Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar » Illinois
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax      Advertise Here      About     Exclusive Subscriber Content     Updated Posts    Contact Rich Miller
CapitolFax.com
To subscribe to Capitol Fax, click here.
Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* CBS

[A] CBS News investigation found a pattern of alleged misconduct in Sangamon County, with dozens of allegations against the sheriff’s office over the past 20 years. They include at least eight deaths in the custody of Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office deputies and corrections officers, in addition to Massey’s fatal shooting.

Jaimeson Cody’s was one of the deaths — in 2021, he was arrested for aggravated domestic battery. That night in jail, correction officers wanted to move him to a different room, but he resisted.

“They took him down to the ground…and a man of over 300 pounds sat on his back, broke ribs,” said Sha Kelley, the Cody family’s attorney who is suing the sheriff’s office, which denies wrongdoing.

Cody was pronounced dead the next day. His stepmom, Cindy Cody, said he died from positional asphyxia, a condition where breathing is impaired due to body position, and called his death a homicide. […]

None of the officers involved in the eight deaths or other misconduct allegations have been criminally charged. In each case, the sheriff’s office and the officers denied any wrongdoing, even in cases settled in civil court by the county.

Click here and read the rest.

* The Democratic Party of DuPage…

York Township Clerk Tony Cuzzone (a Republican) has refused to certify the Democratic candidate for York Township Supervisor, Timothy Murray. No objection to Murray’s candidacy was filed, leaving York Township taxpayers responsible for the legal fees. Among the specious reasons noted in a letter sent to Murray, Cuzzone falsely claims that the Resolution to nominate Murray was not filed within the required timeframe.

Murray has filed a lawsuit against Cuzzone in his capacity as Clerk of York Township. Initial court proceedings will begin on Thursday, February 6 in the 18th Judicial Circuit Court of DuPage County. Murray seeks a preliminary Injunction to have his name printed on the ballot pending resolution of the matter.

Democratic Party Chair of DuPage County, Reid McCollum said, “It should offend every citizen that York Township’s GOP incumbents would force taxpayers to foot the bill for their blatantly partisan scheme. This is clearly an attempt to defeat their opponent by refusing to fulfill the duties of Clerk, rather than allowing voters to decide on April 1.”

* Subscribers were extensively briefed about this earlier today. AFL-CIO President Tim Drea and Chicago Federation of Labor President Bob Reiter

In Springfield, the stakes could not be higher as state legislators consider how they will step up to prevent a true calamity.

The operating budget gap for the Chicago Transit Authority, Metra and Pace will top $750 million next year when federal pandemic funds run out. Without help, the trains and buses that shuttle us where we need to go face devastating service cuts that will cripple the region.

We cannot and will not let that happen. It’s why more than 30 different labor partners came together to form the Labor Alliance for Public Transportation — or LAPT — representing the thousands of transit workers who keep Illinois safe and moving in the right direction.

Our alliance comes with a monumental opportunity to create a new path forward for Illinois’ public transportation networks. Our new road map legislation — Senate Bill 1938 — will jump-start policy conversations that identify solutions to provide more efficient and reliable transit that prioritizes ridership safety instead of just warning about the devastating costs of inaction.

* The Woodstock Institute…

On February 4, the First District Appellate Court, which encompasses Cook County, issued a ruling upholding a decision that a 482% APR loan made by a Utah-based online lender to an Illinois resident did not violate the Illinois Predatory Loan Prevention Act (PLPA), which caps consumer loan rates in Illinois at 36% APR.

This decision is the latest development in an ongoing saga of high-cost lenders – both inside and outside Illinois – blatantly charging Illinois consumers triple-digit interest rates despite the rate cap that Governor Pritzker signed in 2021 as part of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus’s agenda to eliminate systemic racism in Illinois. Just-released polling shows that 88% of Illinois voters and 95% of former payday loan borrowers support a rate cap of 36% APR or lower.

“We knew predatory lenders would attempt to evade the rate cap, so the law was written with strong Anti-Evasion provisions. Nevertheless, lenders are violating the law with impunity, which will most certainly encourage more lenders to do the same.,” said Brent Adams, Senior Vice President of Policy and Advocacy at Woodstock Institute and former head of IDFPR, the state agency that oversees the high-cost lenders.

“The implication of this decision is that state rate caps are void as long as the lender uses an address in a state without a rate cap, which can be as easy as using a private mailbox,” said Daniel Edelman, a nationally recognized consumer rights attorney.

Advocates including Woodstock Institute have raised alarms over “rent-a-bank” arrangements where high-cost lenders circumvent state rate cap laws by partnering with out-of-state banks to make loans far in excess of a state’s rate cap. One such rent-a-bank lender partnered with an out-of-state bank, once again based in Utah, to make a loan at 159.5% APR to an Illinois resident. This decision represents a significant escalation of this practice by theoretically allowing any online lender to circumvent Illinois law and charge usurious interest rates to Illinois consumers.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | AG Kwame Raoul’s statement on federal court granting injunction against an unconstitutional birthright citizenship order : “As I have previously indicated, the issue of birthright citizenship is a personal one to me. I am pleased the court has granted our request for a nationwide preliminary injunction and refused to let ‘the beacon of light’ that is the rule of law darken. The 14th Amendment was enshrined in our nation’s Constitution more than 150 years ago, and since then, the right of an individual born in this country to be a citizen of this country has been uniformly recognized. The judge correctly said today, ‘It has become ever more apparent that to our president, the rule of law is but an impediment to his policy goals.’

* WAND | Donald Trump is ‘calling for ethnic cleansing,’ says Illinois House Democrat: State Rep. Abdelnasser Rashid (D-Berwyn) said President Donald Trump is enacting an ethnic cleansing after Trump called all Palestinians to leave Gaza. “Let’s call that what it is, ethnic cleansing,” Rashid said. The lawmaker said this at a press conference where he unveiled a new bill. The plan would repeal a current Illinois law that restricts companies from boycotting Israel. The Illinois Investment Policy Board can currently restrict public funding to a company if they believe they are protesting Israel.

*** Statewide ***

* Journal Courier | Historical sites marking Lincoln’s birthday with events: The Lincoln Log Cabin State Historical Site in Lerna will be open for tours from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday. Refreshments and crafts will be available. The Lincoln Tomb in Springfield will be open for visitors from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday. Lincoln, his wife and three of their children were laid to rest in the tomb.

* WAND | Thousands of cars sold in Illinois have fake odometer readings: CARFAX told WAND News more than 2.14 million cars on the road may have had their odometer rolled back in 2024, up more than 18% since 2021, and up more than 82,000 vehicles since 2023. […] Illinois is among the leaders in the nation in odometer rollbacks. The state ranks number 5 nationwide with an estimated annual rollback of 79,200 miles. That’s up from the number 6 position in 2021.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | CPS security video shows Secret Service trying to enter Chicago’s Hamline School: The footage from Jan. 24, released in two, 30-minute recordings that offered different angles of the conversation, begins with two agents in plainclothes walking up to the main entrance and buzzing the intercom. They then fidget and peer through a window as they wait to be allowed entry. At one point, an agent tries unsuccessfully to yank open the door. The recordings have no sound, but agents are seen carrying file folders and showing identification cards that bear the U.S. Secret Service emblem. One agent twice shows that identification outside the building’s main entrance.

* Sun-Times | $27 million settlement proposed for family of pedestrian hit by SUV fleeing police: The money would go to the family of Angela Parks, a single working mother of five who was rendered a quadriplegic, then died 18 months later — at age 45 — after being struck by the passenger door of a Jeep that Chicago Police Department officers were pursuing because they believed it had been stolen. […] Officers in an unmarked vehicle were chasing a Jeep they suspected had been stolen — even though the police department’s general orders dating “as far back as 2000” prohibited officers from conducted a vehicular chase that could endanger motorists or pedestrians “for a property crime or theft,” Gallagher said. The chase occurred shortly before noon on a Sunday in a busy area with lots of traffic and pedestrians.

* Bloomberg | BMO joins IBM’s quantum network with plans to hire in Chicago: The Canadian bank will join another 50 financial institutions including Wells Fargo & Co. and HSBC Holdings Plc in gaining access to IBM’s quantum computer. The technology will be used by a team of quantum specialists BMO is currently building, said Kristin Milchanowski, chief AI and data officer at the bank. The finance industry is expected to be one of the biggest beneficiaries of quantum computers, which are exponentially more powerful than traditional machines. The technology helps sort large amounts of data and solve complex mathematical problems that would take binary computers days, months and even years.

* WBEZ | Under Trump administration, some Chicago students think twice about applying for financial aid: In light of President Donald Trump’s threats of mass deportations, Chicago-area high schoolers with undocumented parents are weighing whether it’s worth it to fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA. “It’s creating an additional barrier to keep Brown kids out of college,” said Aidé Acosta, chief college officer for the Noble Schools charter network in Chicago.

* Hyde Park Herald | Talk draws attention to untold stories of freedom seekers on the Underground Railroad in Illinois: Larry McClellan, a founding professor at Governors State University, has spent decades researching, writing and speaking about the myriad stories of freedom seekers and sites of the Underground Railroad throughout Illinois. And yet, over that lengthy span, one figure has stood out as the source of particular fascination – Lewis Isbell. The son of a plantation-owner and an enslaved mother, Isbell was “in the middle of every significant thing that happens in Chicago’s Black community” from the moment he set foot in the Windy City until his death in 1905, McClellan said at a University of Chicago talk this week.

* Tribune | Virginia McCaskey, principal owner of the Chicago Bears and George Halas’ daughter, dies at 102: McCaskey was reluctantly forced by circumstance to take over her father’s enterprise. She guarded it with passion, patience and more than a touch of Papa Bear’s legendary toughness and stubbornness. When she removed eldest son Michael as team president in February 1999 and went outside the family to replace him with financial director Ted Phillips, she made the difficult decision with a style and grace that defined her personality.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Lake County News-Sun | Judge asked to allow Highland Park parade shooting victims who testify to watch trial of alleged shooter: Prosecutors filed a motion to allow victim witnesses to be in the gallery, which goes against normal courtroom procedure. Judge Victoria Rossetti said during a Thursday case management conference that she will hear arguments on the question on Feb. 20, four days before jury selection is scheduled to begin in the case. Outside of giving their testimony, witnesses are usually barred from being in the courtroom during a trial because authorities are concerned that they might hear something that would affect their testimony. Witnesses are sometimes allowed to be in the gallery after they testify.

