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Some afternoon updates: Karina’s Law; Hemp; Energy; PRB/IDOC (Updated)

Monday, Jan 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I decided to switch this post to a liveblog format. It takes a second to load, so be patient…

  10 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Jan 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration passed on applying for state funding for a city-owned grocery store, raising questions about the future of the bold proposal the mayor floated more than a year ago.

Johnson first raised the idea of a publicly owned grocery store in September 2023. He framed the idea as a way to improve food access on the city’s South and West sides, where supermarket closures have left many residents with limited access to fresh groceries in their neighborhoods. […]

In December, the city passed on applying for state funding for the project despite previously saying it would do so.

The $20 million Illinois Grocery Initiative, which Gov. JB Pritzker signed into law in 2023, was created to help open or fund grocery stores in “food deserts” statewide. Municipalities are among the entities that can apply for the funding for up to $2.4 million for each project — not nearly enough to fund the startup of a grocery store, but a place to start.

* WSIL

Hundreds of resources are helping restore electric to the community following a winter storm which swept through the area on Sunday and Monday morning.

Wil Stephens shared a statement by Ameren Illinois who stated the freezing temperatures and high winds have caused damage to power lines, transformers and other equipment.

Ameren stated they have 800 resources to help with restoring electric to customers in the region. Some of which are tree trimmers, damaged assessors and more.

As of late Monday morning, roughly 22,000 Ameren customers were still left in the dark. However, Ameren anticipates they will restore power to roughly 80% of them by Tuesday night.

Click here for the Ameren outage map.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press release | December Illinois Flash Index increased after declining in November: The Illinois Flash Index for December showed strength, rising to 102.4 from its reading last month of 102. […] Illinois’ major state tax revenues, the primary drivers of the index, were strong in December. Both sales and individual income tax receipts were up in real terms from the same month last year while corporate receipts were down slightly. Nominal sales tax receipts recorded the highest monthly total in history, missing the one-billion-dollar level.

* Crain’s | Illinois AG starts crackdown on weight-loss drug copycats: Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul is cracking down on potentially unsafe copycats of popular weight-loss drugs, like Ozempic or Zepbound, issuing cease and desist letters to local medical spas marketing such medications and warning the public about their practices. Raoul’s office recently sent cease and desist letters to five unnamed medical spas in the Chicago area that were allegedly producing misleading marketing content for glucagon-like peptide 1, or GLP-1, drugs, which treat obesity, Type 2 diabetes and heart disease.

* Press Release | Collins pushes for expanded protections for nursing home residents: Under the legislation, House Bill 2474, nursing homes would be prohibited from retaliating against a resident who is exercising their rights. If a resident faces retaliation, they would be able to file a civil suit against the nursing home and potentially recover damages if proven true. […] House Bill 2474 passed the Senate on Sunday.

* Herald-Review | Decatur in line for horse racing track, casino under proposed legislation: The legislation, which has yet to be filed, would specifically authorize an organization license for harness racing in Macon County. Though the license would technically be open to any group that applies for it, the legislation is aimed at opening the door for Virginia-based Revolutionary Racing to develop a more than 200-acre parcel of vacant land at the northwest corner of U.S. 36 and Wyckles Road into a harness race track.

*** Statewide ***

* What I’m Reading | These programs help Black students graduate. A federal complaint claims they’re discriminatory.: The Black Male Initiative, along with the Black Student Achievement Program (BSAP), are now targets of a federal civil rights complaint filed by the Equal Protection Project, a conservative legal group. The complaint alleges that the two programs, run by NIU’s Center for Black Studies, unlawfully discriminate based on race and sex in violation of the Constitution.

* RiverBender | Illinois DCFS Offers Post-Secondary Scholarships to Current and Former Youth in Care: Through the program, a minimum of 53 academic scholarships will be awarded to current and former youth in care for the upcoming school year, with four awards reserved for the children of veterans and two awards presented to students pursuing degrees in social work in honor of Pamela Knight and Deidre Silas, two DCFS caseworkers who succumbed to injuries sustained in the line of duty.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* ABC Chicago | Jury back in court after extended holiday break in former IL House Speaker Michael Madigan trial: The jury Monday got to hear prosecutors cross-examine the former Illinois speaker’s then-chief legal counsel: now appellate court Justice David Ellis. Ellis is one of the witnesses called by Madigan’s defense team, as they try to refute the government’s claims that Madigan ran a decade-long criminal enterprise designed to enrich himself and his political cronies.

*** Chicago ***

* ABC Chicago | Chicago Transit Authority deactivates X social media accounts: The agency confirmed to ABC7 Friday that two of their accounts are no longer active on the site formerly known as Twitter. The CTA and CTA service alerts X accounts now have disclaimers saying they are no longer active.

* WBEZ | CPS CEO says contract talks with the teachers union have not stalled: ‘In fact, it’s just the opposite’: Chicago schools chief Pedro Martinez pushed back Friday against the teachers union’s claim that contract negotiations have stalled in the two weeks since he was fired. “The urgency has never been higher,” Martinez said, who, due to a provision in his contract, will stay at the helm of the school district for six months. “There is no evidence at all (that progress has stalled). In fact, it’s just the opposite.”

