Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers were briefed this morning. Tribune…
* Chalkbeat…
* Tribune…
* Farm Week | County fair season begins across Illinois: While some fairgoers may be counting down the days until they can enjoy a corn dog and a lemonade shake-up, the Greene County Fair and the Martinsville Ag Fair are set to launch the county fair season this week. “It’s promotion of agriculture. It’s bringing people in that are not familiar with agriculture to see what people in agriculture do,” said Greene County Fair Board Secretary Mark Walker about county fairs. * Muddy River News | DCFS report: Denman Elementary physical education teachers gave ‘birthday spankings’, taped students mouths shut: While the investigation revealed no lasting physical marks from these actions, it was determined that such behavior was “wildly inappropriate, but not criminal” since there were no sexual connotations. Multiple parents with students at Denman, as well as Denman teachers, verified the incidents with Muddy River News. They said their children had begged them not bring treats or attempt to have their respective classes recognize their birthdays at school for fear of getting the “birthday spankings.” The names of the students, families and teachers asked for their names to be withheld for fear of repercussions from within the Quincy School District. * SJ-R | Here’s why a Springfield attorney was suspended for 2 years: The Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission, which operates under the state’s Supreme Court, last week ruled on the case of Salena Rachelle Young after a complaint was submitted in 2024. Young “knowingly” submitted timesheets to the Illinois Attorney General’s office showing she worked full days while she also worked part-time as a Sangamon County assistant public defender and operated a solo law practice. * WJBD | Unemployment drops across South Central Illinois: The Illinois Department of Employment Security reported unemployment dropped nine-tenths of a percent in April to 3.5-percent. That’s nine-tenths of a percent lower than in March and a full percent lower than a year ago. The data translates into 560 on the unemployment rolls in Marion County, down 150 from March. The county’s work force also grew 190 people to 16,204. * BND | Millstadt-area resident finds black bear in her yard. What to do if you see one: The bear stuck around Seavey’s home, and she spotted him again the morning of May 20, curled up in a ball underneath one of the trees in her backyard. He then got up, stretched, yawned and walked down her driveway headed across her front yard. “I was like, ‘Oh, you have got to be kidding me,’” Seavey said. * WSIL | Thrillville Thrillbillies season opener begins today: First pitch is set at 7 p.m. at Mountain Dew Park. Officials say the first 1,000 fans will receive a magnet schedule. New for this season is the “All You Can Eat Seat”. Thrillbillies officials say every seat is an all-you-can-eat seat. As a way to encourage more fan turnout, the $20 tickets could feed a family of four for $80. * Crain’s | How the South Works quantum transformation is unfolding: If the Silicon Valley-based company is successful, it will help turn what has so far been a lab experiment into the next big thing in technology. By using a radically different approach to computing, quantum technology could result in unbreakable cybersecurity, new treatments for disease or creation of composite materials in a fraction of the time, and modeling of weather patterns more accurately and over longer periods than what is possible now. It’s a moonshot with no guarantee of success, one that nonetheless has proven irresistible to startups, big tech companies and academic researchers. * Crain’s | Across from proposed quantum campus, residents weigh risks and expectations: hey’re asking: Will the project bring jobs? Will gentrification displace us? And top of almost everyone’s mind: What are the possible health and environmental effects of extensive construction on a site they suspect is still contaminated with toxic chemicals and heavy metals? Anne Holcomb owns a multi-unit South Shore building. She gets calls “from real estate speculators at least once a week. She tells them, “You don’t want to buy over here until the whole thing is built, because during construction, everyone over here will be poisoned by breathing toxic construction dust from that brownfield. I’m sure you wouldn’t want that liability.” * WTTW | 3 People Killed, 24 Shot Across Chicago Over Memorial Day Weekend, Well Below Other Recent Years: Police: According to Chicago Police Department figures, 24 people were shot in 21 separate shootings between 6 p.m. Friday and midnight Monday. That marks a steep decline from the same weekend in 2024, when at least 41 people were shot, nine fatally. In 2023, more than 50 people were shot over the Memorial Day weekend, including 11 who were killed. The previous year, 47 people were shot, nine fatally. * Tribune | After years on the front lines of violence prevention, Englewood group faces layoffs as DOJ shifts priorities: His team of workers does round-the-clock work to tackle the root causes of community violence, leading peer-to-peer support and group therapy sessions. They help kids apply for college and jobs, and host programming for kids. They are often the first to crime scenes, even before police. In late April, due to the end of a federal grant that supported many of those efforts, Perkins had to lay off five of the outreach staff at his violence intervention nonprofit, Think Outside Da Block. His organization isn’t the only one that received cuts, and he said there will be half the number of people this summer out in the community mediating conflicts. * WBEZ | 16 new Chicago speed cameras to start ticketing drivers just days from now: The new cameras, mostly placed on the North Side, are about to finish a 30-day warning period and a two-week blackout period so notices could be delivered. […] One of the new cameras at 4716 N. Ashland Ave. is painted black, and has a smaller profile than older, gray speed cameras drivers are familiar with. The camera, attached to a light pole across from Chase Park, has been flashing in recent weeks as drivers sped past. * Crain’s | Advocate Trinity’s South Works investment aims to address health equity: When completed, at a budget of about $300 million, the new hospital will have state-of-the-art technology and an emergency department designed to address the urgent needs of its patients, but with far fewer in-patient beds than the current structure. The present 205-bed facility is being replaced by a 53-bed hospital, as Advocate says its current patient volume is about 72 in-patients per day and new sites of care are meant to absorb lower-acuity patients. * Block Club | Meet Chicago Public Schools’ Only Competitive Bass Fishing Team: Taft hosted the Skokie Lagoons tournament for the first time since starting its bass fishing team in 2009. It is still the only Chicago public school with such a team, and the Norwood Park High School team’s roster has grown from four members to 15. “A lot of the kids who are on this team are very squirrelly, but they calm down when they fish,” said Scott Plencner, a Taft history teacher who coaches the team. “It gives them something to focus on; it’s kind of meditative.” * Block Club | As Pet Surrenders Surge, Chicago’s Overcrowded Animal Shelter Sounds The Alarm: Chicago Animal Care and Control has taken in an average of 56 pets per day so far in May at its Pilsen shelter, said Armando Tejeda, the agency’s public information officer. That’s up significantly since 2013-2017, when the shelter took in an average of 34 animals per day, Tejeda said. “We’re doing the best we can as far as managing transfers and adoption, but just to be on this track and trying to sustain this intake volume, it’s increasingly hard,” Tejeda said. * Chicago Mag | Requiem for the Montrose Beavers: “No animal has been more important to the natural and social history of this region than the beaver,” Joel Greenberg wrote in his 2002 book, A Natural History of the Chicago Region. Indeed, these engineers of the animal kingdom transformed the land, building dams that created ponds and wetlands. And their dense, water-repelling fur was highly desired by humans, who turned those pelts into fancy hats. But trapping — and destruction of wetland habitats — decimated the species. By the time Chicago became a town in 1833, the wood-chomping rodents were getting scarce here, and by the end of the 19th century they were entirely gone. * Aurora Beacon-News | New Aurora Mayor John Laesch chooses his leadership team at City Hall: Soon after taking