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Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Billy Strings

You’ll live a life of fear and dread
if you listen to the Grateful Dead

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. Center Square

The Texas House of Representatives has sued 33 House Democrats who absconded to Illinois to prevent a vote on Congressional redistricting efforts in the Lone Star State.

The lawsuit was filed in the Eighth Judicial Circuit Court in Adams County, Illinois. It asks the court to hold the Democrats in contempt and to domesticate Texas warrants, allowing for absconding Democrats to be arrested and brought back to Texas.

The lawsuit was filed by the Texas Office of Attorney General and Illinois state Sen. Jil Walker Tracy, R-Quincy.

“From day one, I have said that all options are on the table when it comes to making sure my colleagues who have fled the House return to fulfill their constitutional obligations,” House Speaker Dustin Burrows, R-Lubbock, said. Burrows signed civil arrest warrants for 56 House Democrats on Monday. Since then, eight Democrats have been present in the House. The majority of Democrats remain defiant, unmoved by threats of being arrested; 33 remain in the Chicago area.

* More from Democracy Docket

Paxton’s filing leans heavily on the U.S. Constitution’s Full Faith and Credit Clause, which generally requires states to recognize the public acts of other states.

“This court must give full faith and credit to warrants duly issued by the Texas House of Representatives that compel these civil servants to return to Texas and to their civic responsibilities,” the petition states.“They do not have the right to deny the voices and votes of other members by withholding their own.”

The Full Faith and Credit Clause applies most strongly to final court judgments, not to legislative attendance orders, and states can refuse enforcement if it violates their own laws or public policy. Illinois could reject the request on grounds that civilly arresting lawmakers over a political protest is incompatible with its protections for legislative independence.

The current legislative special session is set to end August 20 — giving Paxton less than two weeks to get the Democrats back on the House floor for a vote.

* Meanwhile, from the Sun-Times

A second bomb threat was cleared Friday at the St. Charles hotel and conference center where Texas Democrats are staying in an attempt to stop their Republican counterparts from redrawing congressional maps they say would give the GOP an edge in the 2026 midterm elections.

At 8:32 a.m. Friday, the St. Charles Police Department responded to a report of a second potential bomb threat at the Q Center hotel and convention complex, according to St. Charles police. After a sweep, no threat was found and all 70 guests of the hotel were unharmed.

Wednesday, police responded to a bomb threat at the complex around 7:15 a.m. that was also cleared.

* DHS Secretary Kristi Noem was in the Chicago suburbs today. The Tribune

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem used a visit to the Chicago area on Friday to criticize Illinois politicians, blasting Gov. JB Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson at a press conference over state policies that limit local cooperation with federal immigration authorities.

As about three dozen people protested outside, Noem spoke to the media at a Lombard field office, relaying oft-repeated talking points about immigration enforcement priorities for President Donald Trump, who came into office with sweeping promises to hit record-level arrests and deportations.

Though arrests and deportations have increased since Trump took office, the numbers have fallen short of the stated goals, and the administration has aired frustrations with so-called “Sanctuary Cities.” Earlier this week, the Justice Department placed Chicago, Cook County, and Illinois on its latest “sanctuary jurisdiction list,” as Attorney General Pam Bondi promised to continue pursuing litigation against the jurisdictions on the list. […]

Pritzker has repeatedly defended the “sanctuary” law known as the TRUST Act, which Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner signed in 2017, including at a Republican-led congressional hearing earlier this year.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WMBD | A new law could add more beavers and bison to Illinois: The Illinois law gives more tools for IDNR to balance its ecosystems. They could add more Beavers and Bison, who are keynote species that are known for keeping their environments healthier. Healthier environments could mean fewer floods, which could, in theory, save the state billions of dollars. Cynthia Kanner is the executive director for the Prairie State Conservation Coalition, a non-profit organization that assists conservation land trusts. She said when you restore land, you make it more nutritious for farmers and absorb more water.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Appeals Court Rules Serious CPD Discipline Hearings Must Take Place in Public: Chicago police officers accused of serious misconduct have the right to ask an arbitrator — and not the Chicago Police Board — to decide their fate, but those proceedings must take place in public, an Illinois Appeals Court ruled Friday. The ruling, which is likely to be appealed to the Illinois Supreme Court, endorses the effort backed by the city’s largest police union to upend the system used for 60 years to punish officers.

* Sun-Times | Top mayoral aide throws cold water on installing slot machines at O’Hare and Midway: A top aide to Mayor Brandon Johnson is trying to ground the idea of installing slot machines at O’Hare and Midway Airports for fear it would turn the aerial gateways to Chicago into a chintzy Las Vegas replica. Senior mayoral adviser Jason Lee said the last thing a booming O’Hare needs after a record-setting surge in summer travel is to follow the lead of McCarran Airport in Las Vegas, which has 1,300 slot machines distributed throughout the airport.

* Injustice Watch | ICE contractor locked an immigrant and her baby at an O’Hare hotel for five days: Rep. Delia Ramirez, D-Ill., called the false location listing “chilling” and likened the secretive hotel detention to a “kidnapping.” Illinois and Chicago have some of the nation’s strongest laws aimed at protecting immigrants like Galvis by prohibiting state and local agencies from cooperating with ICE. But her and Naythan’s detention at the Sonesta shows the limits of the state’s efforts to block ICE detention. The federal government can still use commercial facilities like hotel rooms to hold individuals and families in its custody. “Nothing that the states or local governments can do will stop ICE from carrying out its operations,” said Fred Tsao, senior policy counsel at Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights.

* Block Club | Trump Administration Drops Civil Rights Cases On Environmental Justice, Affordable Housing: One case centered around a 2018 complaint that aldermanic privilege allows alderpeople to block affordable housing from being built in white neighborhoods. The other stemmed from a 2020 environmental complaint — sparked by a troubled North Side scrapper’s plan to move its operations to the Southeast Side — that decades of city policies have pushed polluters into Black and Brown communities.

* Sun-Times | Secret DEA lab examines cocaine surging into Illinois and surrounding states: In a lab in an undisclosed location in downtown Chicago, a brick of cocaine awaits testing by Oliwia Nazaruk, a forensic chemist with the Drug Enforcement Administration. The sugary, compressed white cocaine is stamped with an “L.A.” logo. The plastic packaging that wraps the brick also has an L.A. label in blue-and-white Dodgers colors — likely a Mexican drug cartel’s trademark.

* Crain’s | Burnett’s CHA appointment delayed by federal revolving door rules: The Johnson administration has been looking into whether it would have to ask the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development for a waiver to appoint Burnett, who has been a staunch ally to the first-term mayor. That request might normally be routine, but could be complicated by a Trump administration that has engaged in legal battles with Chicago, Cook County and Illinois on multiple fronts. Johnson’s press office did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but senior adviser Jason Lee told the Chicago Sun-Times the administration is in “conversations with individuals at the highest level of HUD to try and understand their interpretation of certain regulations.” The Sun-Times first reported the reason for the delay.

* Sun-Times | Judge tosses lawsuit likening pro-Gaza expressway shutdown near O’Hare to ‘false imprisonment’: In her ruling Thursday, U.S. District Judge Mary Rowland wrote that Manhart’s lawsuit was “only a hair’s breadth away from calling Defendants terrorists and placing the loss of innocent lives at their feet.” Rowland also wrote that stopping the flow of traffic didn’t amount to false imprisonment, and that Manhart had other options for getting past the blockade. Other people stuck in traffic left their cars and walked to the airport, the judge noted.

* Crain’s | Bears reset board after stake sale at $8.8 billion value: Edward L. McCaskey is now listed on the seven-member board, according to the franchise’s website. The seat had been vacant since the death in February of his grandmother, Virginia McCaskey, at the age of 102. Edward McCaskey, who didn’t respond to a request for comment, is the son of board secretary Patrick McCaskey, according to public records.

* I’ve been really meaning to catch the Water Taxi


* Sun-Times | Nearly 1,000 immigrants celebrate naturalization ceremony in Chicago: ‘This is what America is about’: For Jocelynn Carey, who was part of the ceremony, the recent anti-immigration rhetoric was on her mind, saying it added to the emotions of the day. “To be somewhere with 1,000 people and receiving the message like, ‘No, you are welcome here,’” Carey said. “This is what America is about. We’re a nation of immigrants. And immigrants, they make America.”

* Block Club | A Blind Man’s Service Dog Was Stolen In Logan Square. He’s Asking For Neighbors’ Help To Find Him: Every day since June 5, Angel Santiago has stood in front of Tony’s Fresh Market in Logan Square, a green dog collar hanging around his neck, holding the same flyer and reciting the same speech to shoppers: “Missing dog. Please take a flyer and help me find Bam Bam.” Santiago, 58, who is legally blind and has glaucoma and Type 2 diabetes, is on a desperate search to find Bam Bam, his beloved 14-year-old dachshund. The dog was stolen from his backyard near Fullerton and Monticello avenues June 5 while in the yard on a potty break, Santiago said.

* Block Club | The Mangled History Of 16-Inch Softball Hands: Mallets, Swan Necks And Jersey Fingers: Chicago’s long history with 16-inch softball, a no-glove variant of the popular 12-inch game, is recorded in the mangled, deformed paws of its players. Each bent knuckle, crooked nail or smushed joint is treated like a war wound, a proud and painful reminder of the unique skill involved in fielding unusually large Clincher balls with bare hands. But who actually treats those wounds? Due to 16-inch softball’s propensity for digital deformation, a lesser-known yet important ad-hoc army of city hand specialists and orthopedic surgeons has become part and parcel of the distinctly Chicago sport, ensuring the normally minor but sometimes serious jams, dislocations, breaks and tears remain remnants of on-field battles rather than a threat to future ones.

