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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Jun 26, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Have a great weekend




God knows, got to make it on my own
So, baby, can’t you see
I’ve got to break free

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Jun 26, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

A bill to make solar power more accessible to renters and others who face barriers to the alternative energy source stalled in the Illinois Senate, but it’s likely to return in the fall veto session because lawmakers like the idea of helping residents with their electric bills. […]

The safety question boils down to two main areas: safety for people who work on the electric lines and safety for residents.

[Sen. Rachel Ventura] said a big concern for utilities and labor unions was making sure the energy generated by small plug-in solar systems can’t travel back to the grid during a power outage ­— a phenomenon called backfeeding. The danger would come from a lineworker touching a line they believe is depowered.

In the original bill language, there was a carveout for low-wattage plug-in solar systems, between 400-1,200W, that would have allowed people to connect certified systems with little oversight.

Advocates for the bill argued that low-wattage systems didn’t need to meet national code requirements or have special permissions because they generate less energy than many home appliances use.

“The smaller systems are able to just immediately be plugged in by people without needing landlord permission or any changes to wiring, because these are so small,” Chintam said. “They would still need to be certified and would still need to have safety precautions like preventing backfeeding and having an automatic shut off.”

Without the carveout, Chintam said, residents would likely have to wait for national rules to change and they wouldn’t be able to benefit from their safety-certified solar systems until 2029 at the earliest.

The carveout was a sticking point for lawmakers, labor and utilities. More than 30 other states have considered plug-in solar bills, and the carveout language was treated differently in each one.

“So we decided to hold our bill to see how those other states’ come about,” Ventura said. “We are now researching what language moved, what language didn’t move, and trying to create model legislation that we will file or amend in veto session.”

*** Data Center News ***

* State Week | A data center discussion: On this episode, we talk about the controversy surrounding data center development and efforts to enact guardrails at the state level. Lawmakers left Springfield pledging to work on legislation that could address concerns over power usage, utility costs and more. The governor said he would like to see a package considered this fall. Meanwhile, data center demand shows no sign of slowing.

* WCIA | Macon County residents pushing for moratorium on data centers: Thursday night, the county’s environmental education health and welfare board met in Decatur. During public comment, people who live in the area made sure the board knew they want a pause put on all data centers, saying the local government should take time to consider how to handle these projects and the negative effects it could bring.

* Oregon Live | Data centers will receive $450 million in Oregon tax breaks this year: Oregon’s data center industry is already among the largest in the country, occupying about 2,900 acres from Hillsboro to Hermiston. State records show another 9,100 acres are in the planning stages. […] It costs $1 billion or more to equip a large data center with rows and rows of powerful computers. Because Oregon has no sales tax, companies can save tens of millions of dollars when they build a data center, and millions more every few years, when they replace obsolete computers with the latest models.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | Stomping Ground Strategies Wins Eight 2026 Bulldog PR Awards, Including Two Grand Prize Honors: The team at Stomping Ground Strategies has been named the winner of eight 2026 Bulldog PR Awards, including two Grand Prize designations — the program’s highest honor. The awards recognize outstanding communication work submitted by agencies, brands and nonprofits across the country, as judged by journalists. Jaclyn Driscoll, director of media relations at Stomping Ground Strategies, received two individual honors: the Grand Prize for PR Star of 2025 and Gold for PR Star Under 40. The designations recognize a practitioner whose results consistently maximize client resources and whose approach to PR is rooted in old-school rigor and a deep understanding and respect for the press.

* Fox Chicago | Braun insists ‘handshake’ will seal Bears stadium deal: ”When we ink it, that will mean that we are there,” said Braun. “It has been just a constant discussion since they came to us six months ago. I made it clear that this has to be more than just a bargaining position to do something in Illinois. ”I told them, ‘You’re going to make a strong statement on that day before it comes through our legislature,’ which occurred. That was the first kind of seal on that handshake agreement.” […] Braun said Indiana would be open to discussions should the Bears seek to sweeten their Hammond deal or ask for revenue enhancements to help the team buy out of its Soldier Field lease at a potential cost of $90 million.

* Windy City Times | Pritzker reflects on LGBTQ+ rights, gay Republicans and ‘character’ in the age of Trump: There’s a congresswoman from southern Illinois named Mary Miller, who now wants to eliminate Pride Month. She’s literally introduced a bill to eliminate that [and rename June as “Family Month”]. One question that I would pose to my opponent [Republican gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey] is if he agrees with Mary Miller. It’s an important question for him to answer because he is still against marriage equality.

* Press release | Illinois Department of Natural Resources Director to depart at the end of the month, interim Director to begin on July 1: Renee Snow will serve as IDNR’s Interim Director beginning on July 1. She has worked at the Department since 2014, most recently serving as General Counsel. In that capacity, she has led several major initiatives, including Brandon Road, the Shabbona land transfer with the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation, and the innovative Pullman P3 project.

*** Chicago ***

* Illinois Answers | City Leaders Tout Tree-Planting Bonanza, But Neighborhood Disparities Persist: That’s a stark improvement over years past. For instance, from 2018 to 2021, nearly half of new trees — about 10,000 in total — were planted in North and Northwest side wards. Still, a deeper dive into the data reveals the city’s most recent tree plantings have been uneven within the wards themselves, with some neighborhoods thick with trees still getting even more, while others with few trees are still shortchanged as city leaders struggle to plant trees where they are most needed. Between 2021 and 2025, the Streets and Sanitation department also removed more than 28,000 trees all across Chicago, mostly due to damage and disease.

* Block Club | Edgewater Synagogue Redevelopment Reduces Building Count In Latest Proposal: The new proposal includes a 25-story building and an adjacent 12-story building on the east side of Sheridan Road and a five-story building on the west side of Sheridan Road. After incorporating feedback from neighbors, the developers eliminated plans for a north tower — the building closest to the neighboring Malibu East Condominium — and shifted those units to other parts of the site.

* Block Club | City’s ‘Keep Chicago Clean’ Campaign Encourages Neighbors To Pick Up Litter This Summer: Neighbors who participate in community cleanup events can call 311 and borrow tools and cleaning supplies from the Department of Streets and Sanitation, according to the city. The campaign will last through a “peak time” for tourists and outdoor events, including popular music festivals such as Lollapalloza and Riot Fest. “We take great pride in our work to keep Chicago clean and safe,” said Cole Stallard, Department of Streets and Sanitation commissioner. “We can’t do it alone, though, and we thank everyone for pitching in to help.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | ICE agent who crashed car into hedgerow after Broadview shift admits reckless driving: Lampariello said Diaz-Torres does not have a criminal record and already completed some requirements set under his plea, including at least 12 hours of counseling. His attorney, Mike Baker, told the Tribune his client is still employed as a federal agent.

* Shaw Local | Plainfield District 202 lays out budget cuts to close $8 million deficit; staffing reductions planned: The deficit stems from a shift in Illinois funding models and a “technical adjustment” to the state’s Comparable Wage Index, a measure which recalculates regional labor costs. Due to the adjustments, the district’s eligibility status was downgraded from Tier 1 to Tier 2. Illinois uses a four-tier system to prioritize funding. Tier 1 districts, which have the lowest local funding adequacy, receive the largest increases in state funding.

