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
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, May 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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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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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * We told you yesterday that a man had been arrested for threatening Rep. Nicole La Ha. More from the Tribune…
* Tribune…
* Attorney General Kwame Raoul…
* IPM | More babies are being admitted to NICUs in the Midwest, according to CDC data brief: The report found that about 1 in 10 infants nationwide were admitted to a NICU in 2023, which marks a 13% increase from 2016. Many Midwest states saw increases in the rate of babies being admitted to NICUs during that time period. In 2023, the percentage of babies admitted to the NICU was 11.4% in Indiana, 10.1% in Illinois, 10.7% in Iowa, 8.5% in Kansas, 11.3% in Kentucky, 10.5% in Missouri, 11.4% in Nebraska, 10.2% in Ohio, and 8.9% in Oklahoma. * WEEK 25 | Illinois House passes school hazmat emergency preparedness bill: This plan calls on the Illinois Emergency Management Agency and Office of Homeland Security to work with the State Board of Education to develop guidance for local emergency responders and school districts. Sponsors said the guidance will cover federal, state, or local agencies responsible for identifying whether a spill or explosion has occurred and how that information can be communicated to school personnel. * Crain’s | Loop Capital’s Jim Reynolds: No sacred cows in fixing Chicago’s $1B budget gap: The working group, led by Loop Capital founder Jim Reynolds, began meeting last weekend in an effort to put business, civic and labor leaders in a room to look for solutions that either haven’t been found or have been cast aside because of a lack of political will to implement them. “We’re getting data on everything. Everything. There’s no sacred cows, there’s no political influence on anything,” Reynolds said during Crain’s C-Suite Conversations event this morning. * Chalkbeat | Some Chicago high schools are rethinking lenient grading amid surging absenteeism: Teachers at Richards Career Academy High School on Chicago’s Southwest Side raised a question last spring that took principal Ellen Kennedy aback: Should the school stop giving students so much leeway on grades and go back to stricter standards? The school — which serves mainly low-income Latino and Black students — had piloted a new grading approach in 2019, then embraced it when the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted students’ lives and learning. Students could redo assignments repeatedly and turn in work late. Even if they didn’t complete the assignment, the lowest score they could get was 50 rather than zero — a concept known as no-zero grading. * Block Club | After City Removes Gompers Park Tents, A New Encampment Pops Up Across The Street: Thirteen tents were removed from Gompers Park by residents or by city workers during a May 12 “coordinated cleaning event,” and fencing was put up around the former encampment area. Most Gompers Park residents have relocated across the street to a small patch of green space near the Harmony Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center, where 12 tents were seen Monday. Three tents remained at Gompers Park, though closer to the river, not in the former encampment area. * Sun-Times | Security bollards eyed around Wrigley Field, with $30 million-plus in cost shared by city, state and Cubs: The ordinance introduced at Wednesday’s City Council meeting by Wrigleyville Ald. Bennett Lawson (44th) calls for installation of “anti-terrorism-rated removable bollards” around the ballpark and the widening of sidewalks along Addison Street. It resolves a long-running security stalemate between the Cubs and City Hall. * Sun-Times | Beyonce helps set hotel occupancy record, but city must spend more on tourism, Choose Chicago CEO says: The city’s new convention and tourism agency chief, Kristen Reynolds, is beating the drum for a so-called tourism improvement district that would more than double her agency’s annual budget by increasing the tax on rooms in Chicago hotels with 100 or more rooms by 1.5 percentage points — to 18.9%. * WBEZ | Chicago’s festival season kicks off without bolstered security requirements for big events: Ald. Raymond Lopez, 15th Ward, says the city is not prepared to keep large-scale events safe. He first raised concerns about event security at a February meeting of the City Council’s cultural committee. In the wake of the New Year’s Day attack in New Orleans, when a motorist plowed a truck through crowds on the famed Bourbon Street, Lopez called on the city to strengthen security requirements. Reached this week, he said that discussion did not go anywhere. * Tribune | Chicago beaches set to open for summer season on Friday: The Office of Emergency Management and Communication, the Chicago Fire Department, Chicago police and the Chicago Park District are asking residents and visitors to be mindful of safety rules while visiting beaches or the Chicago River. Officials are asking patrons to read and adhere to signage that indicates swimming is prohibited in certain areas. Patrons can consult the Park District’s website before heading out to beaches to ensure water conditions are safe. Officials also said to only enter the water if a lifeguard is on duty. Swim hours are from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily from Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day. * Sun-Times | Obama Foundation partner launches shared vendor network for small businesses: The Shared Purchasing Network gives businesses and