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Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * This is just about perfect. Bob Weir plays this song much like he did with the Dead, but his usual “second” guitar part is now the featured lead. It helps that Bobby had great people around him, including his longtime friends and RatDog co-founders Rob Wasserman and Jay Lane. Jackie Greene has always played a lot of Grateful Dead songs on tour, so he really gets it… Strangers stoppin’ strangers, just to shake their hand
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Illinois Department of Employment Security…
* Evanston Now | Biss campaign denies he sought AIPAC support: According to a source with knowledge of AIPAC’s conversations with the candidates, AIPAC tried to reach out to Biss again in the late summer to “make a deal with Daniel” after a slow start to Fine’s campaign. But days later, Biss came out publicly with a more critical position on Israel, despite his familial ties to the country, calling for the recognition of a Palestinian state and endorsing the Block the Bombs Act, which would block offensive weapon sales to Israel. * Jon Seidel…
* Tribune | Chicago faith leaders recount harm from immigration agents: ‘Prayers and thoughts was not going to stop ICE’: Villarreal said he asked the students, all native Spanish speakers who have immigrant parents, what was wrong. A student, with her voice shaking, replied that federal immigration agents were in her neighborhood. She didn’t know what to do if they knocked on her door, Villarreal said. “I had no clue what to answer, because prayers and thoughts were not going to be enough,” he said. “Prayers and thoughts was not going to stop ICE from knocking and pounding down their doors. Prayers and thoughts was not going to change the situation.”
* Sun-Times | 12 stunning photos of frozen Lake Michigan in Chicago’s deep freeze: Wrapped in four layers and armed with a drone, a Chicago Sun-Times photojournalist braved the brutal temps to capture delicate pancake ice swirling beneath the cold gaze of Chicago’s skyline. * Sun-Times | Power restored to 1,500 on North Side, with another cold night ahead: Over a third of the outages were reported in West Ridge as of about 8 a.m., but power to the area has since been restored, according to ComEd’s website. A ComEd spokesperson said most of the outages weren’t related to the cold weather and that crews were on standby “around the clock.” Wind chills dropped as low as 36 degrees below zero at O’Hare Airport and 34 below zero at Midway as of 6 a.m. Friday, according to the National Weather Service. O’Hare recorded an official low of 8 degrees below zero as of the same time. * Block Club | Commuters, Tourists — And Even A Few Swimmers — Brave Brutal Cold: But despite the conditions, Dan O’Conor, known as the Great Lake Jumper, still showed up early Friday to take a dip at Montrose Harbor. He was joined by George “Iceberg” Miller and several other brave souls. * Daily Southtown | Governors State University student scammed by caller threatening to report him to ICE: Governors State University notified students of scam that led an international student to pay $2,400 out of fear that he would be reported to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The university, through a campus notification, said the student was targeted by a caller who falsely claimed to be a member of the Governors State Department of Public Safety “and indicated that if the student did not pay a $2,400 fine immediately, he would be reported to ICE.” The student paid the fine before calling the public safety to verify the request, which the department confirmed was a scam. * Aurora Beacon-News | Developer pitches 151-unit senior living project in St. Charles, citing demand in area: Cedarhurst Senior Living, a St. Louis-based owner and operator of senior housing communities, is looking to build a senior living development at the southwest corner of Dean Street and Peck Road, currently in an unincorporated part of St. Charles Township. The proposed project would have assisted living units and a memory care facility, as well as a number of independent living units. The project — which would be called Cedarhurst of St. Charles — is intended to meet a demand for senior housing options, said Nick Dwyer, the Director of Development for Dover Development, at the city’s Planning and Development Committee meeting on Jan. 12. Cedarhurst Senior Living is the management company for Dover. * Crain’s | Empty suburban office space ended 2025 at new record high: The suburban office vacancy rate ended the year at a record high of 32.9%, up from 32.4% three months earlier and 32% at the end of 2024, according to real estate services firm Jones Lang LaSalle. The share of available workspace across the suburbs is up from 22.1% when the COVID-19 pandemic began and has now hit new all-time highs every quarter for five years. * Evanston Now | Evanston home prices rose 5.7% in 2025: The value of midrange houses, condos and co-ops and Evanston were 5.7% higher at the end of 2025 than they were at the same point the previous year, according to data provided by Zillow. By comparison, home prices in Chicago grew 2.3%, below the 2.7% increase in the December consumer price index. * STLPR | Scott Air Force Base has a new job — hosting the HQ for the military’s moving company: Scott Air Force Base will soon have a new responsibility: hosting the new headquarters for the part of the military that’s responsible for being soldiers’ moving company when they are reassigned. […]The change is the result of a task force started last year to improve the relocation process, which more than 300,000 American soldiers across the globe undergo every year. Problems, including damaged furniture and poor packing, had plagued the current system, Hegseth said. * BND | Freeburg mayor accepts plea deal on St. Clair County hunting violations: Kujawa dismissed three other charges against Speiser, including two counts of unlawful taking of a white-tailed deer with the aid of bait and one count of firearm deer hunting with the aid of bait. “There