* Block Club | There Is Not A Man Trapped Inside The Bean, So Please Stop Calling The Downtown Alderman: In recent days, videos of people calling for the release of “the man trapped in The Bean” have been shared thousands of times on TikTok and Instagram. The chaos started on July 31, when a group dressed all in black gathered near the Bean (the more familar moniker of the officially titled “Cloud Gate”) in Millennium Park. They held up signs calling for the release of “the man in the Bean.” The videos caused many to laugh — and others to become very confused. Ald. Brendan Reilly, whose 42nd ward is home to the Bean, said his office has been inundated with calls about a man trapped in the sculpture.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘Stop focusing on the past’: Mundelein won’t revise impact fees for Ivanhoe Village development now: In an open letter to the community, Mundelein Mayor Robin Meier this week quashed any hopes officials with two local school districts may have of increasing the amount of cash they’ll receive from the company behind the massive Ivanhoe Village residential and commercial development. “We have to stop focusing on the past and we cannot keep dividing our community with controversy,” Meier wrote on the village website. “We need to understand that the impact fee approval (process) has been completed, approved and doesn’t need to be reopened.”

* Crain’s | Northwestern’s Tim Franklin stepping down from Local News Initiative he helped launch: Tim Franklin, the well-known voice of local news research and advocacy, is stepping down as director of the Medill Local News Initiative at Northwestern University in September. The initiative, spearheaded by Franklin in April 2018, is instrumental in providing research on local news outlets and closures across the country, as well as offering sustainable strategies to strengthen them. Franklin, 65, is stepping down as part of a phased retirement. He will oversee the department’s annual State of Local News Report through the spring and will continue serving as the John M. Mutz Chair in Local News at the Medill School of Journalism for at least another year, Franklin told Crain’s.

* NBC Chicago | 13 suburban DMVs will now offer walk-in hours on Saturdays. Here’s what you can do: The Illinois Secretary of State’s office announced Thursday it will start offering expanded walk-in hours on Saturdays in numerous suburbs “to help reduce weekday wait times and increase the number of residents the DMV can serve in August.”Beginning Aug. 9, 13 locations will serve walk-in customers from 7:30 a.m. to 12 p.m.

* Daily Southtown | Orland Park OKs tax incentive for Original Pancake House, Egg Harbor: The inducement agreements are meant to help the businesses, both focused on a breakfast-lunch menu, defray the costs of opening, although what is paid to the restaurants is based on how well they perform. Village trustees approved agreements this week that will split sales tax revenue, for up to 10 years, to The Original Pancake House and Egg Harbor.

*** Downstate ***

* Illinois Times | Massey Commission nears end, prepares recommendations: Work groups are submitting their final recommendations to the full commission by next month, with the commission’s full report due by Oct. 1. Earlier this week, the Law Enforcement Hiring, Training, Wellness and Cultural Competency work group deliberated over the recommendations to offer up to the full commission, which meets Aug. 11. “Despite the SAFE-T Act’s reforms, there are gaps in the enforcement of the decertification process, and we heard that through multiple platforms,” Sunshine Clemons, founder of Black Lives Matter Springfield, said at the Aug. 4 work group meeting. “We want to focus on that if we’re going prepare to talk to legislators about it in September.”

* The Alton Telegraph | Alton helicopter-barge crash update: River reopens as probes start: The Missouri State Highway Patrol immediately closed the Clark Bridge after the helicopter crash, but that was reopened within two hours of the crash. The National Great Rivers Research and Education Center was evacuated Thursday morning as a result of the helicopter crash and was closed for the remainder of Thursday.

* WCIA | Lake Mattoon beach closed after algal bloom signs still present, city says: Just days after being reopened, Lake Mattoon is closed to swimming after city officials said there are still signs of a harmful algal bloom in the water. The beach was closed for three weeks after that bloom wreaked havoc on the city’s water supply, resulting in a do not drink order. Even after the order was lifted on July 18, the lake remained closed pending treatment of the water, which was delayed by low levels of oxygen in the water.

* WCIA | Deficit of over $400K projected in GCMS school district’s proposed budget: WCIA’s partners with the Ford County Chronicle reported that with projected expenditures of $18.87 million and revenues of $18.46 million, the overall deficit is projected to be $413,200. The budget also anticipates ending the fiscal year on June 30, 2026, with a fund balance of more than $11 million. […] Additionally, Superintendent Jeremy Darnell said after Wednesday’s board meeting that the operations and maintenance fund, with expenditures of $2.97 million compared with expenditures of $2.28 million, is expected to run the largest deficit. This will come as a result of $3.1 million in planned upgrades to outdoor recreational spaces next summer.

* Illinois Times | City Council set to approve third round of cannabis grants: A $100,000 grant from the city’s cannabis grant program, expected to be approved at the Aug. 6 City Council meeting, would help fund what McNeil estimated will be a $400,000 to $500,000 project to renovate the former office of Dr. Edwin Lee at 501 S. 13th St. The council is expected to vote to authorize the city to work out agreements with McNeil’s business, Dr. Edwin Lee Historical Building Inc., and four other minority-owned east side businesses that could receive $406,000 in total grants.

* 25News Now | Numerous Central Illinois school districts receiving evidence-based funding: round 20 school districts and regional offices of education in Central Illinois are getting “significant” new evidence-based funding. State Sen. Dave Koehler (D-Peoria) said the FY2026 budget invested $300 million in new funding through evidence-based funding.

* BND | Opponents, supporters of solar farm at Belleville cemetery face off at meeting: “It looks like it’s going to court,” said opponent Jesse Berger, who had warned earlier that the city was opening itself up to legal challenges if it proceeded with the controversial project. “It may be the only way to get it stopped. (Officials) aren’t backing down,” he said. About 60 people gathered on Thursday evening at the Southwestern Illinois Justice and Workplace Development Campus. The city had been required to hold the meeting under guidelines of a state program that’s providing financial incentives for the project.

* WTVO | Roscoe Village board votes to paint over existing mural: One trustee said he hopes to replace the mural with something the community can contribute to. “We wanna be proud of what the village does, nothing against what’s up there now, we just think it’s time for a change, something a little more vibrant, hopefully, if the board okays this, we’ll actually ask the public for help this time around,” said Trustee Mike Wright. The mural, painted by Thomas Agran in 2022, depicts an aerial view of the Pecatonica River as it flows into the Rock River. When the mural was commissioned, Roscoe officials hoped that community sponsors would cover half the cost. No donations were made, so the village had to cover all of the costs.

*** National ***

* WaPo | The price increases that should cause Americans more alarm: Meanwhile, since 1999, health insurance premiums for people with employer-provided coverage have more than quadrupled. From 2023 to 2024 alone, they rose more than 6 percent for both individuals and family coverage — a steeper increase than that of wages and overall inflation. For many people who have the kind of insurance plans created by the Affordable Care Act (because they work for small companies or insure themselves), rates have probably risen even more drastically. In this market, state regulators scrutinize insurers’ proposed rate increases, but only if they exceed 15 percent.

* Crain’s | United’s tech outage shows breaking up with mainframes is still hard to do: One of the first things CEO Scott Kirby pointed out when he joined United in 2016 was its outdated technology. The airline has been upgrading its technology for years, investing heavily in mobile apps for customers and employees alike, which run on newer systems built around the mainframe platform at the core of its operations. United also has been migrating data and software from its own computers to the “cloud,” or hardware maintained by vendors such as Amazon Web Services. Last year, Chief Financial Officer Mike Leskinen told analysts the airline had moved “70%, 80%, 90% to the cloud, but we still have to maintain that mainframe with 10% or 20% of the systems on that — on that mainframe.”

* NYT | Trump Wants U.C.L.A. to Pay $1 Billion to Restore Its Research Funding: The proposal calls for the university to make a $1 billion payment to the U.S. government and to contribute $172 million to a claims fund that would compensate victims of civil rights violations. If U.C.L.A. accedes to the demand, it would be the largest payout — by far — of any university that has so far reached a deal with the White House. Columbia University agreed to pay $221 million in connection with its settlement with the government, and Brown University pledged to spend $50 million with state work force programs.

* NAFSA | U.S. Economy Could Suffer a $7 Billion Loss from Precipitous Drop in International Students: Preliminary projections by NAFSA: Association of International Educators and JB International reveal that recent actions such as visa bans and disruptions in visa interviews and processing could have a devastating effect on U.S. local economies. An analysis of SEVIS and State Department data predicts a potential 30–40 percent decline in new international student enrollment, contributing to a 15 percent drop in overall enrollment this fall. Such an outcome would deprive local economies of $7 billion in spending and more than 60,000 jobs.

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Question of the day

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Turn it up!…


* The Question: Your favorite Illinois State Fair memory?

  6 Comments      


Illinois rolls out $4 million in tax credits to fuel local news, but 78 percent of new reporter credits go unclaimed

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* John Volk for the Medill Local News Initiative

Forty Illinois local news entities operating 120 outlets are receiving $4 million in state tax credits under a new law designed to encourage the retention and hiring of journalists, according to documents released this week. […]

They span major legacy organizations, small community newspapers, digital start-ups and public broadcasters. Most of the funding went to organizations outside the Chicago metro area. Nonprofit outlets received 30% of the money. The vast majority of news organizations in Illinois are for-profit. […]

So far in Illinois, 61 entities have applied for funding with 49 of those approved. Five applicants had their applications denied and seven more applications remain under review. The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity did not immediately provide a response to written questions about who was denied and why.

* Gannett, which runs 11 daily papers in western and central Illinois, and Alden Global Capital, owner of the Chicago Tribune, didn’t make the list



* Back to LNI

The legislation attempted to cap the amount of funding to organizations backed by private funds like Gannett and Alden. One such company, Lee Enterprises, still managed to be the largest recipient of Illinois’ tax credits at $375,000 across applications it submitted for four newspapers in the state.

Earlier this summer, Illinois became the first state in the nation to distribute money directly to local news organizations for employing journalists. The Illinois law is the latest step in the growing movement of state and local governments using legislation to intervene in the local news crisis, even as the federal government clawed back $1.1 billion in funding for public broadcasting last month. Twenty-two states and municipalities have passed or are considering bills to support local news, according to Rebuild Local News. […]

Illinois’ legislation, passed in May 2024, makes available $25 million over five years for local news organizations that hire and retain journalists in the form of refundable tax credits. In its first year, $5 million is available in tax credits broken into two buckets, with $4 million earmarked for retaining journalists and the remaining $1 million for newsrooms that add new journalists. A little over $1 million remains available in 2025, with 78% of the credits for expanding newsrooms unclaimed.

The credits are distributed on a first-come, first-serve basis. To receive funding, outlets must apply and demonstrate eligibility based on certain criteria, including consistent publication of original local content and employment of journalists.