* Tribune | World’s first Dairy Queen becomes a Route 66 landmark in Joliet: “You have the meeting of two very iconic things,” said Greg Peerbolte, the museum’s CEO. “You’re talking about one of America’s most recognizable companies, and it is sitting on Route 66.” Peerbolte noted that Joliet is within the first 100 miles of Route 66, which starts in Chicago and spans 2,448 miles through three time zones to end in Santa Monica, California. This year marks the Mother Road’s 100th anniversary.

* Daily Herald | Sugar Grove wins second place in North American tap water taste competition: “We value providing Sugar Grove with the best possible water, protecting our water resources, and we are all celebrating their win for the community as the stewards of the best-tasting water in the United States,” Village President Sue Stillwell said in a news release. Sugar Grove first won the Kane County Water Association’s regional taste test. Then in April, the village won the state title at the Illinois Section AWWA WATERCON convention in Peoria.

*** Downstate ***

* STLPR | Metro East cyclists get new bridge, longer trail to explore in St. Clair, Madison counties: The $6.3 million bridge will allow users of MCT’s Schoolhouse Trail to avoid crossing the state highway on the northeast corner of Horseshoe Lake. Madison County Transit Managing Director SJ Morrison said the new bridge means MCT now has 51 bridges and 22 tunnels to keep trail users from crossing busy roadways. “This represents the 73rd structure on the MCT trails that safely carries trail goers over creeks and roads and streets and other obstacles that would either slow or stop the seamless accessibility of the trails for trail users of all ages and all abilities,” Morrison said.

* Illinois Times | New Mental Health Board meets: Sangamon County’s recently convened Mental Health Board agreed on a job listing for an executive director position and started discussions about how to organize the Board’s grant structure during its June 24 meeting. Former Massey Commission staff and members also implored the board to avoid filling governmental budget gaps with the nearly $15 million it’s expected to disburse for community mental health support. Instead, multiple speakers told the board to consider finding ways to bolster methods of intervention so fewer people require state services in the first place.

* WAND | Effingham church provides disaster relief supplies to community reeling from tornado: The Churches of Christ have a Nashville, Tennessee, distribution center to assist communities impacted by weather and other disasters. “They help communities when they have disasters. Whether it’s a flood, a tornado, or anything like that,” Leighann Slater of the Effingham Church of Christ told WAND News on Tuesday. Supplies include food, some clothing, cleaning products, shovels, tarps, brooms and more.

*** National ***

* NYT | FEMA Official Who Claimed He Once Teleported to a Waffle House Is Leaving: A top official at the Federal Emergency Management Agency who had come under scrutiny for a series of unexpected claims — including that he had once teleported to a Waffle House in Georgia — has gone on leave, according to an agency spokeswoman. The official, Gregg Phillips, was appointed by the White House in December to lead FEMA’s Office of Response and Recovery, the agency’s largest division. The office, with more than 1,000 employees and a budget of nearly $300 million, is central to FEMA’s mission of responding to disasters like hurricanes, floods and wildfires.

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Um, OK

Friday, Jun 26, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* CNN

The Trump administration’s 16-day-long Great American State Fair has begun, offering visitors to the National Mall in Washington, DC, the chance to visit pavilions showcasing every US state and territory. […]

The 16-day-long festival has been organized by Freedom250, a Trump-aligned nonprofit that has organized a plethora of 250th-anniversary events backed by the president, such as the Rededicate 250 prayer event on the National Mall in May.

* Tribune

With Illinois among several states declining to send official representatives to an event in Washington backed by President Donald Trump to commemorate America’s 250th anniversary, a central Illinois museum says it volunteered to participate because “Illinois is as much a part of American history as any state.”

Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration said it was not sending any representatives to the “Great American State Fair” event, which starts June 25 and is sponsored by the group Freedom 250, but declined to give a reason. It’s no secret Pritzker and Trump have been ardent political enemies going back to their respective first terms in office.

But state officials said the Peoria Riverfront Museum plans to send a showcase to the 16-day event on the National Mall to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence consisting of, among other things, a pavilion that will highlight Illinois’ contributions to sports, architecture and agriculture, along with a hologram of prerecorded greetings from a number of Illinoisans from all over the state.

“We have a wall that a top graphic designer put together, a beautiful mural wall, sort of from the prairie to the cornfield, from Peoria to Chicago to various aspects of our great state,” said John D. Morris, president and CEO of the museum, which sits along the Illinois River about 130 miles southwest of Chicago. “We have corn stools that the kids will be able to sit on. We have handouts of Abraham Lincoln’s famous ambrotype image taken in Peoria. We were prideful to be able to put that forward and invited people from throughout the state to represent.”

* From the fair…


Computer, zoom in

  10 Comments      


It’s almost a law

Friday, Jun 26, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

A pandemic-era allowance is now law six-and-a-half years later. Senate Bill 618 makes cocktails-to-go permanent.

Illinois lawmakers passed legislation during the pandemic that allowed restaurants and bars to sell cocktails and mixed drinks for pickup or delivery as businesses were closed to in-person customers. That will be allowed to continue permanently under the new law. […]

The new Department of Early Childhood will officially launch on July 1, completing one of Gov. JB Pritzker’s top priorities of his second term.

Senate Bill 1 to create the new agency passed the General Assembly with bipartisan support in 2024 and calls for consolidating a variety of early childhood services that are spread across multiple state agencies under one roof. Those include oversight and funding of preschools, childcare centers, home visiting and early intervention programs.

Pritzker tapped Teresa Ramos to direct the agency. She worked in childcare advocacy before joining the governor’s office’s education policy team.

* Tribune

Companies that violate the Illinois Oil and Gas Act could face stiffer fines under a new bill aimed at reducing the thousands of abandoned oil and gas wells scattered throughout downstate Illinois.

Passed by the legislature late last month, the bill comes in response to a Chicago Tribune investigative series that exposed the myriad problems surrounding those wells, and a similarly focused study jointly created by the California-based environmental nonprofit ClientEarth USA and the Environmental Advocacy Center at Northwestern University’s Pritzker School of Law. […]

At its core, the bill increases the maximum possible daily penalty for most violations of the act from $1,000 to $4,000. Operators who fail to comply with Illinois Department of Natural Resources’ rules, regulations, orders or permits could also face steeper penalties under the bill: up to $2,000 a day for a violation that lasts more than 90 days but less than 180 days, and up to $4,000 a day for violations lasting 180 days or longer.

Penalties in excess of $1,000 a day will be deposited in the department’s fund designated for the plugging and restoration of orphaned and abandoned wells, which as of this month, totaled nearly 3,900 wells. IDNR calculates the cost to plug them is around $155 million.

* WCIA

Under Senate Bill 1504, the the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) would be required to prepare youth, aged 15 years old and older, for their transition out of care and into independence.

The youth transition plan should address areas like post-high school goals, drivers education, employment, mental and physical health and well-being, physical documentation needed for adulthood and more. The law also places court oversight over DCFS’ efforts to ensure the youth are getting “age and developmentally appropriate life skills.”

State Senator Lakesia Collins said that by creating legislation which gives young people a “game plan” to figure out their options, the state is helping children in care plan for their futures. The bill was signed in August 2025 and takes effect on July 1, 2026.

* WAND

A bill on Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk could create an intelligent speed assistance program within the Secretary of State’s office as an alternative to license suspension for dangerous drivers.

The plan requires drivers who commit two offenses within a year to install the speed limiting device in their vehicle.

This comes as 75% of people with suspended licenses continue to drive.

“Our current methods are not working,” said Rudy Faust from Families for Safe Streets. “The intelligent speed assistance program is a practical and equitable step towards saving lives of both drivers and vulnerable road users without limiting mobility.”