organizations access to benefits typically reserved for larger counterparts that reduce operational and administrative costs. The program is initially offering waste hauling services, but Emerald South expects to add offerings such as insurance, security and natural gas in the coming months. The program is free to join and available citywide, but Emerald South is focusing on raising awareness in Chicago’s historically under-resourced communities. * Aurora Beacon-News | District 204 school board OKs sale of up to $156.5 million in bonds for facility improvements: Indian Prairie School District 204 is continuing on with a second bond sale for capital projects in the district, as part of the $420 million in bond sales approved by voters in November. On Monday, Indian Prairie’s school board approved a resolution for the district to sell a round of bonds to generate up to $156.5 million in funding for capital projects. This is the district’s second bond sale from the referendum, as it issued almost $15 million in December. The sale of the bonds will happen in rounds through 2029, according to past reporting. * Aurora Beacon-News | Matt Thomas sworn in as new police chief of Aurora: Surrounded by his family and Aurora elected officials, Thomas said after he was sworn in at Tuesday’s City Council Committee of the Whole meeting that his commitment is to continue serving the Aurora community with professionalism, transparency and integrity. “We’ll stay focused on making Aurora a city where people feel safe in their neighborhoods, where our partnerships with the community continue to grow and where every officer has the tools and support they need to serve with excellence,” he said. * Daily Herald | Legal fight brewing over Pope Leo’s childhood home? South suburb plans to acquire site: Despite the current owner’s plans to sell the home to the highest bidder in an auction next month, the village “intends to purchase the home either through direct purchase or through eminent domain powers,” village attorney Burton Odelson wrote in a letter Tuesday. The pope’s parents purchased the home, at 212 E. 141st Place, new in 1949, paying a $42 monthly mortgage. The current owners purchased the home intending to flip it and sell it. They renovated the home last year and on May 5 put it on the market, listing it for $219,000. Ultimately the owners decided to put the Cape Cod-style home up for auction, according to brokers iCandy Realty. * Daily Herald | Mount Prospect looking at possible improvements for pedestrians, diners on Prospect Avenue: Mount Prospect village board members this week approved a $114,000 contract with Civiltech Engineering of Itasca to look at ways to enhance the look and feel of Prospect Avenue between Main Street and Elmhurst Avenue. Downtown Mount Prospect south of the tracks is no longer a sleeping giant. Restaurants are popping up along Prospect Avenue, a phenomenon that led the village to put up barricades to create an alfresco dining area in front of the Patina Wine Bar and Lady Dahlia. * Aurora Beacon-News | Mayor taps former St. Charles City Clerk Nancy Garrison to return to post while city fills vacancy: On Monday, the St. Charles City Council voted to approve former City Clerk Nancy Garrison to return to her post temporarily while the city accepts applications for the position. The position was left vacant because Susan Hanson, who ran unopposed in the April 1 election, relocated downstate for work outside of the St. Charles city limits, according to past reporting. * I guess this is almost an island getaway…
* WGLT | Olympia School District ‘frustrated’ by error that led to incorrect McLean County tax bills: Administrators in the Olympia School District in western McLean County say they are frustrated by county government’s efforts to fix an error in tax bills recently sent to property owners. “Our attorneys are involved [with the county] and we are trying to remedy the situation,” said Olympia superintendent Laura O’Donnell. Olympia recently notified school district families in McLean County that the county did not apply the new tax rate prompted by voters’ approval of a March 24 referendum. * WCIA | Springfield City Council approves 25-year solar contract: The contract with Sangamon Solar LLC, approved this month, is in conjunction with a new 100 MW, 750-acre solar installation to be built in Sangamon County south of Chatham. This project is expected to start in 2026 and begin operation in 2028. It will also create a number of construction and maintenance jobs. * River Bender | Country Star Jake Owen To Headline Illinois State Fair Grandstand: With 10 No. 1 singles and more than 2.5 billion U.S. on-demand streams, Owen is a standout performer in the country music scene. His laid-back style and chart-topping songs like “Barefoot Blue Jean Night,” “Beachin’,” and “The One That Got Away” have made him a household name. “August 8 is Agriculture Day at the Illinois State Fair, and this is the perfect way to celebrate,” said Jerry Costello II, Director of the Illinois Department of Agriculture. “Country artists are a crowd favorite in central Illinois, and we are excited to bring Jake Owen to the Grandstand.” * AP | Stop making cents: US Mint moves forward with plans to kill the penny: The U.S. Mint has made its final order of penny blanks and plans to stop producing the coin when those run out, a Treasury Department official confirmed Thursday. This move comes as the cost of making pennies has increased markedly, by upward of 20% in 2024, according to the Treasury. By stopping the penny’s production, the Treasury expects an immediate annual savings of $56 million in reduced material costs, according to the official, who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity to preview the news.
