Durbin. The building also has broader cultural significance—it was designed by renowned architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and features an iconic Alexander Calder sculpture. … Many of the federal buildings on the list of non-core real estate are fully occupied, sources tell WIRED. This includes buildings like the Senator Paul Simon Federal Building in Carbondale, Illinois, which houses offices for the Federal Aviation Administration, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the Social Security Administration

* WCIA | IL Manufacturers’ Association hosting 6th Annual ‘Makers Madness’ contest: Nominations for “The Coolest Thing Made in Illinois” are now being accepted at makersmadnessil.com. Voting will also take place here, beginning March 4. Any product that is manufactured in Illinois can be nominated for the tournament. Additionally, while qualifying products must be made in Illinois, the manufacturers’ headquarters don’t have to be in the state.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Naperville Sun | Man charged after allegedly threatening to ‘blow up’ Naperville-based state rep: A Downers Grove man has been charged with threatening to “blow up” state Rep. Anne Stava Murray in a phone message he allegedly left for the Naperville Democrat. William Dzadon, 71, of the 100 block of 55th Street, turned himself in to the Illinois State Police Tuesday after an arrest warrant on two counts of threatening a public official was issued Feb. 7, a news release from DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin and Illinois State Police Director Brendan Kelly said.

* Daily Herald | Transit funding crisis coming to a head in Springfield: “We’re really at a critical point,” RTA Executive Director Leanne Redden said at a Transit is the Answer Coalition meeting. “If the General Assembly does not find a funding solution for the fiscal cliff by the end of May” it will result in a budget gap and 40% service cuts to Metra, Pace and the CTA, Redden cautioned.

*** Statewide ***

* Illinois Times | Student MAP grants lower than expected: College students who receive Monetary Awards Program grants are seeing an 8% cut in their spring semester assistance after a higher-than-expected number of eligible students enrolled in classes this school year. The cuts represent a $12 to $336, or 8%, reduction compared to students’ previously estimated MAP grants, according to the Illinois Student Assistance Commission, which administers the grant program.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Acting CTA President Pledges Outreach, Engagement as Agency Works to Tackle Budget Gap and Draw Back Passengers: A key way for the CTA to learn about rider priorities is the agency’s chatbot launched last spring, which allows people to submit complaints about issues on the system. Leerhsen said she asked the team behind the chatbot to look for trends, and that baseline things like cleanliness and smoking quickly emerged as common themes. “The smoking issue does come up as a primary complaint,” Leerhsen said. “Not all rule violations are created equal, and I think smoking really has an ability to really set a tone for a rider that is not indicative of what we want them to see.”

* Block Club | Mayor’s Office Releases ‘Gift Room’ Log, Video Following Inspector General Investigation: A dedicated city webpage now hosts the full log of gifts received by the city dating back to when Johnson took office in May 2023. The city has also posted a brief video of the room to YouTube, which it plans to update quarterly. The protocols now require all gifts be logged within 10 days of receipt and reported to the city’s Board of Ethics and comptroller. The gifts will be posted on the city’s website and will include a description of the gift, the date it was received and the name of the donor “to the extent provided,” among other criteria.

* WBEZ | Parents demand answers on the fate of Acero charter schools: Nearly two months after the Chicago Board of Education voted to save five of the seven Acero charter schools slated for closure, Chicago Public Schools officials and the schools’ private operator still have not landed an agreement for the schools to remain open. School board members joined Acero teachers and parents in asking for the status of those talks at a board meeting Wednesday and voicing their impatience at the lack of clarity on the future of the privately managed, publicly funded charter schools.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez one of six candidates for superintendent job in Clark County, Nevada: The school board voted to fire Martinez without cause in December after growing hostility with Mayor Brandon Johnson. His contract allows him to stay on as CEO until June and he is currently suing the Chicago Board of Education. But according to an agenda for a special meeting posted online, Martinez was one of 46 people to apply for the job leading the Nevada district, which is the fifth largest in the nation after CPS. The Clark County Board of School Trustees will meet Feb. 18 to discuss the slate of six candidates vying to be the next superintendent.