* WQAD

Illinois is expanding its definition of cyberbullying to include AI-generated content in schools under House Bill 3851.

Beginning with the 2026-27 school year, cyberbullying will include posting or distributing an unauthorized AI-generated digital replica of another person if it meets the state’s definition of bullying. The law also expands the definition of bullying to include the posting or distribution of sexually explicit images and adds legal definitions for artificial intelligence, digital replicas and generative artificial intelligence. […]

Illinois is making several changes to state liquor laws under Senate Bill 618.

Beginning July 1, the law creates a new Class 3 craft distiller license, allowing eligible distilleries to produce up to 100,000 gallons of spirits annually and self-distribute limited quantities. The law also updates provisions governing the delivery and carryout of mixed drinks, allows retailers to use third-party delivery platforms for alcohol sales and deliveries, and makes other changes to state liquor laws.

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Today’s quotables

Friday, Jun 26, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Senate’s Bears stadium negotiator Sen. Bill Cunningham on NBC5 this week

No one’s coming through the door of my district office right now saying ‘You have to give the Bears something, do something for the Bears, give them property tax certainty, do whatever they want to keep them here.’ I don’t hear that from my constituents.

More from NBC5’s Mary Ann Ahern

[Cunningham said] there are informal talks underway, but as far as setting up a special session in Springfield, that is not close.

MAA’s conclusion

Well, here is the bottom line: Indiana does appear to be the leverage to get a deal in Illinois. Why else would the Bears still be talking to Illinois lawmakers? However, what is unknown: How long will the Bears wait?

Discuss.

  39 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Jun 26, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker signs ban on junk fees, other consumer protections into law. CBS Chicago

    - The Junk Fee Ban Act requires businesses to tell consumers the final price of a ticket or hotel room upfront. Companies may not advertise prices that fail to disclose service, processing, or convenience fees, surcharges, and mandatory gratuities upfront.
    - Another bill bans automated ticket scalping, when bots buy up tickets so they can drive up demand and resell them at a higher price.
    - Bills that forbid ticket resellers from offering tickets they don’t really have, and regulating buy-now-pay-later lenders, were also signed into law.

* Related stories…

* Gov. JB Pritzker has no public events scheduled today.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Supreme Court ruling in Roundup case is a major blow for agricultural states like Illinois, advocates say: The ruling carries significance for agricultural states like Illinois, one of the nation’s largest producers of corn and soybeans and among the heaviest users of glyphosate-based herbicides such as Roundup. Some rural Illinoisans have faced long-term exposure to the weedkiller. In a previous interview with the Tribune, organic farmer Harold Wilken talked about how he believes years of Roundup use contributed to his tonsil and lymph node cancer. For farm advocacy groups that filed briefs in the case, the decision raises concerns that federal regulatory approval may now make it harder to bring state consumer protection claims.

* MJBizDaily | Major labor strike threatens Illinois cannabis supply chain, union says: Hundreds of unionized employees at a marijuana multistate operator-owned Illinois cultivation facility walked off the job Thursday in what could be one of the biggest labor stoppages the legal cannabis industry has seen to date, according to union officials. In an action that could disrupt the supply chain in Illinois, more than 300 workers organized with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 916 are on strike at Ascend Wellness Holdings’ licensed cultivation operation in Barry, Illinois, Teamsters officials said in a press release.

* WGLT | New report indicates Illinois’ creative economy has ‘major’ impact statewide: The creative economy — which ranges from arts education to festivals, fairs and conventions to music recording and publishing — supports 734,269 jobs in the state of Illinois, the report indicated. That figure represents 12.2% of all employment across Illinois and generates $148.1 billion in total output and $20.6 billion in tax revenue. The report evaluates economic impact for the state, as well as within the city of Chicago.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WIFR | Illinois Lt. Gov. candidates focus on affordability in pitch to Rockford voters: The Democratic and Republican candidates for governor picked new running mates for their rematch. With Lieutenant Governor Julianna Stratton running for U.S. Senate, Pritzker picked Christian Mitchell to join his ticket. On the Republican side, Aaron Del Mar joins Bailey, who previously ran with Stephanie Trussell in 2022. Mitchell and Del Mar spoke Thursday with WIFR on what inspires them to run, their campaign priorities and ideas to improve the Rockford region.

* Capitol News Illinois | Cocktails-to-go, new state agency among laws taking effect July 1: A pandemic-era allowance is now law six-and-a-half years later. Senate Bill 618 makes cocktails-to-go permanent. Illinois lawmakers passed legislation during the pandemic that allowed restaurants and bars to sell cocktails and mixed drinks for pickup or delivery as businesses were closed to in-person customers. That will be allowed to continue permanently under the new law.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago school board adopts legislative agenda calling for more funding — after state lawmakers adjourn: “This would have been fantastic for us to have in January or even February,” said Anusha Thotakura, an appointed board member who has previously pressed CPS for a legislative plan. “There is absolutely no opportunity for this legislative agenda to result in increased state funds for the upcoming school year — zero.” Several board members called for the agenda to be a “living document” that CPS could add ideas to. And others wanted more demands of local officials. Elected board member Che “Rhymefest” Smith said he was disappointed the agenda didn’t include anything about pressing the city to send more special taxing district dollars to the district – an amount that can vary year to year.

* Gov Tech | Illinois’ First Chief AI Officer Is From the Private Sector: Illinois has chosen Kader Sakkaria as its first-ever chief AI officer, a newly created leadership post filled as the state formalizes its approach to AI governance, strategy and adoption across the enterprise. […] Sakkaria’s background aligns closely with those priorities, spanning AI, data strategy, cloud modernization and digital transformation. This is likely his inaugural public-sector position. According to his LinkedIn profile, he was most recently global head of data technology and center of excellence at Gallagher, where he helped oversee large-scale data and analytics operations, including AI governance initiatives.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | Mayor’s $3 Billion Parking Meter Offer Was $800 Million More Than The Next Highest Bid, Investor Says: Wyper and his colleagues said Stonepeak bid about $2.5 billion — which proved to be the winner after the city walked away. Stonepeak is now seeking City Council approval for its proposed takeover of the meter system. And the mayor is trying to avoid talking about it. City officials have previously said the city’s bid was about $3 billion, but refused to offer specifics or share their calculations for arriving at that figure. The $800 million difference with Stonepeak’s bid left alderpeople asking more questions. Some railed against the mayor and the city’s law department for failing to disclose the information sooner.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago Public School teachers warn of cuts as CPS faces $700 million budget deficit Chicago Public School teachers warn of cuts as CPS faces $700 million budget deficit : The Chicago Teachers Union says the district is at risk of cutting thousands of teacher and staff positions. The union also points to aging school buildings and a growing population of students with special needs as additional pressures on the system. “Our students deserve more not less. Our school communities have had enough of cuts year after year,” said Pavlyn Jankov, Director of Research at the Chicago Teachers Union. The Chicago Public School Board met Wednesday to discuss the budget. District leaders said they are considering all options to preserve as many student resources as possible. CTU is urging state lawmakers to call a special session to address school funding.