* Shaw Local | With Hebron down to 1 full-time cop – who some want gone – village contracts with sheriff for local patrols: The department, which then had a mix of full- and part-time officers, now numbers one. Police Chief Peter Goldman is the department’s only active, full-time employee. Hebron’s lone sergeant is on medical leave after a fall at the station in December, and the village’s community service officer resigned in early January. But residents demanded more patrols – an activity some say they have not seen Goldman doing since becoming chief on Nov. 13.

*** Downstate ***

* Daily Journal | Former Iroquois County official accused of gambling while being on the clock: Attorneys for former Iroquois County Public Health administrator Dee Ann Schippert argued in a motion that her allegedly gambling for more than 750 hours while claiming to be on the clock for her job is not relevant to the charges against her. According to charging documents, the 58-year-old Schippert stole more than $100,000 from the health department between May 31, 2020, and July 15, 2022, and has been charged with eight felony counts of theft of government property, eight forgery felonies and 17 felony counts of official misconduct.

* Illinois Times | City Council enacts new conflict-of-interest standards: The Springfield City Council voted 8-0 on Feb. 4 to spend about $1.5 million in TIF funds to help a local couple renovate a dilapidated building in the 300 block of East Adams Street. But the Ward 5 representative on the council, Lakeisha Purchase, who has worked with Martin and Laurie Haxel for two years on the project at 322 E. Adams St. as part of Purchase’s efforts to revitalize downtown, abstained from voting on the measure or taking part in debate.

* Illinois Times | Springfield parents struggle with lack of child care options: Day care directors throughout the area say they are continually rebuffing parents seeking a place for their children – particularly infants. “I have over 100 infants on my waiting list,” said Kasi Maisenbacher, owner of Kardinal Kids on the west side of Springfield. “I only have four infant slots. It’s because babies are so labor-intensive, and it’s hard to find people who have the qualifications to care for babies.”

* WAND | FedEx facilities in Springfield, Urbana, and Effingham to close: In a statement they said, “FedEx regularly evaluates its network and makes adjustments to align with the evolving needs of the business… Decisions of this nature are the result of much thought and consideration for maintaining the high level of service expected from our customers and other needs of our business.” FedEx went on to say that affected team members were notified several months before any changes occur and will receive assistance with finding other employment opportunities within the company, including additional support options like “relocation assistance or severance where applicable.”

*** National ***

* AM NY | Subway crime plummets as ridership jumps significantly in 2025 in congestion pricing era: In the first month of 2025, there were 147 reported crimes on the subway down from 231 last year—resulting in 36% fewer crimes committed on the rails this year. At the same time, subway ridership has increased significantly since the start of congestion pricing on Jan. 5. This means that the drop in crime on the tracks has actually decreased even as more people are using NYC’s busy transit system—one of the largest in the world.

* The Guardian | US immigration is gaming Google to create a mirage of mass deportations: That four-day operation in Colorado? It happened in November 2010. The 123 people targeted in New Orleans? That was February of last year. Wisconsin? September 2018. There are thousands of examples of this throughout all 50 states – Ice press releases that have reached the first page of Google search results, making it seem like enforcement actions just happened, when in actuality they occurred months or years ago. Some, such as the arrest of “44 absconders” in Nebraska, go back as far as 2008.

* AP | Second federal judge in two days blocks President Trump’s birthright citizenship order: U.S. District Judge John Coughenour in Seattle on Thursday decried what he described as the administration’s treatment of the Constitution and said Trump was trying to change it with an executive order. The latest proceeding came just a day after a Maryland federal judge issued a nationwide pause in a separate but similar case involving immigrants’ rights groups and pregnant women whose soon-to-born children could be affected.

* Crain’s | Rivian adopts AI-powered, sensor-rich strategy for self-driving tech in bid to catch Tesla: Rivian has one potential advantage over Tesla: It’s willing to spend the money for high-tech sensors, such as radar and lidar, that could help close the gap with Tesla’s camera-only approach to hardware. “As competition in this space evolves, I think you are going to see [automakers] with more sensors,” Scaringe said at Rivian’s showroom here in late January. “One of the areas where we are different than Tesla — we’ve put more sensors in the vehicle, recognizing that is a way to catch up to what they’ve built using a camera-only system.”

* WaPo | DOGE broadens sweep of federal agencies, gains access to health payment systems: In recent days, officials affiliated with DOGE have visited the offices of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), according to five people with knowledge of the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private interactions. DOGE officials have also sought access to payment and contracting systems across the Department of Health and Human Services that control hundreds of billions of dollars in annual payments to health-care providers, and they appear to have gained access to at least some of those systems, the people said.  The Wall Street Journal earlier reported that DOGE aides had been granted access to the CMS grant-management system.

* NYT | Schumer Urged Democrats to Oppose Trump Nominees in Protest of His Policies: The plea for blanket opposition was only symbolic. Relegated to the minority in the Senate, Democrats have no power to block Mr. Trump’s nominees unless they can persuade a handful of Republicans to join them, and the Republican Party has largely fallen into line behind the president’s picks. But the entreaty was a notable change in strategy for Mr. Schumer, who has come under increasing pressure from progressive activists, Democratic governors and some senators to take a more aggressive and confrontational stance against Mr. Trump in response to the president’s efforts to steer around Congress on spending and policy.

  13 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - 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.

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like the Drakefords, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

  Comments Off      


That’s really good advice, so why won’t you take it?

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rep. Brad Halbrook (R-Shelbyville) was the original sponsor of the “kick Cook County out of Illinois” bill and is a member of the Illinois Freedom Caucus, which is a bitter enemy of House Republican Leader Tony McCombie. Halbrook spoke on the floor today to celebrate Ronald Reagan’s birthday. It was quite something

Reagan had a rare gift. He brought people together. He knew that unity, not division, was a key to lasting change. There was his famous 80/20 rule that comes into play. Reagan once said, ‘The person who agrees with you 80 percent of the time is a friend and an ally, not a 20 percent traitor.’ In today’s political climate, we would do well to remember his wisdom.

He knew that conservatives, while sometimes differing in approach, must understand together in pursuit of shared values. He didn’t demand perfection. He sought progress. Reagan’s ability to unite people was evident in his landslide victories, his ability to work across the aisle and his unwavering belief in the American people. He didn’t dwell on what divided us, he focused on what could bring us together.

That was either a complete surrender announcement or one of the most self-unaware floor speeches I have heard in 35 years of doing this.

  26 Comments      


DOJ sues Illinois, Chicago over immigration enforcement (Updated x4)

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Reuters

The U.S. Department of Justice sued Illinois and the city of Chicago on Thursday, accusing them of impeding the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement policies and seeking a court order sweeping aside so-called sanctuary laws.

Citing a national emergency declared by President Donald Trump on Inauguration Day, the Department of Justice is seeking to block the enforcement of several state and local laws that “interfere with and discriminate against” the federal government’s enforcement of federal immigration law.

The complaint was filed in Chicago federal court. […]

Newly installed U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi issued a memo on Wednesday that said sanctuary jurisdictions should not receive federal Justice Department grants and the department should take actions against jurisdictions that impede immigration enforcement.

Click here to read Bondi’s memorandum.

* From the complaint

The United States brings this declaratory and injunctive action to prohibit the State of Illinois and its subdivisions from enforcing several state and local laws—namely, the Way Forward Act, TRUST Act, Welcoming City Act, and Cook County, Ill. Ordinance 11-O- 73—that are designed to and in fact interfere with and discriminate against the Federal Government’s enforcement of federal immigration law in violation of the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution. […]

Both the Governor of Illinois JB Pritzker and Mayor of Chicago Brandon Johnson, sued here in their official capacities, profess a shared interest with the Federal Government in enforcing immigration laws to effectuate the removal of such offenders from the United States. Last week on CNN, Governor Pritzker proclaimed: “Well let me start by being clear that when we’re talking about violent criminals who’ve been convicted and who are undocumented, we don’t want them in our state. We want them out of the country. We hope they do get deported. And if that’s who they’re picking up, we’re all for it.” https://www.cnn.com/2025/01/26/politics/video/sotu-pritzker-on-planned-chicago-immigration-raids. Illinois laws, however, provide otherwise. […]

The Illinois Way Forward Act and TRUST Act both impede the Federal Government’s ability to regulate immigration and take enforcement actions against illegal aliens by preventing state law enforcement officials from assisting with federal civil immigration enforcement. Under these laws, state officers are explicitly prohibited from complying with immigration detainers or civil immigration warrants; they are also prevented from entering into agreements to detain noncItizens for federal civil immigration violations. […]

By refusing to honor civil detainers and warrants expressly authorized by Congress, Defendants have unlawfully eliminated these means for federal immigrations officials to carry out their statutory functions.

* The DOJ sued Chicago in 2017 over its sanctuary city status. National Immigrant Justice Center

The National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC) welcomes today’s federal court ruling that the U.S. Attorney General’s threat to withhold law enforcement funding from sanctuary cities has no basis in law.

The decision from the Northern District Court of Illinois, written by Reagan appointee Judge Harry D. Leinenweber, is another significant federal ruling blocking the administration’s anti-immigrant agenda.

The City of Chicago sued the U.S. Department of Justice last month after Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced he would cut federal Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program funding to cities and states that refuse to honor immigration detainers or have their local police act as immigration agents. The court found these conditions to be unlawful. At issue was Chicago’s 2012 Welcoming City Ordinance, which forbids the city’s police from inquiring about immigration status or detaining individuals for immigration purposes.

“Today’s ruling creates a critical roadblock to the administration’s persistent drive to enlist our local police in federal immigration enforcement,” said NIJC Associate Director of Litigation Mark Fleming. “As the City of Chicago has long recognized, and as our communities and elected officials acknowledged last month as Governor Rauner signed the TRUST Act into law, removing the fear that any interaction with the police could result in deportation is important to public safety and critical in building trust between communities and the police; that is what sanctuary city policies are all about.”

This post will likely be updated.