office, Laesch hired three new people from his transition team to work in the Mayor’s Office and recently appointed four others, with approval from the Aurora City Council, to other upper city management positions. Shannon Cameron, who led Laesch’s transition team, was hired to be his chief of staff — a position that seems to functionally replace the chief management officer position formerly held by Alex Alexandrou. The job of the chief of staff position, Laesch told The Beacon-News, will be to run the city when he is not around, even though he plans to be hands-on with city staff. The goal is to have him and Cameron be “interchangeable,” he said. * Tribune | New Homer Township leadership pledges to reduce highway commissioner salary, review civic center costs: It’s been about three months since the Homer Township Reset slate won the February Republican primary, ousting the incumbent administration, and the group is ready to get to work, Homer Township Supervisor Susanna Steilen said. Because the Reset party ran unopposed in the April 1 election and state law states most township officials assume their duties the third Monday of May, it’s been a long wait, Steilen said. The Reset slate, which also includes Highway Commissioner John Robinson, Clerk Tami O’Brien, Collector Sara Palermo and Trustees Ken Marcin, Chris Sievers, Don Melody and Keith Gray, were sworn in May 19. * Naperville Sun | Naperville-based Alive Center for Teens to start franchising: The nonprofit is ready to start franchising, the center has announced. With locations in Naperville, Aurora and Hanover Park, the organization has launched a social franchise model and is hoping to “significantly expand its proven teen support system statewide,” the release said. “That’s really the message we’re (giving) out, that we’re here,” said Kandice Henning, CEO of The Alive Center. “That we have a solution that is proven and works and we are willing to share it. We really want to help more kids and impact more kids in a positive way. (We want to) help more families and more communities ultimately.” * Daily Southtown | Tinley Park, Park District pair up after spat on Fourth of July fireworks: There has been friction between the village and Park District over control of the former Tinley Park Mental Health Center, which the Park District bought from the state last year for $1 and has plans to redevelop for recreational uses. The village had also sought to acquire the 280-acre property, northwest of Harlem Avenue and 183rd Street, with plans to develop it for property and sale tax generating entertainment uses. * NYT | Trump Allies Look to Benefit From Pro Bono Promises by Elite Law Firms: Earlier this year, the Trump administration agreed to spare Skadden and eight other large law firms from executive orders that could have crippled their businesses in exchange for commitments from those firms to collectively provide nearly $1 billion in pro bono legal work and represent clients from all political points of view. Now individuals and organizations allied with Mr. Trump are starting to request that the firms make good on the free legal work they committed to perform, according to 11 people briefed on the outreach, including some who requested anonymity to discuss internal law firm business. * WIRED | There’s a Very Simple Pattern to Elon Musk’s Broken Promises: WIRED examined the history of Musk’s pledges on everything from Full Self Driving, Hyperloop, Robotaxis, and, yes, robot armies, with a view to reminding ourselves, his fans, and investors how reality in Elon’s world rarely matches up to the rhetoric. Tellingly, Musk’s fallback forecast of “next year” turns up repeatedly, only to be consistently proven wrong. * NYT | The C.D.C. Now Says Healthy Kids Don’t Need Covid Shots. Is That True?: It’s true that for many children, a case of Covid will be inconsequential. They might have a runny nose, a cough or other mild symptoms, if any at all, and bounce back within a few days. But some children do become seriously ill and, in rare cases, die from their infections. And data shows that over one million U.S. children have developed long Covid.
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Unions call on Pritzker to support their Tier 2 pension overhaul
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers were told about this earlier today. Today, the union coalition We are One Illinois sent this letter to Governor JB Pritzker…
The amendment is here. They want to use some of the money freed up after two pension obligation bonds are paid off.
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The fight over working hours for Direct Support Professionals (Updated)
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Senate Republicans last week…
* Pritzker’s spokesperson responded last week…
* Shore Community Services took both parties to task in a press release. Excerpt…
* Capitol News Illinois last month…
…Adding… From Senate Republican Leader John Curran’s Press Secretary Whitney Barnes…
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Updated context to today’s subscriber edition
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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As Budget Is Finalized–Remember That Senior Care Can’t Wait
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] The push to prioritize home care for seniors has overwhelming and growing support in the IL GA, with 30 Senators and 59 Representatives signed on. The voices of seniors and workers are breaking through, as in this new radio ad that started hitting Chicago stations on Saturday, and in the video below, making the case that Illinois needs to put seniors before big corporations and the ultra-wealthy:
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Mayor Johnson says ’some room’ to delay transit funding after May 31, but ‘not very much’
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson held a press availability this morning…
It’s a big lift to do both this week. We’ll see. * Other topics…
* Bears…
I’m not sure that the Bears are engaged in “active talks” about state funding with anyone. Many thanks to Isabel for cleaning up the recorded transcript. However, just in case, please pardon any transcription errors.
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Powering Illinois’ Energy And Economic Future
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] What if Illinois could expand its energy grid, attract AI and emerging tech companies to the state, and provide over 60,000 new jobs with no impact on communities or the environment? SOO Green makes it possible. Built along existing rail corridors, this underground transmission project will deliver 2,100 MW of low-cost reliable power making the electric grid more resilient in the face of extreme weather while unlocking billions in economic investments for Illinois. The SOO Green Advantage:
• 60,000+ new jobs • Lower energy costs for families and businesses • $26 billion in economic benefits statewide • $9.8 billion in health benefits by reducing emissions With SOO Green all ratepayers will enjoy a more reliable grid, protection from rising energy costs, and a stronger economy for Illinois. Learn more at www.soogreen.com.
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It’s just a bill
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Grist…
* Tribune…
* Rev. Dr. K. Edward Copeland, pastor and former public defender…
* WAND…
* Chicago State University President Zaldwaynaka Scott and President of the Chicago Urban League Karen Freeman-Wilson…
* WAND…
HB 2688 has passed both chambers, it only needs approval from the governor to become law.
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RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments. Retailers like Jon enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.
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What the proposed Medicaid and SNAP cuts mean for Illinois
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
* Meanwhile, from the Sun-Times…
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Repeal The Interchange Fee Prohibition Act Now
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] ![]() “In the short remainder of this spring’s legislative session, lawmakers have the opportunity to prevent the upending of a financial system that provides Illinoisians with affordable credit and enables small businesses to thrive…. Hurting local financial institutions and small businesses isn’t the way to grow our economy. “For the sake of our communities and the members we serve, we call on General Assembly members to repeal this flawed legislation.” Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.