* Block Club | ‘The Bear’ Looking For Babies, Chefs And Average Chicagoans To Be Extras In New Season: Filming starts as soon as Feb. 25, according to local casting agency 4 Star Casting, which posted a call for extras on social media. That includes a 2- or 3-year-old body double for Richard “Richie” Jerimovich’s (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) daughter, Eva. There’s also a 4 Star Casting call for an infant under six months old for March, according to the agency’s Facebook.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Hayes endorses Tinaglia to succeed him as Arlington Heights mayor: After initial reluctance to make an endorsement, Arlington Heights Mayor Tom Hayes Wednesday threw his support behind Trustee Jim Tinaglia to succeed him in the village’s top elected post. At the same, Trustee Robin LaBedz — Hayes’ president pro tem — backed Trustee Tom Schwingbeck to be the next mayor.

* Daily Herald | Supervisor Tiffany Henyard absent from Thornton Township Board, trustees push back budget vote: From her Thornton Township office, Henyard recorded and posted a live video at around the time of the meeting where she said she chose not to attend due to security concerns. Tuesday marked the first regularly scheduled meeting since a brawl broke out Jan. 28 involving Henyard, her boyfriend, community activists and others. “I was not going to be in jeopardy of being attacked or anything of that nature,” Henyard said in the video. She claimed trustees changed the layout of the board meeting last minute, “which was very concerning and alarming.”

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg trustees approve village’s first residential conversion of office building: The project’s anticipated 16- to18-month time frame includes replacing the original facade with an aluminum surface with a wood appearance. The interior work will carve out a mixture of 19 studio, 63 one-bedroom, and 16 two-bedroom apartments. Each unit will have its own balcony, laundry machines and temperature control.

*** Downstate ***

* The Southern | ‘This is our moonshot:’ Marion approves issuing first STAR bonds: It was then that the Marion city council voted unanimously to pass an ordinance approving the issuance of series 2025 STAR bonds, the first such bonds issued by the city since legislation was passed in 2010 allowing Marion to do so. In short, STAR bonds, short for sales tax and revenue, uses the state and local sales tax generated in a specific area to pay for projects developed in that area.

* WAND | UIS hosts ‘Hackathon’ to solve real-world challenges using tech: “The goal is they work in these teams and they really begin to see how what they’re learning in the classroom can be used to for real world problems for populations that maybe many aren’t thinking about or aren’t thinking about how technology can be the solution,” said Travis Bland, interim dean of the College of Health, Science and Technology.

*** National ***

* Mediaite| ‘Costs And Chaos!’ Ford CEO Warns Trump Tariffs Will ‘Blow A Hole’ In Auto Industry: Ford CEO Jim Farley warned that President Donald Trump’s tariff threats will “blow a hole” in the auto industry and manufacturers faced a spike in “costs” and “chaos.” Speaking at a Wolfe Research conference on Tuesday, according to Axios, Farley warned that Trump’s tariff-heavy trade tactics, whether targeting neighbors like Canada and Mexico or raw materials like steel and aluminum, are poised to wreak havoc on his industry.

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

Thursday, Feb 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Thursday, Feb 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Thursday, Feb 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Report: Underutilized CPS schools driving up costs
* AG Raoul lays out extensive defense of state immigration laws
* Intoxicating Hemp: No safety? No thanks!
* USDOJ wants to join challenge to Illinois law that requires nonprofits to disclose demographics of boards and officers
* It’s just a bill
* As Chicago continues to look the other way, Decatur city council bans sweepstakes machines
* Illinois Hospitals Are Achieving Nursing Excellence Through ANCC Magnet Program
* Isabel’s morning briefing
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* Selected press releases (Live updates)
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