* Sun-Times | Mayor’s financial task force proposes Downtown congestion fee, service tax, restructuring electricity taxes: To chip away at Chicago’s $36 billion pension crisis and erase the city’s structural deficit, the 23-member group of civic leaders is also suggesting offering retirees lump-sum payouts in lieu of monthly pension checks, consolidating actuaries and administrators of the four city employee pension funds, and restoring the automatic escalator locking in annual property tax increases at the rate of inflation.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Delays in ramping up work on Chicago’s Black Student Success Plan frustrate some advocates: Over the past year, district officials have worked to reassure parents and advocates that they are forging ahead with the initiative — while appearing to move slowly and cautiously to ward off further federal scrutiny and fallout. On Thursday, Jitu Brown, the board member slated to lead the Black Student Achievement Committee, announced yet another delay in naming its members. And when the district this past spring challenged in court the U.S. Department of Education’s move to withhold grant dollars over the plan, one of CPS’ arguments was that it hadn’t even started implementing the program.

* Tribune | Chicago resident in risk of deportation after Supreme Court allows Trump to strip Syrians of legal protection : Now, Hatem is faced with deportation to Syria, a country in which he has never even set foot, after the United States Supreme Court ruled in a 6-3 decision Thursday allowing President Donald Trump to end temporary protection status for immigrants from Syria and Haiti. Without TPS, they lose protection from deportation and work authorization.

* Block Club | Is Chicago Ever Getting Video Gambling Machines? Bars Wait For Answers As City Council Spars: On Wednesday, Christopher Jewett, Bally’s vice president for Corporate Development, said legalized video gambling terminals “will hurt the city’s finances for years to come.” “Had we known that within just a few years, this body would reverse course and allow an alternative form of gaming that breaches the agreement, we would never have agreed to the numerous commitments, all of which we’ve held up,” Jewett said. “I can assure you that other corporations around the country and world are watching the treatment of our relationship and will take note when determining to bring businesses and jobs here.”

* Crain’s | Chicago tourism grew in 2025, but city still chasing pre-pandemic high: Nearly 57 million people visited Chicago last year, marking both a step forward for the local tourism sector and a sign that it is still trying to find its post-pandemic footing. Tourism agency Choose Chicago today announced visitation to the city grew by 2.6% last year to 56.8 million people. The total still trails the record-high 61.6 million tourists the city welcomed in 2019.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘The sirens go off because you’re under threat’: Elgin officials clarify emergency warning system: The city has 25 sirens across its 38 square miles. They had been automatically activated whenever the National Weather Service issued a warning for the area, including tornado warnings and severe thunderstorm warnings with damaging winds or large hail. Residents had complained about confusion, expecting the sirens to specifically indicate tornadoes. Cagann said city officials “agonized” over how best to keep the community safe, but ultimately decided to return to full automation because, he added, the ‘why’ of the sirens sounding isn’t important.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Kane County’s draft fiscal year 2027 budget may be on display as early as July: Like last year, the county board’s recent budget-making efforts have largely centered around addressing a looming budget shortfall in the county’s general fund, which the board has been solving since 2023 by dipping into the county’s cash reserves. But using reserves to balance the county’s annual budget won’t be an option forever, county staff members have cautioned, warning that the county must make significant cuts or find new revenue before 2027 to avoid going into its required 90-day reserves.

* Daily Southtown | Flossmoor considers transforming commuter lot into public park, gathering space: “This would be a great spot to do events,” Homewood-Flossmoor Park District executive director Doug Boehm said at a Wednesday open house. “We can host concerts, whatever, you name it. Things that we do in the park— celebrations and movies in the park, all sorts of things.” The property belongs to the village, but would potentially be transferred to the Park District if the project goes forward, Boehm said. Homewood has more than 20 parks, while Flossmoor has just seven, he said.

* WTTW | Cook County Has Been Called the Wrongful Conviction Capital of the US. New Book Explores Why: In her new book, “Crime Fictions: How Racist Lies Built a System of Mass Wrongful Conviction,” author Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve tries to answer that. She identifies cases of Black youth, some as young as 7, who are wrongfully accused and coerced into confessions. “We often talk about wrongful conviction as though it’s an accident or a series of accidents, and what I’m trying to do in this book … is to think about wrongful conviction as a set of patterns, a systemic way of doing business by police,” Gonzalez Van Cleve said. She set out by trying to answer how a person becomes guilty in the eyes of the police. After years of interviews, archival research and the excavation of hidden documents, she said she found that police have techniques for creating wrongful convictions.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | B-N residents voice concerns about Flock cameras in policing to the man who leads Bloomington’s program: A group called Shut the Flock Off requested all emails within the Bloomington Police Department with the word “Flock” in them. It was 79,000 emails. A narrowing resulted in the group still receiving thousands of documents, one of which was posted on social media last week. McQueen added that email to one of his slides. “Highlighted in there is my statement that they posted online,” he said. “It says ‘these issues are putting our system and data at risk,’ which was alarming to a lot of people. We got a lot of phone calls, and they said ‘Uh oh, that’s that data from the LPRs.”

* WCIA | ‘No evidence’ of bomb found after threat made at Champaign elementary school: The Champaign Police Department said a bomb threat that was called in to an elementary school earlier this week is now being investigated as a false report. Officers with the Champaign Police Department and a specialized K9 from the University of Illinois Police Department responded to South Side Elementary School — which is located in the 700 block of S. New Street — at 11:22 a.m. on June 22.

* WAND | Auburn’s iconic Route 66 brick road offers a drive through history: Long before Interstate 55 carried travelers through central Illinois, Route 66 connected communities, businesses and families along what would become America’s most famous highway. On Thursday, one of the best-preserved reminders of that history sits just north of Auburn, where a nearly four-minute stretch of brick pavement continues to draw visitors from around the world. The brick road, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, offers a rare glimpse into what travelers experienced nearly a century ago when Route 66 first stretched from Chicago to Los Angeles.

*** National ***

* Talking Points Memo | What’s This Database DHS Is Trying to Use to Purge Voter Rolls?: The changes to SAVE came in response to Trump’s March 25, 2025 executive order that directed DHS and SSA to ignore privacy laws and create a database for state and local election officials to verify citizenship status for people registering to vote. There are several issues with the way the Trump administration is trying to use the SAVE database, specifically on the privacy front. But one glaring election-related issue: there is evidence that the tool is incorrectly flagging eligible voters as ineligible. Also, as we know by now, non-citizen voting is extremely rare and it is not happening en masse as Trump and his allies claim.

* WaPo | Meet the megadonors pouring more than $1.3 billion into the 2026 election: The donors lean Republican and cash could prove critical for the GOP to maintain control of Congress in November. In the first half of 2026, Republican-leaning donors gave $880 million, compared to $290 million from Democratic-leaning givers and $200 million from bipartisan and special interest groups. But most of the money, regardless of affiliation, was given to super PACs that can legally accept unlimited sums.

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Good morning!

Friday, Jun 26, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Recent events have prompted me to think about my own eventual demise (which, hopefully, isn’t for a long while). This is one of the songs I’d like played at whatever event is held. In case it happens sooner than I expect, bonus points if this band (which I have tickets to see Saturday in Chicago) plays it live

River gonna take me, sing me sweet and sleepy
Sing me sweet and sleepy all the way back home
It’s a far gone lullaby sung many years ago
Mama, Mama, many worlds I’ve come since I first left home

What are your final requests?

  12 Comments      


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

Friday, Jun 26, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Jun 26, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Jun 25, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

Anthony Gonzalez Alvarez, 27, of Lyons, pleaded guilty in April to a felony charge stemming from a traffic altercation with Border Patrol agents in Brighton Park in October.

His sentencing had been scheduled for July 22. On Thursday, however, prosecutors filed a cryptic motion asking for the sentencing to be stayed as “the parties are in the process of evaluating a potential legal issue” with the charge to which Alvarez pleaded guilty.