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Open thread
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers know more. ICYMI: Big issues for Illinois legislative session’s final week include public transit, pension reform.Tribune…
- Democrats control the General Assembly, but the $55.2B budget could divide moderates and progressives—especially over the lack of funding for health insurance for noncitizen immigrants under 65. - State revenues are $471M below projections according to COGFA, complicating efforts to fund transit reforms as Chicago faces a looming fiscal cliff with federal COVID funds expiring early next year. -Leaders warn lawmakers may need to return after the May 31 adjournment due to uncertainty over federal funding under the Trump administration. * Related stories…
∙CBS Chicago: Illinois lawmakers face Spring Session deadline to pass legislation ∙ NBC Chicago: Spring session underway for Illinois State Senate ∙ Capitol City Now: IL lawmakers could pass budget by Saturday Sponsored by the Illinois Pharmaceutical Reform Alliance * BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here. * Governor Pritzker has no public events scheduled today. * Tribune | Illinois coal plants get Trump exemptions from Biden-era rule limiting mercury, other toxic air pollution: In November, the company said it would keep Baldwin running until 2027. Then last month, in an attempt to revive the nation’s dwindling coal industry, President Donald Trump threw a lifeline to Vistra and a few dozen other energy companies, encouraging them to apply for exemptions from the latest federal limits on soot, mercury and other toxic air pollution. Vistra took Trump up on his offer, getting at least a two-year break from tougher regulations at Baldwin and six of its other coal plants: Kincaid south of Springfield, Newton in Jasper County, three in Texas and one in Ohio. * Daily Herald | Cuts to school mental health grants could trickle down to local districts: Murray Bessette of the U.S. Department of Education’s office of planning, evaluation and policy development stated the grants violate federal civil rights law and conflict with the department’s commitment to “merit, fairness and excellence in education.” One of the grants, the School-Based Mental Health Services Grant Program, provided ISBE initially with $2.97 million in fiscal year 2022 to increase the number of credentialed mental health service providers for students, according to the U.S. Department of Education. That was extended to the end of 2025 and the total obligations were increased to $6.2 million, according to HigherGov. * Tribune | Illinois finalizes deal for land near Joliet needed for stalled invasive carp prevention project: “This is something that we’ve been waiting for for over a decade,” Marc Smith, policy director for the National Wildlife Federation, said. “It’s very good progress.” The state earlier this year postponed construction on the Joliet-area project, with state officials saying they didn’t want to move forward because they anticipated a federal funding shortfall. Then, two weeks ago, the Trump administration announced it supported the project and that funding was available, though Pritzker and Trump still managed to snipe at each other at the time. * Sun-Times | IHSA looks for compromise on Right To Play issue: IHSA executive director Craig Anderson said the association decided to get in front of the issue after hearing feedback from member schools. A bylaw proposal allowing athletes to compete in non-school activities is expected to be on the annual ballot this fall. The consensus, Anderson said, is “if we’re going to change the bylaws, it’s best to let the membership do that rather than if we’re forced to change.” * Crain’s | Cash-strapped Illinois weed businesses ‘bet the farm’ on a risky tax strategy to save millions: Nobody likes paying taxes, least of all cash-strapped businesses struggling for their lives. That’s why a new business strategy has taken off over the past year in the legal cannabis trade: claiming exemption from a burdensome federal tax provision that has — until now — been effectively taxing much of the industry to death. Since early 2024, state-licensed cannabis companies in Illinois and across the country have been changing up their approach to filing and paying federal taxes — specifically to claim exemption to a little-known 1982 provision in the Internal Revenue Code called Section 280E — in a move that is saving many of them eight or nine figures apiece. * Sun-TImes | What Trump’s cuts to Medicaid will mean for nursing homes, long-term care facilities in Illinois: Across Illinois, about 70% of days spent in nursing home care are covered by Medicaid, making it the largest insurance payer for this type of coverage, according to state officials. Advocates worry the proposed cuts will reduce the type of care low-income seniors and those living with disabilities will receive at these facilities. * Daily Herald | Political Roundabout: Mayors in Crespo’s corner, Schneider gets primaried, and is a service tax on tap?: “Fred Crespo is a friend to our Northwest suburbs, but, more than that, he is concerned for this entire state. He is honest to a fault,” Hanover Park Mayor Rod Craig, Schaumburg Mayor Tom Dailly and Hoffman Estates Mayor Bill McLeod told the Daily Herald in a letter. The trio “felt compelled to set the record straight,” after Welch removed Crespo as chair of the House Appropriations Committee for General Services and from the Democratic caucus earlier this month. * Tribune | Illinois lawmakers’ latest perk — continuing education credits for going to work: The new benefit came about from a little-noticed change in Supreme Court rules, a move encouraged and endorsed by multiple lawmakers. It took effect Jan. 1, just in time for the ongoing spring legislative session. At least 29 lawmakers were notified that they could qualify for up to 12 of the 30 educational credits they need to collect over two years. The lawmaker-lawyers can chalk up three hours of credit by simply attending one day of a legislative session, a committee meeting or a subcommittee hearing, according to the new rule. One catch is that they can collect only three credits throughout a legislative session, such as a spring session that lasts several months or a fall veto session that lasts a few weeks, court officials said. * Crain’s | Jenner & Block wins ruling blocking Trump’s executive order: Judge John Bates of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia said in his five-page order the actions detailed in Trump’s executive order, which included revoking security clearances for Jenner employees and limiting the firm’s access to federal buildings, were null and void. * Sun-Times | Chicago Public Schools lays off hundreds of tutors before CPS school year ends: Hiring hundreds of tutors was one of CPS’ key strategies to shore up learning as students returned to in-person classes after the COVID-19 pandemic. When elementary school reading scores rebounded, CPS credited the tutors in part for the improvements. But CPS officials said Friday that the school system is “refining and refocusing the program in response to key lessons learned and in alignment with current district resources.” This year, more than 200 schools had literacy and math tutors. Next year, though, only 55 will get math tutors for middle school students, according to CPS, which is facing a budget deficit of at least $529 million. * Sun-Times | Chicago’s ‘missing middle’ housing program adds more neighborhoods, extends developer deadline: Launched in fall 2024, the Missing Middle Infill Housing program began with 40 vacant lots in North Lawndale, which will now be developed into more than 100 housing units. The expansion of the program in April opens up 54 lots across the three South Side neighborhoods. With $75 million allocated to the program, the city expects to create up to 750 residential units. The term “missing middle” refers to the hole in the center of a housing supply that often includes more low- and high-density properties, like single-family homes and high-rise apartments. * Sun-Times | Family wants city action after woman, 88, is killed in Garfield Ridge: ‘There’s no speed bumps around here’: Fernando Ochoa, another of Maria Ochoa’s sons, said the area has a reputation for reckless driving and he often hears cars racing up and down the street. He wants more speed cameras and speed bumps in the area and stiffer penalties for those flouting the laws. “Every night I hear this going on down Archer