* Tribune | CTA to lock in federal funding for Red Line extension before Trump takes office: The CTA is set to formally lock in needed federal money for the extension of the Red Line before President-elect Donald Trump takes office, paving the way for the long-planned addition through Chicago’s Far South Side to move forward. A large, nearly $2 billion federal grant, key to moving the $5.3 billion project forward, had been promised to the CTA but the formal agreement not yet signed. That put the transit agency under pressure to finalize the agreement before the change in administration and a Republican-controlled Congress could potentially throw the commitment into jeopardy.

* Tribune | Chicago, once again, ranks among the worst in the nation for traffic congestion in annual report: Roads are so snarled that the city once again ranked among the worst in the nation for the severity of traffic in 2024. Drivers lost an average of 102 hours to traffic last year, putting the Chicago metro area on par with New York City — and for Chicago, 2024 traffic was even worse than the 96 hours the average driver lost to traffic the year before, according to a new report from mobility analytics firm Inrix.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* ABC Chicago | Thornton Township stops bus service for senior citizens amid government shutdown: The government there remains shut down over disagreements between Supervisor Tiffany Henyard and two township trustees. Residents who rely on the bus service feel stuck in the middle. “It’s a hardship on seniors, they rely on this service,” said resident Tya Robinson.

* Daily Herald | Glendale Heights village president asks court to put him back on ballot: Khokhar filed a petition Monday seeking judicial review of the village electoral board’s Dec. 23 decision to remove him from the ballot and keep him from seeking a second term. Listed as defendants are objector Matthew Corbin and the three members of the board — village trustees Chester Pojack and Mary Schroeder, and Village Clerk Marie Schmidt.

* Naperville Sun | Former Naperville Councilman Kevin Coyne named new DuPage County GOP chair: Former Naperville City Councilman Kevin Coyne is taking over as chairman of the DuPage County Republicans. He succeeds Jim Zay, a longtime DuPage County Board member. Coyne officially took the reins New Year’s Day. The change of guard comes in the wake of a strong showing by Democrats across DuPage County in November, the latest of what’s been a string of successes for local Democrats in recent years.

* Daily Southtown | Judge restores opposition slate in Tinley Park after ‘clearly erroneous’ Electoral Board ruling: The objection claimed the nominating petitions were invalid because they included an array of six small U.S. flags on the top of each page. A three-person village Electoral Board ruled in favor of the objectors Dec. 9, removing a slate led by Michael Maloney in opposition to Mayor Michael Glotz from the ballot. Village Trustee William Brennan chaired the panel, which included board members Mathias Delort and Paul Karkula. Delort voted against removing the candidates from the ballot.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | City of Springfield unveils first proposed budget for FY26. What you need to know: The public is getting a first look at the city of Springfield budget while departments will lay out particular programs in workshops beginning Jan. 14. The overall ask is $350,232,993 by agencies outside of City, Water, Light & Power. The utility is seeking $318,611,749. In both cases, that excludes American Rescue Plan Act, or ARPA, expenses.

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Bill to rein in health insurance companies falsely mocked by far right

Monday, Jan 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A very simple and straightforward explanation of House Bill 2350 from then-Sen. Cristina Pacione-Zayas…

The current Illinois insurance code is gender-specific, meaning patients who are listed as female or male can only be covered for pap smears or prostate exams respectively. This specificity prevents many patients from getting the care they need if they are not registered as the same gender as they were assigned at birth. With these restrictions, patients may not be able to access necessary cancer screenings without incurring massive out-of-pocket costs.

House Bill 2350 would make the insurance code gender-inclusive rather than gender-specific, removing barriers to accessing care aligned with people’s biology versus gender identity and lowers the risk of denial of care reported by transgender individuals. Additionally, this initiative would require prostate screenings for people 40 years and older who have a genetic predisposition to prostate cancer, which would ensure that insurance covers important preventative treatment.

* As we are all too painfully aware, health insurance companies are notorious for often using whatever methods they can to deny coverage.

So, when state statute requires that insurance companies cover the full costs of annual prostate cancer screenings for men above a certain age, and you’ve changed your birth certificate to reflect that you are a female, your exam may no longer be covered, even though you still need those annual prostate screenings. Same goes for mandated coverage for annual cervical smear or Pap smear tests. If you’ve changed your birth certificate to male, you very well might not get covered.

That’s it. The bill would simply protect a relatively small handful of Illinoisans from being denied health insurance coverage for a couple of basic procedures.

The bill passed the House way back in March, then cleared the Senate in May and was signed into law a month later.