* Despite $1 million available to support hiring new reporters, most grant recipients focused on subsidizing their newsrooms rather than adding staff.…

* Related…

    * AP | Abrupt Closure of Illinois-Based Newspaper Chain Leaves Dozens of Communities Without a News Source: Dozens of communities in the Midwest and West learned Thursday they had lost their newspapers after an Illinois-based publisher announced it would abruptly close because of financial problems. News Media Corp., which owns local newspapers across five states, said it will close 14 operations in Wyoming, seven in Illinois, five in Arizona, four in South Dakota and one in Nebraska.

    * WTVO | Byron Allen Media sells WREX and 9 other stations to WIFR parent company, Gray Media: Byron Allen Media plans to sell 10 local TV stations, including WREX in Rockford, to Gray Media, which owns CBS affiliate WIFR. According to Variety, the deal is expected to close later this year, subject to regulatory approval. In a press release, Gray said it hopes to “strengthen the company’s presence in the seven other markets by creating new duopolies that would allow Gray to preserve and deepen public service to their communities with expanded local news, local weather, and local sports programming.”

    * Crain’s | Illinois NPR and PBS stations see donations surge after federal funding blow: Chicago NPR affiliate WBEZ-FM/91.5 has raised $984,000 from 4,788 supporters since July 18, when the rescission package was approved, according to Victor Lim, vice president of marketing and communications at Chicago Public Media, which owns WBEZ. PBS member station WTVP-TV/Channel 47 in Peoria has raised $40,000 since mid-July and is expecting additional matching funds, according to Jenn Gordon, the station’s president and CEO.

    * WaPo | Can NPR do without federal funding? Its CEO says she’s optimistic: NPR is perhaps better positioned for a new era without federal funding than PBS, which relies on taxpayers for about 15 percent of its annual budget. By contrast, NPR only gets about 1 percent. But many of its member stations, especially those in rural America, are far more dependent on federal funding, creating a ripple effect that Maher said greatly amplifies the cuts’ impact on the network itself. Maher, the bright-eyed 42-year-old CEO of NPR joined the public radio giant in March 2024 not from a local member station but rather as an outsider to the system: She was previously the chief executive of the nonprofit Wikimedia Foundation, which oversees the online encyclopedia Wikipedia. But understanding — and working with those stations — is key to any NPR chief’s mission; and never more so than now.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition (Updated)

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Today’s must-read, and a few other important points

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Jared Rutecki at WTTW

Medicaid cuts enacted by a sweeping federal rescission bill are sounding alarms for Illinois health professionals, who warn the move could gut insurance coverage, strain already overburdened hospitals and deepen access issues in rural Illinois and across the state.

Reductions to Medicaid, a public health insurance program for families and individuals with low incomes and limited resources, are expected to affect services and facilities across the state. Medicaid benefits are often used by middle-class families needing long-term or specialty care. The reduced budget is expected to impact rural and safety net hospitals. […]

The problems would only grow if the cuts lead to hospital closures.

Recent figures estimate 330,000 Illinois residents could lose health coverage under the plan. Many who spoke with WTTW News said the law will lead more uninsured patients to seek emergency care, often with advanced conditions. […]

The Congressional Budget Office identified a drop of more than $1 trillion in health care spending from the law referred to as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. CBO, which provides nonpartisan information to Congress, projected the bill would increase the number of people without insurance by 10 million in 2034, as well as increase the budget deficit by $3.4 trillion.

The story is far more comprehensive than this snippet would indicate, so click here and read the rest.

* Three other points not mentioned:

1) While many of the Medicaid cuts don’t officially take effect until shortly after the 2026 election, most hospitals cannot wait until the deadline to take defensive action. They are almost all rather large businesses (often the biggest employers in Downstate cities). Large businesses cannot turn on a dime. So, as I told subscribers last month, we can expect layoffs (which hospital leaders say are already happening) and closures ahead of the election.

2) Illinois submitted a plan late last year to increase its hospital assessment by a billion dollars, which will net the facilities almost $1.5 billion. If that assessment is not approved by the feds, we’re gonna see a big problem really soon. The plan also results in a $90 million “rake” for Illinois’ General Funds budget. A new hole is not something the Pritzker administration needs.

3) That CBO estimate of a $1 trillion cut to health care spending will undercut one of the country’s only economic bright spots, according to the latest jobs report

The U.S. labor market’s reliance on healthcare for job creation hit eye-catching levels last month.

Though the overall market cooled in July, healthcare remained a bright spot by accounting for the majority of job gains, according to new data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The industry created 55,400 of the 73,000 jobs across all sectors, representing 76% of job growth in the country. Healthcare’s total surpassed the 39,200 jobs it added in June and was above its average monthly gain of 42,000 jobs over the past 12 months.

Ambulatory health care services drove the bulk of the industry’s growth with 33,600 jobs added, while hospitals provided 16,000 and nursing and residential care facilities contributed 5,800.

  23 Comments      


Consumers Are Getting Slammed With Higher Electric Rates – Don’t Add Fuel To The Fire With ROFR

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois consumers are feeling the heat, both from triple-digit temperatures and soaring electricity bills. Ameren customers are seeing 18–22% rate hikes. ComEd has customers paying as much as triple-digit increases.

And it’s going to get worse. In July, the PJM Capacity Auction hit another record high - a 22% increase on top of the record highs everyone just started paying. This will already lead to further rate increases next year!

As frustration heats up, lawmakers must choose: support competition that drives prices down or fan the flames of electricity inflation with “Right of First Refusal” (ROFR) legislation.

ROFR kills competition and boosts prices by giving incumbent utilities exclusive rights to build transmission lines. It’s so anti-competitive that both presidents - Biden and Trump - opposed it in 2020 and 2023.

As the ICC has said, “The Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) believes that competition among transmission developers spurs innovative results and helps control costs.”

ROFR would send electricity prices even higher. Springfield should focus on long-term strategies to lower electricity bills, not raise them. As ROFR may resurface this fall, legislators should reject it and stand up for cost-cutting competition that benefits consumers.

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Sen. Martwick defends his pension bill, says mayor and governor agreed

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Forgotten in all the talk about the new pension change for Chicago first responders is this Tribune story from June

Lead sponsor Sen. Robert Martwick, a Chicago Democrat, told the Tribune the tweaks were a negotiated fix agreed to by Mayor Brandon Johnson and Gov. JB Pritzker that was promised to both bring parity between Chicago and downstate first responders and help bridge a shortfall in benefits for employees hired after 2010. […]

Dave Sullivan, a lobbyist for the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7, wrote in the union’s monthly newsletter that several years ago Pritzker called “personally to assure me that he would make Tier 2 parity … a reality,” and he looked forward to the governor’s signature. […]

Martwick said Johnson “understood a promise was made. I give him credit” for living up to it. “He continues to show — unlike so many of his predecessors — a willingness to solve the problem and consistency in terms of living up to those steps” to do so.

* I reached out to Sen. Martwick yesterday. His full response…

Rich,

Much hyperbole has been written about the recent Chicago police and fire pension legislation signed by Gov. Pritzker. I thought I’d send a quick note to help clear up the misinformation and provide some context.

    1. Tier 2 pension benefits for public sector employees do not meet the federal requirements under the “safe harbor” provision. This is universally accepted as fact.
    2. Failure to meet safe harbor could lead to employers being on the hook for not only the pension benefit promised, but also having to provide full social security benefits for those employees, without the benefit of having ever paid into the system. This would be catastrophically expensive. As such, it is also universally accepted that the wise course it to adjust the benefits to satisfy the law before we are in violation.
    3. In 2019, tier 2 benefits for every police officer and firefighter (except Chicago) were improved as part of the deal consolidating their investments. The benefit changes were heavily negotiated and designed to satisfy safe harbor so as to prevent the huge cost associated with failure. At the time, the same benefits were promised to Chicago police and fire.
    4. Actuarial analyses of this benefit change indicate that while this benefit change will “by and large” satisfy safe harbor, there still exists limited circumstances where certain employees will still fail. As such these actuaries suggest that limited benefit improvements may still be necessary in the future.
    5. The changes recently passed to Chicago police and fire pensions are the exact same benefits granted to first responders across the state. This means that they do nothing more than solve the tier 2 problem.

Many have opined recently about this. Let me be very clear. Any increase in benefits will put strain on a city whose finances are already problematic and whose pension systems are already woefully underfunded. There is no way to avoid that fact, but that is the worst reason for inaction. The notion that we should delay the fix is to suggest that ignoring the problem will somehow make it go away.

The fact is that this debt and obligation to pay it exists whether we passed this legislation or not. Passing it only makes it transparent and forces everyone in government to acknowledge it and devise a plan to pay for it.

In all the years that I have worked on pensions I have learned a few absolute truths. First, every attempt to fix pensions costs money and so it is never convenient to do any fix “today.” However if you don’t fix it today it will be exponentially more expensive and harder to accomplish tomorrow and again, even harder the day after. In the 80s and 90s Paul Vallas skipped pension payment after pension payment (either for the city when he was budget director or at CPS when he was CEO), causing the massive accumulation of debt Chicago suffers with today. We should never ever seek to repeat that irresponsible decision making. Governor Pritzker made not only the right decision, but unequivocally the most financially responsible decision when he signed this bill. Remember, this change was coming one way or another. As such, acknowledging it sooner means that the city can pay for it now instead of later, and that always provides the best protection for our valued first responders at the lowest possible cost to the taxpayer. I dare anyone to prove me wrong.

One last caveat. S&P recently opined negatively about this, suggesting this legislation conferred benefits more than the bare minimum needed to solve the tier 2 problem. Again, this is divorced from the realities of democratic governance. As I stated previously, this change is not perfect. It solves the problem, but still might need further adjustment, meaning it actually falls short in some instances. Clearly, it is not excessively over generous. Additionally, it was heavily negotiated with all stakeholders. S&P suggesting that only the bare minimum is acceptable is folly. Negotiations produce the best outcome achievable, and this bill does exactly that. I am confounded that an institution that preaches financial responsibility would suggest that continued debt accumulation that makes any solution even more expensive would be better than addressing the problem in a way that at worst is only slightly less than “ideal.”