was a dismissal of three counts in exchange for a plea to one,” said Chris Allen, spokesman for State’s Attorney James Gomric. Speiser declined to comment this week, saying he didn’t want to interfere with the case of another defendant, Danny Cox, 66, his friend and neighbor, who formerly pitched for the St. Louis Cardinals and managed the Gateway Grizzlies. Cox’s next hearing is set for Feb. 17. * WGLT | Organizers launch Peoria-based Braver Angels chapter to ‘disagree better’ and ease political tension: Bill Poorman and David Pittman are co-organizers of the West Central Illinois Braver Angels, set to launch formally next week with a purpose of giving people tools for “disagreeing better.” “The ultimate motivation is just seeing all the polarization in our politics, seeing all this division and rancor,” said Poorman, who will act as the group’s moderator. “There is another way, right? We can find ways to work across differences and to get along, so to speak.” * WGLT | Illinois State campus to add public art installation to revived arts complex: The Illinois Arts Council and the Illinois Capital Development Board have partnered to commission an outdoor public art piece for display at the new Wonsook Kim College of Fine Arts complex. It’s part of a larger push for public art in Bloomington-Normal that will now include a major opportunity on Illinois State University’s campus for an Illinois artist. In a news release, the Illinois Arts Council said artists have about 1,045 square feet of space within the Fell Arboretum, with a $195,000 budget to “utilize as they see fit and…draw inspiration from the cultural, historical and environmental contexts of ISU, the Fine Arts Complex and the Fell Arboretum.” * Ken Klippenstein | ICE Making List of Anyone Who Films Them: The Department of Homeland Security has ordered immigration officers to gather identifying information about anyone filming them and to “send that information to Intel who will do a ‘work-up’ on them,” a federal law enforcement official directly involved tells me. “Meaning, trying to identify them via social media, running their license plates if available, and running a criminal history check,” the official explained. * WaPo | ‘House burping’ is a cold reality in Germany. Americans are warming to it: Lüften, meaning “airing out” or “ventilation,” is dogma in German households. Rain or shine, hot or cold (which, in Berlin winters, can be bone-numbing), windows must be opened several times a day to exchange stale indoor air for the fresh outdoor stuff. Ventilation, of course, is part of life in much of the world. Germans, however, have codified it in an especially German way. Many apartment leases here contain a “lüften” clause, requiring tenants to open their windows multiple times a day, even - or especially - in winter. German courts have ruled that, absent specific landlord guidance, a tenant is required to open windows twice a day, morning and evening, for 10 minutes each. * Electrek | Tesla didn’t remove the Robotaxi ‘safety monitor’ – it just moved them to a trailing car: When Musk says there’s “no safety monitor in the car,” he’s technically telling the truth, the monitor is in a different car, following right behind. But the implication that Tesla has achieved true unsupervised autonomy is misleading at best. True unsupervised autonomy means the vehicle can operate safely without any human backup ready to intervene. That’s what Waymo does, their vehicles operate genuinely alone, without chase cars, across multiple cities. They’ve accumulated over 100 million fully driverless miles.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Addendum to today’s edition
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Indiana House Speaker to Bears: Put up or shut up
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * As subscribers know, the Indiana Bears stadium bill is starting in the Senate, which, as we saw during re-remap, is quite an interesting group of folks. But the Hoosier House Speaker has issued a message to the Chicago Bears even before his chamber takes up the bill…
So, if Huston’s position holds (and things can change), the Bears will quickly have to decide whether Indiana is merely leverage or their real destination. * From Gov. Pritzker’s office…
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Embattled power line company catches a break at Illinois Supreme Court (Updated)
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Last July…
Missouri US Sen. Josh Hawley took credit for the funding cancellation. Chicago’s Invenergy is the company behind the project. But…
President Trump has, of course, made it abundantly clear that he despises windmills. * Also from last July…
* The Illinois Farm Bureau has been trying to stop the project here. From FarmWeek this past November as the case moved to the Illinois Supreme Court…
WAND’s report on the Supreme Court hearing…
* The Illinois Supreme Court issued its opinion today…
…Adding… Grain Belt Express spokesperson…
* Donovan Griffith, Executive Vice President & Chief Strategy Officer for the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association…
* Illinois Chamber…
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Question of the day
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Tribune…
* WSIL…
* WGLT…
* The Question: What are your favorite go-to recipes when it’s really cold outside? Rich and I have both been using this leek and potato soup recipe lately, but with added touches (more cream, more potatoes, etc.). He made a big batch for my grandma (his mom) over the weekend. Anyway, we’re both looking for new ideas, so don’t just tell us what you make. We’re looking for how you make them, or at least your special touches. Thanks!
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It’s just a bill
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Daily Herald…
* Rep. Maurice West filed HB4531 this week…
* HB4544 from Rep. Eva-Dina Delgado…
* Meanwhile, in Iowa…
Any redrawing of the border would require approval by the Illinois and Indiana legislatures, as well as Congress. So… this is not going to happen.