…Adding… From Gov. Pritzker…

Statement from the Illinois Governor’s Office:

    “Unlike Donald Trump, Illinois follows the law. The bipartisan Illinois TRUST Act, signed into law by a Republican governor, has always been compliant with federal law and still is today. Illinois will defend our laws that prioritize police resources for fighting crime while enabling state law enforcement to assist with arresting violent criminals. Instead of working with us to support law enforcement, the Trump Administration is making it more difficult to protect the public, just like they did when Trump pardoned the convicted January 6 violent criminals. We look forward to seeing them in court.”

Noting some recent comments directly from Gov. Pritzker too:

    • January 28 Press Conference: “We can make sure that we’re following the law which is what we always do and that the federal government is following the law. That’s most of what we can do. We’ve passed laws in Illinois to protect people and we’ll continue to focus on taking action where they’re most threatened.”
    • January 24 Press Conference: “We’re all having discussions across all the agencies of state government to make sure that we’re communicating. It’s Know Your Rights, making sure that people know what they should do if an agent shows up and asks them for proof of citizenship or proof of residency. Everybody is looking to follow the law and make sure that families are safe in the process. The federal government is not communicating with state government or local governments about what they’re doing, how they’re doing it, and so we don’t know exactly how to either assist the parents in dealing with it or assist the federal government in the work that they’re doing that is legally constitutional. It’s a challenge. But what we’re communicating with all of our agencies and making sure that, again, know your rights is really what we’re trying to communicate to all the parents and all the organizations across the state.”

…Adding… Sun-Times with more react

At a Loop news conference, Preckwinkle said “we’ll defend ourselves and hope for success in the court system… We’re gonna fight back. We will pursue every legal opportunity to defend the programs that we believe in and defend our values.”

A spokesperson for the city Law Department said they were reviewing the suit. Johnson has pledged to maintain the city’s sanctuary policies.

The lawsuit also named Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling and Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart as defendants. CPD officials declined to comment. Dart’s office couldn’t immediately be reached.

…Adding… Leader Curran…

Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove) released the following statement in response to The United States Department of Justice filing suit against the State of Illinois and City of Chicago for impeding federal immigration enforcement:

“By continuing to obstruct federal immigration authorities from apprehending dangerous criminals being harbored in Illinois illegally, Gov. Pritzker and Mayor Johnson are putting both law enforcement and Illinoisans at risk. For years, the Democratic Majority has ignored multiple pieces of legislation brought forth by Illinois Republicans to repeal the Trust Act and allow state and local authorities to communicate with federal immigration enforcement agencies. Their continued refusal to put the safety of Illinois citizens before their own personal political agendas has now forced the federal government to intervene to keep Americans safe. I strongly encourage the Governor, Mayor of Chicago, and Democratic legislative leaders to quit impeding law enforcement’s ability to cooperate and assist federal authorities with removing violent criminals who are here in Illinois illegally, and immediately call our repeal of the Trust Act for a vote.”

…Adding… Attorney General Kwame Raoul…

“The 10th Amendment to the Constitution preserves Illinois’ right to decide how we use our law enforcement resources. This includes opting out of federal attempts to commandeer those state law enforcement resources to perform the federal government’s job on civil immigration enforcement. The TRUST Act reflects Illinois’ constitutionally-protected choice. We have successfully defended the TRUST Act in federal court before, and we look forward to vigorously defending the law again.”

  53 Comments      


Um, what?

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times

CTU praises arbitrator’s report on contract talks but rejects recommendations as falling short

Neutral “fact-finder” said CPS has more money to offer in contract negotiations — a positive for CTU. But union officials on Wednesday said the arbitrator only made recommendations on two of 15 key areas. CPS said it was still reviewing the report.

The Chicago Teachers Union said an independent arbitrator found that Chicago Public Schools officials have more money to offer in contract negotiations than they’re letting on — representing an unexpectedly positive outcome for the union. But CTU leaders said they would reject the neutral fact-finder’s report because it fell short in other areas — a move that could take the school district closer to a teachers’ strike.

CTU leaders said they were stunned by the report’s findings on financial issues, calling it the most favorable the union has received in the 15 years since a state law was created allowing for a neutral arbitrator to weigh in on CPS-CTU negotiating disputes.

* But

The report is here.

  20 Comments      


It’s just a bill (Updated)

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* HB2827 from Reps. Terra Costa Howard and Michelle Mussman

Creates the Homeschool Act. Requires the State Board of Education to create a Homeschool Declaration Form to be used by a homeschool administrator to submit information indicating that a child is enrolled in a homeschool program to the principal of the public school or to the school district that the homeschooled child would otherwise attend. Provides that a student enrolled in a homeschool program in which the homeschool administrator has not notified the public school or school district with the Homeschool Declaration Form is considered truant, with penalties applying. Provides that if a child in a homeschool program seeks to enroll part time in a public school or participate in any public school activities taking place on or off of school grounds, the homeschool administrator must submit proof that the child has received all required immunizations and health examinations or a signed Certificate of Religious Exemption. Sets forth requirements for homeschool administrators and programs and reporting requirements. Makes conforming and other changes in the Freedom of Information Act, the School Code, and the Illinois School Student Records Act, including requiring (rather than allowing) nonpublic schools to register with the State Board of Education.

Last year, ProPublica and Capitol News Illinois published a series of stories examining Illinois’ “hands-off” approach to homeschooling.

* Rep. Anne Stava-Murray filed HB1589 last month

Amends the Trustees Article of the Illinois Local Library Act. Provides that a candidate for the position of library trustee must have a valid library card for the library.

* Sen. Mike Porfirio…

State Senator Mike Porfirio is backing House Bill 2723, introduced by State Representative Abdelnasser Rashid, which would lift state pension investment restrictions placed on companies engaged in boycotts of Israel. Porfirio plans to file a bill in the Illinois Senate with identical language this week.

“Public pension funds should prioritize fiscal responsibility,” said Porfirio (D- Lyons Township).

In Illinois, public pensions are managed through administered retirement systems. The systems invest funds into assets such as stocks, bonds and real estate, and in return, guarantee annual benefits to employees once they retire.

Current law prevents the Illinois Investment Policy Board from investing public pension funds in companies that intentionally engaged in boycotts of Israel. House Bill 2723 would lift this restriction, allowing the state to invest in companies solely based on financial standards.

House Bill 2723 awaits committee assignment in the Illinois House of Representatives. The bill introduced by Porfirio will await assignment once filed.

* WGN

Illinois’ neighbor to the north is well-known for its prodigious alcohol consumption.

There’s a reason why “Drink Wisconsinbly” has become a popular Badger State slogan.

A bill now up for consideration in the Illinois General Assembly proposes to put Illinois on the same footing as Wisconsin in at least one drinking measure.

The bill, introduced by State Rep. John Cabello (R-Machesney Park), would amend the Liquor Control Act of 1934 to allow 18- to 20-years-olds to drink alcohol at bars and restaurants in Illinois, so long as a parent or guardian is present.

* WICS

On February 5, a coalition of Illinois leaders, advocates, and community members gathered at the Illinois State Capitol Building Rotunda to rally support for the Clean Slate Bill.

This legislation aims to modernize the state’s record-sealing system by replacing the outdated petition-based model with an automated system. The bill seeks to remove barriers for over 1.5 million Illinoisans with old criminal records, fostering economic stability across the state.

According to the Paper Prisons Initiative, an estimated 73% of people in Illinois with an arrest or conviction record are eligible to have their records sealed under the current petition-based process. This represents 2.2 million Illinoisans who have met the requirements for a second chance but continue to be denied employment, housing, and other opportunities because of a past record. […]

In addition to economic benefits, the bill aims to promote public safety by removing barriers to meaningful employment, housing, and other opportunities. Donnell Williams, a member leader at the Workers Center for Racial Justice, called for action, saying, “We don’t want another task force to talk about the causes of recidivism. We don’t want another think tank to talk about the barriers to re-entry. We don’t want a seat at the table, we want to help build the table for our own resources that our community needs. We need automatic expungement now! We need good jobs now!”

* Rep. Maura Hirschauer filed HB2934 yesterday

Amends the Illinois Vehicle Code. Provides that, on and after October 1, 2025, the default speed limit is [25] (instead of 30) miles per hour within an urban district, and 10 (instead of 15) miles per hour in an alley within an urban district. Requires, by September 1, 2025, the Secretary of State to communicate the speed limit change to every licensed driver in the State via direct postal mail and a broad statewide communications campaign. Provides that a county, municipality, or township with speed enforcement authority may only issue warnings for violations during the first 60 days after the change of the speed limit is enacted. Effective immediately.

…Adding… A small note on Rep. Hirschauer’s bill: The synopsis contained a typo, stating 20 mph instead of 25 mph. I’ve corrected it to match the bill’s language.

…Adding… Rep. Bob Morgan…

Illinois State Representative Bob Morgan (D-Deerfield) has introduced HB 2969, the ‘Balanced Earnings And Record Standards & Stadium Oversight Expectations Act,’ also known as ‘The BEARS Act.’ This legislation is designed to establish a merit-based framework for determining when tax dollars can be used for public funding of sports stadiums, based on the performance of the teams.

“Our primary goal with this bill is not to punish teams, but to ensure that Illinois taxpayers’ dollars are spent responsibly. No one wants to see taxpayer dollars wasted by billionaire team owners that are not investing in their teams’ competitiveness,” Representative Morgan said. “As families across Illinois are tightening their belts due to the rising cost of living, we must be careful with how we spend limited public dollars, especially when it comes to billion-dollar franchises. Illinois should be committed to ensuring that public investments are directed to Illinois residents, and then to teams that, at the very least, are performing at a competitive level.”

The ‘BEARS Act’ requires professional sports teams to achieve a .500 record or above in at least three out of five regular seasons in order to qualify for public financing for stadium construction, renovation, or maintenance. If a team’s record drops below .500, they will be ineligible for future funding until they demonstrate improved performance over three out of five seasons.

The legislation aims to ensure that taxpayer funds are only allocated to teams that demonstrate a basic level of competitiveness. “This isn’t about perfection; it’s about making sure that the teams we invest in have a realistic chance of being successful and bringing value back to the community,” Morgan added.