The motion stated that the U.S. attorney’s office “has re-offered” Alvarez a plea agreement that would resolve the case as a misdemeanor — which could allow him to avoid any prison time. […]

To have a felony conviction unravel after a defendant pleads guilty is a rare occurrence at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse. But Alvarez’s case has an even more interesting wrinkle.

Court records show Alvarez was indicted on Oct. 23 by the same grand jury that had also returned an indictment that same day in the “Broadview Six” case, which later collapsed amid allegations of wrongdoing by Assistant U.S. Attorney Sheri Mecklenburg.

* From Rep. Stephanie Kifowit…

*** Statewide ***

* WAND | Illinois launches America 250 website, events celebrating state history: The new America 250 webpage is meant to serve as a digital gateway to Illinois history, showcasing the state’s contributions to the nation’s political, economic, agricultural and cultural development. It will feature historic photographs, documents and other treasures from the collections of the Illinois State Archives and the Illinois State Library, while also giving access to a complete schedule of America 250 events and activities happening throughout the Capitol Complex.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Task force pitches long-term Chicago budget fillers, but many need state buy-in: The group also said the city should seek a rule change in Springfield to make sure there’s a fiscal impact note whenever lawmakers change the city’s pension benefits, contributions or funding. The city claimed that recent state-mandated pension changes were done without enough consultation or a full accounting of the cost, let alone any help paying for them. Among the most feasible tweaks: making sure leaders meet twice a year to discuss significant pension policy decisions.

* WTTW | Chicago Budget Task Force Recommends Long-Term Structural Reforms to Address City’s Fiscal Challenges: The Chicago Financial Future Task Force — a group of nearly two dozen business, labor, public policy and community leaders — published its final report Thursday that included 58 policy recommendations, such as instituting a downtown congestion fee, restructuring electricity tax rates and instituting property tax increases based on the national consumer price index. “This challenge was not created overnight,” Chicago Urban League President and task force co-chair Karen Freeman-Wilson told reporters this week. “So there has to be — for there to be sustainability — a gradual fix. And it’s not just revenue, it’s not just cutting expenses, it’s not just looking at some of the long-term structural liabilities. It’s all of those things.”

* Crain’s | Chicago’s political megadonors crack the nation’s top 50: Several other donors with Chicago ties also made the Post’s top 50. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker ranked 37th after contributing $12 million to Democratic causes. Citadel founder Ken Griffin — whose financial empire was headquartered here until his high-profile departure to Miami — ranked 39th with $10.5 million in Republican donations. J. Christopher and M. Jude Reyes, the billionaire brothers who co-chair Rosemont-based Reyes Holdings, ranked 41st after giving $10.1 million.

* Sun-Times | New study finds the creative sector is Chicago’s third-largest industry: The report states that only healthcare and professional, scientific and technical services make up larger workforces in Chicago. It also found that Chicago’s creative economy generates $50 billion in economic output, measured by the sales of goods and services, like concert ticket sales or broadcasting services.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Weeks after tornado, Bartlett cleaning up again from damaging storms: Bartlett Fire Protection District Chief William Gabrenya said fire crews began receiving service calls at about 6:30 p.m. and handled 38 “storm-related incidents” over the course of the night. […] National Weather Service storm survey teams are starting their investigations in Huntley and working their way southeast into the Carpentersville and Bartlett areas, officials at the agency said.

* Daily Herald | ‘A legacy for all of us’: St. Charles eyes redevelopment of former police station site: City council members gave direction to staff this week during a workshop meeting to draft a statement of interest signaling support for working with the park district and the property’s redevelopment. A statement of interest agreement could be reviewed by aldermen in July, Deputy City Administrator Derek Conley said. Mayor Clint Hull expects to put together a group of city council and park district representatives to begin work on the project.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville lags far behind other towns in protecting historic buildings, study finds: But when it comes to preserving its historic buildings, the city lags behind peer communities and should dedicate more resources to preserving its structures, according to a report issued by Naperville Preservation Inc. The nonprofit, which spent about a year putting together the analysis, created its own preservation plan after being told repeatedly that the city does not have enough staff to focus on the subject. Members have been told by city staff that historic preservation appears to be a low priority for the Naperville City Council.

*** Downstate ***

* STLPR | East St. Louis schools could lose food pantry, programs while grant is in limbo: Emma Giamberdino, deputy director of policy, communications and external Affairs for ACT Now Illinois, said her organization has already seen some schools lay off staff and cut back programs when the funding was first disrupted in December. “I unfortunately don’t have a timeline,” Giamberdino said. “A lot of that infrastructure had already been degraded. I think the worst part about this is that students, families and certainly the practitioners and school staff are really the ones that are suffering.”

* WCIA | Funding uncertainty threatens Urbana Farm to School program: “We alternated for several years in securing grants for the farm school program as we were building it up and getting the components in place,” Barkley said. These grants, Sola Gratia’s executive director said, are ones that they and the public health district have consistently found. That is until one from the USDA fell through this year. “And what we need right now is for the school district to be taking some ownership and investment into the program,” Barkely said.

* Illinois Times | Man fights city hall: He lives in an 18-square-foot home on a corner lot at 17th and Carpenter streets. He built the “pod” himself, he says, from watching how-to videos on YouTube, and it features solar panels, battery-powered generators, a foundation of heavyweight tires, air conditioning, insulation, a six-foot bed, a microwave and an internet connection from a cheap satellite service. He wants to market the mass production of such do-it-yourself, off-the-grid tiny homes not only for his potential profit, but more because of a “calling from God” to better help the homeless get off the streets, just like he did. He thinks he can design a car that would run for at least 100 miles on “a gallon of water and electricity.” Meanwhile, the city of Springfield is “unjustly harassing me,” he says, because none of the structures on the lot he owns are up to code regarding zoning and other public works requirements.

*** National ***

* AP | Supreme Court allows Trump administration to end legal protections for Haitians, Syrians: The decision overturns lower court orders and allows the Department of Homeland Security to swiftly end temporary protected status, a program that protects a total of 1.3 million people from 17 countries. The Trump administration argued judges that can’t second-guess immigrations officials’ decisions about the protections, which were intended to be temporary.

* AP | Supreme Court ruling blocks thousands of lawsuits against maker of Roundup weedkiller: The high court, in a 7-2 ruling, found that Roundup cannot face failure-to-warn lawsuits in state courts because federal regulations have found a cancer link unlikely and do not require a warning label. Though focused on Roundup, the ruling could affect similar health claims against other pesticide products. “This decision is good for American farmers who help feed the world,“ Bayer CEO Bill Anderson said. ”It provides the regulatory clarity necessary for innovators like us to develop the agricultural tools that guarantee an affordable food supply.”

* NYT | Apple Raises Prices on Macs and iPads Amid the A.I. Boom: Apple increased prices on some laptop and tablet models $200 or more. A base model of the MacBook Pro, for example, now costs $1,999, up from $1,699. Apple’s entry-level laptop, the MacBook Neo, now costs $699, $100 higher than when it was unveiled in March.

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When it comes to natural disasters, we’re basically on our own

Thursday, Jun 25, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

Illinois has seen a record number of tornadoes just six months into the year after a series of spring and summer storms barreled their way across the Midwest, causing millions in damage as federal disaster assistance wanes in Democrat-led states.