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Investing In Illinois
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Judge dismisses Chicago-area use-of-force lawsuit at plaintiffs’ request. Sun-Times…
- The case was brought last fall by protesters, clergy and members of the media. It culminated in November with Ellis’ historic order that restricted the feds’ use of tear gas, chokeholds and other uses of force during President Donald Trump administration’s deportation campaign in Chicago called Operation Midway Blitz. - During Thursday’s brief hearing, Ellis decertified the class governed by that preliminary injunction since the order is no longer in effect. * Related stories… * Tribune | Illinois ramping up REAL ID campaign before TSA’s $45 fines begin Feb. 1: The Illinois secretary of state’s office will have its REAL ID supercenter in downtown Chicago at 191 N. Clark St. open for the next two Saturdays from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. to make it easier to obtain the identification before the Transportation Security Administration’s planned $45 fine for all air travelers without one goes into effect. In addition, in partnership with the secretary of state’s office, the Cook County clerk’s office will extend its Saturday hours from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. to help Illinoisans get the documents they need to obtain a REAL ID, such as marriage or birth certificates. People can walk in or schedule appointments online with the clerk’s vital records office in downtown Chicago at 118 N. Clark St. * Crain’s | Latest federal funding threat targets Illinois’ abortion referral law: The move is the latest in a series of funding threats from the Trump administration against Illinois, which along with other states has faced pressure from federal offices over issues from transgender care for minors to diversity, equity and inclusion policies and abortion rights, including threats to end Medicaid payments for non-abortion services to Planned Parenthood organizations. Yesterday’s action follows lawsuits challenging mandated physician referral for reproductive health services that include abortion, regardless of a provider’s conscientious objection to abortion. * Tribune | State finds nearly $500 million in budget reserves amid federal funding uncertainty: Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration on Thursday announced it has identified nearly $500 million it will keep in budget reserves following the governor’s request last year that state agencies identify 4% of their budgets to hold back amid federal budget uncertainty. […] The governor’s fall executive order essentially codified his lack of confidence in Illinois’ ability to come out unscathed from Trump’s funding cuts and economic policies. The order applied to agencies that operate only under the governor and not the attorney general, secretary of state or other branches of government. * Post Tribune | Bill aimed at attracting Chicago Bears to Indiana passes committee: The bill offers a financial framework “that Illinois simply cannot match,” according to the press release. The bill “creates a pathway for the team to control its own destiny without the prohibitive tax burdens and stalled infrastructure talks currently seen in Illinois,” according to the release. * Axios | Pritzker, Gallego head to Nevada: Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Arizona Sen. Ruben Gallego will headline a Democratic Party event in Nevada on Feb. 1 to celebrate the late Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), a person familiar with the matter told Axios. […] The Illinois governor donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to back a successful 2024 [Nevada] ballot measure in the state as part of an effort to protect abortion rights. * Sun-Times | Bally’s shooting for end-of-year opening for permanent casino in River West: A bill now pending in Springfield would extend Bally’s license to operate a tempoary casino at Medinah Temple until September 2027. But the Bally’s team assured City Council members Thursday that the mega-casino is “on track to speed through completion,” and that they have no intention of needing or using the entire one-year extension. * Sun-Times | Chicago gets its first-ever LGBTQ+ affairs director, Antonio King: King was the first gay Black man ever to serve as LGBTQ+ health & outreach liaison for the Chicago Department of Public Health. Now he’ll help develop a policy plan to strengthen protections and opportunities for LGBTQ+ Chicagoans. * Block Club | Chicago Crossing Guard Carries Students To Safety In Frigid Temps After Water Main Break: While WGN’s chopper was overhead filming the water main break’s aftermath, its camera also caught Joe Sass, longtime Jamieson Elementary school crossing guard, helping a student across the flooded street. […] Some of the children get to Jamieson pretty early, and once he realized they’d have to navigate the flooded street, Sass decided to help some kids by carrying them across the urban river on his back, he said. * Daily Herald | Postponed: Public hearing for data center in Lisle delayed due to large turnout: The village’s planning and zoning commission decided to postpone a Wednesday night hearing due to the size of the crowd. More than 300 residents showed up for the 7 p.m. meeting, exceeding the 250-person capacity in the village board chambers and an overflow room set up for the meeting, Mayor Mary Jo Mullen said. Cloud Centers LLC is proposing a 256,000-square-foot, 50-megawatt data center on the shuttered Lockformer property at 711 Ogden Ave. The 18-acre parcel on the south side of Odgen has sat vacant for more than 20 years. The Lockformer property was the center of a firestorm after a toxic chemical used in the plant had leaked into the drinking water. * Tribune | Naperville D203 wants state OK to increase driver’s ed fee to $500 max: The D203 School Board this week approved the waiver request that would allow the district to charge up to $500 for driver’s education for the 2027 to 2031 school years. School districts are allowed to charge $250 under state rules, and anything beyond that amount must be submitted to the state school board for approval. […] In 2024-25, it cost the district $537,549 to run the program for 682 students but only received $279,500 in revenue through student fees and state funds, district documents said. * Aurora Beacon-News | Responding to resident concerns, St. Charles makes immigration enforcement proclamation: ‘Of course we care’: Following requests from residents to address the federal immigration crackdown happening in Chicago and its suburbs in recent months, St. Charles Mayor Clint Hull and the City Council responded with a proclamation at its meeting on Tuesday. The proclamation comes months into President Donald Trump’s administration’s immigration crackdown in Chicago, dubbed Operation Midway Blitz. Thousands were detained across Chicago and its suburbs — most of whom had no known criminal record — and fear and uncertainty have permeated work, school, Halloween celebrations and more. * Evanston RoundTable | Emotions run high at first closure hearing for Kingsley Elementary: The first closure hearing for Kingsley Elementary on Wednesday was less than an hour long, but things got