Avenue, down 55th, cars drag racing, there’s no speed bumps around here,” Fernando Ochoa said. “We’ve been asking for this stuff for a while and nothing happened. We have no speed cameras here at all.” * WBEZ | Gerald Reed is suing over alleged torture by Chicago cops: In May 2024, Cook County Judge Steven Watkins found Reed not guilty on all counts, following a four-day trial. His attorney will now seek a certificate of innocence, which would make Reed eligible for nearly $200,000 from the state for his time spent in prison. The lawsuit filed earlier this month in federal court also seeks damages, naming the city and dozens of current and former Chicago police officers as defendants, including Burge. * Tribune | Soaring Chicago police lawsuit payouts hit record amount — and more are on the way: Through May alone, the City Council has already approved at least $145.3 million in taxpayer payments to settle lawsuits involving the Chicago Police Department, a record number that dwarfs sums from past years, according to a Tribune analysis. That amount — far above the $82.6 million Mayor Brandon Johnson and aldermen budgeted for settlements, verdicts and legal fees involving the department — does not include many smaller payments that face less aldermanic scrutiny. * WGN | Chicago sees smooth travel as millions hit the road for Memorial Day: AAA predicted 45.1 million people across the country will travel at least 50 miles from home this weekend. The holiday’s previous domestic travel record of 44 million was set 20 years ago. Of that, 87.4% were expected to travel by car, which equals over 39 million people, and an increase of about 3% from last year. * Sun-Times | 86-year-old owner of Old Fashioned Donuts goes viral thanks to granddaughter’s TikTok: Since 1972, shop owner Burritt Bulloch, 86, has shown up nearly every day to make doughnuts, and he has not only become a fixture in his community, but an inspiration to his family. “My grandfather is the heart of the business,” said Edwards, 23. “He’s said before, ‘If I stop, then that’s it for me.’ This is what keeps him going, and it warms my heart that he has this drive. He was just a young guy with a dream when he moved to Chicago and he’s accomplished so much. I’m grateful for his legacy.” * Press Release | Congressman Sean Casten Announces Endorsement of Daniel Biss for Illinois’ 9th Congressional District: Today, Congressman Sean Casten (IL-06) announced his endorsement of Daniel Biss for Congress in Illinois’ 9th Congressional District. Casten’s endorsement comes just days after a slate of state elected officials endorsed Biss, adding to the growing momentum in his campaign. “Congressman Casten is a dedicated, hardworking public servant who brings much-needed expertise and commitment on climate action to Washington. I’m truly grateful to have earned his support,” said Daniel Biss. “Illinois needs a Congressional delegation that won’t back down when Donald Trump and his MAGA followers threaten the services our people rely on or the rights we hold dear. Sean Casten has stood up time and again for the people of Illinois, and I hope to earn the opportunity to fight and win alongside him in Congress.” * Daily Herald | Few suburban Congressional candidates met financial disclosure deadline: Only three of the more than two dozen candidates for congressional seats serving the North, West or Northwest suburbs turned in federal financial disclosure reports by a May 15 deadline, a Daily Herald analysis revealed. One, 9th District Democratic hopeful and internet personality Kat Abughazaleh, is a political newcomer whose campaign has received national media attention. The other two — Republicans Niki Conforti of the 6th District and Jim Marter of the 14th — are campaign veterans who lost previous bids for federal office. * NBC Chicago | Suburban couple fights for fair Cook County property taxes after massive increase: “It [the property tax] was affordable until last August when they did a reassessment and the property in the back went from a market value of $107,000 to $752,000 in tax dollars,” Sandra Kucala said. “That’s a 602% increase. Their other two parcels saw double digit increases, too. “It [the tax bill] went from $3,000 a year in taxes to $17,000,” she said. “We can’t even sell it [the property] with the taxes being that high.” * Daily Herald | Schaumburg aims to slash police hiring time during officer staffing crisis: Desperate to resolve a problematic 13 vacancies among its 119 officer positions, Schaumburg will follow the lead of most other area police departments to bring its six-month hiring process down to the regional norm of two months. Though Schaumburg is in crisis mode, other departments are facing hiring issues as well. “Being short officers as we are can lead to burnout, or officers being tired,” Schaumburg Mayor Tom Dailly said. “We don’t want our officers out there in that condition.” * Daily Southtown | Former Gov. Pat Quinn shares Memorial Day message in Blue Island: On Monday, Quinn echoed some of the thoughts of Blue Island American Legion Post 50 Cmdr. Joe Serbantez, who said Memorial Day was about more than cookouts and mattress sales. “Yes, we have ballgames and we have picnics and all kinds of celebrations and that’s good,” Quinn said. “We were given a gift by God to be here in the United States as citizens in 2025. That’s all important. But we cannot forget the significance of today, which is to honor all of those who came and served our country. We cannot forget them.” * WTTW | There’s a Shortage of Native Seeds, So Cook County Preserves Is Growing Its Own Supply: A 2023 report sounded the alarm about the scarcity of native seed: The native segment of the commercial seed production industry is comparatively small and highly specialized, and there isn’t enough species diversity in the offerings that do exist. Too often, key species are unavailable or buyers have to make do with substitutions, and that can affect the success of a restoration project. Pat Hayes, long-time volunteer site steward at Cook County’s 1,000-acre Orland Grassland preserve, didn’t need data to tell her what she’s been experiencing firsthand. * Sun-Times | McDonald’s is closing its CosMc’s restaurants, including Bolingbrook site: McDonald’s said Friday that it’s closing down CosMc’s, a new restaurant format it began piloting in the U.S. last year. But the company said beverages inspired by CosMc’s will soon be tested at U.S. McDonald’s locations. Among the drinks on CosMc’s current menu: matcha iced latte, turmeric spiced latte, prickly pear-flavored slushy with popping candy on top and a frozen sour cherry energy drink. * Daily Herald | ‘Peace is not free’: Honoring those who made the ultimate sacrifice: Streamwood Village President Billie Roth noted the suburb was founded in 1957 as the U.S. and the world continued to move beyond World War II. “Our town was established during a time when the world was recovering from the hardships of war, and we are here today because of the immense sacrifices made by those who fought to secure the freedoms we all enjoy,” she said. * WEEK 25 | Ameren Illinois customers warned of price spike on summer electricity bills: “These results highlight the ongoing energy challenge in downstate Illinois and the need for a more robust resource planning process on the state level,” an Ameren Illinois spokesperson said in a statement. “Balanced solutions, including transmission, energy storage, renewables, natural gas, nuclear, energy efficiency, and demand response, are needed to provide residents and businesses with affordable and reliable energy,” the company said. * WAND | Urbana residents face changes in electric supply as municipal aggregation contract expires: The City plans to pursue aggregated pricing again in the spring. Residents have several options: they can remain on Basic Generation Service, subscribe to community solar, or choose their own retail electric supplier. If residents stay on Basic Generation Service for two billing cycles, they will be locked in for another 10 months. Additionally, those who enter a retail contract in the spring will not be automatically enrolled in future aggregation attempts. * WICS | Springfield city council approves new 13-million-dollar solar energy agreement: Sangamon Solar is building a new 750-acre solar farm south of Chatham. The project is set to cost the city 13 million dollars. That 13-million dollars is from taxpayer money, but it’s not an extra 13 million. It’s money already budgeted, but instead of being spent on electricity, it will be spent