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Abuse rates are higher at nursing homes with more mental illness. APM Research Lab

In the wee hours of the morning, less than 24 hours after his arrival at [North Aurora Care Center], V.R. allegedly groped a resident with Down syndrome. He also tried to get into bed with another resident and entered the room of a third woman, according to inspection reports. Nurses on duty at the time did not find out about the alleged abuse until residents told them the next morning. […]

Illinois passed a law in 2010 requiring the state’s health department to establish a certification program. To be certified, a nursing home would need to hire specialized staff and provide specific training before accepting even one resident with a serious mental illness.

But the state has no record of North Aurora Care Center being certified, even though roughly 70% of its residents were there primarily due to mental illness as of late 2023. Indeed, the Illinois Department of Public Health has no record of any nursing home carrying such a certification — even though some 600 facilities in the state had at least one resident with a serious mental illness. The law directed the department to establish a certification program by the beginning of 2011, but nearly 15 years later it still has not done so.

The Illinois Department of Public Health declined to explain why or comment for this story.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Subscribers know more. Daily Herald | Rep. Amy Grant of Wheaton to step aside after current term: Grant won’t seek reelection and plans to bow out in 2027. The decision to call it a political career comes with “both a measure of satisfaction and many mixed emotions,” Grant said in a retirement announcement. Grant served six years on the county board and then won four elections to the Illinois House.

* Crain’s | Illinois NPR and PBS stations see donations surge after federal funding blow: Chicago NPR affiliate WBEZ-FM/91.5 has raised $984,000 from 4,788 supporters since July 18, when the rescission package was approved, according to Victor Lim, vice president of marketing and communications at Chicago Public Media, which owns WBEZ. PBS member station WTVP-TV/Channel 47 in Peoria has raised $40,000 since mid-July and is expecting additional matching funds, according to Jenn Gordon, the station’s president and CEO.

*** Statewide ***

* South Side Weekly | ‘We Need Help’: Local Organizations Step Up as Undocumented Immigrants Lose State Health Coverage: She is one of over 30,000 undocumented immigrants that lost health coverage as Illinois ended its Health Benefits for Immigrant Adults (HBIA) program July 1. For the past three years, the program provided healthcare to immigrants without legal status between the ages of 42 and 64, covering doctor and hospital care, lab tests, therapy and mental health services. Advocates and immigrants said the program was critical for the community, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic.

* Shaw Local | Once a rarity, girls wrestling now flourishing across Illinois: It’s not just talk. The numbers reflect that girls’ high school wrestling is the fastest-growing sport in Illinois. In the 2023-24 season, there were an estimated 2,400 girls wrestlers in the state, more than double the number in its inaugural sanctioned season. 350 schools either have a girls wrestling team or at least one girls wrestler competing. “It’s one of the most exciting times that not just girls wrestling has seen but that the sport has seen,” Batavia coach Scott Bayer said. “For a long time, the sport of wrestling cut itself off to 50% of the population, and what we’re seeing right now is it’s catching on at an explosive rate.

* Daily Herald | Krishnamoorthi leading investigation into license plate readers: Krishnamoorthi, the ranking member of the Oversight Subcommittee on Health Care and Financial Services, announced Thursday he and California Rep. Robert Garcia have launched a formal investigation into Atlanta-based Flock Group Inc. Both have written a letter to Flock Safety founder and CEO Garrett Langley outlining their concerns. They want a full accounting of all National Lookup searches involving the terms “abortion,” “ICE,” or “CBP”; contracts or communications between Flock and Immigration and Customs Enforcement; and documentation of any action taken to address misuse.

*** Statehouse News ***

* 21st Show | Why is Illinois’ transfer of Shabbona Lake State Park to the Prairie Band Potawatomi tribe significant?: Last year, the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation made history when it became the first federally recognized Native American nation in Illinois since the mid-1800’s. The tribe’s homelands are in the Great Lakes region, but many of its members were forced off that land. For generations, the nation has argued that some of the land in Northern Illinois was illegally sold to white settlers. Nowadays, the nation is based in Kansas. But over the years, it’s been slowly buying back parts of its original reservation in Illinois. Earlier this year, Governor JB Pritzker signed a law to transfer ownership of Shabbona Lake State Park to the tribe. A member of the Prairie Band tribal council disccusses the history of the tribe, its connection to Illinois and what this move means for the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Mayor may seek broader power if Springfield won’t let city pursue ‘progressive revenue,’ top aide says: “If there’s no viable option, but there is momentum on giving Chicago more home rule authority, sure, we would be willing to take that on and do what’s necessary for the people of Chicago,” senior mayoral adviser Jason Lee told the Sun-Times. “If for whatever reason they say, ‘Look, as much as we believe these are good ideas, we just can’t execute them,’ then we can say, ‘All right, well, will you let us do it?’”

* WTTW | Former Ald. Walter Burnett Could Collect $121K Annual City Pension While Earning $311K as CHA Head, Records Show: Former Ald. Walter Burnett (27th Ward) will collect an annual city taxpayer-funded pension of $120,608 — and could also earn more than $310,000 at the same time as head of the Chicago Housing Authority, according to records obtained by WTTW News. Burnett, who represented parts of the West Side and the West Loop for 30 years on the Chicago City Council, retired July 31. During 2024, his final full year as an alderperson, Burnett earned $145,974, and accepted a 4.1% raise for 2025, bumping his final annual salary to $152,016, records show.

* WBEZ | Many home care workers are immigrants. Now, some are afraid to go to work: Immigrants make up a disproportionate share of home health care aides. In the Chicago metro area, 65% of the 24,000 people who worked for home care agencies in 2024 were not citizens, according to a WBEZ/Sun-Times analysis of U.S. Census data. Six months into President Donald Trump’s crackdown on immigration, it’s not yet clear how deeply these workers have been hit by his efforts. But there are signs in Chicago that the changes in immigration policy could be affecting aides, caregivers and the people who rely on them.

* Sun-Times | All Chicago police misconduct cases could be heard in secret if court sides with union: Most officers accused in these cases are already opting to skip the Chicago Police Board, which holds public hearings, and instead go to arbitration, a process that has historically been favorable to the police. As it stands, officers accused of lesser misconduct already can make their case out of public view. The appellate court ruling is expected Friday, but could be quickly appealed to the state Supreme Court.

* Sun-Times | A young transgender bus driver thought her CTA job was the answer: But in her seven months driving North Side bus routes, she found an environment that was not inclusive or supportive even as the CTA specifically includes gender identity in its anti-discrimination policy, the Chicago Sun-Times found after reviewing her hundred pages of records and interviewing family and friends. Supervisors and colleagues regularly misgendered her, including on work documents. A boxy, mannish uniform put her ill at ease and confused riders into calling her “sir.” She knew no other trans coworkers. And it’s not clear she had help from her union. […] Ava died by suicide. She was 27.

* Sun-Times | Founders of Chicago’s premier AIDS unit gleam over decades of progress, as Trump cripples research: After witnessing tragedy after tragedy as the disease ravaged Chicago’s gay community in nearby Boystown, they are now living what Blatt calls a “dream come true” — a world where an AIDS diagnosis is no longer a death sentence. […] It took more than a decade of medical research and activist pressure before the tide of suffering caused by the crisis began to recede, slowly ushering in a new era of improving treatments and longer lives for patients with the virus. But in recent months, the Trump administration has targeted access to health care and the LGBTQ+ community and cut a $258 million program seeking to develop an HIV vaccine.

* Tribune | Concerns swirl about potential closure of Weiss hospital, which will lose Medicare funding this weekend: Worries about closure follow news last month that the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services planned to terminate Weiss from the Medicare program Aug. 9, which is this Saturday. The federal agency issued a public notice, at the time, saying that the Uptown hospital would lose its ability to participate in Medicare because it was out of compliance with rules related to nursing services, physical environment and emergency services. The notice did not elaborate on specific problems, but it came after the Illinois Department of Public Health conducted an on-site investigation at the hospital in June in response to complaints of high temperatures after air conditioning equipment at the facility failed, according to a state health department memo obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request.

* Tribune | Angry with DHS, protesters disrupt job fair at Congress Plaza Hotel: Thursday’s protest exemplified the frustration many Americans expressed towards the Trump administration’s immigration policies, but in doing so, it clashed with Chicagoans searching for jobs. “We’re hoping to make this space as inhospitable (for Customs and Border Protection) as possible,” said Johnny, 33, a protester from Chicago who asked that his last name not be used. “It seems like it’s working.”

* WGN | Remembering Ofc. Ella French: Chicago street renamed in her honor: The street in front of the criminal courthouse will now be known as Honorary Officer Ella French Way. “The moment is not just about a street sign. It’s about a life of service, courage and deep compassion. ” Ella was just 29 years old when she was shot and killed in the line of duty on Aug. 7, 2021.

* Block Club | Chicago River Swim Returns For The First Time In Nearly A Century: The event — which was approved by the city after officials denied it a permit last year — takes place Sept. 21 and will feature 500 qualified swimmers navigating a one or two mile course through a stretch of the river Downtown, organizers announced Thursday. The event is set to begin at the Dearborn Street Bridge and end near the Clark Street Bridge, followed by a festival along the Riverwalk with events for Chicagoans of all ages. “The return of the Chicago River Swim marks a major victory for our city — a testament to decades of hard work revitalizing our river,” Mayor Brandon Johnson said in a statement.

* WGN | Thousands of rubber ducks race for a cause in the annual Chicago Ducky Derby downtown: Participants who purchased a duck for $10 looked on as the mass of rubber waterfowl made its way down the river and a handful of lucky donors whose ducks crossed the finish line first will be awarded one of three available prizes, including a Chevy Trailblazer, a $2,500 Cash Prize and tickets to the Cub’s W Club Chicago.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | County prosecutors’ union bid should get tossed out, judge finds: A decades-old Illinois Supreme Court decision bars Cook County prosecutors from unionizing, an administrative law judge for the state’s labor board found Wednesday. A bid from the International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 700 to represent nearly 700 assistant state’s attorneys should therefore get tossed out, the judge, Michelle N. Owen, found. “The petition is clearly inappropriate,” she wrote.