tense, resulting in an Evanston man being escorted from the meeting room during public comment. * Sun-Times | In Kane County’s first bison herd, a chance for Native Americans to reclaim what’s lost: When Jay Young, a Citizen Potawatomi and co-executive director of American Indian Center of Chicago, heard about a chance to bring the bison back to the Midwest, he was intrigued but a little mystified. The Forest Preserve District of Kane County was seeking a partner for a prairie restoration project and was running out of time; it had promised residents that the herd would be in place for spring 2026, and a first candidate had fallen through. Young scrolled through the email for the deadline. “We’re a little nonprofit organization,” Young recalled thinking. “We’re not a tribe, we don’t have any land. What are we going to do with bison? That’s crazy. We live in the city.” * Crain’s | With new leader, U of I stakes out bold AI mission for Discovery Partners: The research institute — which aims to give downstate faculty, researchers and students a presence in Chicago — will focus on artificial intelligence and quantum computing. “We think the focus should be the future of computing, and the future of computing is AI and quantum,” said Rashid Bashir, dean of the Grainger College of Engineering at UIUC and vice chancellor Chicago partnerships. “To advance quantum you need advances in AI.” * Shaw Local | Manteno rejects request for Gotion to file form on foreign investment: After a brief presentation by Gotion representatives during public comment and discussion among Manteno trustees, the board voted 3-2 against requesting that Gotion submit the form, which would have been voluntary. After the meeting, Manteno Mayor Annette LaMore said she was disappointed in the vote to not ask for the filing. “It’s not even mandatory, so even if we ask them to do it, they don’t have to do it,” she said. “It’s something that you have to be willing to do. But it would certainly show good faith if they said, ‘Yeah, we’ll be glad to fill that out.’ * WCIA | USPS changes could impact vote by mail; Vermilion Co. Clerk encourages early voting: Robyn Heffern said in late 2025, the USPS updated its postmark system. The postmark date will no longer be the date the item is placed in the mail; instead, the postmarks reflect the date mail is processed at a postal facility. Heffern added that ballots may receive a later postmark date than expected because of mail processing delays. * WCIA | Central Illinois warming shelters open as extreme temperatures approach: In Hoopeston, the mayor said City Hall will open up its chamber as an unmanned warming center through the weekend. At Danville’s City Council meeting Tuesday, the city said it won’t open a city-sponsored emergency warming shelter because it simply wasn’t used enough in past years. But, there are several options in the city and county. One of them is The Dwelling Place, open Mondays and Fridays during the day. * WSIL | Pinckneyville Community Hospital Ranked Among Nation’s Fastest Emergency Departments: Using 2024 data, the hospital achieved a median emergency department length of stay of just 56 minutes, placing it among the top 10 hospitals nationwide for emergency department efficiency. The performance is well below the national average of 161 minutes. Hospital leaders say the recognition reflects a sustained commitment to continuous improvement and patient-centered care. By identifying opportunities to streamline processes and eliminate unnecessary delays, Pinckneyville Community Hospital has improved efficiency while maintaining high standards of quality, safety, and personalized attention for patients. * WaPo | The abhorrent power of the photograph of a 5-year-old held by ICE: School officials in Minnesota say that the prekindergarten student was used “as bait” by ICE, in an apparent attempt to gain access to the adults inside the private house where he once lived. That act, the use of a boy too young to understand the political game in which he became a pawn, mirrors in a perverse and deeply disturbing way the power of the photograph. The photograph stirs empathy and compassion, the same emotions that ICE agents apparently used to entice adults into making themselves vulnerable to capture.
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Good morning!
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Gipsy Kings… She from afar This is an open thread.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Friday, Jan 23, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…
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Another federal case falls apart in Chicago (Updated)
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Background is here if you need it. Jon Seidel…
…Adding… More background from WTTW…
…Adding… Jon Seidel…
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Krishnamoorthi explains his committee vote to hold Bill Clinton in contempt of Congress
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * As Isabel told you this morning, US Senate candidate Raja Krishnamoorthi voted in committee yesterday to hold former President Bill Clinton in contempt of Congress for evading a subpoena to testify on the Epstein files scandal. He did not vote to hold former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in contempt. Neither Isabel nor I could find any sort of explanation from Rep. Krishnamoorthi online, so I reached out to his campaign with a question…
From Congressman Krishnamoorthi…
Discuss.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * John Pletz for Crain’s…
From last year…
Irony. * WIFR…
* South Side Weekly | City Council Pauses on Curfew, Bans Some Hemp Products: Quinn’s measure could change depending on what happens at the federal level. Buried in the bill that ended the government shutdown last year was a provision that closed a loophole on small amounts of THC in hemp products, effectively banning most hemp products by November 2026. The legislation also dealt a blow to Mayor Brandon Johnson’s plan to tax hemp products last year, which was projected to deliver $10 million in revenue annually. A bipartisan push this month from U.S. Senators Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Rand Paul (R-KY) and Jeff Merkley (D-OR) aims to delay the federal ban by two years. * Block Club | Chicago’s 1st Reentry Support Center For Formerly Incarcerated Women Opens In Pilsen: The city chose the Pilsen-based Women’s Justice Institute, a national organization based in Chicago, to run the community reentry support center that will help women find housing and employment and provide trauma-informed counseling and mental health services, said Joseph Mapp, director of the mayor’s Office of Reentry. * Sun-Times | Video shows man fatally shot in head by Chicago police ‘posed no threat,’ family’s lawyers say: Roberto Calvario Jr. was killed Dec. 9 as he struggled with a police officer responding to a call of a stolen car in West Ridge. His family’s attorneys argued that body camera video released Thursday contradicts the police department’s initial claim that the officer fired the deadly shot after being dragged by the car Calvario was driving. * WTTW | State Law Allows Chicago’s Police Misconduct Agency to Investigate Fatal Police Shootings, Judge