* But the far right just took notice

IL House GOP Leader Tony McCombie Joins ‘Woke’ Left, Supports Insurance Coverage for Men’s ‘Cervical’ Exams and Women’s ‘Prostate’ Screenings

🤦

* The usual suspects were fully triggered…


* McCombie felt the need to defend herself…

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Mayor criticized by governor’s office for ‘debating imaginary revenue strategies at the expense of children’s health’ (Updated)

Monday, Jan 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Politico

— HEMP HARRUMPH: Gov. JB Pritzker has called on House lawmakers to pass legislation to regulate hemp products during the lame-duck session, as POLITICO’s Mona Zhang reports. But Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson is pushing back. His team wants to slow down the discussion “to make sure Chicago is at the table” on hemp. “What the governor is doing is overreaching and trying to overrule Chicago’s home-rule authority to tax hemp on our own,” said a person close to the mayor’s office. Johnson supports strict public health regulations but also sees generating revenue as crucial.

The mayor’s office is pretty clueless when it comes to state stuff, and this is no exception.

1) The bill has been bouncing around for a long time in various forms. The current version passed the Senate in late May - 225 days ago. The time to be “at the table” was before then, or at least soon after.

2) From the governor’s office…

Nothing in this bill preempts Chicago’s home-rule authority. Arguments to the contrary are not based in law or fact.

Also, the mayors of Roselle, Aurora, and Waukegan are in support. They’re home rule municipalities.

* Also from the governor’s office…

Too many children have been hospitalized because of unregulated intoxicating products and predatory sales tactics. Instead of debating imaginary revenue strategies at the expense of children’s health, Governor Pritzker calls upon all elected officials to uphold their responsibility to protect our children and support this bipartisan, commonsense, and decisive action.

…Adding… The mayor’s office is in town today. Pic from Isabel of Kennedy Bartley…

I’m told the bill as of this morning had 62 House Democratic votes.

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Jan 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 Ade, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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The Illinois Flag Commission’s reject pile

Monday, Jan 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Winter break had just started when my FOIA for the Illinois Flag Commission submissions came through. The rejects did not disappoint—here is a small sample

* I think this would be a perfect I voted sticker…


* Come on people…

Click here to check out all the submissions. There are definitely some hidden gems—let me know which ones are your favorites!

If you need a refresh of the commission’s selection you can find that here.

  31 Comments      


Happy birthday, Isabel!

Monday, Jan 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Here’s a pic of Isabel with the legendary Tawl Paul…

* And here’s one of Isabel with some guy with big ears…

* One more…

If you see that young lady at the Statehouse today, please wish her a happy birthday.

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Stratton testing the waters

Monday, Jan 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column which ran before the Christmas holiday break

We’re less than nine months from when candidates can begin circulating petitions for the 2026 election, so we’re rapidly approaching the time when major figures will need to decide whether to run or not. Because of that, a lot of people are polling.

The state’s two big dogs, U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and Gov. JB Pritzker, are still not saying what they plan to do, although Durbin has said he’ll make his plans known after the start of the new year.

Pritzker has been polling, although his campaign wouldn’t comment. A friend who was polled said the questions varied from migrant and immigration policy, to a possible constitutional amendment to protect abortion rights, to crime response and whether he should stand up to President-elect Donald Trump if he tries to violate the rights of Illinois residents or whether he should find a way to work with the Trump administration to benefit Illinois.

There were the usual right direction vs. wrong direction questions and questions rating the governor’s performance on things like fiscal management and taxes, and where they believed Pritzker stood on the political ideological spectrum.

Pritzker’s poll tested the statewide popularity of people like Mayor Brandon Johnson and U.S. Reps. Lauren Underwood, D-Ill., and Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill. The governor also tested Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton’s popularity.

Stratton is also polling. A source with knowledge of the poll and the thinking behind it said Stratton is “keeping her options open” as a decision by Pritzker looms. However, the person stressed Stratton has “no plans of not keeping her day job.”

Stratton has been actively fundraising since the summer of 2023 and has also become more visible, appearing with the governor at many of his governmental and campaign stops and doing several of her own events.

Stratton’s poll tested Durbin’s popularity, which is standard in these sorts of things, but that’s an office she could seek. Also, if Pritzker decides not to run again, the decision will likely create a down-ticket cascade as people attempt to move up the ladder. Like Pritzker, Stratton tested the popularity of several other elected officials.

Stratton’s poll tested various background messages with potential voters, which is also common.

For instance, a question tested how her relationship to Pritzker plays with voters: “Juliana Stratton has worked with JB Pritzker since Day One to get big things done for Illinois. JB calls her his partner in governing. Together, they turned the Illinois economy around and along with accomplishments like raising the minimum wage, making historic investments in infrastructure, and giving $1.8 billion in tax relief to working families in Illinois.”

Voters were then asked to rate her favorability between one and 10.

Another test question notes that Stratton “is the first Black lieutenant governor and first Black woman constitutional officer in Illinois ever,” and after talking about her life on the city’s South Side, closes with, “As a descendant of enslaved people, she understands the systemic barriers facing marginalized communities. She works every day across Illinois to rebuild neglected communities.”

The poll talks about her time as the “primary caregiver” to her mother, who had Alzheimer’s disease and lived with Stratton for three years before dying. “She says it was both the honor of her life as well as incredibly difficult. Stratton was also raising three daughters at the same time, sandwiched between two generations and caring for everyone. Stratton managed it all and knows how hard Illinois families have it.”