* Lake County News-Sun | Illinois Beach State Park-area officials reissue call for help; ‘We have people dying’: State Sen. Mary Edly-Allen, D-Libertyville, who represents the area, said funding has been set aside to provide that support, but is tangled up in state bureaucracy, although she has meetings scheduled with decision-makers on the issue. Area fire departments, including Zion, Winthrop Harbor and Beach Park, say they’ve seen an increase in water-related calls since the completion of a $73 million beach restoration at Illinois Beach State Park. In June, the drowning of a 20-year-old reignited calls for federal or state financial assistance, which only got louder with the July drowning of a 14-year-old.

* Daily Southtown | Despite lawsuit settlements and drop in security detail, Dolton budget forecasts increased spending: Total revenue for the budget year — fiscal 2026 which will end April 30 — is projected to be $26.8 million compared with $24.2 million in last year’s budget, according to the proposal. Revenue from property taxes, sales taxes and other sources are expected to be $13.3 million in fiscal 2026 versus $12.5 million in fiscal 2025. Fiscal 2026 revenue includes a $2 million bond sale, part of which is used to pay for garbage collection.

* Tribune | Hollywood Joliet unveils new $185 million casino ahead of Monday opening: Pending final Gaming Board approval, the new $185 million Hollywood Casino Joliet is planning to open its doors Monday in the Rock Run Collection, a sprawling 310-acre mixed-use development taking shape next to the busy Interstate 80 and Interstate 55 interchange. The massive 189,000-square-foot casino complex features 1,000 slots, 43 table games, a new retail sportsbook, a 10,000-square-foot event center and celebrity chef restaurants, ushering in a new era of gaming in the southwest suburbs.

* Daily Herald | ‘Salesman of hope’: How former car salesman became director of Batavia workshop for disabled: Valley Sheltered Workshop has been a direct beneficiary. After he explained to his priest and wife about his desire to move on, a text soon came from the workshop board asking if he was interested in an executive director role they were creating. Divine intervention, one might say, made his answer of “yes” and eventual hiring seem natural. Nearly four years later, Saltijeral has kept the workshop at 325 Main St. moving forward for its 60th anniversary in May of 2026, but also is adding his vision for workshop participants to be able to do more in their lives.

*** Downstate ***

* Prison Writers | The Inside Story of East Moline Correctional Center: I knew the first day I arrived that this prison had serious health code issues. I noticed on the receiving wing that a lot of cells were boarded up and pad-locked. Upon further inquisition, I found out that there was an overwhelming presence of Black Mold in them, as well as in the showers. A lot of the incarcerated people were complaining of respiratory issues and other health concerns that they believed were linked to the mold. Mop buckets were placed strategically around the leaky wing to catch the falling water, massive puddles pooled on the floor in our living and recreational areas. I could not fathom how this had not been addressed, I soon found out that things were drastically worse.

* WTVO | Ogle, Lee County’s communities blindsided by sudden closure of newspapers: News Media Corporation has unexpectedly ceased operations, leaving several areas, including Ogle and Lee Counties, without access to local newspapers. The corporation cited financial challenges, significant economic downturn in the industry, revenue losses and increased expenses as just some of the reasons for its closure, according to a press release.

* BND | Fatal helicopter crash on Mississippi River kills two Ameren contractors: It was a Hughes 369D, which is a type of light utility helicopter, according to the National Transportation Safety Board. NTSB confirmed that it is investigating the crash in a Thursday afternoon statement. St. Louis media reported that the helicopter was being used to transport crews performing work on the power lines. They were contractors for Ameren who were repairing and replacing tower lighting and marker balls, which make the wires visible to aircraft pilots.

* WGEM | Quincy Spirit Halloween reopens for the season: Quincy’s Spirit Halloween reopened this week in preparation for spooky season. The Quincy location opened on Wednesday along with over a hundred other Spirit Halloween locations across the country.

* WSIL | Businesses in Carbondale are ready for SIU Students to return: Project Human X, which is a community art center, studio & gallery, is one of the businesses ready to welcome back students. They are located right down the street from SIU on South University Avenue. Marquez Scoggin is one of the co-founders of PHX and an alumnus of SIU. He says they get a lot of business during the school year from students stopping by to make art and meet new people. “When they get done with class, they can come here and de-stress and make some art, connect with new people, and make new friends,” Scoggin said.

*** National ***

* AP | EPA cancels $7 billion Biden-era grant program to boost solar energy: The funding, part of the Biden-era’s Solar for All program, was awarded to 60 recipients including states, tribes and regions for investments such as rooftop solar and community solar gardens. Solar, a renewable energy, is widely regarded as a way to introduce cleaner power onto the electrical grid and lower energy bills for American consumers.

* AP | Judge orders temporary halt to construction at Florida’s ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ detention center: The facility was quickly built two months ago at a lightly used, single-runway training airport and can hold up to 3,000 detainees in temporary tent structures. The site was continuing to be built out, but the order by U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams temporarily bars the installation of any new industrial-style lighting, as well as any paving, filling, excavating or fencing. The order also prohibits any other site expansion, including placing or erecting any additional buildings, tents, dormitories or other residential or administrative facilities.

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Open thread

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Wake up with Jesse Welles singing about summer by a creek

What’s up?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Aug 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Aug 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Politico

NEW POLL: The Illinois Policy Institute is out with its Lincoln Poll results that show voters at this moment care most about high taxes, state governance, the economy and crime. That’s all predictable. What might surprise is a statistic about Gov. JB Pritzker’s favorability. The poll shows 47.2 view him favorably, and 50.2 percent rank him unfavorably — the first time the governor’s been underwater on that question in this poll, which is conducted quarterly. Details in the cross tabs.

M3 Strategies conducted the survey. The group leans right as does the Illinois Policy Institute. But the cross tabs show that of the 752 people polled, 54 percent were Democrats and 39 percent were Republicans. The poll was conducted July 15 through 18 and has a margin of error of plus-or-minus 3.57 percent. Respondents were “randomly selected from a pool of individuals who are likely to vote in the 2026 General election,” according to Illinois Policy. The polling memo has more.

* WTTW

When Mayor Brandon Johnson scrapped the city’s controversial gunshot detection system, he defied critics who warned that without ShotSpotter, police officers would be unable to stop a wave of gun violence.

But nearly a year after officials turned off the microphones that sent an alert to police officers every time the system picked up suspected gunfire, a new analysis of Chicago crime data shows a steep drop in violent crime and homicides in the 12 South and West side neighborhoods that had ShotSpotter sensors until September 2024.

Police beats that had ShotSpotter sensors saw an approximately 17.8% decrease in violent crime and a 37.5% decrease in homicides during the first six months of 2025, as compared with the first six months of 2024, according to the analysis of Chicago crime data by Rob Vargas, a sociology professor at the University of Chicago who leads the UChicago Justice Project.

Citywide, incidents of violent crime dropped 17.7%, while the number of homicides dropped 30% during the same period, as compared with the same period in 2024, according to Chicago police data. The number of shootings was also down 30%, according to police data.

* Bob Fioretti, a former Chicago alderman, is circulating petitions for a Republican bid for Illinois attorney general. Brenden Moore


[From Rich: Fioretti lost primaries or general elections in both parties in 2024, 2022, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2016 and 2015. Zero surprise that he wants to run again this time.]

* Citizens Utility Board, Illinois PIRG and AARP Illinois…

Many Nicor Gas customers may not know that their utility is trying to hit them with the largest gas rate hike in Illinois history, but a state public forum Thursday night in Elgin is an opportunity to speak out against the company’s fifth rate-hike request in recent years.

The Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) is holding a public forum–requested by AARP Illinois–on Nicor Gas’ request for an unprecedented $316.5 million rate increase – 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 7 (TONIGHT) at Hemmens Cultural Center, 45 Symphony Way, Elgin, IL 60120. Utility watchdogs have warned the proposal would raid consumers for at least double the amount Nicor can request within the boundaries of state law. […]

Those who can’t make the forum can join hundreds of people who have signed a CUB petition or filed a public comment with the ICC against Nicor’s rate-hike request.

Nicor embarked on its quest to obtain a record-high rate hike for an Illinois gas utility in January of this year, and the tally has only expanded since then, from about $309 million to $316.5 million (Docket No. 25-0055). Nicor customers have expressed frustration at the company’s serial rate hikes: This would be Nicor’s fifth since 2017. In that same time period—from 2017 to 2024—the utility has raised delivery rates by 114 percent, totaling $747 million, and its parent, Southern Co., has made $25.2 billion in profits. […]

The ICC will issue a final ruling on Nicor’s rate-hike request in November. If approved, Nicor’s rate hike would increase average gas bills by about 9 percent, or about $7.70 a month/more than $92 a year, and push the utility’s total increases to more than $1 billion in less than a decade.

*** Statewide ***

* Press Release | Tom Hughes Appointed Board President of INCCRRA, Expanding Leadership at the Intersection of Public Health and Early Childhood: The Illinois Public Health Association (IPHA) is proud to announce that Executive Director Tom Hughes has been appointed President of the Board of Directors for the Illinois Network of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies (INCCRRA), effective January 2026. INCCRRA is a statewide leader in expanding access to high-quality, affordable child care and supporting the early childhood workforce. This appointment reflects a growing recognition that the health and well-being of Illinois communities is deeply connected to the strength of early childhood systems. As both organizations prioritize equity, access, and family-centered support, Hughes’ leadership reinforces a shared commitment to innovation, quality, and collaboration across systems.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Texas senator says FBI will help find Democrats who fled the state; Pritzker calls it ‘grandstanding’: Texas Sen. John Cornyn on Thursday said the FBI has agreed to help track dozens of Texas Democrats who fled to Illinois and New York as they try to stop Texas Republicans from enacting new congressional maps that would give the GOP five more seats. The request sets the stage for an escalation of a war between the Trump administration and Illinois Democrats, with Gov. JB Pritzker at the helm. But it’s unclear what role federal agents can play in the matter, and there were no reports of FBI activity in the area housing Texas Democrats as of Thursday morning. The FBI declined to comment on the matter.

* CBS Chicago | Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker defends signing bill upping pension payouts for Chicago police, firefighters: Supporters said House Bill 3657 was needed to bring first responders in line with their colleagues in other departments around Illinois, Capitol News Illinois reported.