Experts chalk the sudden increase up to temporary fluctuation, although a small increase over decades is in line with current climate change research. But more severe weather events could strain local and state governments as recent analysis shows blue states have struggled to get federal aid requests approved under the second Trump administration.

The National Weather Service confirmed a record 153 tornadoes in Illinois as of June 23, a number all but guaranteed to increase as teams continue to evaluate late June storms while more tornadoes are bound to occur in the second half of the year. Before 2023, Illinois hadn’t recorded more than 73 tornadoes in a calendar year since 2006.

* Illinois chart

But

A Politico analysis found Democrat-led states saw just 23% of their disaster requests granted in the first year of Trump’s second term, compared to 89% for their Republican counterparts. Under the past six administrations — including Trump’s first term — states led by either party saw similar rates of approval, between 70% and 90%. The analysis also found that the administration takes twice as long to issue decisions on requests from blue states.

* From that analysis

From the story

• Trump’s 23 percent approval rate of Democratic requests is unprecedented. Every president since Reagan has approved at least 67 percent of requests from Democratic-led states. Republican Presidents George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush and Trump in his first term each approved a higher percentage of requests from Democratic states than from Republican states.

• Trump has taken 80 days on average to approve or deny requests from Democratic-led states — compared to 39 days for Republican-led states.

• Trump has been openly partisan on social media about using disaster funding for political purposes. He has linked his decisions to grant aid with his electoral victories in Republican-led states.

• Eight out of Trump’s 10 denials for Democratic-led states came despite FEMA having documented high levels of damage after on-the-ground inspections. Previous presidents have rarely denied disaster aid for events that caused as much damage as FEMA found for the eight denials.

• Trump’s denials of Democratic-led states overwhelmingly affected counties that supported him in 2024, suggesting that Trump’s rejections were directed at state leaders who oppose him politically.

* Gov. Pritzker was asked about this topic yesterday

It’s hard to say that this administration doesn’t have politics playing a part in virtually all of its decision making, even when there are lives at risk. But you know, I also will say, I looked at a study that showed that on a, I think it’s on a per capita basis, that California, Illinois, and Ohio have received the least remuneration in the face of disasters, and I think again it’s on, I think, a per.. it might either be on a per disaster site or a per person basis. But I saw Ohio in there, and I thought that’s a Republican state, it’s controlled by a Republican legislature. So, I’m not sure, and maybe it’s that the president does not like Governor DeWine, who he has said he does not like. Maybe that’s what it’s about. I don’t know. I can’t really tell.

All I can tell you is this is not the way the country should be run. It should not be. Look, you run an election, you fight over issues, you know, between the two parties, and then someone wins and has to run the state or the country, and you’re there in charge of the benefit of all of the people of your state or your country, not just the people who voted for you, and not against the people who didn’t vote for you, so I would just, you know, reiterate, I am concerned there’s politics involved, but it is hard to pinpoint.

I’m inclined to believe, because in so many other ways this president seems like every decision is based on, you know, going after his enemies, protecting his friends, even, you know, corruptly taking money from people that he doesn’t like and opposes, so I don’t know the answer, I guess, to your question, and it’s very hard to pinpoint, but we should receive FEMA dollars for the disasters that have occurred in the state of Illinois.

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CBS poll: Large majorities say data centers ‘mostly bad’ for environment, water and energy resources and utility costs

Thursday, Jun 25, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* New national poll…


* More from CBS News

Many Americans are skeptical about having a data center in their area, fueled largely by what they perceive as negative impacts on the environment and resources.

The construction of data centers in the U.S. has accelerated in recent years, but most Americans feel they don’t know a lot about them yet.

People’s own lack of familiarity with data centers contributes to their unease about having one in their local area. While people tend not to favor them no matter how much they feel they know, the less they feel they know about data centers, the less likely they are to favor one.

Overall, by more than two to one, more Americans oppose than favor having a new data center built in their area. Many aren’t sure.

* From the toplines

* Methodology

This CBS News/YouGov survey was conducted with a nationally representative sample of 2,023 U.S. adults interviewed between June 2-4, 2026. The sample was weighted to be representative of adults nationwide according to gender, age, race, and education, based on the U.S. Census American Community Survey and Current Population Survey, as well as 2024 presidential vote. The margin of error is ±2.8 points.

Discuss.

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Illinois’ SNAP error rate increased in 2025 (Updated x2)

Thursday, Jun 25, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Remember Rich’s column from last summer about Illinois’ SNAP payment error rate?

The costs to Illinois’ government because of the new Republican congressional budget reconciliation law will be steep. […]

If current trends continue, Illinois will have to pay 15% of the total SNAP benefit costs, which, according to the governor’s office, would be $705 million a year.

The reason the state is on the hook for 15% of benefit costs is because of its high SNAP payment error rate, which stood at 11.56% in fiscal year 2024, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The state’s error rates for underpayments to SNAP beneficiaries was less than 1%, but its overpayment error rate was 10.6%.

The new federal law requires that states with SNAP payment error rates of 10% or higher must pay 15% of SNAP benefit costs. The state will struggle mightily to afford that, so lots of people may lose their food aid if things don’t change. […]

If Illinois could reduce its error rate to above 8% but below 10% — on par with states like Michigan, Ohio and Texas then it would pay 10% of benefit costs, or $470 million a year.

* Numbers released yesterday show Illinois’ SNAP payment error rate hit 14.67 percent in FY2025. WTVO

Illinois could face hundreds of millions of dollars in penalties or lost federal funding tied to its administration of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), as new federal data shows the state has one of the highest payment error rates in the country.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s most recent SNAP Quality Control report found Illinois posted a 14.67% payment error rate in fiscal year 2025, well above the national average of 10.62%. The rate reflects how often benefits are issued incorrectly, including both overpayments and underpayments. […]

Under changes approved in a 2025 federal law, states with high SNAP error rates could be required to cover a share of program costs. Illinois’ current trajectory could put it on the hook for roughly $700 million annually if its error rate remains above 10%.

The policy establishes a sliding scale: states with error rates above 10% may be responsible for 15% of total SNAP benefit costs, while lower error rates would reduce that share. […]

Illinois received about $4.7 billion in SNAP funding last year, meaning even a partial cost shift could have major budget implications.

* The AP

An exception in the federal law gives states with the highest error rates more time to try to reduce them. States with error rates of at least 13.34% last year will receive a delay in their cost-share requirements until at least the 2029 fiscal year.

The delay will benefit Alaska, which had the highest error rate of over 23%. Other jurisdictions receiving a one-year, cost-share delay are Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, New Mexico, Oregon and the District of Columbia. […]

A recent survey of state agencies that run SNAP found that most already are analyzing the root causes of their payment errors. The mistakes appear to be evenly attributable to SNAP recipients and program administrators, and many states are planning to increase staff focused on eliminating errors, according to the survey released by American Public Human Services Association.

But states also are planning for cuts, if they are forced to pay a portion of SNAP benefits. More than a quarter of the states responding to the survey said they could consider narrowing eligibility policies, and four states said they could consider withdrawing from SNAP entirely. The report did not list those states.

* US Department of Agriculture

In addition to this matching fund requirement, states with PER at or above 6% threshold are required to submit a Corrective Action Plan to USDA’s Food and Nutrition Administration detailing how they will address the root cause of their errors. Some of these states may also be liable for a separate financial penalty as part of the SNAP quality control process.