The poll touts her experience as a mediation attorney. “That means her whole job was to get opposing sides to compromise, see things from the other’s point of view, and get both sides to agree to a solution. And Stratton had a very high percent success rate. Who better to lead us when everyone is so divided? Stratton has the skills and the know how to help bring both sides together to get things done.”

After testing other candidates’ popularity, Stratton’s poll also asked whether her support of various issues made respondents more or less likely to approve of her, including raising the minimum wage; enacting a large infrastructure plan; criminal justice reform; balancing the budget, improving pension funding and achieving nine credit upgrades; helping pass a bill to “enshrine reproductive rights into state law”; leading the Council on Rural Affairs and the Council for Women and Girls; and “stood up to the NRA” by helping pass an assault weapons ban.

That should give you an idea of the messaging to expect if Stratton decides to run for a different office.

Discuss.

  18 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Jan 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Jan 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois lawmakers consider an array of measures in final days of lame-duck session. The Tribune

    - A bill that would eliminate barriers for people wanting to change their names passed 33-16 in the Senate with an amendment that now needs approval from the House.

    - The Senate passed a bill Sunday intended to protect senior citizens in Illinois from abuse and neglect by prohibiting nursing homes from retaliating against a resident for registering complaints about the home to state officials.

    - Also under consideration is a bill that would require the Illinois Department of Corrections to post quarterly reports on the use of restrictive housing, or solitary confinement, on the agency’s website.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Daily Herald | What will happen in the air, on roads and with public transit in 2025?: “Last year, I cynically predicted that the taxpayers would ultimately be hit hard with little in the way of reform to address the financial problems at CTA, Metra and Pace,” said Northwestern University Professor Savage. “My prediction has not changed.” He said to expect legislative activity and intense politicking in the first half of the year over the Metropolitan Mobility Authority or alternative legislation.

* Tribune | After long holiday break, jury in Madigan corruption trial back for more defense testimony: After an extended 18-day holiday break from testimony, the jury in the corruption trial of former House Speaker Michael Madigan will be back to work Monday to hear more defense witnesses in a case inching to the finish line. Before the panel was sent home for the holidays on Dec. 19, the trial’s spotlight had finally turned to Madigan’s defense team, whose witnesses so far have offered a far different picture of the powerful Democratic speaker than the image of a conniving and opportunistic political machine boss painted by prosecutors.

*** Statehouse News ***

* AgriNews | Eliot Clay to lead AISWCD: The Association of Illinois Soil and Water Conservation Districts announced the selection of Eliot Clay as its new executive director. Clay comes to the AISWCD from the Illinois Environmental Council, where he led their policy agenda on agriculture, conservation and how natural and working lands are utilized in Illinois.

* Labor Tribune | Illinois unions calling Jan. 6 Day of Action to fix Tier 2 pensions: On Monday, Jan. 6, the Illinois Education Association, Illinois AFL-CIO and others are pushing for a one-day lobbying session, setting up a number for constituents and Labor activists to call their legislators and ask them to fix the Tier 2 problem. In 2010, the Illinois state legislature and then-Gov. Pat Quinn approved a law in the middle of the recession that forced state leaders to deal with decades of underfunding by changing the way state retirement benefits and calculated. It only affected employees who began their jobs after Jan. 1, 2011 – known as the Tier 2 employees.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Statewide police body camera requirement kicked in Jan. 1, but full compliance picture unclear: The most recent report from the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board is from 2023, before many small departments were required to comply, and falls short of giving a full picture. Only about 180 departments provided information about body cameras to the ILETSB. Of the roughly 170 departments from that group which reported using cameras in 2023, 20 didn’t explain their review process for camera footage and 15 failed to report how many cameras they had on hand, according to the 2023 report. Another 25 were missing the numbers of officers in the department using body-worn cameras. All three elements are required to be reported under the law.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Chicago leaders prepare for ‘TIF cliff’ as several city special taxing districts expire: It’s the latest chapter in Chicago’s long history with TIFs, which supporters have praised for spurring growth in struggling neighborhoods and critics have hammered as little more than opaque slush funds for aldermanic and mayoral pet projects. Council members quietly got the ball rolling weeks ago during the chaos of passing this year’s city budget. They let 13 TIF districts expire and extended eight others for another 12 years.

* Sun-Times | Chicago’s homelessness surged in 2024, as major U.S. cities bore the brunt of a national trend: Nationally, the dramatic rise was driven mostly by a lack of affordable housing, natural disasters and a surge of migrants in several parts of the country, federal officials say in a new report. Chicago estimated 18,836 people experienced homelessness last year compared with 6,139 in 2023, according to the city’s annual tally released last summer.

* WBEZ | Chicago students without bus service getting PiggyBack rides to school: Reliance on school buses has waned for years as districts struggle to find drivers and more students attend schools far outside their neighborhoods. As responsibility for transportation shifts to families, the question of how to replace the traditional yellow bus has become an urgent problem for some, and a spark for innovation. State and local governments decide how widely to offer school bus service. Lately, more have cut back. Only about 28% of U.S. students take a school bus, according to a Federal Highway Administration survey concluded early last year. That’s down from about 36% of students in 2017.