Public funding for sports stadiums often proves a poor return on investment. While proponents claim it boosts local economies, many studies show that the benefits are often overstated. The jobs created are typically low-wage and temporary, and the economic impact rarely offsets the massive public subsidies. In many cases, teams and stadium owners capture most of the profits, leaving taxpayers to cover construction, maintenance, and potential projected revenue shortfalls. This raises concerns about whether such investments truly benefit the public.

“While Illinois enters an unprecedented time, with state funding under constant threat from the Trump administration, Illinois must be vigilant with every cent spent. While I don’t support using taxpayer dollars for stadiums, this framework ensures that, if funds are spent, they go to teams offering the best return on investment,” concluded Representative Morgan.

  26 Comments      


Some react to US Transportation Secretary’s directive tying funding to birth and marriage rates

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Last week, we talked about how the US Transportation Secretary directed his staff to “give preference to communities with marriage and birth rates higher than the national average” when awarding grants, loans and conracts.

Illinois’ birth rate is lower than the national average, as is its marriage rate.

* Greg Hinz followed up

Another [local transportation official], who also asked not to be named, laughed off the move, noting that while the DOT has substantial discretion in awarding some kinds of funds, others are carefully negotiated in Congress with a deal struck between rural and urban lawmakers that eventually is enacted into law.

The truth is no one rightly knows amid a flurry of executive orders and the like from the Trump administration, said Illinois Rep. Mike Quigley, who serves on the House Appropriations Committee and is the ranking Democratic member of its key Subcommittee on Transportation.

Quigley said he doubts Duffy can do all of this on his own, but isn’t sure at this point. “I’m hoping this idea fades away.”

Regional Transportation Authority Chairman Kirk Dillard, whose agency supervises and funds the CTA, Metra and Pace, said he’s not sure either — “there are many federal funding formulas, and this needs to be assessed” — but rejected the notion that Chicago’s needs are less important because some other cities are growing more quickly.

The governor’s office did not respond, preferring to wait for more details.

Discuss.

  21 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  17 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker signs law to prioritize placing foster children with family members. Capitol News Illinois

    - The new law puts an obligation on the Department of Children and Family Services to use a “kin-first approach” when placing children in foster care.

    - DCFS will develop a certification policy for family members, which will allow them more access to financial resources for caregiving.

    - Relatives will also have different criminal background criteria than other foster parents. The federal government allows DCFS to waive “non-safety-related licensing” for relative caregivers on a case-by-case basis.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WBEZ | Amid deportation fears, hundreds of patients skip appointments at one Chicago health clinic: CommunityHealth treats more than 4,000 people a year, with around 50 employees and 1,000 volunteers helping take care of patients. Like a lot of hospitals and health centers, CommunityHealth doesn’t ask a person’s legal status. Still, in the first two weeks after Trump took office, nearly 30% of patients didn’t show up or canceled their primary care or specialty appointments or lab tests without rescheduling, translating to more than 300 missed visits, Willding said.

* Tribune | Jury concludes sixth day of deliberations in Madigan corruption trial without verdict: Jurors in the trial of Michael Madigan left the courthouse Wednesday, their sixth day of deliberations, without having reached a verdict – and without having sent any notes or asked any questions. The complete radio silence was somewhat unusual: Jurors have sent at least one communication every day since they began their discussions the afternoon of Jan. 29. So far they have deliberated for roughly 36 ½ hours. They are slated to return Thursday morning.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WTVO | Illinois bill would remove student performance from teacher reviews: Currently, Illinois requires up to 30% of a teacher’s evaluation to be based on student growth. In 2024, the Illinois State Board of Education commissioned a study from the American Institutes for Research that found other factors impacted a student’s learning “outside of teacher’s control such as family issues, health, or access to resources.”

*** Statewide ***

* 25News Now | Illinois corn growers respond to tariffs on largest trading partners: Illinois Corn Growers Association President and Waterloo, IL farmer Garrett Hawkins said each of these countries is an important market for U.S. corn farmers, especially Canada and Mexico, who are the largest market for ethanol and corn. “The farm economy is in a really tough spot right now with low commodity prices and high input costs. Export demand for corn products has been about the only positive in the market recently. Mexico, Canada and China are major buyers of our AG products, and any retaliation from these countries on our exports will likely target farmers. I know that President Trump supports farmers and the rural economies they’re a part of, so we’ll look for a quick resolution that protects our relationships and benefits both farmers and our end customers.”

* Bloomberg | Pritzker Warns Federal Workers in Illinois Against Musk Buyout: Illinois Governor JB Pritzker is warning federal employees in his state about risks related to the buyouts President Donald Trump and his advisor Elon Musk are offering to shrink the US government’s workforce. More than 40,000 federal civilian employees are based in Illinois. They must decide by Thursday whether to accept or turn down an offer to leave their jobs immediately, with pay and benefits through September. More than 20,000 workers countrywide have taken the buyout, and the Trump administration expects around 10% of the 2 million civil servants across the US to accept it.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Johnson to testify at congressional probe of sanctuary cities: The mayor’s office confirmed Johnson will attend the hearing of the Republican-led House Oversight Committee on March 5 in the nation’s capital. “We thank Committee members for the upcoming conversation on this important issue, and for the opportunity for Mayor Johnson to represent Chicago alongside Mayors from Boston, Denver, and New York,” the mayor’s office said in a press release.

* Tribune | Illinois mother says her teenager’s chest surgery was canceled after Trump executive order on gender-affirming care: But the Illinois mother said her son has already been caught up in fallout from the order. The woman, who is named as Jane Doe 2 in court documents, says that her 17-year-old son was referred to UI Health for chest surgery and had his surgical consult there in October, but the surgery was canceled a day after the executive order was issued. She wrote about her family’s experience in a declaration that was filed Wednesday as an exhibit attached to a motion for a temporary restraining order, in a lawsuit in federal court in Maryland challenging Trump’s executive order. The lawsuit was filed by PFLAG, GLMA and transgender young adults and their families, and alleges that Trump’s executive order usurps congressional authority and violates federal laws that prohibit discrimination based on sex in health care programs receiving federal dollars.

* Tribune | Cultural commissioner criticized for leaving ‘void,’ faces bullying allegations: After canceling a quarterly meeting with some of Chicago’s top cultural minds for a second time, Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events Commissioner Clinée Hedspeth is facing criticism from appointees of past administrations who say she is leaving a “void” in the struggling arts industry. Hedspeth postponed until late February the Cultural Advisory Council’s meeting just days before it was set to occur last week. The decision “continues a pattern” of noncommunication with arts leaders left in the dark about her vision for Chicago culture, advisory council member Amina Dickerson said. “I think a city is defined by its cultural vibrancy,” said Dickerson, an arts activist long involved in leading local cultural institutions. “That needs support, that needs counsel, that needs careful tending for that to be maintained. And I’m just not sure that is a priority.”

* ABC Chicago | Fact-finder report released for Chicago Public Schools, teachers; union contract negotiations: The Chicago Teachers Union said it’s rejecting an “unprecedented” fact-finding report and is returning to negotiations with Chicago Public Schools as the union prepares to expand the bargaining table. The CTU said the report only included recommendations for two of the 15 issues it submitted. But, the union said it was surprised that some of the findings in the report actually sided with what they are asking for, like increasing pay for veteran teachers, increasing the number of school librarians and hiring more family engagement coordinators.

* Sun-Times | CTU praises arbitrator’s report on contract talks but rejects recommendations as falling short: CPS noted that the report commends the district for academic progress and “underscores the financial obstacles faced by the District, a sentiment that was corroborated by an independent review by the Civic Federation.” But CPS’ statement does not mention the areas where the arbitrator sides with CTU. CPS CEO Pedro Martinez said last week that he hoped the report would provide a “mutual set of facts to move forward in a productive way” that would to help settle the contract. Martinez also has said that the two sides are close to a deal and he can’t “imagine a need for a strike.”

* Sun-Times | Some Chicago restaurants are charging extra for eggs to cope with soaring costs: Joel Nickson, Wishbone’s chef and co-owner, added the surcharge on Jan. 25 “knowing this was not going to be a one-month problem.” The restaurant at 161 N. Jefferson St. tries to avoid raising menu prices, but egg costs are the highest he’s seen in 35 years of running Wishbone. “At first people were making fun of me for doing it,” Nickson said of the surcharge.

* NBC Chicago | Multiple Chicago area schools closed, delayed due to icy conditions: Full List: More than a dozen schools across the Chicago area were on delayed starts or closed Thursday due to icy conditions on roads, streets and sidewalks. The closures and delays come hours after sleet, freezing rain, freezing drizzle and snow fell across the region Wednesday night and overnight, leading to cars spinning off highways and treacherous walking conditions.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Harvey Mayor Christopher Clark drops out of race for Thornton Township supervisor: Christopher Clark announced Tuesday he withdrew his candidacy for Thornton Township supervisor to prioritize his work as mayor of Harvey. Clark said the challenges facing Harvey, including $165 million of debt, demand his full attention, leading him to drop out of the township race. “I want people in the city of Harvey to know and understand that even in this particular case, I am willing to make that sacrifice for them,” Clark said Tuesday.

* Daily Herald | Operator of Lutheran Home in Arlington Heights files for bankruptcy protection: Lutheran Life Communities “has been investigating strategic alternatives for addressing the financial needs of the company and its affiliates, reorganizing their business, maximizing the value of the assets of the company and its affiliates; and protecting the company’s affiliates from the appointment of a receiver,” according to a resolution approved Monday by the nonprofit’s board of directors. The resolution was included Tuesday in a 19-page Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Chicago. Officials couldn’t be reached for comment Wednesday.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Illinois protestors among those nationwide against actions of President Trump, Elon Musk: A nationwide protest at state capitols consequently drew about 200 people to Springfield, Illinois by Wednesday afternoon. Organized by the 50501 Movement and apparently taken up by volunteers in each state, the Springfield protest saw people from throughout Illinois that sought to push back on actions being taken by President Donald Trump and his administration.

* Illinois Times | The impossible task of providing child care: Heather and Stephen Casner sat across from the loan officer in the fall of 2022, a stack of papers between them. The building they were trying to buy – a 21-room, one-story motel in rural Anna, Illinois – was overflowing with trash and would need a complete overhaul before they could reopen it as a child care center in a region where there were almost no such facilities. But after a long search, it was the best option they could find. The Casners were about to sign the papers for a $600,000 loan, using their house as collateral and setting aside $200,000 from Stephen’s retirement to cover what the loan wouldn’t. It was a staggering sum in a southern Illinois town where the per capita income is about $25,000 – 40% below the national level. “I’ve never even seen that much money,” Heather said. “I wasn’t raised that way.”