* House Minority Leader Tony McCombie…

House Minority Leader Tony McCombie released the following statement after the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) released the annual Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) payment error rates (PER) showing Illinois’ rate as one of the highest at 14.67%:

“Illinois’ SNAP error rate has skyrocketed because of years of mismanagement, and our most vulnerable will be paying the price.

“This isn’t about taking benefits away from families who legitimately need assistance. It’s about making sure the program is administered properly and taxpayer dollars are protected. Fraud, waste, and abuse have no place in government.

“Governor Pritzker can’t blame the federal government for Illinois’ failures. If families lose benefits, it will be because he refuses to fix one of the highest error rates in the nation, that responsibility rests squarely with him.”

Thoughts?

…Adding…. Gov. Pritzker today

We have worked steadfastly really, every day. Our Department of Human Services and others have worked together to make sure that we’re upgrading the technology, upgrading the number of people that we have applied to the SNAP error rate from that time to now, and we’ve made a significant dent from that time to now. That number is now significantly down from not just the 14% but below the 11 plus percent that was originally reported.

…Adding…. The governor did not have the new error rate number, but stood by his claim that the rate was below FY24.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Jun 25, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Unified transit police force is ‘easiest’ option but could be costly, Sheriff Dart says. Sun-Times

    - Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart is worried about runaway costs he’s seen in Los Angeles, which recently formed its own transit police force. “I’ve just been watching [L.A. and] how those costs have been ballooning. And it worries me,” Dart said.
    - About 50 deputies have been patrolling CTA trains each day, Dart said. They initially started on Red Line trains on the South Side, but have since expanded to riding all other train lines. Dart said they’ve already learned lessons about deployment and enforcement that will be shared in their task force report.
    - The NITA law calls for unarmed, trained “transit ambassadors” to begin assisting passengers next year. Dart says they will be a welcome and necessary addition to the system to offload some of the work being placed on officers who are being tied up responding to mental health emergencies.

* Related stories…

* At 1:30, Gov. JB Pritzker will host a bill signing press conference for a package of consumer protection measures that lower costs for working families. Click here to watch. At 6:15 pm, the governor will deliver the opening remarks at Common Defense’s National Convention and Leadership Summit.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Daily Herald | Independent governor hopeful Corbett’s place on ballot affirmed after Bailey campaign pulls objection: Bailey’s team “did whatever they could to keep us off the ballot, but they couldn’t stop our commonsense movement of everyday Illinoisans,” said Corbett, a longtime Republican operative. In response to the objection, Corbett’s petitions were scrutinized last week by Illinois State Board of Elections staff who found that he had 27,323 confirmed signatures, more than the required 25,000, officials said.

* NYT | Utah Senate President Loses Primary After Data Center Backlash: The president of the Utah State Senate, who championed a huge data center beside the Great Salt Lake, was defeated in his Republican primary on Tuesday night, one of the most high-profile signs of the voter backlash to data center projects. The vote to oust the Senate president, J. Stuart Adams, was a stunner. Mr. Adams was one of the longest-serving and most powerful politicians in Utah, a solidly Republican state, and had won earlier re-elections with little opposition.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press release | New JB For Governor Ad Features Governor Pritzker’s Success in Bringing New Industries to Illinois: The 30-second ad features Richard Demirjian, President of TCCI Manufacturing, explaining how Gov. Pritzker’s investments allowed the company to expand in Decatur, growing economic opportunity for downstate Illinois. The ad will air on Illinois broadcast and cable television markets downstate, as well as on digital platforms.

* Capitol News Illinois | New Illinois driving test age requirements start July 1: The 2025 law, titled the Road Safety and Fairness Act, also creates a process for immediate family members to report cognitive or physical health declines to the state for review. The minimum age for a driving test will be raised from 79 to 87, although drivers 79 and older will still be required to take a vision test, and if they have a driving violation, a written test.

* WIFR | New Illinois law expands cyberbullying definition to include AI-generated images: As of July 1, schools across Illinois will face new responsibilities involving student safety and technology. State Sen. Steve Stadelman (D-Rockford) refers to a report saying students across the country are using artificial intelligence programs to create harmful images of classmates. “There are growing reports nationwide of students using AI programs to create explicit or harmful images of classmates, and that raises concerns about safety and accountability,” Stadelman said.

*** Data Center News ***

* Daily Southtown | Blue Island Mayor Fred Bilotto opposes data center development: Bilotto said a data center would not maximize jobs, economic impact and long-term community benefits, standards he said best serve the community. “I have an obligation to treat every property owner fairly,” he said. “That said, being fair does not require us to be without a vision for Blue Island’s future.” The mayor’s opposition comes after property owners Builders Capital sent a letter to the city offering to demolish hospital buildings and exchange the hospital property for the city-owned Libby property, where they said they want to build a data center, Bilotto said.

* Illinois Times | Future data center tax breaks on hold: “Data centers are coming. They’re being proposed, they’re being negotiated, and they are being approved,” he said. “Too many communities are being forced to respond one city at a time, one village at a time, one zoning meeting at a time. That is not a strategy, that is a setup. While regular people are still trying to figure out what is happening, the lawyers have already met, the developers are already called, the lobby is already moved and the paperwork is already in motion. That is why we need the POWER Act; we need statewide standards.”

* WQAD | Video: Lee County, Illinois, residents expected to protest potential data centers: Rock Falls Alderman Marshall Doane will submit his petition against data center development at the County Board of Supervisors meeting on Thursday.

* WGN | Proposed data center in Hoffman Estates sparks resident outrage: At a commission meeting held on June 3, residents said they were not given information about the scope of the project, so they filed a freedom of information request and said what they found was alarming. “We feel like we’ve been totally ignored. The public hearings we’ve had are like political theater. It’s just a formality. They’ve already made up their mind,” Barrington Hills resident Amanda Pollard said. “They had all these plans up to 18 months ago even prior to the sale of the property. We found a letter from the village manager who basically guaranteed we can re-zone.”

* WSJ | The Data-Center Boom Is Sparking a Third Wave of Inflation: The data centers used for AI require sophisticated computing equipment, cooling systems to keep that equipment from overheating, electric and fiber-optic cables and backup generators to prevent power disruptions. Based on announced and planned developments, Van Nieuwerburgh estimates that spending on the AI build-out through 2032 could come to about $8 trillion—nearly five times the market value of the entire New York City property market. With so much demand, prices are rising for many of the things that go into the AI build-out. And because those things are used for more than just AI, those price increases are spilling over into the broader economy.

* E&E News | Tech heavyweight Oracle challenges Wisconsin data center rules: The company lodged a lawsuit on Friday in Ozaukee County Circuit Court challenging the Wisconsin Public Service Commission’s April order establishing terms and conditions for data centers to receive electric service. Oracle, a partner in the $15 billion Stargate data center in Port Washington, Wisconsin, said the PSC requirement would force the company to post a letter of credit for electric service that would cost more than $100 million annually in fees. The company said the requirement is unreasonable and would chill further data center investment in Wisconsin.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Seven in 10 Chicago voters say they’re not inclined to re-elect Johnson: According to the survey conducted for One Future Illinois, a business-backed group that has been critical of the mayor, 71% of poll respondents said they are not inclined to vote to re-elect Johnson for a second term in the February 2027 city election. The survey of 801 likely Chicago voters also found that 66% disapprove of Johnson’s job performance at City Hall, with 46% strongly disapproving. A third, 34%, gave a thumbs-up to Johnson’s performance. […] A person familiar with the findings said of the 71%, 51% said they definitely would not vote to give Johnson a second term, and 20% “probably” would not do so. Among Black voters, 51% said they definitely or probably would not back Johnson for re-election. [From Isabel: Click here for the cross tabs on that question.]