on solar energy * WGLT | A $35 million price tag to dredge Lake Bloomington: A study done for the City of Bloomington estimates the cost to dredge Lake Bloomington at more than $35 million. “And that doesn’t include the drying beds. We would need to acquire land to lay out that silt and whatnot to dry so we can dispose of it,” said Deputy City Manager Sue McLaughlin. * WGLT | U of I Extension’s Master Gardeners program marks 50 years of research-based advice: Brittnay Haag is the horticulture educator for Illinois Extension serving McLean, Livingston and Woodford counties. She said one of the biggest advances the program has made has been giving more scientific solutions to gardeners, as opposed to internet tips and family secrets. “They really learn proper care and proper techniques that have been researched, that they may not have always done. A lot of them are like, ‘Oh, I learned this from my grandma 50 years ago,’ and that may not be the proper researched-based technique nowadays,” she said. * WTTW | Black Bears Looking to Relocate Too? Southern Illinois Has a Furry Visitor, Wildlife Officials Confirm: The Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) said it is monitoring a bear that’s been spotted hanging out all week in St. Clair County in the southwestern part of the state, just east of St. Louis. The bear has had no interaction with humans but has damaged some bee hives on private property, IDNR said. * IPM News | This Memorial Day, a U of I professor will honor the life of his relative who went missing during WWII: “A few hours of internet searching suddenly led to an understanding that there was information about my relative who died in the B-24 bomber that the family never knew,” Althaus said. “And very quickly this became what would eventually become a five-year research project to try to find the final resting place of my relative, Second Lt. Thomas V. Kelly, Jr.” * Auto Blog | Tesla’s Odometer Lawsuit Could Be EV Industry’s Dieselgate Moment: A California class-action lawsuit alleges the company uses predictive software to inflate odometer readings by up to 117%, voiding warranties prematurely and forcing owners into $10,000 repair bills. And if the Courts find it to be systematic? Global? Based on the lawsuit data, the total estimated annual financial benefit to Tesla is about $3.99 billion. Nyree Hinton’s 2020 Model Y odometer logged 72 miles/day despite a 20-mile commute, burning through his 50,000-mile warranty in 18 months. * The Lever | Get Ready To Pay In ZuckBucks: Amid a flood of industry lobbying in Washington, D.C., and Democrats’ capitulation, the Senate is set to pass the GENIUS Act, a sweeping cryptocurrency law that could spread fraud-ridden, destabilizing digital currencies across the banking system. But lawmakers and consumer protection experts warn that the bill has an even more serious problem: It would allow Elon Musk and other Big Tech tycoons to issue their own private currencies. That means we could soon live in a world where all online transactions will require us to pay for goods in billionaires’ own made-up monopoly money, for which tech giants will be able to charge exorbitant transaction fees. * Slate | Crypto Is About to Cause the Next Great American Financial Crisis: So imagine this scenario: It’s a year from now, maybe two. Crypto-friendly legislation is now law, opening the floodgates for all manner of bank exposure to crypto. Next, the economic recession people have been forecasting for years actually happens. Trump’s erratic economic policies and his embrace of tariffs have boosted the chances of one to as high as 70 percent on prediction markets just last month, although they’ve since come down. Historically speaking, though, recessions are unavoidable. News of a downturn then leads to a sizable drop in the markets. As investors rush to shed themselves of risky assets, crypto, perhaps the riskiest “asset” imaginable, is dumped with ferocity. Soon, there’s a run on the banks, except it’s not like in 2023, it’s far bigger. Instead of only a handful of banks, dozens or maybe even hundreds are affected, including some of the largest in the country. And quelle surprise, we are all obligated to bail the banks out (again) or face global financial armageddon.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Addition to today’s edition
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Reader comments closed for the holiday weekend
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Bob Weir and Jackie Greene will play us out… Well, there ain’t nothing wrong with the way she moves
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Keeping up with the congressionals…
* Click here for some background on the bill. Ben & Jerry’s launched a small Meta ad campaign this week for the FAIR Act… The bill passed through the House in April but has yet to move in the Senate. * Be safe out there folks…
…Adding… Sen. Meg Loughran-Cappel’s father Edward Loughran has passed away. Click here to read his obituary. * NWI Times | Around 30 lawsuits filed against Indiana, Illinois cremation services over mishandled, misidentified remains: The Indianapolis-based law firm CohenMalad, Chicago-based attorney Scott Yonover and the Chicago-based law firm Costello, Gilbreth & Murphy have filed 28 lawsuits in Indiana alleging negligence and the mishandling of human remains, and plan to file “dozens more” in coming days. They also additionally plan to file “numerous” lawsuits in Illinois on behalf of family members who say their loved ones’ remains were mishandled, that their loved ones’ ashes were co-mingled with other people’s, and that they were sent the wrong remains. * Daily Herald | ‘Anything to raise awareness’: Drivers asked to watch for turtles crossing roads: Unlike squirrels or deer that dart out of the woods and can startle drivers, turtles aren’t going to surprise anyone and can’t take evasive maneuvers to avoid being struck. That’s why wildlife experts are reminding drivers to be alert for the slow-moving reptiles crossing roads near lakes, ponds and marshes throughout the region searching for water, food and mates. “This time of the year is probably the highest concentration of road mortality or encounters,” said Dan Thompson, ecologist for the Forest Preserve District of DuPage County. * WTTW | Deadline Approaching for Illinois Lawmakers to Secure Transit Funding and Reform Bill: “In order to realize the savings of 20%, you’d have to cut service by up to 40%,” said Orlando Rojas, a Metra train conductor and legislative representative at Sheet Metal Air Rail Transportation (SMART) Union Local 653. “There’s certain fixed costs that the transit agencies have. Whether it’s fully funded or not, they’re obligated to meet those costs. So where they have the most room is in service cuts, unfortunately, and that’s the actual service that we provide. Now you’re talking a 40% reduction. Obviously, the people that I work with are concerned about cuts.” * Chicago Eater | Illinois Third-Party Reservation Ban Bill Awaits Gov. Pritzker’s Approval: The Restaurant Reservation Anti-Piracy Act was unanimously passed with 58 votes on Thursday, May 22. The Illinois bill is modeled after a New York policy signed into law in December. The measure seemingly targets Appointment Trader, a website where users sell reservations to trendy restaurants. Lawmakers contend users deploy bots on sites like OpenTable and Resy to scoop up desirable times before customers can book tables. Illinois State Rep. Margaret Croke says the difficulty in finding reservations at restaurants like Armitage Alehouse led her to introduce the legislation in February in Springfield. * WGLT | CIRA taxis down $70 million capital projects runway: The Central Illinois Regional Airport has about $70 million in infrastructure projects underway, or in a six-year pipeline. Some are moving faster than others. A road project at CIRA has hit a snag. Airport executive director Carl Olson said a proposed cargo access road has lost about $1.5 million in federal funding. The road would divert heavy truck traffic from the main airport road used by passenger traffic, increasing safety and reducing road wear. Olson said design work for an intersection is done. * Telegraph | Judge denies protection order for Madison County board member after social media dispute: A hostile response to a social media post by Madison County Board member Alison Lamothe led to a court hearing Thursday, where Associate Judge John Hackett denied Lamothe’s request for an order of protection. On May 7, Madison County