* Sun-Times | The Bears get a big victory over the Packers. A bigger victory: This miserable season is thankfully over: Cairo Santos didn’t have a game-winning field-goal attempt blocked, the way he did on the final play of a 20-19 loss to the Packers on Nov. 17. The Bears didn’t find a strange way to lose a strange game, the way they did so many times in this dreadful season. The game didn’t end with the Bears trying to explain their inherent Bear-ness, as it so often did in 2024.

* Tribune | Lake-effect snow in Illinois likely to disrupt Monday commute as winter blast hits hardest farther south: According to the National Weather Service, travel will be affected the most in northeastern Illinois as snow blows in Sunday night through noon Monday. Accumulations might reach 3 to 5 inches across portions of Lake County — perhaps even higher near the Wisconsin state line. As the snow band moves south toward Chicago from noon to 6 p.m., it could drop 1 to 3 inches.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Sales tax switch creates funding shortfall for mental health services in McHenry County: For some clients of the Association for Individual Development, having access to the nonprofit’s help can have life-or-death stakes. […] According to county records, the organization received about $100,000 less this year in funding from the McHenry County Mental Health Board, down from $345,725 to $245,000. Those funds help cover things like psychiatric services and a certified recovery support therapist. Baker attributes the drop to the county’s new quarter-cent sales tax for the mental health board generating less revenue than projected — the result of what McHenry County officials acknowledge was an error on their part.

* Highland Park Mayor Nancy Rotering | Act now, Illinois lawmakers, to keep intoxicating hemp products out of kids’ reach: Gov. JB Pritzker and leaders in the Illinois General Assembly have announced their support for House Bill 4293, a bill regulating the sale of intoxicating hemp products across the state. I have fought to keep the Highland Park community, particularly our children, safe from unregulated and deceptively advertised products. But this is a fight no single town, village or city can win on their own.

* Shaw Local | Solar development, data center proposed for 30 acres along Peace Road in DeKalb: A developer wants city permission to install a solar field and data center on about 30 acres of land west of Peace Road in DeKalb, documents show. Donato Solar has submitted a concept plan for a 4-megawatt solar energy system and what the company is calling a “boutique data center” to sit at 1199 N. Peace Road, between Greenwood Acres and Challenger drives, according to an agenda released ahead of Monday’s Planning and Zoning Commission meeting.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Author and historian Michael Burlingame to address Abraham Lincoln Banquet: Renowned Abraham Lincoln scholar, author and professor Michael Burlingame will be the featured speaker at the Abraham Lincoln Association (ALA) Birthday Banquet at the President Abraham Lincoln Hotel on Feb. 15. The free Benjamin P. Thomas Symposium will be held the same day. The author of the two-volume “Abraham Lincoln: A Life,” one of the most definitive biographies of the 16th president, Burlingame is the Chancellor Naomi B. Lynn Distinguished Chair in Lincoln Studies at the University of Illinois Springfield.

* 25News Now | Illinois State Police activate emergency snow plan for many counties south of Peoria: The affected counties include Sangamon and Logan. Other Troop 6 counties are Adams, Brown, Cass, Christian, Mason, Menard, Morgan, Pike, Schuyler, and Scott. Troopers in Troop 6 patrol I-55, I-72, I-155, I-172, as well as all the state and U.S. highways within the 12 counties. Motorists are urged not to travel unless it is absolutely necessary.

* NBC Chicago | Multi-vehicle crash closes Interstate 70 in Illinois as winter storm continues: All traffic was being diverted off the roadway at U.S. Route 40, ISP officials said in a social media post at around 3:03 p.m. There were no immediate reports of injuries in the crash.
is located in Cumberland County in southeastern Illinois, with Interstate 70 crossing the state on its way to the northeast toward Indianapolis. Elsewhere in central Illinois, a portion of I-55 was shut down due to a collision.

* WCIA | Champaign Public Works working 24-hour day clearing roads: The City’s Public Works Department started the process back in October checking plows and going over routes for snow removal. Public Information Officer Kris Koester said staff have been working back-to-back 12-hour shifts to clear roadways. […] “As the forecast changes, or as the forecast moves along, the weather moves along, we’ll continue to update our resources to be out on the streets making sure the roads are as passable as possible while it’s snowing,” Koester said.

*** National ***

* AP | Higher Social Security payments coming for millions of people in public service jobs from bill that Biden signed: President Joe Biden on Sunday signed into law a measure that boosts Social Security payments for current and former public employees, affecting nearly 3 million people who receive pensions from their time as teachers, firefighters, police officers and in other public service jobs. Advocates say the Social Security Fairness Act rights a decades-old disparity, though it will also put strain on Social Security Trust Funds, which face a looming insolvency crisis.