*** National ***

* NYT | Harry Stewart Jr. Dies at 100; One of Last Tuskegee Airmen to See Combat: Mr. Stewart was one of a tiny handful of still-living Tuskegee pilots who saw combat in the war. He flew 43 missions — almost one every other day — from late winter 1944 into the spring of 1945. On one mission, to attack a Luftwaffe base in Germany, Lieutenant Stewart and six other American pilots were baited into a dogfight with at least 16 German fighter planes. Firing his machine guns and performing risky aerial maneuvers, he downed three enemy aircraft in succession, fending off a potential rout. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, cited for having “gallantly engaged, fought and defeated the enemy” with no regard for his personal safety.

  8 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and more news (Updated)

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


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

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Live coverage

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Feb 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comments Off      


House Republicans walk out of chamber as J6/Trump resolutions begin (Updated x5)

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* House Resolution 118

Condemns President Donald Trump’s inexcusable pardons of his coconspirators and criminals convicted of attacking police officers, attacking our Capitol, and attacking our democracy.

The House Republicans called for a caucus meeting during debate. They came back in and then walked out during the roll call…

The HGOPs are holding a press conference.

* The other resolutions teed up for debate…

    * HR116: Condemns President Donald Trump’s cruel and lawless efforts to block lifesaving services that help people access healthcare, put food on the table, afford housing, and more. Urges the United States Congress to take clear and unequivocal action to check the undemocratic actions of the Trump Administration that violate the constitutional separation of power. Renews the commitment to helping Illinois families get ahead by supporting the services they need to be their best, expanding access to affordable healthcare, and reining in the cost of living.

    * HR115: Calls on President Donald Trump to stop the actions of his administration that are making communities less safe, undermining the rule of law, and raising the cost of living. Urges federal lawmakers to instead prioritize comprehensive reforms, including a pathway to citizenship, and focus on the safety of every community, the economic security of every family, and the rights guaranteed under the U.S. Constitution.

    * HR117: Condemns President Donald Trump’s efforts to undermine equal pay, make workplaces less fair, and limit opportunity. Condemns the false, hateful comments President Trump and his allies have used to impugn and demean working people. Renews commitment to prioritize equal pay for equal work, opportunities for all, and protections in our workplaces in Illinois.

    * HR119: Calls upon President Donald Trump to abandon his reckless tariff plans that would raise costs on Illinois families and businesses.

…Adding… From the HGOP presser…

…Adding… Rep. John Cabello (R-Machesney Park) was asked this question today…

You are a police officer. I mean, do you agree, though, that should people that assaulted police officers be pardoned?

He didn’t answer, and instead tried to pivot to the SAFE-T Act. He was asked again, and he didn’t answer again.

* Rep. Chris Miller (R-No Relation) has talked on the floor this session about his strong support for the president’s actions and was asked for his thoughts. Rep. Cabello interrupted to say…

We’re not here to discuss what’s going on nationally. We’ve got some issues here in this state.

* House Republican Leader Tony McCombie…

Q: The Democrats would say that this is in response to some of the comments that have been made by some members of this caucus about some of these topics, whether it’s immigration or some of the other topics that were addressed in some of those resolutions. What would you say to them? What would you say to those that would say that the House Republicans are not talking about some of these issues that you just mentioned, that you guys are talking about some of these topics.

McCombie: Why are they so worried about what the super minority was saying on the other side? And if they’re having to be talking about some of the members of a caucus within our caucus, why are they so worried about a small group within our minority, they’re still part of our team. What are they worried about? What are they scared about? I think they should just worry about their own districts and worry about the election cycle.

…Adding… During the roll call on HR115, Marcus Evans calls out Republicans by name to ask if they want to vote…

…Adding… House Speaker Chris Welch…

What’s been coming out of Washington, DC these last couple of weeks has been sad and concerning on many levels, and the people who elected you to be here would want you to be here, to speak for them… pardons to rioters who severely harmed law enforcement officials. We are here to speak up against that freezing legally mandated funding for state and local governments and blocking the services families need to keep a roof over their head, blocking the funding for Head Start programs to keep their doors open. We are here to speak up for those families who need those services.

But there’s 40 people who were elected by people in this state who walked out on those people today, they should be here speaking out against issuing tariffs on our friends and allies in Canada and Mexico that will raise the cost of everything in our districts and their districts too, but they’re not here to speak up for those people. They’re not here to talk about President Trump taxing working families all across this country to pay for tax cuts for his billionaire friends. They’re not here to talk about a president who is doing everything except addressing our broken immigration system. They’re not here to talk about him leading by fear and intimidation, causing immigrant families to stay inside and not go to school, not go to church, not visit restaurants, not visit malls. They’re not here.

They’re not here to talk about the president attacking workers rights and Diversity Equity and Inclusion programs that data proves work and make us all better, even people in their districts. They’re not here to talk about special government employees who no one elected using Nazi salutes and accessing America’s most personal and confidential information.

They’re not here to talk about what’s coming out of Washington DC. What’s coming out of Washington DC can be summed up in one word, fascism. Fascism. Fascism.

They should be here to speak out against fascism. We cannot be silent. We must rise up. Speak up, speak out. We cannot walk out on the people that sent us here. We have to stay in faith. German pastor Martin Niemöller once said, ‘First they came for the communists and I did not speak out because I was not a communist, then they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out because I was not a socialist. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out because I was not a Jew. But then they came for me, but there was no one there left to speak for me.’

Members, this is not a time to be silent. This is not a time to walk out on your job. This is not a time to walk out on the people who sent you here. This is a time to stay, Stand and fight.

We have members who were elected to represent people on that side of the chamber who traveled to Washington, DC on January 6, 2021 to march for Donald Trump, with Donald Trump, but today, February 5, 2025, they couldn’t stay and do their jobs and speak out against fascism.

But we’re here, Illinois.

We are here. The Democratic caucus is here. We’re united on this floor. We’re here speaking up for you, Illinois. We’re here speaking out for you, Illinois, whether you’re in a blue district or a red district, we’re here. What Trump is doing is wrong for Illinois, what Trump is doing is wrong for America, and we are here to speak out against it. We will resist, we will fight, and we will win. Vote yes and condemn this nonsense coming out of Washington.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* From the House Republicans…

In response to several House Resolutions brought forward by the majority party, House Minority Leader Tony McCombie released the following statement after her caucus left in a unified protest, refusing to vote:

“Today, House Republicans stood together for working families across Illinois and against the petty political games of the majority party. We are here to promote economic growth, improve public safety, and deliver real relief to taxpayers. It’s time to do our jobs—offering solutions that benefit our state and the hardworking people we represent. House Republicans are here to work, not to waste time on political theater.”

In closing, Rep. Kam Buckner called the Republicans “the Houdini caucus, silence and absence, ignoring the harsh realities of what their inaction will lead to for the people that they represent, proving that they’re in a rocky relationship with democracy. Nobody in any of our districts gets paid to leave their job early, and they don’t expect that of us. What they do expect is for us to fight, for them, to push back against ham handed, haphazard, nonsensical government action. And we, those of us who remain, will do exactly that.”

…Adding… More from McCombie’s spokesperson…

“I think we struck a nerve: The Speaker’s unhinged grandstanding this evening just proves our point. If Speaker Welch needs ideas on how to serve Illinois families, House Republicans have solutions to get the job done.”

  29 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated x2)

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Gov. JB Pritzker says the Trump administration’s widely reported plans to slash funding and staff at the Department of Education, or eliminate it altogether, could cost the state’s schools billions. […]

Federal funding accounts for roughly 10% of budgets for K-12 schools, he said. […]

Pritzker also noted the importance of federal support for special-education funding.

“To get rid of special education is to harm the most vulnerable children in our state,” he said.

* CBS Chicago

Gov. JB Pritzker on Wednesday signed legislation aimed at making it easier for relatives to become a child’s foster parents.

The Kinship in Demand (KIND) Act would allow the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services more flexibility in certifying grandparents and other relatives as foster parents for children in their family. […]

Currently, relative caregivers must go through the same certification process as traditional licensed foster parents who may be total strangers to a child, making it difficult for them to take in a related child as their own. […]

The KIND Act also makes sure related foster parents would get the same financial benefits as traditional licensed foster caregivers to help them pay for the care and supervision of a child in their care.

…Adding… This will cause a stir…

WHAT: Press conference introducing legislation to restore protections for peaceful advocacy in
Illinois by repealing the state’s 2015 anti-boycott law targeting advocates for Palestinian freedom.

WHO: State Representative Rashid
State Senator Porfirio
Advocates representing the Illinois Coalition for Human Rights, a diverse multifaith coalition of local advocates including, Rabbi Brant Rosen, Lesley Williams, Deanna Othman, Sheri Maali

WHEN: Wednesday, February 5, 2025 12:00 PM - 12:30 PM

WHERE: Blue Room Illinois State Capitol Building Springfield, IL

WHY: Illinois’ 2015 anti-boycott law has had serious consequences for human rights advocacy. The most prominent example came when the state divested from Unilever after Ben & Jerry’s decided to stop selling ice cream in Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian territories due to human rights concerns. President Trump’s latest statement—calling for the U.S. to take over Gaza—raises the alarm about the risk of wholesale ethnic cleansing, making the repeal of this law even more urgent. Illinois must not be complicit in shielding human rights abuses from accountability or suppressing peaceful advocacy.

VISUALS: Coalition of diverse faith leaders, civil rights advocates, and community members gathering to support legislation protecting constitutional rights, including the right to advocate for Palestinian freedom.

* A little session update

…Adding… After two Democrats spoke in debate, the House Republicans called for a caucus of between an hour and an hour and a half.

* Equality Illinois…

Equality Illinois Boards of Directors launches an open search process to identify the next CEO for the statewide LGBTQ+ civil rights organization

Brian C. Johnson, the CEO of Equality Illinois since 2016, announced today that he will transition out of the role on June 30th after nine years helping to grow the statewide LGBTQ+ civil rights organization into a multi-issue and high-impact advocacy organization.  He will focus his energies in the interim on fighting back against the hate-filled agenda flowing from Washington DC, making Illinois the first state in the country to protect the lives of sex workers by fully decriminalizing adult consensual sex work, and providing for a smooth leadership transition.