Board member and Edwardsville resident Alison Lamothe filed a petition for a stalking/no contact order against Russell Wheat of Roxana. Wheat previously received attention for his battles with the Roxana Landfill. * WICA | Potential legal action: Rantoul officials upset with landlords following large fire at former Air Force base: Charred piles of mattresses, burned brick and busted windows are what’s left of a vacant building on the former Chanute Air Force Base in Rantoul following a fire on Tuesday. Some village officials are upset with landlords for their lack of action and communication. Now, Rantoul leaders are taking legal action. Fire Chief Chad Smith and Mayor Sam Hall feel the recent fire could have been prevented if the owners had taken care of the property. * IPM News | Danville says goodbye to Bresee Tower: The demolition of the 12-story downtown office building began in early May. With no explosives involved in the process, city officials say it could take months for a demolition crew to remove the long-vacant building. In its first few days on the job, a demolition crew focused on Bresee Tower’s north side, tearing down the fire escape, and punching through walls. * PJ Star | Major courthouse renovations will change the look of this Downtown Peoria block: Capped at $6.76 million in construction costs, the Courthouse Plaza and surrounding block will undergo an aesthetic upgrade that will include “new permeable pavers, water jets, lighting, electrical and irrigation systems, vehicle protection bollards, benches, picnic tables, and landscaping,” according to a news release. * Sun-Times | Chicago restaurateurs push for repeal of law raising tipped wages; supporters want to expand it statewide: Lopez acknowledged getting the 26 City Council votes needed to repeal the ordinance will likely be an uphill climb. “I’ve had one or two individuals mention [a repeal] to me anecdotally but nothing in terms of a serious effort, which is problematic if it’s going to be successful,” he said. * WTTW | Jussie Smollett Agrees to Make $50K Charitable Donation to Resolve City of Chicago Lawsuit: On Thursday, the city announced the case will be dismissed in exchange for Smollett making a charitable contribution of $50,000 to BBF Building Brighter Futures Center for the Arts, a local organization that provides community, health and education opportunities for Chicago’s underprivileged youth. * WGN | ‘In crisis mode’: CACC warns of pet drop-offs as daily line keeps getting longer: The shelter is averaging in May around 56 animals being surrendered per day, up from 54 in April. Some are strays, but many are owners giving up their pets. […] “Most of it is the economy — the cost of pet food, vet appointments, other stuff,” Tejeda said. “A lot of people truly love their pets but they just don’t know about all of the resources out there.” * Sun-Times | No charges for shooter in Roseland double homicide sparked by argument over cheese: The shooting was sparked by an argument over what kind of cheese was being put on a customer’s sandwich at Momty’s Grill, located at 9 East 111th St., on Monday afternoon, according to a Chicago police report. An employee, Lois Wheeler, became upset with the customer, who was yelling at her about the cheese, the Chicago police report said. Wheeler called her son, Tate Wheeler, to the restaurant. * Daily Herald | Naperville mayor touts Block 59 dining district, calls I-88 corridor the ‘most significant redevelopment opportunity’ in city history: A new study calls the corridor the only “opportunity area” of its scale left in the city. Much of the corridor in Naperville — once known as its “Innovation Corridor” — was developed with single-use, low-density office space and is underused and “underperforming relative to its potential,” according to the report by AECOM, a consultant hired by the Naperville Development Partnership. * Daily Southtown | Substitute teacher charged with assault of student at Country Club Hills school: Officers took a statement from Lavana McEwen, who said that earlier that day, her son had been chased and battered by a school staff member, police said. […] Moore is scheduled to appear in court at 9 a.m. on June 3, according to court records. […] Parents and students said a substitute teacher chased, choked and hit a student after becoming angry in a fourth grade classroom at Meadowview. Another student was injured when the teacher allegedly pushed and overturned classroom furniture, leaving the child pinned in a corner, according to parents. * Crain’s | A year ago, Oberweis Dairy was in bankruptcy. Now it’s launching an expansion: Five to seven new stores are set to open in the Chicago area — Oberweis’ largest market — and five in St. Louis, where the company already operates four stores. Oberweis is also targeting an “aggressive expansion” into Southwest Florida, where it plans to open five stores. “We know that (Florida has) a rich history of Midwest-rooted people that live there, whether it’s from Chicago, St. Louis, Wisconsin — all markets we serve, where they’re familiar with the Oberweis brand,” Hoffmann said. “We want to capitalize on all that brand recognition.” * Courthouse News Service | Florida judge rules AI chatbots not protected by First Amendment: But in her order, U.S. District Court Judge Anne Conway said the company’s “large language models” — an artificial intelligence system designed to understand human language — are not speech. “Defendants fail to articulate why words strung together by an LLM are speech,” she wrote. “By failing to advance their analogies, defendants miss the operative question. This court’s decision as to the First Amendment protections Character A.I. receives, if any, does not turn on whether Character A.I. is similar to other mediums that have received First Amendment protections; rather, the decision turns on how Character A.I. is similar to the other mediums. The court is not prepared to hold that Character A.I.’s output is speech.”
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Rep. Gordon-Booth shares her pain, hopes ahead of Memorial Day
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Rep. Jehan Gordon-Booth today on the House floor… * Please pardon any transcription errors…
The chamber then observed a moment of silence, and so will we.
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CNI takes a look what the US House budget plan does to Illinois
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Click here for the very good KFF tracker. Capitol News Illinois…
Some will take effect immediately, including the de-funding of Planned Parenthood and and discontinuing Medicaid coverage for gender affirming care. But, things can change now that the bill is in the Senate. Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. This article first appeared on Capitol News Illinois and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. * Click here for the final House “manager’s amendment.” More about the clean energy aspect…
That’s gonna sting if it survives the Senate. * Related… * Sun-Times | How Medicaid cuts from Congress could affect every Cook County resident: Still, there are some clues for how much is at stake. For example, the House bill requires that, with some exceptions, Medicaid enrollees work (research shows most already do). The county says work requirements could lead to a $88 million annual loss. That’s based on state estimates and what happened in Arkansas, when around 18,000 people lost coverage either because they didn’t have a job or because of the confusing process to keep their insurance, according to KFF, a non-partisan health policy research organization. The federal government also would reduce from 90% to 80% how much they share the cost of adults who joined Medicaid when the program expanded under the Affordable Care Act to states like Illinois that fund health care for undocumented adults and children. If this happened, the state has a law that would end the expansion program and estimates at least 700,000 people would lose insurance. The projected impact to Cook County Health: around $200 million a year. All of these losses could translate into an increase in charity care, or discounted care, for county patients if they can’t afford to pay their medical bills. In 2023, this totaled nearly $140 million at the county’s flagship John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital on the Near West Side alone, almost six times more than the next closest hospital, according to a WBEZ analysis of the most recent Illinois public health data.