  15 Comments      


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

Monday, Jan 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Jan 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.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Jan 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s early afternoon roundup

Sunday, Jan 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* A quick weather update

* Cook County Record

Trial lawyer and former Democratic Illinois state representative Scott Drury appears to have reached a deal to end a 10-year-long lawsuit against political commentator Dan Proft and one of Proft’s political action committees over election year political ads which criticized Drury over a state education funding law, but which Drury said were untruthful. […]

In early December, Drury and Proft signed a settlement agreement, appearing to officially end the litigation Drury first launched in 2014, accusing Proft and Liberty Principles PAC of defamation.

Terms of the settlement remain confidential. Proft and his attorney, Jeffrey Schwab, of the Liberty Justice Center, declined to comment on the terms of the settlement, saying the deal forbids disclosure.

* Capitol News Illinois

Illinois lawmakers established the Warehouse Safety Standards Task Force in January 2023 to study warehouse safety in response to the Edwardsville tornado, and it issued its final report last month.

Among its recommendations was that building codes be amended to require tornado shelters in warehouses. The International Building Code became Illinois’ statewide building code on Jan. 1 after being approved by the legislature in 2023. The task force recommended shelters be added to that code. […]

Illinois saw a record of 142 tornadoes in 2024, according to the National Weather Service. The state has averaged 60 tornadoes each year over the last 10 years. But the number of tornadoes in the state could be increasing as technology to detect them improves, according to data compiled by The New York Times. Most Illinois counties saw an increase in tornadoes in the 20 years from 2002 to 2022compared to the previous 20 years.

Most tornadoes are not as powerful as the Edwardsville tornado, Marc Levitan from the National Windstorm Impact Reduction Project told the task force, but warehouses are more vulnerable because they’re tall and supported by heavy walls that rely on the roof for stability.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Subscribers know much more…


* WCIA | Lame duck session gives lawmakers one last chance to pass 2024 proposals: On Friday, Senator Bill Cunningham filed a new group of clean energy policies. The bill would create some avenues to improve clean energy storage, while also helping build out the grid. “There’s a couple of flashing warning lights on the dashboard right now that we have to take action on, and incentivizing the use of battery storage for energy can be a really big part of that,” Cunningham (D-Chicago) said.

* Tribune | Pritzker EPA vows to step in as Trump calls for massive cuts to environmental protection: Jen Walling, executive director of the nonprofit Illinois Environmental Council, worries state lawmakers won’t have the political will to respond to Trump’s expected cuts to the U.S. EPA. Unlike other state agencies funded with general tax collections, the Illinois EPA’s budget depends solely on federal grants and permit fees. “No matter how exceptional [James Jennings] may be, he’s going to be faced with decisions that already were made for him during the past decade,” Walling said.

* WAND | Hemp regulation top priority for Illinois lawmakers during lame duck session: Intoxicating hemp would only be allowed to be sold to customers 21 and older at licensed dispensaries. Over 9,000 cases of Delta-8 poisoning have been reported nationwide, and nearly half of those cases involved children. Three elementary school-aged children in Chicago were hospitalized in early December after becoming severely ill from eating gummy edibles.

* WGEM | Moore heading to Springfield a few days early: Fresh off his November win in the race to replace retiring state Rep. Randy Frese, Kyle Moore began his term a few days early. Moore was selected Friday by the GOP party chairs from the counties in Illinois’ 99th House District to replace Frese, who resignation was effective at noon on Thursday. Appellate Judge Amy Lannerd swore in Moore afterward in a ceremony at the Adams County Courthouse.

* 25News Now | Illinois bill could place foster kids with families, financially support families providing care: This bill prioritizes relatives as legal guardians for kids in foster care and could require the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services [DCFS] to focus on those placements first. It could allow DCFS to pursue access to federal funds to give to the relatives taking those children in, as well as doing background checks.

* Scott T Holland | Push to tweak foster care system will also require cash infusion: Under current state law, the Department of Children and Family Services pays foster parents who complete specific education and pass home inspections. Those and other standards are important for making sure DCFS wards are in better situations than their actual homes and verifying the people who provide foster care aren’t just in it for the checks. However, the rules apply to any foster family, even those taking in a relative. The CNI story said nearly 10,000 kids under DCFS care live with family members, but more than 60% of those homes aren’t qualified for monthly payments, yearly clothing vouchers or participating in support groups.

* WIFR | IDPH announces new public health laws starting with the new year: One of the key changes in the new year is more public health intervention based on results of testing blood lead levels in children. Illinois law says children living in a high-risk ZIP code are automatically tested at 12, 24 and 36-months-old, and children under 6-years-old are required to be assessed by a pediatrician for lead exposure. Under the new law, public health intervention is required for any test result higher than 3.5 µg/dL. Interventions include a home inspection to determine the source of the lead and remove it. A public health nurse will also come to the home to educate the family on how to protect children from lead.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* Center Square | Jury to return for Madigan corruption trial and continued Illinois appeals court judge testimony: urors are scheduled to return from an 18-day holiday break on Monday at the corruption trial of former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan and codefendant Michael McClain in Chicago. Judge John Robert Blakey held a charge conference for attorneys on Jan. 2, when prosecutors and the defense teams discussed terminology used in the indictment.