“It has been a privilege of a lifetime serving the half a million LGBTQ+ Illinoisans over these past nine years,” Johnson said.  “I have served during three Presidents, worked with two Governors, and partnered with three Chicago mayors.  We have even survived a global pandemic and shutdown together.  But now is the right time to hand the baton over to the next leader who will direct the important work ahead.  I plan to spend this next year discerning how I can continue to serve Chicago, Illinois, and our country while spending some more intentional time as a husband and father; my two favorite roles.” […]

Commenting on the transition during this time, Johnson said “I know these are tough times.  We are under attack like we haven’t been in my lifetime.  This is why we are planning a thoughtful extended transition.”  Johnson added, “Until then, I am all in. I am comforted to know that Equality Illinois has never been better poised to meet this moment.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Illinois attorney general says state will protect gender-affirming care, despite Trump executive order: After a week of uncertainty for Illinois hospitals and clinics over an executive order seeking to end gender-affirming care for minors, the Illinois attorney general issued a statement Wednesday saying the state will protect such care. The statement, from Attorney General Kwame Raoul and the attorneys general of 14 other states, says that federal dollars remain available to institutions that provide gender-affirming care despite the executive order, and that Illinois and the other states will take legal action if that funding is halted.

* Click here for some background…


* The Triibe | Social justice organizations push to automate expungement and record sealing in Illinois: The Clean Slate Illinois Coalition (CSIC), which is leading the effort, aims to streamline expungement and record sealing statewide. Advocates say the economic impact is projected to restore up to $4.7 billion in lost income to the Illinois economy, as people with sealed records could see an estimated 20% wage increase, according to CSIC. For many impacted by the criminal justice system, the stigma of a conviction doesn’t end once their sentence is complete. A criminal record creates barriers to housing, jobs, and more, according to Antonio Lightfoot, who’s among those lobbying for the Clean Slate Act.

* Crain’s | 2nd bill in Springfield aims to get rid of single-family zoning: The bill, HB 1814, calls for small municipalities in Illinois to let builders put up multi-unit structures on most lots that are now zoned for single-family residential. It complements a bill introduced a year ago that would do the same in large municipalities, including Chicago.

* WAND | Amy Meek to serve as Deputy Director of the Illinois Department of Human Rights: Meek is a civil rights attorney. The announcement comes alongside Alex Bautista’s transition from IDHR after nearly 8 years of service to work on special projects with the Governor’s Office of New Americans. “Alex Bautista has been an essential advisor for the last 6 years. He was thoughtful, deliberate, and collaborative,” said IDHR Director Jim Bennett. “I am confident that Amy Meek will rise to the occasion in her new role as she leads our efforts to secure freedom from unlawful discrimination for all individuals in Illinois.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Following budget strife, Mayor Brandon Johnson says passing a spending plan is ‘City Council’s responsibility’: At an inaugural “Lakeside Chat” community engagement event to tout Johnson’s 2025 budget, the mayor and his budget director Annette Guzman sought to appeal directly to constituents after a bruising road to securing enough City Council votes for the $17.1 billion 2025 spending plan two weeks before the Dec. 31 deadline. But the event at Harold Washington Library, originally billed for 300 guests, saw only a few dozen attendees.

* Crain’s | City asks judge to reconsider ruling on how TIF dollars are awarded: Cook County Circuit Judge Cecilia Horan ruled last month that an internal city committee that reviews funding requests for the city’s tax-increment financing districts met the definition of a public body and violated the Open Meetings Act by not holding public meetings or making committee agendas available, nor taking notes or audio recordings of the nearly monthly meetings. In a motion filed yesterday asking Horan to reconsider the ruling, the city argues the decision would have the “unintended consequence of chilling communications of high level officials that are necessary to do the business of the residents of the city of Chicago.”

* FYI



* More City Council drama


* WTTW | Lawsuit Filed by Man Who Spent More Than 29 Years in Prison After Being Tortured, Wrongfully Convicted Set for Trial: The police detectives who tortured James Gibson were directly supervised by Jon Burge, a disgraced former Chicago police commander. Dozens of lawsuits and complaints alleging physical abuse have been filed against detectives trained by Burge, who city officials admit tortured and beat more than 100 Black men during his career. Although no physical evidence or eyewitness ever linked Gibson to the murders of 61-year-old Lloyd Benjamin and 56-year-old Hunter Wash in an Englewood garage in December 1989, the then 23-year-old was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison after telling police he was in the garage when the two men were killed.

* Block Club | Chicago Fire’s Near West Side $80 Million Training Center Opening Next Month: The new “world-class” center includes two and a half hybrid grass/turf pitches, three synthetic turf pitches, a 10,000-square-foot inflatable dome and a 56,000-square-foot performance center containing the soccer club’s athletic and medical facilities. Construction is nearly done and the soccer club expects its professional team to start training at the Near West Side center before the Major League Soccer season begins in late February. Plans call for the center to officially open in March.

* Crain’s | Citadel nears deal to shrink, move Chicago office: More than two and a half years after Citadel uprooted its headquarters from Chicago, the hedge fund is poised to slash its office footprint in the city and move out of its namesake Loop tower. Citadel is in advanced talks to lease about 55,000 square feet on two floors in the office building at 353 N. Clark St., according to sources familiar with the negotiations. The new office space in the 45-story River North tower would be a fraction of the 315,000 square feet it leases today at 131 S. Dearborn St., known as Citadel Center.

* NBC Chicago | Here’s the timing of when icy roads could impact Chicago-area travel: A winter weather advisory will take effect Wednesday afternoon across all of northern Illinois and parts of northwest Indiana, as up to one-tenth of an inch of ice could coat untreated roadways and sidewalks, along with power lines and tree branches. The advisory will first take effect across areas south of Interstate 80, including LaSalle, Grundy and Kankakee counties in Illinois, along with Newton and Jasper counties in Indiana. The advisory will take effect at 6 p.m. in the rest of northern Illinois and northwest Indiana, and remain in effect until Thursday morning.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Mental health advocates decry planned service cuts, layoffs at Arlington Heights hospital: Northwest suburban mental health advocates are speaking out against the planned cuts to inpatient psychiatric services and layoffs of more than 100 workers at Arlington Heights-based Northwest Community Healthcare. Arlen Gould, a board member of the North-Northwest Suburban Task Force on Supportive Housing for Individuals with Mental Illness, called the proposed cuts by corporate owner Endeavor Health “troubling” at a time when the demand for mental health treatment continues.

* Tribune | North suburban schools prepare for potential immigration raids: Kalman Resnick, a Chicago-area immigration attorney, told Pioneer Press that it’s unlikely that immigration agents will attempt to detain students in school. “I don’t think it’s a priority (for the Trump administration) right now. They’re prioritizing people who are already in the process of deportation, either because they either have an outstanding order of deportation, or they have a criminal conviction,” he said.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Springfield-based health system names new president and CEO: The health system announced Mandy Eaton will be the new president and CEO beginning April 1. Eaton will take over for Ed Curtis who is retiring at the end of March. Before coming to Memorial, Eaton served as executive vice president and chief operating officer of Cone Health, a non-profit healthcare organization that includes five hospitals and numerous outpatient locations serving a five-county area in North Carolina.

* WCIA | ‘I was absolutely shocked’; Effingham teacher surprised by classroom guest: “Hello, is this Becky Wilson?” said Governor JB Pritzker. “This is Governor JB Pritzker calling, how are you?” “Illinois is among the best states in the nation on these [test] scores for eighth graders for reading and math, and it can’t happen without great teachers like you,” he went on to say.

* WAND | Peoria County now has one confirmed case of tuberculosis: The Peoria County Health Department has confirmed one tuberculosis (TB) case in the county, and the patient is now in active treatment. […] Claushayla Nunn, an epidemiologist at the health department, said when someone’s infected, they’re isolated. “The team of disease specialists will track and do Directly Observe Therapy [where they watch the patient take medication if there is an active patient,]” said Nunn.

*** National ***

* AP | President Donald Trump’s birthright citizenship order is put on hold by a second federal judge: A federal judge on Wednesday ordered a second nationwide pause on President Donald Trump’s executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship for anyone born in the U.S. to someone in the country illegally, calling citizenship a “most precious right.” U.S. District Judge Deborah Boardman said no court in the country has endorsed the Trump administration’s interpretation of the 14th Amendment. “This court will not be the first,” she said.

* AP | NWSL creates $5M fund for players as part of a settlement from abuse scandal in 2021: The funds will go to players who experienced abuse. The settlement also requires the league to maintain safeguards put into place following a pair of investigations released in late 2022 that found widespread misconduct that impacted multiple teams, coaches and players. It also gives the attorneys general, Kwame Raoul of Illinois, Brian L. Schwalb of Washington, D.C., and Letitia James of New York, the ability to oversee changes that the NWSL made after the scandal broke, and the ability to fine the league if it fails to uphold those changes.

* AP | Pro-Trump Arab American group changes its name after the president’s Gaza ‘Riviera’ comments: Bishara Bahbah, chairman of the group formerly known as Arab Americans for Trump, said during a phone interview with The Associated Press on Wednesday that the group would now be called Arab Americans for Peace. The name change came after Trump held a Tuesday press conference alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House and proposed the U.S. take “ownership” in redeveloping the area into “the Riviera of the Middle East.”

  13 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Quick session update

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Bat nabbed in Capitol

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Heh…


* Captured!…

An analogy is begging to be identified.

  26 Comments      


Today’s number: 0.0009 percent

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WGN’s Ben Bradley and Andrew Schroedter

Often lost in the cacophony of criticism on cable news – and along the campaign trail – is perspective on how often people born biologically male are seeking to compete in girls’ sports.

The Illinois High School Association says of the 320,000 student-athletes competing in all IHSA sports at all levels, only three people born male asked for and received waivers to compete in girls’ sports last year. The organization granted just two waivers the year before.