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Caption contest!
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * As subscribers were told earlier this week, White Sox legend Ozzie Guillén is at the Statehouse today. Isabel was able to meet him… ![]()
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Advocates: Big hits coming for consumers, economy (Updated)
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * The Illinois Environmental Council on the congressional budget reconciliation bill…
* Meanwhile, on a different but still related topic, this is from the Citizens Utility Board…
…Adding… CUB…
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What we know so far about Chicagoan who killed two at Capital Jewish Museum (Updated x2)
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * AP…
* Sun-Times…
* Gov. JB Pritzker…
* Rep. Bob Morgan…
…Adding… Press release…
…Adding… The Tribune’s A.D. Quig…
…Adding… More misinformation…
* Related…
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Don’t Greenwash Discrimination: Demand Inclusive Labor Standards In Energy Storage Legislation
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] As Illinois charts its path toward a clean energy future, lawmakers must remember the promises made under CEJA—the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. CEJA was never just about clean energy; it was about equitable clean energy. That means creating good-paying union jobs for all workers, especially those from historically excluded Black and Brown communities. Yet today, a new energy storage bill threatens to undo that vision. Without strong, inclusive Project Labor Agreement (PLA) language, this legislation risks handing energy jobs to a narrow slice of the construction industry—jobs that will go disproportionately to white, politically connected workers, while locking out the very communities CEJA aimed to uplift. We can’t let Illinois’ clean energy transition be built on the backs of exclusion. Labor unity means every union has a seat at the table—not just the favored few. Ironworkers, roofers, painters, bricklayers, glaziers, boilermakers, cement masons, carpenters, millwrights and many other crafts helped build this state and deserve a shot at building its future. Lawmakers: don’t sell out working families. Reject any energy storage legislation that doesn’t include inclusive PLA language. Because when we say “green jobs,” we should mean jobs that are union, local, and equitable. This isn’t just about jobs—it’s about justice, too.
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Krishnamoorthi continues fundraising prowess
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Raja Krishnamoorthi press release…
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Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois
Thursday, May 22, 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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It’s just a bill
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WGN…
* WAND…
* Sen. Cristina Castro…
* WCIA…
* Sen. Robert Peters…
* WAND…
* Sen. Rachel Ventura…
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Repeal IFPA Now
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] ![]() IFPA Will Harm our Members and our Communities. “My members would be so frustrated.” Stop the Chaos for Our Hard-Working Educators! Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.
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Open thread
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Rare Abraham Lincoln artifacts sell for nearly $8 million at Chicago auction. WBEZ…
Sponsored by the Illinois Pharmaceutical Reform Alliance * BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here. * WGN | Federal budget cuts threaten academic support for at-risk Chicago youth: For the last 25 years, Chicago Hope for Kids (CHK) has supported some of the city’s most vulnerable children, providing academic support throughout the year. Federal budget cuts proposed by President Donald Trump’s administration threaten a significant reduction in the number of kids they can serve this summer. * WGN | Homer Glen man accused of threatening Illinois State Representative: Steven Brady, 40, faces a felony charge in connection with an alleged threat against Illinois State Rep. Nicole La Ha on Friday, May 16. La Ha is an Illinois House of Representatives member, representing District 82. Following an Illinois State Police probe, troopers arrested Brady without incident on Monday, May 19. Authorities did not disclose the nature of the threat or offer any additional details. * Report: Medicaid cuts risk maternity care for rural Illinois: Medicaid pays for half of all births across the state. Kathy Waligora, deputy director of external affairs for the advocacy group Everthrive Illinois, said rural communities already face health care challenges, including hospitals closing or no longer offering maternity care. She emphasized any threats to the program would leave millions without health insurance and affect health outcomes for women and babies across the state. * 25News Now | Local food bank worries more will need help if SNAP benefits are cut: As current federal budget negotiations suggest a $300 billion cut to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program funding, a local nonprofit believes this will only spike the demand for food. The reconciliation bill is under consideration by the House of Representatives to determine how much federal funding programs like SNAP will receive. The Community Impact Director for the Neighborhood House, Noah Palm, said the nonprofit is tracking a 20% to 30% increase in people coming to the food pantry. * A musical interlude… * Politico | The Danny Davis question: Congressman Danny Davis, who hasn’t officially announced his plans for 2026, tells Playbook he’s only focused on the budget negotiations in Washington this week. But we hear state Rep. La Shawn Ford, an ally of Davis’, has started to call mayors and aldermen in the 7th Congressional District to let them know he’s pulling together a campaign. Stay tuned. * FYI…