Rules:The Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 7, has objected to COPA investigators probing police shootings since the agency’s creation in 2017, amid the outcry over the 2014 murder of 16-year-old Laquan McDonald by Chicago Police Officer Jason Van Dyke. In the less than nine years COPA has existed, its investigators have probed 138 deaths caused by Chicago police officers, records show. Union President John Catanzara Jr. did not respond to a request for comment from WTTW News. * Crain’s | Indie music venues drive $2.8B to Chicago’s economy, new report finds: Most of Chicago’s roughly 150 independent music venues are in financial peril despite producing a combined $2.8 billion economic impact and supporting almost 17,000 jobs in the city, according to a new report from the Chicago Independent Venue League and Choose Chicago. The State of Live report — based on a survey of the city’s smaller independent music venues — found that just 22% of such concert halls were able to turn a profit in 2024, an indicator that many of them could be forced to shutter, said CIVL co-chair Jimalita Tillman. * ABC Chicago | Chicago weather forecast: Extreme Cold Warning Friday as dangerous polar plunge nears: The warning was upgraded from a previous Extreme Cold Watch; it will go into effect from 3 a.m. until noon Friday for the Chicago area. ABC7 meteorologists said that although the warning expires at noon on Friday, it will be dangerously cold all day. * Daily Southtown | Orland Park robocall attacks Village Trustee Cynthia Katsenes, former Mayor Keith Pekau: A robocall calling out Orland Park political figures including Trustee Cynthia Katsenes and former Mayor Keith Pekau was not sent by the American Federation of Labor political action committee despite its claims, according to the Chicago Federation of Labor. The federation, which represents 300 unions and more than 13,000 union members in Orland Park, denounced the robocall in a news release last week. Federation President Bob Reiter said no registration for the American Federation of Labor PAC exists in Illinois, and “the messages were not created or commissioned by the Chicago Federation of Labor, the Illinois AFL-CIO, national AFL-CIO or any related entities.” * Daily Herald | Hersey High School wrestling coaches dismissed amid probe of student residency, recruiting: The probe identified residency eligibility issues and determined that “several” students who wrestled at Hersey didn’t reside within the Arlington Heights school’s attendance boundaries, district officials said Wednesday. Officials declined to say how many athletes are involved since the matter involves student eligibility and remains under review by the Illinois High School Association. * WMBD | Former school secretary allegedly stole $168K from Illinois grade school: Purchases linked to youth baseball appear to have triggered a larger investigation that led to the discovery of $168,000 found missing from a rural Tazewell County school. According to documents filed in Tazewell County Circuit Court, the superintendent for Spring Lake Elementary School noticed about $281 spent on the school’s credit card at two local sports complexes, as well as to a prep baseball tournament company. […] Rawlings allegedly used the school’s credit card in 2024 and through August 2025 and spent $75,103 for “numerous purchases at various locations for items not associated with the school.” The detective also found that Rawlings allegedly connected the credit card to her Google Pay account. * WCIA | Strengthening labor leadership: East Central Illinois AFL-CIO elects 9 new officers: The East Central Illinois AFL-CIO swore in nine new officers on Wednesday night. They represent more than 18,000 union members across 11 counties in Central Illinois. They advocate for their members and their families as far north as Iroquois County and as far south as Jasper. Luther Baker is the new president, and he said, in his new role, his goal is to make sure all of the members feel supported. * WGLT | Extreme Cold Warning issued for Central Illinois with ‘dangerously cold wind chills’: Central Illinois is on the northern edge of a massive winter storm that’s expected to sweep across much of the eastern and central United States this weekend as cold air from Canada is expected to mix with warmer air from the south, causing significant snow and ice across the southeastern U.S. and the East Coast. * WSIL | Mounds City Council Votes Against City-Wide Security System:The decision came after the council listened to public comments expressing concerns over the initiative. The proposed system would have been funded by adding a $15 public safety fee to residents’ water bills. More than a dozen residents attended the council meeting, eager to voice their opinions. Many raised questions about the cost of the security system and its impact on their monthly water bills.
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Catching up with the congressionals
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * [From Rich] I asked the Laura Fine congressional campaign today about an unusual post on Fine’s website…
The campaign’s response…
314 Action is supporting Daniel Biss. So, I followed up because something being on a website for a handful of hours and then suddenly disappearing seemed weird…
The response…
- Rich Miller * Evanston Now…
* Politico…
While his door-to-door campaign was key to winning his state House seat, a congressional district is way too big for a candidate to cover alone. He wasn’t in Springfield today or yesterday, so maybe he’s out hitting doors up north. * Meanwhile, Kat is still in California…
* Over in the 8th CD, US Rep. Jan Schakowsky endorses Kevin Morrison. Press Release…
* More endorsements from Politico…
* More… * WBEZ | What to know about U.S. Senate candidates’ debate: The Chicago Sun-Times, WBEZ and the University of Chicago Institute of Politics are hosting a debate with the three leading Democratic candidates in the March 17 primary for the open U.S. Senate seat to replace outgoing Sen. Dick Durbin. The debate will be Jan. 26 at 6 p.m. at the University of Chicago’s International House. * Daily Herald | Another 9th Congressional District candidate turns to TV: The 30-second ad from Wilmette resident and former FBI agent Phil Andrew is called “Crisis-Tested.” Starting with video of Andrew speaking directly to viewers, it highlights his professional and personal leadership during emergencies as well as his activism against gun violence. The former FBI counterterrorism expert and hostage negotiator was among the people shot by Laurie Dann in 1988; Dann’s North Shore crime spree included a deadly school shooting, poisonings at Northwestern University and a confrontation with police at the Andrew home that ended with Dann’s suicide. * Daily Herald | Davis, Rice try to differentiate themselves at debate in 8th Congressional District GOP primary: Rice questioned any “America First” credentials Davis might claim as the GOP candidate after she spoke of hiring workers in India for her company, something he said he’d never do. “Am I missing something?” Rice asked. “Help me understand how that isn’t hiring foreign workers?” Davis responded that many American companies use foreign resources, including the energy Rice buys and sells.