* WBEZ | Madigan trial set to resume next week, but judge and lawyers still struggling with definition of ‘corruption’: What does the word “corruptly” mean? U.S. Supreme Court justices zeroed in on that very question when they heard oral arguments last April in the corruption case against former Portage, Indiana, Mayor James Snyder — the same case that triggered a six-month delay in Madigan’s trial. The justices grilled a government lawyer for a clearer definition of the term, with Justice Neil Gorsuch even asking at one point, “Is it a sin? Are we now talking about … a venial sin? Or does it have to be a mortal one?”

*** Statewide ***

* Shaw Local | Fight like a girl: Girls wrestling continues to grow throughout Illinois: With more girls and teams competing than ever, expect to see even further success. “I think everyone has been wrestling pretty good,” Morris coach Lenny Tryner said at the Reindeer Rumble. “We had about 600 matches with (27) teams so that’s really impressive. … We’ve had a lot of bigger teams, and we’re one of the bigger tournaments in the area, so that’s really good.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | CPS CEO says contract talks with the teachers union have not stalled: ‘In fact, it’s just the opposite’: “The urgency has never been higher,” Martinez said, who, due to a provision in his contract, will stay at the helm of the school district for six months. “There is no evidence at all (that progress has stalled). In fact, it’s just the opposite.” The back and forth Friday underscored the highly unusual situation the district is in as it tries to settle a contract with the union and avoid a strike. Just days after Martinez was terminated, some school board members showed up at contract negotiations, hoping to move forward on making a contract deal.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Here are the remaining sticking points in contract talks between CPS and CTU: The union and the district provided separate bargaining updates late Friday afternoon suggesting they are making some progress — and both sides said they agreed to pause a neutral fact-finding process that started in October. The district and union both said they have reached tentative agreements to expand the number of Sustainable Community Schools to 70 over the next four years, hire more English learner teachers and other staff, and jointly look for ways to offer housing help to homeless students.

* WTTW | Shootings, Homicides in Chicago Fall to Lowest Levels Since 2019: Police: Homicides citywide decreased 8% for 2024 compared to the previous year, while shootings fell 7% and the number of shooting victims fell 4%, Chicago Police Department figures show. “This year, the Chicago Police Department continued to drive down violent crime while focusing on the victims affected by the trauma of these crimes,” Superintendent Larry Snelling said in a statement. “The efforts we made set the foundation for strengthened public safety for years to come.”

* Mother Jones | Chicago’s Municipal Buildings Are Now Powered Largely by the Sun: It takes approximately 700,000 megawatt hours of electricity to power Chicago’s more than 400 municipal buildings every year. As of January 1, every single one of them—including 98 fire stations, two international airports, and two of the largest water treatment plants on the planet—is running on renewable energy, thanks largely to Illinois’ newest and largest solar farm. The move is projected to cut the carbon footprint of the country’s third-largest city by approximately 290,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide each year—the equivalent of taking 62,000 cars off the road, according to the city.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan officials hail effectiveness of pilot police/social worker program; ‘They find people in crisis and help with solutions’: Not long ago, the Waukegan Fire Department received a call about an unresponsive woman. When the paramedics arrived, she was dead of natural causes and her adult son needed help. Though there was no evidence of a crime, police assistance was needed. It came from the Community Assistance Group formed just over a year ago, where some police calls are made by two-person teams like the one consisting of Officer Neil Wolfe and social worker Julieta Alvarez.

* Daily Southtown | State police honor Orland Park Trooper Clay Carns in funeral procession: Illinois State Police honored and helped lay to rest one of their own in Orland Park Friday morning. Hundreds attended the private funeral service of State Trooper Clay Carns at Parkview Christian Church in Orland Park as well as the previous night’s visitation. A procession followed from the church to Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Alsip for Carns’ internment. “Today, and every day going forward, we honor Illinois State Police Trooper Clay Carns for his sacrifice, and the sacrifice made by his family,” State Police Director Brendan Kelly said in a news release Friday. ​

* Daily Herald | What’s the role of local police in feds’ mass deportations?: It’s “a common question we’ve answered plenty of times — a state law, the TRUST Act, prohibits local law enforcement from assisting ICE,” Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain explained. Likewise, “under both current Cook County ordinance and state law, the sheriff’s office is limited in its ability to perform federal duties,” Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart’s spokesman Matt Walberg said.

* Daily Herald | ‘Prepared for the worst’: Suburban immigrants brace for mass deportations: Blanca Ramirez, an Immigrant Solidarity DuPage organizer, said there is a lot of fear in the community, especially among families who’ve been in the United States for many years. “They’re worried, they’re anxious. They don’t know what’s going to happen,” added Dulce Ortiz, executive director of Mano a Mano Family Resource Center in Waukegan.