* Press Release…
* Crain’s | Illinois payroll hits highest level since Great Recession: State government has 55,340 workers, eclipsing the total it had in 2008. The state positions it as a success in finally staffing hard-to-fill roles at chronically understaffed social service agencies, such as the Department of Children & Family Services and the Illinois Department of Human Services. * WTTW | Chicago to Pay $62.5M to Settle 4 Police Misconduct Cases: The Chicago City Council agreed Wednesday to pay $62.55 million to resolve four lawsuits alleging a wide range of misconduct by Chicago police officers. Just five months into the year, Chicago taxpayers have spent at least $144.5 million to resolve nearly two and a half dozen lawsuits, exceeding its budget to resolve lawsuits alleging police misconduct by more than 76%, city records show. * Invisible Institute | Chicago cops dismissed recruit’s claim a colleague sexually assaulted her. Then, he was accused again and again: At the same time, Chicago Police Department investigative records show, Tabb started telling other recruits that Byrd-Maxey had overreacted and that he had only tapped her on the shoulder so he could get to his seat. The following week, when Byrd-Maxey reported the incident to her class leader, he talked with fellow recruits, and they downplayed the encounter. A recruit who witnessed what happened and was friends with Tabb later told investigators Byrd-Maxey was “trying to victimize herself.” * WTTW | Vote Blocked on Plan to Allow CPD to Declare ‘Snap Curfews’ to Stop Teen Gatherings: Seventeen members of the Chicago City Council joined together in an unprecedented show of force Wednesday to block a vote on a measure to allow Chicago Police Department officials to preemptively impose a curfew anywhere in the city and begin enforcing it with just 30 minutes notice in an effort to stop large teen gatherings. It takes just two City Council members to use a parliamentary procedure to block a vote until the City Council’s June meeting. But Ald. Jason Ervin (28th Ward) and Ald. Andre Vasquez (40th Ward) said 15 other members of the City Council had signed on to the letter stopping the vote. * Leslie S. Richards | Philadelphia’s transit faces deep cuts. Chicago can still avoid this fate: These are not doomsday scenarios. They are very real and very imminent, and they will profoundly affect how people get to work, school and critical appointments. Trust in transit cannot be rebuilt while preparing to take it away. Philadelphia and Chicago have much in common. Both operate legacy transit systems that serve millions of riders across dynamic and diverse regions. Both are navigating post-pandemic ridership trends and rising operating costs. * WBEZ | What’s the deal with Lower Wacker? Answers to your questions about Chicago’s basement: On its face, the phrase “double-decker street” sounds unique and innovative. But once you actually enter the bowels of Wacker Drive, it can lose its allure quickly. Like the top level, Lower Wacker winds along the curves of the Chicago River. Add in the dim lighting, minimal signage and nonexistent GPS signal and you’re in for a far more daunting adventure than you anticipated on a trip downtown. * Tribune | Waukegan parade organizer accuses alderman of intimidation; ‘This behavior is … inappropriate and very unethical’: Elizabeth Marrero, a director of not-for-profit organization Juntos — the organizer of the Viva la Independencia parade in September — said Felix asked the group to withdraw its special-use permit granted by the city on Jan. 14. The group began working on it in December. “Felix stated that the parade had been promised to other individuals and warned us that if we do not withdraw, they will find loopholes to revoke the permit,” Marrero said. “No public official should use their position to intimidate or manipulate (a) community group.” * Daily Southtown | Calumet City clerk Nyota Figgs testifies in document destruction lawsuit: In a lawsuit brought by Calumet City alleging she illegally destroyed records, city clerk Nyota Figgs testified Tuesday that she was given proper authorization. Though Figgs’ supporters claim the records lawsuit represents a targeted political attack from Mayor Thaddeus Jones, its trial has continued, with closing arguments scheduled for June 18. * Naperville Sun | Firearm arrest No. 10 made at Naperville Topgolf parking lot: Officers were performing a proactive foot patrol of the Naperville Topgolf lot when they observed suspected drugs and a handgun in plain view inside a parked, unoccupied Honda, according to Naperville police spokeswoman Kelley Munch. […] After a nearly four-month break, gun-related arrests outside the facility started up again in early February. Last month alone, police made five such arrests in the business’ lot. * Naperville Sun | DuPage County Board member Sheila Rutledge to step down in August: Reached over the phone, Rutledge said she loves her work on the county board but decided that her focus should be on Winfield Township. When she vied for the supervisor position earlier this spring, Rutledge had always intended on