“Most people didn’t really care – they were just there to compete,” said Ashley O’Connor who competed on the Downers Grove South High School badminton team. “I was terrible and barely made the team. … Being there to do that with my friends was so important to my sanity.” […]

The ACLU says the issue has only come up a few times in Illinois because state law specifically allows people to access bathrooms, locker rooms and sports based on their gender identity. Some Illinois republicans want to change that.

“Just because folks around the state might not be in an uproar over one individual – it doesn’t mean it’s not happening,” said state representative Adam Niemberg (R, Dieterich, Illinois).

  45 Comments      


There’s No End To Credit Card Swipe Fee Greed

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Credit card companies collect more than $172 billion in swipe fees from customers and businesses each year, but it’s not enough to satisfy their greed. As consumers and retailers continue to grapple with inflation, Visa raised swipe fees on January 1.

Gov. JB Pritzker, Senate President Don Harmon, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch and the General Assembly took a stand against swipe fee greed by passing the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act, which limits swipe fees from being charged on the sales tax and tip portion of transactions. This law will provide tangible relief to Illinois families and retailers of all sizes.

While Visa and Mastercard fight to protect their unchecked duopoly in court, Illinois policymakers have sent a clear message that enough is enough.

  Comments Off      


Here’s something you don’t see every day

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sen. Dale Fowler wearing a fake mustache hanging out with Santa and showing off the beauty of southern Illinois


It’s time I tell you what’s in the vault…

If you saw one of my last videos then you may have been wondering like many others…what’s in the vault?! To tell you properly, in this video I take you back to the beginning, and you’ll never believe who I found in there…🎅

#southernillinoistreasures #hiddengems

Posted by Senator Dale Fowler on Tuesday, February 4, 2025

  14 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Chalkbeat Chicago

llinois lawmakers are proposing a change to state law that would no longer require school districts to use students’ test scores in teacher evaluations.

Senate Bill 28, if approved, would roll back changes made 15 years ago that were aimed at improving teacher evaluation systems amid a push by the federal government under the Obama administration to link teacher quality to students’ success in the classroom.

Democratic state Sens. Kimberly Lightford, the Senate majority leader who represents neighborhoods on Chicago’s west side and western suburbs, and Meg Loughran Cappel, who represents Plainfield and surrounding suburbs, are co-sponsoring the measure, which would leave it up to districts to decide whether to link evaluations to student growth.

The bill passed out of committee with no discussion Tuesday afternoon. According to the Illinois General Assembly’s website, nearly 400 proponents, including the Illinois Educators Association, Illinois Federation of Teachers, Illinois Principal Association, and Illinois Stand for Children have signed witness slips in support of the change. There were only 11 opponents and two with no position, notably one from the Chicago Public Schools.

If the bill is passed into law, changes would take effect July 1, 2025.

* WAND

Illinois lawmakers are renewing their push to ban retail stores from selling products containing chemicals linked to poor health outcomes.

Senators passed a plan last year to ban stores from selling products with additives like brominated vegetable oil, potassium bromate, propylparaben, Red Dye 3 and titanium dioxide by January 1, 2027.

They noted the bill could prohibit harmful additives commonly found in candy, pop and ultra-processed food linked to a recent spike in diabetes, autism, ADHD, and cancer. Although, the legislation failed to move in the House.

Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias led the push to pass the measure last year. The Democrat shared a video message in support of the new proposal Monday night.

“Illinois must act to ban the use of harmful additives,” Giannoulias said in a post on X. “Please contact your state legislators and voice your support for Senate Bill 93 to help ensure Illinoisans, and especially our children, eat safer and healthier food.”

* WTWO

Two Illinois lawmakers, Rep. Brad Halbrook (R-Shelbyvile) and Rep. Bob Morgan (D-Deerfield), have introduced legislation that would make daylight saving time “the year-round standard time in the entire state.”

The bills, which contain nearly identical language, aim to eliminate the two yearly clock changes in March and November by making daylight saving time permanent. If approved, the change could take effect in March 2026, provided it aligns with federal regulations.

Both bills (HB 1400 and HB 0039) have advanced to the Illinois House Rules Committee, though similar proposals have stalled there in recent years. Because of that, it remains unclear whether either measure will gain enough support to move forward. […]

In any case that Illinois were to pass a law for a permanent daylight saving change, it would still need to comply with federal laws. States that didn’t previously make a change around a Congressional Amendment in 1972 would need approval from U.S. Congress to otherwise make the change a reality.

* Rep. Sonya Harper filed HB2557 yesterday

Creates the Cannabis Delivery License Act. Provides that a Cannabis Delivery License shall authorize the license holder to deliver cannabis or cannabis-infused products purchased from a licensed dispensary directly to consumers within Illinois. Sets out application and operational requirements. Provides for penalties and enforcement. Requires the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation to adopt rules. Effective immediately.

* Capitol News Illinois

House Bill 2502 and Senate Bill 1519 follow the findings of a yearlong investigation by ProPublica and the Chicago Tribune.

The investigation found that schools ticket students for in-schools behavior, even though Illinois law bans school officials from fining students themselves. Instead, they have law enforcement officials issue tickets to students in schools for violating local ordinances.

The investigation found 11,800 tickets were issued to students between 2019 and 2021, and Black students were twice as likely to be ticketed than their white peers. […]

Rep. La Shawn Ford, D-Chicago, who sponsored the bill in the House, said fees and fines don’t address the underlying issues for which students are ticketed. Instead, he said he thinks school-based discipline, educational programming and restorative justice programs should be used.

“If the student is caught vaping, what benefit to the student is there to have the student get a ticket? The benefit is recognizing that there may be a problem and possibly referring the student to help,” Ford said. “And so, our goal is to help students and not lead them down a path of what we all have heard, the school prison pipeline.”

* HB2534 filed by Rep. Nabeela Syed

Amends the Genetic Information Privacy Act. Provides that an insurer may not seek information derived from genetic testing for use in connection with a policy of life insurance. Provides that an insurer may consider the results of genetic testing in connection with a policy of life insurance if the individual voluntarily submits the results and the results are favorable to the individual. Amends the Illinois Insurance Code. Provides that an insurer must comply with the provisions of the Genetic Information Privacy Act in connection with the amendment, delivery, issuance, or renewal of a life insurance policy; claims for or denial of coverage under a life insurance policy; or the determination of premiums or rates under a life insurance policy.

* WAND

State Senate Democrats filed a bill that would make all employers give at least 30 minutes of paid break time for nursing mothers to feed their children.

This would be additional paid break time and wouldn’t conflict with any other paid break such as lunchtime.

State Senator Laura Fine (D-Glenview) said when she was nursing her children at work, it was a struggle to find the time and she didn’t want the future generation of moms to feel the same.

“When you’re a new mom and you’re tired, you’re emotional and you’re getting back to work, for me we did not have that break to take care of my child,” Fine said.

  23 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From The Hill

Frustrations mounted during a tense call last week between Democratic governors and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (N.Y.). Six Democratic governors, including Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey, pressed Schumer to put up more of a fight against Trump’s agenda.

Healey specifically urged Schumer to slow down Senate votes and do more to stir up public opposition, according to The New York Times, which first reported the call.

That produced an exasperated response from Senate Democrats, who spoke on the floor late into the night Wednesday to highlight the impact the funding freeze ordered by Trump’s budget office would have on communities around the country.

“I would say to my friend [Pritzker], as you would like to have a majority of governors, we would like to have the majority of senators. There’s a limit to how much we can we do,” Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (Ill.) said.

Discuss.

  74 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  9 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Advocates ask Illinois lawmakers to increase funding for the unhoused in new budget. WGLT

    -With budget negotiations around the corner, advocates from across Illinois have written a letter asking Gov. JB Pritzker to include an additional $100 million in the budget for homeless shelter services.

    - That would mark more than a 30% increase over what the state currently spends on the unhoused.

    - The Illinois Shelter Alliance said 4,000 beds are needed to address the increase in homelessness in the state.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | What to do if you encounter a bird or animal with suspected avian flu: Don’t be a hero if you spot birds or animals showing signs of avian flu (dead or distressed birds, multiple signs of sickness). Our instinct is to help, but trying to help a bird with avian flu likely spreads it more.

* Tribune | Madigan jurors end fifth day of deliberations with no verdict: The jury began its discussion Wednesday afternoon, kicking off the final phase of a landmark four-month trial. Altogether the jurors have deliberated for roughly 29 hours — longer than in two other recent high-profile corruption cases. The jury in the “ComEd Four” bribery case, which featured evidence that overlapped significantly with some of the evidence in the Madigan trial, reached a verdict after about 27 hours. Jurors in the racketeering trial of former Ald. Ed Burke found him guilty in about 23 hours.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker stresses importance of federal education funding amid latest threats from Trump: “The Department of Education funds important programs like special education. We have in the state of Illinois many, many parents and their children who need special education and that funding is vital,” Pritzker told reporters at the Illinois state Capitol. “If they take that away, that’s going to be highly detrimental to the people of our state. So, I’m going to do everything I can to preserve that funding. I hope that that doesn’t end up being a target of their attacks. They should know better. It would be shameful to take it away.”

* WAND | Illinois House Republicans demand Pritzker cut migrant services: When it comes to the budget, Cabello said that he wants to bring the new Department of Government Efficiency to Illinois, saying the state should follow Elon Musk’s DOGE and the federal budget cuts. “Let’s find out exactly how much money is going to help people and how much money is going to overhead,” Cabello said. “Because there’s probably way too much money going to the overhead.”

*** Statewide ***

* WAND | New study finds Illinois retail generates $112 billion in economic investment annually: The Illinois Retail Merchants Association told reporters Tuesday that retail is the state’s largest private sector employer, with 1.3 million people working in the industry. IRMA President and CEO Rob Karr said retail also brings in over $7 billion of income and sales taxes for Illinois. The state’s retail sector generates a combined direct and indirect total sales impact of $441 billion and supports 2.4 million jobs.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Johnson team pitches new hemp business license to a skeptical City Council: The city has yet to unveil a comprehensive regulatory framework to address concerns about where intoxicating hemp products are manufactured and how they are sold — despite resisting efforts at the state level that some argued would create a de facto ban on hemp gummies, vapes and other products with delta-8 and delta-9. These products have grown in popularity because of their relative availability and lower price compared to legal marijuana.