* Illinois Times | Governor signs health laws: Late last year, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield – a separate company from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois that does not offer insurance plans in Illinois – had planned to start setting time limits for anesthesia coverage before announcing a reversal around the time UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was murdered. One month later, practicing anesthesiologist and state Rep. Bill Hauter, R-Morton, introduced House Bill 1141 to require health insurance companies to cover anesthesia services without time limits. The bill saw unanimous support across both chambers and will be required as part of all future contracts the Department of Healthcare and Family Services negotiates with insurers.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | Three Homeless Encampments, Three Different City Responses: But some alderpeople and neighbors still find the city’s strategy unclear and inconsistent. Tents sometimes create safety and sanitation hazards, but the city lacks enough units to house everyone in need, and in multiple instances over the last year, officials didn’t act until alderpeople repeatedly complained or violence broke out around the encampments. To understand how city officials address homeless encampments, Block Club analyzed the response to sites in three different wards, using emails obtained through public records requests as well as interviews with alderpeople and city officials.

* Sun-Times | U.S. Rep. Ramirez’s comments on her Guatemalan heritage draws backlash from conservatives, White House: But Ramirez, who sits on the House Committee on Homeland Security, said she was simply sharing pride in her multi-cultural, multiracial heritage. In a statement, she said the criticism she was receiving wasn’t about national identity, but instead an attempt to silence her political views against “the nativist, white supremacist, authoritarians in government.”

* Crain’s | Goldman Sachs beefing up Chicago office as competition picks up: The firm has about 800 people in its Chicago office, roughly 85% of them working in asset and wealth management, and is aiming to grow its local headcount by 7% to 10% annually, according to Christopher Keogh, global co-head of the institutional client business within Goldman’s asset and wealth management division.

* Block Club | 22 Things To Do In Chicago This Weekend: Windy City Comedy Fest, Bud Billiken Parade And More: The Bud Billiken Parade, Hey Benji Kids Festival and 2000s Night at the Zoo are all on deck, as well as Trash People’s pop-up for teachers in need of school supplies. You can also reserve a time with your group for a museum-wide escape room at the Griffin Museum of Science and Industry or catch a free concert in Hyde Park’s Harper Court.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Underwood: ICE ‘completely unresponsive’ after enforcement in Joliet: By July 20, Underwood expected a “comprehensive briefing” from Lyons about the incident that was described as “very aggressive” and “dangerous” by Marcos Ceniceros, executive director of Warehouse Workers for Justice. “ICE has been completely unresponsive to our inquiries, and that is unacceptable,” Underwood said at the town hall. She said there was “considerable property damage” done in the course of that “enforcement action.” She said that is not the “kind of law enforcement that we expect in our community.”

* Shaw Local | Financial uncertainty looms over McHenry County as it plans how much to tax and spend: As the McHenry County Board starts to look at how much the county will tax and spend next year, the potential for additional federal cuts could shape what that looks like and is among the factors adding uncertainty to the process.

* Shaw Local | Joliet makes another parking deal with developer John Bays: Bays will have exclusive use of the Riverwall parking lot, which is rundown and seldom used. The parking lot along the Des Plaines River is located across Joliet Street from Bays Tower, making it an attractive asset for Bays.

* Tribune | Long after the fuss over Pope Leo XIV, the village of Dolton will still be here: Dolton, whether or not you ever think about it again, is full of kindness and hope. But interesting. It’s a pocket-sized village (4.6 square miles, with a population that peaked at around 26,000 in 1970 and has drifted off ever since). It’s on the banks of muddy Little Calumet River and modest Lake Cottage Grove, though it feels far from anything damp. The town water tower always seems like it could use a fresh coat of paint. Railroad tracks shoot here and there, all over the place. It’s been working class since European settlers (Germans, Dutch) arrived in the 1800s. But after industry faded away generations ago, the future never trended brighter. Dolton kept hoping. Its new wish for a burst of pope-related tourism resonates with another moment in its history 130-odd years ago, when Dolton so hotly anticipated a boom of new residents and tourists to emerge from the success out of Chicago’s Columbian Exposition of 1893, Dolton civic leaders decided to get incorporated.

* Daily Herald | 100-degree heat returns to northern Illinois starting Friday: Heat and humidity remain on the rise across northern Illinois, and triple-digit heat levels are expected back by Friday. The high temperatures will last through the weekend, according to the National Weather Service. Peak heat indices will reach 95-100 degrees on Friday and Saturday, and 90-95 degrees on Sunday.

* Evanston Now | Sticky, hot … but less smoke: The National Weather Service says we can expect heat index temperatures of nearly 100 degrees Friday and Saturday in Evanston. But air quality issues caused by Canadian wildfire have diminished — and while an Air Pollution Action Day was declared for Thursday, the latest readings indicating a “moderate” level of particulates and a “good” reading for ozone.

*** Downstate ***

* Fox 2 Now | 2 dead after helicopter crashes into Mississippi River barge north of St. Louis: According to the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), a Hughes 369D helicopter struck transmission lines over the river and crashed into the barge at 11:05 a.m. The barge then caught fire.

* WAND | BGCCIL announces school year club sites despite funding challenges: “Our ability to maintain services at these five donor-supported sites is a direct result of the community’s belief in our mission,” said BGCCIL Chief Executive Officer Tiffany Mathis Posey. “We remain dedicated to expanding these services further, should funding and partnership opportunities arise.”

* WCIA | Rebuilding nearly complete at Arcola grain elevator: Construction is nearly done at an Arcola grain elevator, where a bin collapsed in February 2024 and damaged two smaller surrounding silos. The cause is still unknown. […] Total Grain Marketing — which owns the elevator — said 570,000 bushels of corn and a large amount of steel were in the bin when it collapsed. TGM knocked down five more older structures to make way for newer and sturdier bins.

* Dispatch-Argus | River Bend Food Bank retiring Backpack Program, turns to school pantries to boost access: River Bend Food Bank will phase out its Backpack Program and instead utilize food pantries, a move expected to provide fie times more meals to school kids and their families. Phase one will include more than 20 schools transitioning this month, the food bank said in a Thursday news release. These schools will discontinue offering pre-packaged bags of food to individual students and instead students and their families will have access to school pantries already located at participating school sites.

*** National ***

* Columbus Dispatch | Tesla but no Rivian? EV maker sues Ohio BMV over prohibition on direct car sales: A California-based electric vehicle maker is suing the state’s Registrar of Motor Vehicles, saying Ohio law prevents it from selling cars in the state while letting Tesla do precisely that. Rivian, a manufacturer of electric vehicles, filed the lawsuit on Aug. 4 in U.S. District Court in Columbus, asking the court to determine that the provision of Ohio’s law violates the Fourteenth Amendment equal protection rights of Ohio consumers. According to the lawsuit, a 2014 Ohio law allows the Registrar of Motor Vehicles to deny a license for a motor vehicle dealer to “a manufacturer, or a parent company, subsidiary or affiliated entity of a manufacturer.”

* AP | New study sheds light on ChatGPT’s alarming interactions with teens: ChatGPT will tell 13-year-olds how to get drunk and high, instruct them on how to conceal eating disorders and even compose a heartbreaking suicide letter to their parents if asked, according to new research from a watchdog group. The Associated Press reviewed more than three hours of interactions between ChatGPT and researchers posing as vulnerable teens. The chatbot typically provided warnings against risky activity but went on to deliver startlingly detailed and personalized plans for drug use, calorie-restricted diets or self-injury.

* AP | Trump seeks to change how census collects data and wants to exclude immigrants in US illegally: Experts said it was unclear what exactly Trump was calling for, whether it was changes to the 2030 census or a mid-decade census, and, if so, whether it would be used for a mid-decade apportionment, which is the process of divvying up congressional seats among the states based on the population count.

* NBC | New research reveals clues about memory from the brains of ‘SuperAgers’: Yackley, a longtime Chicagoan who hails from Turkey, acknowledges that genetic factors may be contributing to her youthful cognition. Her mother and father lived to be 86 and 88, respectively. On the other hand, Yackley feels her joie de vivre helps keep her mind sharp. “I think it’s partly your determination to live a long life and your activities that enable you to do so,” she said, encouraging older adults to pursue “things that make you proud.”

* Informa | Bluesky Reaches 38M Users, Though Post Volume Is Declining: As confirmed by Bluesky chief Jay Graber, Bluesky is now up to 38 million monthly active users, rising from 30 million which it reached back in March. Which is a positive, for sure, adding 8 million more users is a good sign for its evolution, and its enduring popularity in the broader social media space.

  24 Comments      


It’s a law

Thursday, Aug 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias…

Bipartisan legislation drafted by Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias designed to improve security at libraries and enhance safety for librarians was recently signed into law.

The measure, which was approved in the General Assembly this spring, allows the Secretary of State’s office to issue funding grants to increase security measures at public, school and academic libraries. […]

The legislation, which was signed into law last week by Governor JB Pritzker and takes effect on Jan. 1, 2026, was sponsored by State Senator Laura Murphy (28th District-Des Plaines) and State Representative Michael Coffey Jr. (95th District-Springfield) and had strong support from the Illinois Library Association and the Illinois Municipal League.

The legislation comes after several libraries across the state received bomb threats in recent years, including the Illinois State Library. There have been more than 25 bomb threats with multiple libraries responding to repeat threats during the past two years.

While state law contains penalties for threats targeting schools, public officials and human services providers, it does not include the same protections for all libraries and librarians.

Under the legislation, state library grant applicants will have the ability to use funding to install things like security cameras, silent alarms, or security check points, for which funding is not always available and until now grants were not authorized to support.

* WCIA

Illinois police officers are now required to have more training to respond to sexual abuse and sexual assault cases, thanks to a new law signed on Friday.

After a sexual assault, one problem survivors often said they face is law enforcement retraumatizing them with certain questions. […]

With the new law, officers will be trained to be more empathetic when talking to survivors. The Illinois Law Enforcement Trainings and Standards Board said they’re already working to add the topic to trainings officers go through.

“This legislation underscores our collective commitment to ensuring that every officer is equipped with the knowledge and skills to respond to victims of sexual assault and sexual abuse with the utmost sensitivity, empathy, and professionalism,” Sean Smoot, the board’s chairman said in a statement.