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Illinois one of 13 Democratic states on huge federal chopping block (Updated x2)
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * WaPo…
Illinois is, of course, on the list. * RCP…
* CNN…
* Isabel posted this WaPo story earlier today, but here’s a bit more…
…Adding… From Gov. Pritzker’s office…
…Adding… Dave Dahl…
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Report: Carbondale in top 10 percent of US metro locations for ‘workforce, economic strength and adaptability’
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* WSIU focused on the Southern Illinois rankings…
Springfield ranked second in Illinois at 123. Lincoln posted the state’s lowest ranking at 906 out of 949. Click here to see the full Illinois rankings.
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It’s just a bill
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WAND…
The Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice’s response…
* NPR Illinois…
More from Block Club Chicago…
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Credit Unions: Expanding Access To Responsible Credit
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] January is a natural fit for Financial Wellness Month, as credit unions have long treated financial literacy as a core part of their mission. Coming on the heels of the holiday spending season, the month offers an ideal opportunity for a financial “fresh start,” encouraging individuals to set meaningful goals and build healthy, lasting habits. Access to fair, transparent credit is essential to financial wellness. Illinois credit unions often take a relationship‑based approach to lending, looking beyond credit scores to understand a member’s full financial picture. Many credit unions also provide small‑dollar loans and alternatives to payday lenders, giving members responsible options during financial emergencies. These products help prevent cycles of high‑interest debt that can derail financial progress. Financial Plus Credit Union’s Trent Threadgill discusses how credit unions look beyond the credit score: Learn more at www.betterforillinois.org
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Illinois to reserve $482M in FY26 spending amid federal uncertainty (Updated)
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget…
* From the memo sent to the state’s agency directors…
Thoughts? …Adding… Earlier this week, University Professionals of Illinois President John Miller criticized the Illinois Board of Higher Education for recommending a “sham” budget: “Board members claim to be requesting a 3% increase, but that is misleading. In reality, their recommendation is just a 1% increase over what was appropriated – but not released by Governor Pritzker – in the current fiscal year (FY 26).” Miller, who is also the Membership Secretary for the Illinois Federation of Teachers, released this to us today…
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A handy loophole
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Tribune…
She’s using state money to pay for TV ads. But since she’s running for state central committee, that appears to be legal. And she’s not the only one doing this…
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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Illinois investigating if landlord tipped off immigration raid at South Shore apartment building. Sun-Times…
- In a statement, the agency said it is looking into claims the landlords let federal agents know of Venezuelan immigrants living in the building as part of an attempt to “intimidate and coerce the building’s Black and Hispanic tenants into leaving the building.” - The U.S. Department of Homeland Security reported 37 people were arrested during the Sept. 30 raid. Witnesses said they saw kids separated from their mothers. Some U.S. citizens were detained for hours. One resident reportedly hid his neighbor and her 7-year-old daughter in his room. * Related stories… * Sun-Times | As new SNAP rules loom, Cook County officials warn of health consequences for people cut off: So far, about 100,000 people have filed for exemptions, which include people certified as physically or mentally unable to work or are in drug or alcohol treatment programs. But officials and community groups are trying to reach the thousands of others at risk of being pushed out of the program, Dulce Quintero, secretary of the Illinois Department of Human Services, said Wednesday at Provident Hospital of Cook County Health on Chicago’s South Side. * WaPo | Illinois faces federal defunding for state law requiring abortion referrals: The Trump administration is threatening to strip Illinois of federal health dollars over a state law requiring medical providers to refer patients for abortion services, even if the providers oppose abortion. The 2017 measure violates federal conscience protections, according to a notice to state officials sent Wednesday by the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Civil Rights (OCR). * Shaw Local | Bailey talks faith, family, future at Sterling campaign stop: “If we can get 60% turnout, we can win. There are more of us than there are of them,” Bailey said, referring to the need for Republicans to turn out and vote in the primary and in the Nov. 3 general election. “Illinois can be restored. All we have to do, bare minimum, is show up and vote,” he said. * WAND | IL House Speaker, GOP Leader divided on solutions to lower cost of living: Welch said he wants to address homeowner insurance rates as escrow payments continue to rise. Senate Democrats passed legislation in October to tackle skyrocketing home insurance rates, but the bill failed to gain enough support in the House. Gov. JB Pritzker has repeatedly said he’s committed to getting the insurance regulation across the finish line. […] However, House GOP leaders said lawmakers can help Illinoisans by allowing people to benefit from President Donald Trump’s economic policies. McCombie believes Illinois needs to pass bills banning taxes on tips and overtime. She would also like to see the House lower the state’s corporate income tax and create a more competitive business climate. * Tribune | Chicago city worker sentenced to probation after pleading guilty to threatening Illinois state lawmaker: As part of the plea deal, Haggerty was also given a 60-day “stayed jail” sentence, which means he’d have to go to jail if he doesn’t comply with the terms of his probation, Larson said. The deal also requires Haggerty to complete both a drug and alcohol evaluation and a mental health evaluation, and to follow through with any recommended