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s campaign pledge to ban no-knock warrants uncertain amid renewed talks on Anjanette Young ordinance: Johnson confirmed in a City Hall news conference that his administration was working on an updated draft of the so-called Anjanette Young ordinance, named after the Black woman who took on the city following a wrongful police raid that made national headlines in 2020 after video showed Chicago cops leaving Young, a social worker, handcuffed and naked in her home during the search. But the mayor repeatedly dodged questions about whether his latest effort would include a major tenet from the original draft — a ban on no-knock warrants — that was the animating force behind Young’s demands for reform.

* Crain’s | United Airlines looks to add gates at O’Hare as it revs up more growth: United currently has 88 gates to park arriving and departing aircraft at terminals. If the airline is awarded the additional six gates, it opens the door for more growth by O’Hare’s largest carrier at a time when the airport has been lagging behind some of its peers.

* Block Club | Diehard Cubs, Sox Fans Won’t Be Able To Conquer A Red Line Doubleheader This Year: This year, the two teams will only play one three-game series on the same overlapping days in Chicago. The Cubs will host the Milwaukee Brewers and White Sox will host the St. Louis Cardinals June 17-19, but the games will start around the same time.

* ESPN | Inside the Bears hiring of coach Ben Johnson: “Having gone through the process, and having interviewed an extensive field of candidates when Ben was clearly No. 1, and [general manager] Ryan [Poles] said we need to go get him, you had to be ready to move,” Bears chairman George McCaskey said. But before they did, the Bears hosted Tennessee State coach Eddie George on Jan. 19. That put the Bears in compliance with the Rooney Rule, which requires at least two external in-person interviews with minority candidates — Ron Rivera was the other. George’s interview was scheduled at least a week before, two sources said. It was George’s only head coaching interview this cycle.

* WBEZ | His pizza wowed even Chicago’s best chefs. But there’s a gut punch.: Last July, doctors discovered cancer in Goldsmith’s stomach. It was a cosmic gut punch for a man who has spent two decades sending customers out the door with delightfully stuffed bellies. Three days after the Banchets, Goldsmith underwent surgery to remove the tumor in his abdomen, which had been successfully shrunk during rounds of chemotherapy.

* South Side Weekly | Brazilian Funk Gains a Foothold in Chicago: The show Brazilian Funk Night combines “all of this Brazilian music with a funk groove and a lot of improvisation,” said Marcel Bonfim, the ensemble’s musical director and bassist. Bonfim is from São Paulo, Brazil, and has performed on stages such as the Chicago Jazz Festival and Jazz Showcase in the South Loop. A year ago, Bonfim released his debut album, Farewell/Despedida, an ode to his immigration journey from Brazil to the United States. He created Brazilian Funk Night as a passion project, with the December show as the second iteration of the night. It all began with inspiration from one of Brazil’s most prolific bands from the ’70s, Banda Black Rio.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | As Cook County’s environmental justice policy takes shape, communities voice priorities and concerns: Several days after Tara Stamps was appointed as a Cook County board commissioner in the summer of 2023, heavy storms flooded homes in her district’s West Side neighborhoods — including her own. “So I wasn’t just a representative, I was a victim,” Stamps said at a Monday town hall focused on the county’s draft of its first-ever environmental justice policy. “My uncle who lives with me who’s a double amputee diabetic, was just on his bed, like a life raft, in the basement. And what’s so sad about that is, so many of the elders were like prisoners in their own homes during this time.”

* Daily Southtown | Harvey Mayor Christopher Clark drops out of race for Thornton Township supervisor: Christopher Clark announced Tuesday he withdrew his candidacy for Thornton Township supervisor to prioritize his work as mayor of Harvey. Clark said the challenges facing Harvey, including $165 million of debt, demand his full attention, leading him to drop out of the township race. “I want people in the city of Harvey to know and understand that even in this particular case, I am willing to make that sacrifice for them,” Clark said Tuesday.

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County volunteers search deep into the night for the homeless; ‘They left their warm homes to : Cunningham was one of more than 100 volunteers and a small fleet of cars patrolling Lake County on the night of Jan. 29 as part of the 2025 Homeless Point-in-Time Count that she has taken part in for over two decades. The county was broken into smaller regions, and teams of volunteers were given a map of several common locations to check within their regions.

* Fox Chicago | Bus driver shortage in Homer Glen leaves students waiting, district scrambles for solutions: Just last week, 18 bus drivers were absent. Many of them were on medical leave, and others were on sick leave. There are also seven job vacancies right now. What that ultimately means, is that 10 workers from other areas had to get behind the wheel. That included retired drivers, mechanics, and dispatchers who had to step up.

* Daily Southtown | New Lenox gun shop owner, business partner argue wrongful asset seizure and forfeiture abuse in federal lawsuit: New Lenox business owners Jeffery Regnier and Greta Keranen said their lives were turned upside down after officials raided their home and businesses in 2023 while investigating them for money laundering. Regnier said the investigation began due to a $750,000 cash deposit made to his bank, which he says came from a large spike in gun sales at his store, Kee Firearms and Training in New Lenox, during the COVID-19 pandemic. , who ran unsuccessfully in the 2022 Republican primary for the 1st Congressional District, and Keranen, of Kees Construction, face 29 felony charges for fraud and theft of COVID-19 relief funds as well as other offenses, according to two indictments filed in 2023.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | McLean County advisory group recommends spending around $1M to help unhoused: McLean County’s Mental Health and Public Safety Fund Advisory Council [FAC] is recommending around $1 million from the $1.5 million 2025 budget for the taxpayer fund go toward a non-congregate project for the unhoused population. “Between people living unsheltered and people providing services to those unsheltered consistently, we know that we have this gap for people that are chronically unhoused, and we need to shift,” Marita Landreth, the county’s behavioral health director, said in an interview with WGLT.

* WCIS | Under new ISBE requirement, District 186 works to improve student literacy: District 186 has five schools placed on the intensive school list. Meaning, they went through one round, which is four years of an improvement year cycle. But, they have yet to reach the commendable list. Assistant Superintendent, Nicole Moody, said the new requirement will provide benefits for the district. “I think it’s a positive thing that our state board is partnering with districts about what’s happening with the schools,” Moody said. “Particularly the schools that need the most support.”

* BND | Metro-east attorney steps up to help immigrants who fear deportation: Marleen Menendez Suarez’s law firm has been busy over the past few days, and it is all because of a Facebook post she published on Jan. 20 saying that she would prepare legal guardianship and power of attorney documents for free for anyone who fears deportation. “People are very afraid, and they’re very afraid for their children because many of them are U.S. citizens,” Suarez said. “What they’re facing is, if both mom and dad get deported, what happens to their kids, and this is what occurred to me, too. This is why I started doing what I was doing.”

* Herald-Review | On ‘World Nutella Day,’ Gov. Pritzker ‘proud’ of Ferrero’s investment in Bloomington plant: Gov. JB Pritzker marks “World Nutella Day” in the Illinois Capitol. Officials with Ferraro were in Springfield to mark the occasion.

* WAND | Icy conditions across central Illinois: Temperatures will be slow to climb above freezing today, especially north. Ice accumulations will range from a glaze across the south to one-tenth of an inch across our northern hometowns. The freezing rain will change over to all rain south by afternoon and across the north early tonight before ending late tonight.

* PJ Star | Folk music icon Bob Dylan announces Peoria show. Here’s what you need to know: The city was one of 16 additional dates added Monday to Dylan’s Rough and Rowdy Ways World Wide Tour. The Prairie Home Alliance Theater at the Peoria Civic Center will host the musician at 8 p.m. Wednesday, April 9. Tickets go on sale to the general public at 10 a.m. Friday, Feb. 7. As of now, this is Dylan’s lone show in Illinois.

*** National ***

* WGN | NFL replacing ‘End Racism’ message in end zones for Super Bowl LIX: According to the NFL, the end zones at Caesars Superdome for Super Bowl LIX will say “Choose Love” this year. The message aims to counter the catastrophes that have plagued the country since the start of 2025, including the New Orleans terror attack, the Los Angeles wildfires, and the most recent plane crashes in Washington D.C. and Philadelphia.

* AP | Trump and Musk demand termination of federal office leases through General Services Administration: The order seems to contradict Trump’s own return-to-office mandate for federal employees, adding confusion to what was already a scramble by the GSA to find workspace, internet connections and office building security credentials for employees who had been working remotely for years. But it may reflect the Trump administration’s belief that it won’t need as many offices due to its efforts to fire employees or encourage them to resign.

* Politico | Mass deportations haven’t arrived but Trump’s PR blitz has: And yet, the number of daily Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests, trumpeted each day on X, are still about where they were at times under President Barack Obama. Many of those detained have no violent criminal history and thousands have been quietly released for lack of detention capacity. Drugs and illegal immigrants are still slipping across the border each day.

  3 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and more news

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


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

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Live coverage

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Feb 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comments Off      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Selected react to budget reconciliation bill passage (Updated x2)
* Reader comments closed for Independence Day
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Some fiscal news
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)
* RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
* Groups warn about plan that doesn't appear to be in the works
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Campaign news: Big Raja money; Benton over-shares; Rashid's large cash pile; Jeffries to speak at IDCCA brunch
* Rep. Hoan Huynh jumps into packed race for Schakowsky’s seat (Updated)
* Roundup: Pritzker taps Christian Mitchell for LG
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated)
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Trump admin freezes $240 million in grants for Illinois K-12 schools
* Yesterday's stories

Support CapitolFax.com
Visit our advertisers...

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............


Loading


Main Menu
Home
Illinois
YouTube
Pundit rankings
Obama
Subscriber Content
Durbin
Burris
Blagojevich Trial
Advertising
Updated Posts
Polls

Archives
July 2025
June 2025
May 2025
April 2025
March 2025
February 2025
January 2025
December 2024
November 2024
October 2024
September 2024
August 2024
July 2024
June 2024
May 2024
April 2024
March 2024
February 2024
January 2024
December 2023
November 2023
October 2023
September 2023
August 2023
July 2023
June 2023
May 2023
April 2023
March 2023
February 2023
January 2023
December 2022
November 2022
October 2022
September 2022
August 2022
July 2022
June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004

Blog*Spot Archives
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005

Syndication

RSS Feed 2.0
Comments RSS 2.0




Hosted by MCS SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax Advertise Here Mobile Version Contact Rich Miller