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Powering Illinois’ Energy And Economic Future
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] What if Illinois could expand its energy grid, attract AI and emerging tech companies to the state, and provide over 60,000 new jobs with no impact on communities or the environment? SOO Green makes it possible. Built along existing rail corridors, this underground transmission project will deliver 2,100 MW of low-cost reliable power making the electric grid more resilient in the face of extreme weather while unlocking billions in economic investments for Illinois. The SOO Green Advantage:
• 60,000+ new jobs • Lower energy costs for families and businesses • $26 billion in economic benefits statewide • $9.8 billion in health benefits by reducing emissions With SOO Green all ratepayers will enjoy a more reliable grid, protection from rising energy costs, and a stronger economy for Illinois. Learn more at www.soogreen.com.
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It’s just a bill
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Sen. Rachel Ventura…
* WAND…
* WQAD…
SB24 was unanimously voted out of the Senate yesterday and is now back in the House for concurrence. * Sen. Graciela Guzman…
* Rep Sharon Chung…
* More…
* WAND | House passes bill requiring CPR training for Illinois emergency dispatchers, sends plan to Pritzker: Experts have told lawmakers the barriers to entry for effective T-CPR is incredibly low and the training requires minimal investment compared to long-term healthcare savings and life saves. “When CPR begins prior to arrival of emergency medical service, the person in cardiac arrest has a two to three fold higher likelihood of survival,” said Rep. Lisa Davis (D-Chicago). “For every minute intervention is delayed, the chance of survival decreases by 10%.” * WAND | IL bills to help students with FAFSA applications passed out of the Senate unanimously: One bill would require one person in the school, whether staff or a teacher, to become a FAFSA assistant. Their role would be to help students with any problems when filling out their applications. The other bill would require schools to allow some time out of the school day to allow students to complete their FAFSA applications. * KFVS | Deer hunting legislation heads to Gov. Pritzker’s desk: House Bill 2339 requires the Illinois Department of Natural Resources to end its sharpshooting program used to manage chronic wasting disease if no cases have been found in the previous three calendar years. House Bill 2340 makes landowner deer permits more accessible in counties where chronic wasting disease has been found. * Press Release | State Representative Margaret Croke’s Legislation to Prevent Restaurant Reservation Piracy and Protect Local Restaurants Passes Senate, Heads to Governor Pritzker for Signature: Yesterday, State Representative Margaret Croke’s legislation preventing restaurant reservation piracy passed out of the Illinois Senate unanimously. The Restaurant Reservation Anti-Piracy Act prevents third-party services from listing, advertising, promoting or selling reservations for restaurants without written agreement. The bill, which now heads to Governor Pritzker’s desk to be signed into law, protects restaurants from costly no-shows and prevents consumers from experiencing reservation fraud.
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Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] A last-minute provision called the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act (IFPA) was snuck into the budget process last May and will create chaos for small businesses and consumers across Illinois if it takes effect on July 1, 2025. The IFPA gives corporate mega-stores like Walmart and Home Depot — who pushed for this backroom deal — millions more in profits, while small business owners get new expenses and accounting headaches. What’s more, consumers could be forced to pay for parts of their transactions in cash if this law moves forward. A recent court ruling in the litigation challenging the law suggests IFPA is likely pre-empted by federal law for national banks and will only apply to credit unions and local Illinois banks, putting local banks at a disadvantage against their national competitors. Illinois lawmakers should repeal the IFPA and focus on protecting small businesses and consumers across the state — not lining the pockets of corporate mega-stores. Stop the countdown to chaos by supporting a repeal of this misguided and flawed policy. Learn more at https://guardyourcard.com/illinois/ ![]()
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Open thread
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Let’s do one for Fred… Like a steam locomotive, rollin’ down the track Holiday weekend plans?
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers were briefed about this on Thursday. ICYMI: Illinois Medicaid covers gender-affirming care. The massive House bill aims to end that.Tribune…
- The new provision, however, would prohibit Medicaid programs from covering those services for people of all ages on Medicaid — not just people younger than 18, as a previous version of the bill proposed. -Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office said in a statement Thursday that it is evaluating the proposal and its potential implications. Sponsored by the Illinois Health and Hospital Association
* BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here. * Sun-Times | Homeowners pay price for insurance industry’s reluctance to address climate change, consumer groups say: The insurance industry’s continued embrace of fossil fuel projects is worsening climate change, which ultimately hits consumers in the form of higher premiums for homeowners insurance, consumer groups said Wednesday. The four organizations — U.S. PIRG, Consumer Federation of America, Americans for Financial Reform and Public Citizen — blasted the insurance industry on the same day lobbyists for the American Property Casualty Insurance Association were on Capitol Hill for their annual “Legislative Action Day.” * Sun-Times | Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul takes leading role in fighting Trump. ‘We are winning’: “I’d be lying to you if I told you this is not scary to me. That this does not hit me emotionally. That it’s not personal to me. Our very first lawsuit, birthright citizenship. I’m a birthright baby, right? My mom was not yet naturalized when I was born,” Raoul said in an interview with the Sun-Times. “I’m a cancer survivor. I’m a prostate cancer survivor. I was very public when I was diagnosed, partially because it was therapeutic to me while I was going through it.” * Planned Parenthood Illinois…
* The Daily Northwestern | Activists rally for climate legislation in Springfield during annual Climate Action Lobby Day: Throughout the day, attendees stressed the importance of three specific bills: the Clean and Healthy Buildings Act, the Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability Act and the Clean and Equitable Transportation Act. The Clean and Healthy Buildings Act aims to phase out gas burners and stoves so buildings run on clean energy. The Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability Act attempts to modernize the state’s power grid, making it more reliable and affordable while prioritizing clean energy. * Capitol News Illinois | Summer electric price spike fuels policy tensions in Springfield: The average residential customer of northern Illinois’ Commonwealth Edison will pay about $10.60 per month more this summer, according to a company statement. Downstate Ameren Illinois customers, meanwhile, can expect an 18% to 22% increase in their monthly bill. Prices will likely decrease in October once winter electric rates go into effect. * Press Release… Attorney General Kwame Raoul today won a court order stopping the Trump administration’s attempts to dismantle the Department of Education. On March 13, Raoul, as part of a coalition of 21 attorneys general, sued the administration after it announced plans to eliminate half of the department’s workforce. * Tribune | Savings from shuttering Stateville’s maximum security prison minimal as reception center grows: The governor’s proposed operating budget for Stateville in the upcoming year is $148 million. That’s down from $159 million budgeted in the current fiscal year — and less than $150 million is expected to be actually spent — but more than the facility’s $146 million budget two years ago, when the maximum security prison was operational for the entire year. Officials said the reason the proposed funding is in the same ballpark as recent Stateville budgets is in part because of the increased population of the two remaining facilities on the Joliet-area campus, a reception and classification center and a minimum security unit. * Sun-Times | Cook County assessor gave $930,000 in wrongful tax breaks, then waived penalties, interest over its errors: Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi has mistakenly handed out more than $930,000 in property tax breaks to homeowners and businesses since he took office nearly seven years ago. Those “erroneous” property tax exemptions went to 287 