* Sun-Times | CHA Operating Chair Matthew Brewer joins the race for mayor: If Johnson were truly the “collaborator-in-chief” he claims to be, Brewer said, the mayor would not have “all of the fractured relationships and power struggles” that have made him unable to “find common ground” at every level of government. “My approach to leadership is bringing everyone together around similarity, rather than trying to alienate people along lines of difference,” Brewer, 46, told the Chicago Sun-Times.

* Brewer’s intro video


* Crain’s | After CHA showdown with Johnson, Matthew Brewer enters mayor’s race: It’s unclear what lane Brewer will try to carve out for himself in a jam-packed mayoral field that includes politicians with decades of experience and voting records. Thus far, Brewer is the only announced Black candidate and could draw backing from those hoping to eat into Johnson’s base of support among progressives and with Black voters. He has met with business groups seeking support, but it’s not clear if they will break from Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, who’s expected to jump in the race this summer.

* Crain’s | Bally’s escalates fight over video gambling, threatening legal action: Bally’s is threatening to sue Chicago and reopen key parts of its casino agreement with the city if aldermen refuse to reverse course on video gambling. The company says allowing video gambling terminals in bars and restaurants could force a renegotiation of hiring and diversity commitments and jeopardize at least $4 million in annual payments Bally’s makes to the city.

* Tribune | Video gambling hearing ends after tensions flare between Mayor Brandon Johnson allies, opponents: His subsequent exchange with [Business Affairs and Consumer Protection Commissioner Ivan Capifali] over what he described as the city’s lax enforcement with illegal sweepstakes machines ultimately blew the meeting up. “This is a circus, OK? That’s all this is, is a circus, and we’re doing all of ourselves a disservice by even talking about this right now,” Beale said. “And Ivan, I’m sorry, man. You make excuses left and right. Your integrity is zero. You have none. … Ivan, commissioner, I believe that you need to resign because you are doing a disservice to the city of Chicago.” Beale then immediately moved to adjourn the meeting, and a majority of the aldermen in attendance backed his motion, ending the proceeding.

* Sun-Times | Neglected Frank Lloyd Wright house on the West Side sold for $125,000: Austin Coming Together Executive Director Darnell Shields said the organization and the community want to make the home a place where visitors can learn about the house, as well as the neighborhood’s architecture, culture and history. “And while they’re here, [visitors can] support our businesses and restaurants along Madison,” Shields said, adding that Wright’s open plan design of the home’s first floor would make the space conducive for hosting events and gatherings.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Aurora Beacon-News | Contracts approved for two multimillion-dollar sewer and water main projects in Aurora: One of the contracts — which is being awarded to Performance Construction & Engineering, LLC, for a little over $4.6 million — is for sewer separation, sanitary sewer extension and water main work in the city’s 4th Ward. This work is essentially the second phase of a sewer separation project on Broadway done last year, Aurora Assistant Director of Public Works Kurt Muth explained at a City Council Infrastructure and Technology Committee meeting earlier this month.

* Tribune | Hollywood Casino Aurora launches new $360 million land-based facility: Hollywood Casino Joliet ranks fifth among the state’s 17 casinos with $60.9 million in adjusted gross receipts through May, up 67% year-over-year, according to the latest report from the Illinois Gaming Board. Meanwhile, Hollywood Casino Aurora ranks ninth with $41.8 million in revenue, down slightly year-over-year, according to Gaming Board data.

* Daily Herald | Community mourns passing of Lake County Vice Chair Mary Ross-Cunningham: Longtime Lake County Board Vice Chair Mary Ross-Cunningham, a tireless voice for constituents and others who needed assistance, has died. Her son, Waukegan Mayor Sam Cunningham, shared the passing of the family’s “beloved matriarch” on social media Tuesday afternoon. “Vice Chair Cunningham was the bedrock of our family, a devoted mother, grandmother, great-grandmother and guiding light,” he wrote.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Nearly half of St. Clair County taxing districts levied higher taxes in 2025: Across taxing districts in St. Clair County, total EAV rose an average of 5.5% in 2025. That means many districts could keep their tax rates steady while still collecting more tax dollars. The district with the largest dollar increase in its 2025 levy request was Southwestern Illinois College, which requested nearly $4.4 million more than the previous year. But the district also saw a $393 million increase in its EAV, enabling it to keep its tax rate steady.

* WGLT | Prosecutors allege a decade-long ‘pattern of behavior’ as judge jails second Chiddix teacher before trial: McLean County Judge Amy McFarland said Wednesday there was “no doubt” the state had met its burden of proof that Andrew “Drew” Miller, 40, of Normal poses a threat to society and should be detained. Miller has pleaded not guilty to all charges. Wednesday’s pretrial detention hearing was Miller’s second appearance in McFarland’s courtroom after his attorney, Josh Rinker, requested a continuance to prepare arguments for why his client should be released with conditions while navigating the criminal legal process.

* STLPR | O’Fallon, Illinois, library wants voters to approve $17.5M bonds for a new building: The median home value in O’Fallon is $275,000, and that household pays roughly $130 in property taxes to the library annually. The sale of bonds would increase that annual tax to roughly $250, Johnson said. “I view it as an investment — as an investment in our community,” he said. “Just like we all want good schools, good parks, safe streets (and) nice roads, this is an investment in our infrastructure that can literally be a community asset for generations to come.”

* WCIA | Vermilion Co. school district hopes to improve athletic facilities with $9M bond: $8 million of that money would go toward new softball and baseball fields, a combined football and soccer field and a facility for locker rooms, concessions and restrooms. Superintendent Andrew Jordan said this upgrade has been a long time coming. “We are looking to use that money to improve our current facilities,” Jordan said. “We don’t have a softball field, we don’t have a baseball field, and we don’t have a competitive track that we can use.”

*** National ***

* USA Today | Supreme Court live updates: Major rulings possible on citizenship, Trump priorities: The court is expected to hand down some − but not all − of its remaining decisions on Thursday, June 25. Some of President Donald Trump’s top priorities are at stake in many of the remaining cases. If his arguments win, the court could restrict birthright citizenship, refuse asylum claims and remove protections against deportation for Syrians and Haitians. Two election-law cases could change how mail-in ballots are counted and how parties spend money on candidates. And the court could resolve whether states can ban transgender athletes from competing on female sports teams.

* AP | Dozens of states could face new costs because of high error rates in SNAP food aid: States with high error rates will have to make choices that could impact their residents. To fund SNAP benefits, do they spend less on public schools, law enforcement or mental health care? To save money, do they squeeze people off SNAP by making it harder to stay in the program? Or do they drop out entirely from the federal food aid program that’s been around for decades? “There are billions of dollars that are at stake that states will have to find the money to be able to pay if they want to continue to operate a SNAP program,” said Chloe Green, assistant director for policy at the American Public Human Services Association.

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Good morning!

Thursday, Jun 25, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Darondo

What’s going on?

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Jun 25, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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* Pritzker touts some data center benefits, but says: 'We don't want them if they're going to take advantage of us'
* Today's quotable
* US Attorney Boutros appears to threaten Chicago reporters: 'We’re going to address that at the appropriate time'
* Governor Pritzker, Fight For Us.
* Dems won't put state money where their mouths are
* RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Good morning!
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Rep. Benton resigns (Updated x2)
* Yesterday's stories

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