* Daily Herald | Elmhurst Hospital plans $100M project focused on cancer center, observation beds, more ORs: Endeavor Health has proposed a $100.8 million project to expand Elmhurst Hospital’s cancer center, add more surgical space and create a dedicated observation unit for patients requiring short-term monitoring. The plan involves a two-story expansion of the cancer center building and renovation of hospital spaces. The observation unit would contain 16 beds. The hospital also would add three new operating rooms with support facilities, plus four more labor and delivery rooms, according to an Endeavor Health spokesman.

* Tribune | River Forest family help plan funeral for longtime friend Jimmy Carter: Rick Jasculca has done work, off and on, for Jimmy Carter for nearly 50 years. And in the wake of the former president’s Dec. 29 death at age 100, Jasculca, a 77-year-old River Forest resident, had one more assignment. Jasculca and three of his four children helped to plan the state funeral for Carter. “He and Rosalynn were such an important part not only of my life, but our family’s life,” said Jasculca, a cofounder of the prominent Chicago strategic communications firm Jasculca Terman. “Three of my four kids, on a regular basis, did his Carter Center trips.”

*** Downstate ***

* Tribune | America’s oldest Black town is in Illinois — and it’s dying. But the fight has begun to save it: You may never have heard of Brooklyn, Illinois. You might not be aware it’s one of the country’s first Black settlements, or that it’s thought to be the first majority-Black town in America to incorporate and the oldest such town still in existence today. You also probably don’t know that it’s dying. Established in the early 1830s as a refuge for free and enslaved Black people and incorporated in 1873, Brooklyn is nestled on the eastern bank of the Mississippi River across from St. Louis. It was once a key outpost on the Underground Railroad and, later, a welcoming beacon for those fleeing the Jim Crow South.

* WCIA | Snow emergency declared in multiple Central IL cities, counties: On Saturday, the City of Springfield’s Office of Public Works declared a snow emergency for designated snow routes starting at 11 p.m. and ending at 11 p.m. on Monday. They are anticipating snowfall to exceed 6 inches.

*** National ***

* Crain’s | Jonathan Jackson mulling run for DNC chair: report: The son of civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson who is just ending his freshman term in the House told the outlet he was encouraged to run by fellow progressive members of the party within and without Congress, including California Rep. Ro Khanna, over the holiday break. Jackson said he could present his candidacy as a more progressive option for the committee. “There’s a new generation that wants to be heard,” he told Axios, adding that he will decide on whether or not to run by the end of this weekend.

* Crain’s | Rivian production falls 27% on parts shortage, but deliveries tick up: The EV startup reported a 27% drop in fourth-quarter production, building 12,727 vehicles compared with 17,541 in the year-earlier period, Rivian said Jan. 3. Deliveries rose 1.5% to 14,183 vehicles. Rivian doesn’t break out sales and production by model. The R1T starts at $71,700 with shipping, and the R1S starts at $77,700 with shipping.

* The Guardian | US newspapers are deleting old crime stories, offering subjects a ‘clean slate’: “In the old days, you put a story in the newspaper and it quickly, if not immediately, receded into memory,” said Chris Quinn, editor of Cleveland.com and the Plain Dealer newspaper. “But because of our [search engine] power, anything we write now about somebody is always front and center.” Quinn pioneered a “right-to-be-forgotten” experiment in 2018, motivated by the many inquiries he would receive from subjects describing the harms of past crime coverage and pleading for deletion. “People would say: ‘Your story is wrecking my life. I made a mistake, but … I’ve changed my life.’”

* NBC Chicago | Indiana deploys National Guard amid winter storm: According to a press release, more than 120 National Guardsmen will deploy beginning Sunday to help assist stranded motorists and respond to winter emergencies across the state. Holcomb’s office says the members of the Guard will remain active through at least Tuesday to help respond to the storm.

* The American Prospect | Jimmy Carter’s Economic Legacy: Carter’s legacy demands a more critical examination. His presidency, long dismissed as inconsequential, was in fact a pivotal turning point in American history, particularly for economic management. It marked the beginning of a fundamental shift away from the New Deal liberalism that had defined Democratic economic policy for decades, and toward the market-oriented framework that would come to characterize neoliberalism. This transformation not only laid the foundation for many of the challenges that continue to plague American politics but also reshaped the Democratic Party itself. Carter’s presidency, therefore, is not just a historical curiosity; it is a key moment in understanding the economic and political trajectory of the United States today.

* Sun-Times | When Facebook decides you are not a real person: “It’s traumatic; I’m grieving,” Feder said. “The fact that they could just take it away, just like that, without any human intervention, is just appalling to me.” The incident might not be worth airing in public, were it not a glimpse of the world we are all hurtling toward. Someday, we will not just get booted off of social media but admitted to — or rejected from — college without human eyes ever weighing credentials or reading essays. Medical procedures will be permitted, or denied, without an actual doctor glancing at a file.

* NPR | How influencers are impacting journalism: Summer Harlow is associate director of the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas at UT Austin. She created a class for, what she calls, newsfluencers. “Content Creators and Journalists: Redefining News and Credibility” attempts to provide such influencers the tools to ensure accuracy and to build trust in their work.

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