treatment. Larson said Haggerty has served 15 days in jail and was released to a treatment facility, where he completed a course of treatment. He also issued a written letter of apology as part of this resolution, Larson said. Haggerty is also ordered to have no contact with Chesney, his family or his staff. * ABC Chicago | Video shows immigration agents using facial recognition on minors, possibly violating Illinois law: State Representative Barbara Hernandez represents the 50th District, including Aurora, and said when she saw the video on social media, she immediately notified school officials. “It was very disturbing just to overall see that they were taking a picture of this young adult, a minor… without his consent,” Hernandez told the I-Team. The Aurora incident is just one example specifically noted in the state and city’s lawsuit filed against DHS, with attorneys contending federal agents are rampantly violating the state’s Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA), and its own federal mandates by using their facial recognition technology to, “scan biometric information of Illinois residents without consent, without individualized suspicion and to retain that information for fifteen years.” * Evanston RoundTable | Chicago Teachers Union backing Biss and Ruttenberg in Democratic primaries: CTU’s House of Delegates approved the two endorsements at its meeting on Jan. 14, alongside at least 21 other Democrats running for other seats in and around Chicago in the March 17 primary, according to internal materials reviewed by the RoundTable. The union hasn’t publicly announced its primary endorsement slate at time of writing, and did not respond to a request for comment for this story. * Sun-Times | Ald. Hopkins waters down curfew ordinance, again, to appease Mayor Brandon Johnson: The newly revised ordinance would empower Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling to do what he did on New Year’s Eve — make a “dispersal declaration for the applicable public places anticipated to be affected” by a “disruptive youth gathering” whenever police have probable cause to believe there is potential for mayhem or violence. “The officer shall not issue a citation or make an arrest or take a minor into custody … unless the officer reasonably believes that an offense has occurred,” the proposed measure states. * NBC Chicago | Snapchats to informant key to trial for man accused in murder plot against Bovino: Federal prosecutors have alleged Espinoza Martinez was a gang member who used Snapchat to put a $10,000 bounty on the life of Gregory Bovino, a Border Patrol official who has led aggressive and controversial campaigns nationwide, most recently in Minnesota. But defense attorneys said Espinoza Martinez, a carpenter with roughly $20 in his bank account, sent messages amounting to “neighborhood gossip” to his brother and a friend who turned out to be a government informant. * Sun-Times | Ex-Gangster Disciples boss Larry Hoover’s freedom bid should be rejected, Cook County top prosecutor says: The board is scheduled to hold a hearing on Hoover’s request in April. The board gives a recommendation to Pritzker, who makes the ultimate decision on clemency requests. The board typically takes about two months to forward a recommendation to the governor. A January hearing for Hoover was canceled. One of 75-year-old Hoover’s high-profile supporters is Arne Duncan, former President Barack Obama’s secretary of education. Duncan now runs Chicago CRED, an anti-violence organization. In 2023, Duncan sent the Prisoner Review Board a letter supporting Hoover’s separate request for parole, which was denied. The board can grant or deny parole without the governor’s formal input. * ABC Chicago | Public hearing on proposed data center in Lisle postponed due to large crowds: Different than Tuesday night in Naperville, there was no vote expected on whether to approve plans for a data center Wednesday night in Lisle. However, it’s clear there’s heightened conversation surrounding the types of facilities and whether dense suburban municipalities are the right home for them. “My main concern is all the diesel backup generators,” Lisle resident Vanessa Berry said. The concerns sound similar to those who voiced opposition to the data center in Naperville, which went before a vote Tuesday night. The Naperville City Council decisively choosing to deny Karis Critical’s request to build a 36 MW data center. * Daily Southtown | Judge denies former Orland Park Mayor Keith Pekau’s attempt to dismiss order regarding his political blog: Moreland in August granted the village a temporary restraining order barring Pekau from publishing “future statements disclosing the village’s attorney-client privileged communications and confidential non-public information contained in village personnel files,” and ordering he remove any publications of such information. Judge Kate Moreland Dec. 12 dismissed the village’s requests to limit Pekau’s speech in relation to confidential documents the village claims Pekau brought with him after he lost his bid for reelection to Mayor Jim Dodge and left office in May. She also struck the village’s request for injunctive relief. * WGN | Suburban police officer convicted of corruption during traffic stops: The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Illinois said Antoine Larry, a former patrol officer for the Phoenix, Illinois Police Department, conspired with another police officer to solicit cash and drugs from occupants of vehicles during traffic stops in exchange for reducing, dropping or declining to press charges, or allowing the vehicles to avoid impoundment. * ABC Chicago | Hoffman Estates Catholic school in danger of closing, parents say: A few years ago, enrollment was over 200 students, but the parents say the school stopped offering tuition discounts to needy families forcing about a third of them to leave. School parent Lea De Los Santos has two daughters here. “My family has been at this school 11 years, since my children started in pre-K,” De Los Santos said. “This is another home for us.” * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora looking to create hub for clean energy job training: Aurora’s CEJA Workforce Development Hub, set to be located in a currently unused city facility at 649 S. River St., will bring together the existing workforce development programs of the College of DuPage and the 548 Foundation. Both organizations are funded by the state to run clean energy-related job training programs, but those programs do not yet have a permanent location in Aurora. “We’re excited to say we found an important