property owners, according to the assessor’s office. Kaegi’s staff says his office goes after those it finds took tax exemptions they didn’t qualify to get, and that it initially sought to collect another $900,000 in penalties and interest from those 287 property owners — money his office would use to help catch people cheating on their real estate taxes. * Daily Herald | Police say attackers called her a slur. Why aren’t the suspects charged with a hate crime?: Police over the weekend said hate crime charges against Kammrad and a 17-year-old co-defendant were discussed, but rejected by the Kane County state’s attorney’s office. But on Wednesday, State’s Attorney Jamie Mosser said she has not yet ruled out adding hate crime charges for Kammrad and the 17-year-old boy. She is not done with her investigation and will pursue justice “based on the full facts of the case,” she said in a written statement. * Press Release | Rolling Meadows City Council: The City Council will hire its project team to support the relocation of the Chicago Bears to Arlington Park during its next business meeting. The team will guide the City’s preparation and support every stage of the potential stadium project from initial concepts through construction. * Daily Herald | Wheeling cannabis dispensary closing: Okay Cannabis, 781 N. Milwaukee Ave., will close for good by the end of the month, a store employee confirmed Thursday. The West Town Bakery that operated in the same building and was owned by the same parent company shuttered in March. “Ownership has cited a combination of factors, including sales performance that fell short of projections and the high costs associated with operating a large, nearly 12,000-square-foot facility,” said Len Becker, Wheeling’s economic development director. * Daily Herald | History detective uncovers stories of Arlington Heights’ forgotten Civil War soldiers: Already writing articles for the Arlington Heights Historical Society and Museum’s newsletter, the history buff decided to embark on a project to find the names and learn the stories of all Arlington Heights residents who fought in the Civil War. Scouring newspaper archives, databases, genealogical volumes, census records and other documents, Maloney has identified 51 soldiers who participated in the war and lived within the vicinity of what became Arlington Heights. * Sun-Times | Executives’ Club of Chicago names new CEO, president: * Sun-Times | Chicago Teachers Union calls for more charter school oversight: Charter schools have come under scrutiny after abrupt closings. Sixteen charter schools whose contracts expire in June are expected to be considered for renewal at the board meeting next week. * Block Club | Midnight Softball, Park Pop-Ups Planned As City Looks To Curb Summer Violence: Launched in December 2023, the city’s “People’s Plan for Community Safety” aims to tackle the root causes of violence, using a people-first approach to offer programs, events and services in historically underserved neighborhoods. In its first year, the program was centralized around 10-block groups across the four neighborhoods of Austin, West Garfield Park, Englewood and Little Village, which were identified as experiencing a high concentration of violence. * Tribune | Chicago and Calumet rivers ‘pretty clean,’ report shows ahead of Memorial Day Weekend: “The Chicago River is pretty clean. It’s a lot better than it used to be, but it can always be better,” said Tara Hoffman, executive director of Recovery on Water, the rowing team. “We exist to get women moving when they might be otherwise inclined. … And that outdoors element, being on our river and experiencing urban nature — which is all around us, but it’s easy to miss — that’s a real draw for a lot of people.” * WCIA | Homeless people in Danville are being kicked out their home in the park: Officials say those living in Ellsworth Park must leave by tomorrow. But people living there say there aren’t many other options. The police chief said it’s because they’ve been getting complaints about trash, used needles and other health risk items around the area. He said because the park is popular… public health and safety is a top priority. * WCIA | Springfield attorney suspended by Illinois Supreme Court: A woman who logged hours as an Assistant Illinois Attorney General and a Sangamon Public Defender — reportedly at the same time — will be suspended by the Illinois Supreme Court. According to a release sent out by the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission (IARDC) of the Supreme Court of Illinois, Salena Young will be suspended for two years. Young was employed as an Assistant Illinois Attorney General, worked as a part-time Sangamon Public Defender and operated a solo law practice between November 2021 and June 2023. * WCSJ | Grundy Co. Board of Health Has Discussions About Suspending Behavioral Health Services: During the public comment section of the meeting last night, Shawn Gibson expressed his frustration with that decision. […] “Just explain why and how it came about. It’s not just we decided one day to come and shut everything off, just explain why how it happened…I’d also like to know what we are telling our clients. What exactly are we telling them…” Board President Joan Harrop said the reason was due to the lack of employees and therapist leaving for better paying jobs. * WTVO | Pritzker selects Rockford to be 1 of 5 state-designated cultural districts: The chosen area for the cultural district is home to Rockford’s first neighborhood, located in the Southwest corridor of the city. “We don’t want to compete with Chicago or with any of the other things because there are going to be five of them… we just wanted one out of those five, and Chicago could have the other four if they want, but we wanted one here for Rockford,” said Swiftt President Rudy Valdez. * WCIA | Engines revving again: Coles County Speedway seeing success after new ownership takes the wheel: The Indy 500 is just a few days away, but the excitement around a different kind of racing extends closer to home. Mattoon is home to the nation’s oldest micro sprint race track. But until a year and a half ago, when current owner Brian Rieck got involved, the sound of roaring engines was almost silenced for good in Coles County. * WICS | Springfield appoints new police and fire chiefs: he Springfield City Council has selected new leaders for the city’s police and fire departments. Joseph Behl, an 18-year veteran of the Springfield Police Department, has been appointed as the new police chief. Behl, who previously served as the assistant police chief, shared his vision for the department. “As your police chief, it will truly be my honor to serve this community alongside the dedicated men and women of our department. Each day we come to work with a shared purpose, to protect with courage, to serve with compassion and to build lasting trust with people that we are sworn to protect,” said Behl. * The Bond Buyer | Massive tax, spending bill passes House, now heads to Senate: The centerpiece of the president’s second-term agenda, the legislation would expand and make permanent his 2017 tax cuts. Administration officials have said the measure will produce an economic boom. But it also will add $2.4 trillion to the national debt over the next decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Indeed, the legislation will worsen the federal government’s already serious debt woes. In the fiscal year that ended Oct. 1, Washington ran a budget deficit of more than 6 percent of gross domestic product, an unprecedented level outside of war or financial crisis. * AP | Trump’s big tax bill has passed the House. Here’s what’s inside it: House Republicans would reduce spending on food aid, what is known as the Supplemental Nutrition and Assistance Program, by about $267 billion over 10 years. States would shoulder 5% of benefit costs, beginning in fiscal 2028, and 75% of the administrative costs. Currently, states pay none of the benefit and half of the administration costs. * WaPo | Supreme Court allows Trump to fire independent regulators for now: The court’s unsigned order, which drew a sharp dissent from the three liberal justices, did not decide the underlying merits of the case, which will continue to play out in the lower courts. But it was a strong endorsement of presidential authority at a time when President Donald Trump is trying to seize greater control of the federal bureaucracy. “Because the Constitution vests the executive power in the President,” the conservative majority said, “he may remove without cause executive officers who exercise that power on his behalf, subject to narrow exceptions recognized by our precedents.” * CNBC | April home sales dropped to the slowest pace for that month since 2009: Home sales in April fell, as consumers faced high house prices and growing concern over the economy and employment. “Home sales have been at 75% of normal or pre-pandemic activity for the past three years, even with seven million jobs added to the economy,” said Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
|
Live coverage
Friday, May 23, 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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