* Sen. Julie Morrison…

With increasing threats to public health emerging from the intersection of human, animal and environmental factors, a new law spearheaded by State Senator Julie Morrison will create the One Health Commission — a unique collaboration among Illinois experts to improve communication and coordination across fields. […]

The new law establishes the One Health Commission within the Illinois Department of Public Health that will promote collaboration among physicians, veterinarians and other scientific professionals. The commission will work closely with state agencies to recommend best practices to promote interdisciplinary communication, establish methods for the response to and recovery from disease outbreaks in animals and humans and develop ways to monitor emerging health threats, among other responsibilities. A report of recommendations will be submitted to the governor and General Assembly by Jan. 1, 2028.

The One Health approach, which is supported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, recognizes the connection between human, animal and environmental health. This framework promotes a multisector approach to addressing broad health challenges — such as diseases that spread between animals and people, and bacteria or viruses that become resistant to medicine. Research shows integrating expertise across disciplines helps achieve better health outcomes for all living things. […]

Senate Bill 291 was signed into law Friday and takes effect Jan. 1, 2026.

* WAND

A new Illinois law will give the state more oversight over the 2-1-1 emergency counsel service.

2-1-1 is a federal phone line that provides callers with emergency counseling if they need to find food, shelter, mental health services and other life-sustaining resources.

The law will give the Illinois Department of Human Services more oversight over the nonprofit and volunteer organizations providing 2-1-1 response.

Providers must maintain minimum work standards, provide proof that they receive a diverse range of funds, and demonstrate kind and quality service to callers. […]

This law also calls for a data report from providers, including call volume, reasons for each call and caller demographics. That includes data on the age, race, gender, coverage rates and year-over-year trends.

* WCIA

A new law in Illinois will make it easier for people with disabilities to obtain license plates and parking placards by cutting “red tape” out of the process.

Senate Bill 1256 was passed unanimously by both chambers of the Illinois General Assembly earlier this year, and it was signed into law by Governor J.B. Pritzker on Friday. State Senator Steve McClure (R-Springfield) and State Representative C.D. Davidsmeyer (R-Murrayville), the primary sponsors of the bill, explained that the bill allows certifications for disabled individuals to remain valid for five years and allows licensed physical therapists to sign off on applications, which the legislators said will save families time and the cost of additional medical visits. […]

“This bill was just basic common sense. There’s no reason a person with a permanent disability should have to prove that every year,” Davidsmeyer added. “This will alleviate hassle for both Illinoisans and government alike.”

The issue was brought to the legislators’ attention by a woman who lives with multiple sclerosis and who said the law will make a meaningful difference for both her and other Illinoisans.

* Sara Feigenholtz…

State Senator Sara Feigenholtz championed a newly signed law strengthening Illinois’ efforts to address the teacher shortage by removing unnecessary hurdles that drive people away from becoming an educator.

“For years, parents and teachers in my district have been feeling the crunch of the teacher shortage,” Feigenholtz (D-Chicago) said. “As we continue to equip our teachers with resources and support, we need to make sure they don’t face setbacks because of family or medical obligations.”

The law, originally Senate Bill 1584, comes in response to a local resident who took family and medical leave during her pregnancy when she was licensed under short-term approval. For many educators, including Feigenholtz’s constituent, short-term approval in a new subject area is a path to becoming a more versatile teacher who can teach more classes — but it typically only lasts three years.

To ease barriers for these educators, Feigenholtz’s new law allows teachers to take family and medical leave while they are licensed under short-term approval without jeopardizing their short-term licenses. This change “stops the clock” when someone takes FMLA leave so they can pick up where they left off without losing any of their short-term approval period. […]

Senate Bill 1584 was signed into law Friday and takes effect Jan. 1, 2026.

  2 Comments      


Texas skedaddle coverage roundup

Thursday, Aug 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

Texas Republican U.S. Sen. John Cornyn said Thursday the FBI has granted his request to assist Texas law enforcement in locating House Democrats who fled the state, setting up a potential confrontation with Illinois Democratic officials who have vowed to protect them.

“I am proud to announce that Director Kash Patel has approved my request for the FBI to assist state and local law enforcement in locating runaway Texas House Democrats,” Cornyn said in a statement.

“I thank President Trump and Director Patel for supporting and swiftly acting on my call for the federal government to hold these supposed lawmakers accountable for fleeing Texas. We cannot allow these rogue legislators to avoid their constitutional responsibilities.” […]

It was unclear what the FBI’s activities would entail since the Texas lawmakers have not been charged with state or federal-level criminal activity. They are facing civil warrants for leaving the state, but they are unenforceable outside of Texas.

Locating them will be a pretty easy job in Illinois because we (and the person who called in the bomb threats) already know where they are…


* Gov. Pritzker was asked about this today

Q: Governor, Sen. John Cornyn in Texas has basically said today that the FBI has granted his request to go after the Texas Democratic lawmakers. Since you spoke with the media yesterday, can you get more specific on what you plan on doing to protect these lawmakers here in Illinois and what kind of conversations have you had with the state police and your administration to do just that?

Pritzker: Look, I’ve said it before. This is a lot of grandstanding by the Trump administration, by John Cornyn, by Governor Abbott in Texas. The reality is that all that he has said, Cornyn, is that the FBI has been authorized to locate the Texas House Democrats, nothing more. And you know why? Because there is no federal law that allows them to arrest Texas Democrats who are here visiting the state of Illinois.

I welcome the FBI coming to the state. I hope they take in the State Fair. I hope they go see the beauty of Lake Michigan. Yeah, adventure awaits for all of them. But they won’t be arresting anyone, because there is no US federal law that prohibits those Texas House Democrats from being here in the state of Illinois.

* Illinois’ legislative quorum is set in the Constitution as a “majority of the members elected to each house.” Texas has a two-thirds quorum requirement. So, Rep. Ryan Spain (R-Peoria) filed a constitutional amendment proposal this week

Spain filed House Joint Resolution Constitutional Amendment 19 this week to require a two-thirds majority for a quorum like Texas, instead of a simple majority as Illinois has now.

“If the governor is so happy with what’s taking place in Texas and, helping those legislators, I hope he would support having the same quorum requirements in the Illinois General Assembly,” Spain said.

Unveiling the butter cow ahead of the 2025 Illinois State Fair Wednesday, Pritzker said he didn’t have an opinion on the proposed change.

“I think the House will make a determination about what they want, put that out, as you said there’s a bill, I haven’t looked at it,” Pritzker said. “I don’t have an opinion about that today.”

* Texas Tribune

Powered by People, a Democratic political group started by former U.S. Rep. Beto O’Rourke, has emerged as a top funder covering the costs of Texas lawmakers’ out-of-state decampment to thwart a new GOP-proposed congressional map, according to two people involved with the fundraising efforts.

The expenses are mounting fast for the more than 50 Democrats in the Texas House who left the state Sunday to prevent the Republican-controlled chamber from having enough members to conduct business. Most lawmakers traveled to the Chicago area by way of a private plane from CommuteAir. They are now on the hook for lodging, meals and the $500-a-day fines they will each accrue for every day of the special session they miss. […]

Gov. Greg Abbott has warned that members could face felony charges for fundraising to cover their fines, which cannot be paid “from funds accepted as political contributions,” according to Texas House rules adopted by Republicans in 2023 after a prior Democratic quorum break. In a letter sent to absent Democrats Sunday, Abbott alleged that lawmakers who are “soliciting funds to evade the fines they will incur under House rules” may be violating bribery laws, adding that anyone who donates to the cause could also be liable.

Center Square

On Wednesday, the Texas Office of Attorney General launched an investigation into Powered by the People saying it “may have violated bribery laws” as well as other state laws “governing campaign or officeholder contributions and expenditures, coercion of a public servant, and abuse of office.” It issued a Request to Examine, demanding documents and communications from the PAC about its involvement with Texas House Democrats’ scheme to break quorum.

* Meanwhile, in Indiana

Gov. Mike Braun was noncommittal about the prospect of redistricting in Indiana following a meeting with Vice President JD Vance and Indiana legislative leaders at the Indiana Statehouse on Aug. 7.

When asked by reporters if the group came to a consensus on redrawing the state’s congressional maps ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, Braun said “We listened.” He also described the conversation as “pretty good.” […]

Political analysts say, if Gov. Mike Braun calls a special session for redistricting, Republicans could easily redraw maps in Northwest Indiana to flip the 1st Congressional District, currently held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Frank Mrvan. That would put the state at eight Republican seats to one Democratic one.

Redrawing the 7th Congressional District in Indianapolis, held by longtime U.S. Rep. Andre Carson, to get the state to nine Republicans would pose more challenges. Any breakup of deep blue Democratic voters in Marion County could make other Republican House districts more vulnerable in future elections, analysts said.

  18 Comments      


Pritzker on Texas

Thursday, Aug 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker was asked again yesterday about the Texas special session to redraw congressional district lines

You all know that there is a decennial census that takes place in this country. And right after the decennial census, you redraw the maps in a state, it happens. Sometimes it gets done more politically. Sometimes it gets done by an independent commission, but it happens usually. In this case, it was in 2021.

The truth is that now you’ve got Donald Trump and Greg Abbott and Ken Paxton and John Cornyn all saying that, ‘Oh no, we’re going to break the rules. We’re going to go in the middle of the decennial, the decade that we’re in, and we’re going to redistrict in 2025.’

They’re only doing that for one reason. It’s because they know they’re going to lose in 2026 if they don’t breach the rules, if they don’t cheat. And we know that especially, Donald Trump is a cheater. He’s cheated people out of money. He’s defrauded people out of money. He’s cheated on his wives. He’s willing to cheat the American people out of their votes.

Obviously, there is no such rule, written or unwritten. And Texas has done this before. But the pitch is easy to understand, I suppose, so he’s using that argument a lot.

* The rest of his argument is more difficult to understand for many people, but it’s also more accurate

Look, there are five districts in Texas that Donald Trump says he is entitled to have turned over to Republicans. You know what those five districts are? There are five districts that are legal under the Voting Rights Act, that are represented by Black and Brown people who represent Black and Brown people.

And I might say that when we passed our maps here, fully legal, compliant, constitutionally with the Voting Rights Act. So I’m very proud of that fact.