stepping down but anticipated an overlap between the two roles to see through several county projects, she said. * Daily Herald | Naperville police chief says the city will have ‘zero tolerance’ to unlawful conduct at gatherings: On Friday, Naperville police issued multiple citations after a group of about 200 teens gathered in the downtown area. One 15-year-old female from Aurora was arrested and charged with three counts of aggravated battery to a police officer and other misdemeanor charges. Police responded again on Saturday to a car meetup that attracted roughly 100 spectators who were standing outside as cars drove around them in a circle and did doughnuts in the parking lot, authorities say. * Reuters | Exxon Mobil says working to resolve operational issue at refinery in Joliet, Illinois: Exxon Mobil (XOM.N), opens new tab said on Tuesday it was working to resolve an issue at its 275,000-barrels-per-day refinery in Joliet, Illinois. The Houston, Texas-based company reported an equipment failure involving its process unit boiler that resulted in a gas release at the Joliet facility, according to a filing. * Crain’s | Highland Park penthouses sell at $3.7 million, a record for suburban condos: The two condos are both on the fourth floor, the top, of the Park Sheridan, a project of Fulton Developers, whose president, Mark Muller, told Crain’s a year ago that he was targeting affluent empty nesters who are reluctant to move to downtown Chicago. * WQAD | Woman accused of stealing from Rock Island County has previous conviction for embezzlement: News 8 has learned that 62-year-old Leisa Streeter previously went by the name Leisa Whan, who pleaded guilty in 1990 to embezzling $9,000 from the Aledo branch of the state bank of Sherrard where she worked as a teller. She was sentenced to three years of probation in 1991. * Our Quad Cities | Rock Island County deputy announces candidacy for sheriff: Rock Island County Sgt. Marcus Herbert on Monday announced his candidacy for Rock Island County sheriff. “For 20 years, I’ve served with the Rock Island County Sheriff’s Office,” he said in a news release. “I started my career as a correctional officer in 2005, becoming a deputy sheriff in 2010 after graduating from the Police Training Institute. In 2014, I became a certified bomb technician through the FBI and U.S. military, equipping me to handle complex threats.” * WGLT | Town of Normal and nonprofit collaborate to facilitate homeless encampment dispersal: * NCSL | My District: Is Home to the Legacy of Carl Sandburg: Sandburg, one of America’s most celebrated writers, won three Pulitzer Prizes, including one for his multivolume biography of Abraham Lincoln. He addressed Congress on the 150th anniversary of Lincoln’s birthday and even earned a Grammy. Before achieving literary acclaim, he worked locally as a milkman, an ice harvester, a firefighter and a pottery laborer, and he served in the Spanish-American War. * WCIA | U of I researchers discover two new crayfish species, encourage conservation action: University of Illinois researchers studying an invasive species of crayfish recently made a unique discovery — two new species that had long been mistaken for the Signal Crayfish. The Signal Crayfish is invasive and has spread to Europe, Asia and parts of the United States. As U of I researchers studied the Signal Crayfish, they eventually identified two new species — the Okanagan Crayfish and Misfortunate Crayfish — in the Pacific Northwest. * WGLT | Downtown Bloomington named as a new State-Designated Cultural District: The City of Bloomington’s Downtown Cultural District and the other four designees can “apply for $3 million in funding that will be tailored to fit their individual needs and support the goals of their program to foster economic development and help communities preserve their unique cultural identities,” according to a state announcement. * DNYUZ | States and Cities Fear a Disaster Season Full of Unknowns Amid Federal Cuts: Governors and mayors are also anticipating less financial aid, as the Trump administration shifts the burden of response and recovery away from the federal government. Exactly who will pay for what moving forward is a gaping question as disasters become bigger and costlier. “There’s no plan in writing for how FEMA intends to respond during this disaster season,” said Trina Sheets, the executive director of the National Emergency Management Association, which represents state emergency managers. “Things seem to be changing on a daily basis. But there’s no road map for states to follow or to be able to plan for.” * KFF | The Spotlight Is on Medicaid Cuts, But the ACA Marketplaces Could See a One-Third Cut in Enrollment: Some of the legislative language describing these policy changes is murky and the policies themselves are quite technical. It’s not entirely clear what is intended and unintended. But a cut in coverage even close to this magnitude in the Marketplaces would also result in financial hardship for millions of low-income people and destabilize some smaller state Marketplaces or possibly lead to them closing up shop. Marketplaces have to maintain a fixed operational structure to function (supported by plan payments to them, not government), so if enrollment falls too much, smaller Marketplaces in smaller states may no longer be viable.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated)
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, May 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Thursday, May 22, 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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