alliance in the city of Aurora,” said the College of DuPage’s director of the Aurora CEJA Aurora Workforce Hub, Callie Matheny, at a launch event on Tuesday. “This is city government at work. They have been an extreme, fast-moving partner.” * WCIA | Pritzker visits Rantoul, highlights Champaign Co. film success: Governor JB Pritzker, the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) and other local leaders met at Flyover Film Studios, discussing the growth of the film industry in Central Illinois. In 2025, film productions generated $12.3 million in statewide business sales. That money was driven by millions in spending at hotels, catering, transportation providers, rental housing, equipment vendors, and post-production services. And, it resulted in nearly $8 million added to Illinois’ gross domestic product and $1.61 million in paychecks for Illinois households. * WGLT | Midwest Food Bank unveils refrigerated truck funded through an Impact Central Illinois grant: Impact Central Illinois awarded the food bank a $118,000 grant to fund the truck. “This truck is more than just a new set of wheels,” said Christa Staley, executive director of Midwest Food Bank. “It’s a strategic investment in feeding people and preventing good food from going to waste.” With a built-in refrigeration system, the truck will allow the food bank to transport fresh, perishable items that might otherwise be discarded. * WAND | Springfield parks to get major upgrades with state grant funding: Springfield Park District received a $600,000 OSLAD grant to revitalize Dreamland Park. Usually, ODLAD grants split the cost of recreational development projects between the state and local government. […] Aside from the park district, the city of Springfield received $600,000 to upgrade Lake Springfield Center Park as well. Additionally, the Village of Grandview received $600,000 to build an outdoor sports complex and other developments. Dreamland Park has a rich history in the city, and this grant funding allows the community to make memories for future generations. * WCIA | Champaign School District psychologist recognized as ‘most outstanding’ in the state: “Kevin consistently goes above and beyond for students and colleagues,” Nock said. “His dedication, leadership, and ability to bring people together around student success truly set him apart.” Farrell is also involved with the district’s Crisis Team, which supports students from early childhood through the Young Adult Program. * Smile Politely | Be a pen pal with a University of Illinois student: The University of Illinois Library and International Education are partnering up to bring a new Pen Pal Program initiative to the community. The program will match university students with members of the Champaign-Urbana community for some good, old-fashioned handwritten communication. The hopes are to help combat loneliness, integrate students into the C-U community, and facilitate intergenerational and intercultural friendships. It is free to be a pen pal and materials–like recycled and donated stationery–will be provided to participants. * AP | Immigration officers assert sweeping power to enter homes without a judge’s warrant, memo says: For years, immigrant advocates, legal aid groups and local governments have urged people not to open their doors to immigration agents unless they are shown a warrant signed by a judge. That guidance is rooted in Supreme Court rulings that generally prohibit law enforcement from entering a home without judicial approval. The ICE directive directly undercuts that advice at a time when arrests are accelerating under the administration’s immigration crackdown. * ProPublica | ICE Sent 600 Immigrant Kids to Detention in Federal Shelters This Year. It’s a New Record: Today, family separations are back, only now they are happening all across the country. The lawsuit against the zero tolerance policy resulted in a 2023 settlement that limits separations at the border, but it does not address those that occur inside the country after encounters with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE. Advocates fear the administration is conducting the new separations for the same reasons as before: to deter new immigrants from coming and to terrify those who are here into leaving. Since the start of this year, some 600 immigrant children have been placed in government shelters by ICE, according to government data. That figure, which has not been previously reported, is already higher than the tally for the previous four years combined. And it is the highest number since recordkeeping began a decade ago. * WaPo | They ransacked the US Capitol and want the government to pay them back: The pro-Trump mob that ransacked the Capitol caused almost $3 million in damage, according to a 2022 estimate by the Justice Department. The losses included smashed doors and windows, defaced artwork, damaged furniture, and residue from gas agents and fire extinguishers. Defendants were sentenced to more than $1.2 million in restitution and fines, according to a tally by The Post. But the government recovered less than $665,000 of those court-ordered payments, according to a source with firsthand knowledge who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of fear of retaliation. Sen. Alex Padilla (D-California) and Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-Rhode Island) are pushing legislation — backed by some law enforcement officers who defended the Capitol on Jan. 6 — to block government payouts to rioters. Without any Republican co-sponsors, the legislation is not expected to proceed. * Politico | 9 Democrats vote to hold Bill Clinton in contempt of Congress for evading Epstein testimony: Reps. Maxwell Frost of Florida, Raja Krishnamoorthi of Illinois, Summer Lee of Pennsylvania, Emily Randall of Washington, Lateefah Simon of California, Melanie Stansbury of New Mexico and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, alongside Reps. Stephen Lynch and Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts, joined Republicans in voting in favor of holding Bill Clinton in contempt. Two Democrats — Yassamin Ansari of Arizona and Dave Min of California — voted “present.”
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Good morning!
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * I think I’ve told you before that this is my mom’s favorite Grateful Dead song… If I knew the way I would take you home This is an open thread.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Thursday, Jan 22, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…
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