Illinois is, indeed, intensely gerrymandered. But those gerrymanders have stayed within the confines of the Voting Rights Act.

Also, click here for a list of states with independent redistricting commissions.

* This isn’t totally wrong, either, except Budzinski’s district is not nearly as competitive as Sorensen’s

Let me remind you that when Nikki Budzinski was running in her district for the very first time, when Eric Sorensen was running, these are all in 2022 everybody said those were competitive races. So you can’t tell me that these were drawn so that only Democrats could win. There are often races. There are certainly areas where you’re probably not going to have a lot of competition because there are, there is no way to draw a map that is hyper competitive. But those are two examples of even you reported on the competitive nature of those races.

President Trump lost Sorensen’s district last year by just 3.6 percentage points. Kwame Raoul and Alexi Giannoulias both lost the district by low single figures in 2022. The numbers in Budzinski’s district weren’t nearly that close.

* Meanwhile, more news on yesterday’s bomb threat from the Tribune

St. Charles police responded to a report of a potential bomb threat at the Q Center hotel and convention complex shortly after 7 a.m. Wednesday, but no device was found, the department said. As bomb squad units conducted their investigation, 400 people were evacuated from the area, but guests and employees later returned to the premises, the department said.

According to the Kane County state’s attorney’s office, one person made multiple bomb threats during the incident but no arrests have been made. Illinois State Police spokesperson Melaney Arnold said the agency “has been in contact with local law enforcement, which responded swiftly and cleared the building.”

* And in related news

As some Texas Democratic lawmakers seek refuge in the Chicago suburbs to block the Texas Legislature from voting on a mid-decade redistricting plan, Indiana could be facing one of its own.

Vice President JD Vance will visit Indianapolis Thursday to meet with Republican Indiana Gov. Mike Braun, and is expected to push state lawmakers to redistrict the only two Congressional seats that are occupied by Democrats, the 1st and the 7th districts.

It’s part of a nationwide effort led by Republicans and backed by President Donald Trump to redraw the congressional map ahead of next year’s mid-term elections.

  27 Comments      


Caption contest!

Thursday, Aug 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Two candidates for 7th District Democratic State Central Committeeman met on neutral turf yesterday…


Computer, zoom in

  22 Comments      


SB 328: Protects Working People & Helps Fight Trump’s Predatory MAGA Agenda

Thursday, Aug 7, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The same front groups, associations and companies that are backing Trump’s predatory MAGA agenda of raising prices, slashing Medicaid, and gutting the Environmental Protection Agency, Food & Drug Administration, and Occupational Safety and Health Administration are also against SB 328.

They wrongly believe our state can’t be pro-worker and pro-business, and want Illinois to turn its back on people who have shared their stories about big corporations that have poisoned them or their loved ones:

“Other defendants said that my mother needed to file lawsuits in every state that she was exposed to asbestos in, not just in Illinois. That she should go, as a woman dying of cancer, and try to get these other bad actors in multiple states across the country.”

— Daughter of woman who owned an automobile repair small business in Peoria and died from malignant mesothelioma caused by asbestos exposure

SB 328 is good legislation and another way to show that Illinois will always stand up for working families and the most vulnerable.

For more information about SB 328, click here.

  Comments Off      


Pritzker claims Johnson ‘never once called me’ about pension bill, said he doesn’t know if the mayor actually opposes it

Thursday, Aug 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. The chief financial officer filed a witness slip against the police and fire pension bill? That’s truly above and beyond. Must’ve taken her all of, what, fifteen seconds?

When Johnson was asked about the pension bill during a City Hall press conference Tuesday, he said his administration “made it very clear that this legislation would certainly make our situation far more difficult because of the fact that there wasn’t any revenue attached to it,” but stopped short of saying he asked Pritzker to veto the bill.

“He was in a tough position. I understand that,” Johnson said of the governor. “I’m going to continue to work with the governor around ways in which we can generate the revenue to respond to pensions, transportation and education.”

While Johnson has been criticized for not opposing the bill more forcefully in public, his team worked against it in the lead-up to the vote, including his chief financial officer, Jill Jaworski, signing a witness slip opposed to the legislation. When the mayor visited Springfield in late April with a list of “modest” funding requests, his financial team met separately with the bill’s lead sponsor, Sen. Robert Martwick, and other legislators to discuss it.

That meeting with Sen. Martwick obviously didn’t have much impact even though Martwick is one of the mayor’s last true allies in the General Assembly,

* The governor was asked about this topic yesterday at the Illinois State Fair

Look, first of all, I stand up for our police. Always have. … And they deserve to have the same rules applied to them as they’re applied to police all over the state of Illinois. And that’s all that this bill did.

Secondly, the mayor never once called me, or as far as I know, any legislators to oppose that bill or to ask for any changes in that bill. And you know, when a municipality that’s affected by some piece of legislation doesn’t speak up about it, opposing it, then how can people know that the mayor opposed it?

And he didn’t until, oh, after it passed. I know that some of the members of his administration have said so. I really don’t know that the mayor himself opposes it. What I know is that we have helped the Chicago Police get fairness in their contract.

  28 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Aug 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric! Thanks!

  9 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Aug 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Latest federal list of ‘sanctuary’ jurisdictions includes Chicago, Cook County and Illinois. Tribune

    - The Department of Justice placed Chicago, Cook County, and the state of Illinois on its latest “sanctuary jurisdiction list,” with Attorney General Pam Bondi promising to “continue bringing litigation” against places the department says stand in the way of federal immigration enforcement.
    - Illinois is among a dozen states, Cook is one of four counties, and Chicago is one of 18 cities on the list.
    - The mayor’s office and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle’s office both said they had not received any additional communication from the DOJ about the city’s and county’s placement on the list.

* Related stories…

* Governor JB Pritzker will kick off the Illinois State Fair with a ribbon cutting at 10 am at the Main Gate, followed by several appearances throughout the fairgrounds. He’ll be at Conservation World at 11:15 am, present the “County Fair Person of the Year” award at 11:30 am, and take photos with County Fair Queens at noon. At 1 pm, he’ll speak at the Illinois Community College Board’s 60th anniversary event. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | First look: 2025 Illinois State Fair butter cow unveiled: The sculpture is made of 800 pounds of unsalted butter spread across a wire frame. This year’s iteration depicts a cow accompanied by an “adventurer seeking hidden treasure across the fairgrounds.” The theme for this year’s fair is “Adventure Awaits.” “Indeed, this year will be chock full of adventures and treasures for the entire family. Music and entertainment, food and drinks, rides and contests, exhibits and displays, concerts. There will be an opportunity for everyone to experience, to learn, to grow, and we’re again proud to be able to present that not just to Illinoisans who come here to Springfield to enjoy themselves, but also to people who come from around the country, to see what Illinois has to offer,” Gov. JB Pritzker said.

* NCSL | Illinois State Rep. Marcus C. Evans Jr. to Lead NCSL: “As NCSL celebrates its 50th anniversary, I’m incredibly grateful to lead the National Conference of State Legislatures as its 54th president,” said Rep. Evans. “More than ever, legislatures are a vital space for bipartisanship, collaboration and advancing proven solutions tailored to state and local needs. I’m eager to work with my fellow state lawmakers to promote thoughtful ideas that drive unity, close division and energize the work we do for our communities.”

* Tribune | HUD drops housing discrimination complaint related to aldermanic prerogative and Chicago zoning: In a letter HUD sent Wednesday to the complaining parties, which was obtained by the Tribune, the agency said it was closing the case to instead focus on “real concerns regarding fair housing.” “It is the Department’s policy to focus on the original understanding and enforcement of the law and therefore rightfully return such decisions on zoning, home building, and more, to local leaders who are directly responsible for those matters,” the letter says. “HUD enforcement will continue to prioritize investigations of specific allegations of actual discrimination, rather than dictate or influence land use policy.”

*** Statewide ***

* WGN | Illinois Senate candidates ramp up campaigns, as one earns key endorsements: One week remains until the start of a significant Illinois political tradition — the State Fair, which offers an opportunity to check on how candidates are building their campaigns heading into the fall and winter. The biggest prize coming up in the March primary, however, is the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate. On Wednesday, two towering figures in Illinois politics announced their pick in the competitive primary: current Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton.

* WTTW | Illinois Launches New Endowment Fund for State Parks as Feds Disinvest in Natural Areas: The Illinois State Park Fund will be housed under the Illinois Conservation Foundation, which is the official charitable partner of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR). […] All contributions to the endowment fund will be considered restricted and used exclusively to benefit Illinois state parks in the form of park infrastructure, accessibility projects, conservation and programming, according to the Illinois Conservation Foundation.

* KFVS | Limited edition poster series celebrates 100 years of Ill. state parks: To celebrate 100 years of conservation in Illinois, the Illinois Conservation Foundation (ICF) has released a series of posters and sticker packs celebrating 12 parks and historic sites in the state.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Streetsblog Chicago | Should we bet on Welch? House Speaker Chris Welch: My team will present a transit funding plan by fall veto session and “get it done right”: Senate President Don Harmon recently said to Streetsblog, “If stakeholders don’t like the revenue plan the Senate adopted… we need people to come back with counter-proposals that allow us to build that transit system that residents deserve.”This morning, I asked House Speaker Welch, who lives in west-suburban Hillside, for his perspective on the effort to get a transit bill on the governor’s desk.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | New Indiana immigrant detention center could triple ICE beds in Chicago region: In Illinois, state and local laws prohibit local entities from entering into contracts with the federal government to detain immigrants. ICE’s immigration processing center in west suburban Broadview, immigration advocates say, has become a makeshift detention center with no beds or blankets and very little food, the Chicago Sun-Times previously reported.

* Sun-Times | Weiss Memorial Hospital in Uptown on the brink of closure: Weiss Memorial Hospital on Chicago’s North Side is set to lose major federal health insurance payments starting this weekend, raising questions about whether the hospital might close as soon as Friday. Weiss will be cut from Medicare and Medicaid after a monthslong pattern of being in and out of compliance with federal regulators for everything from not having enough nurses per shift to failing to prevent “inappropriate” delays in treatment.

* WBEZ | Chicago alderperson calls on mayor to make a deal with ComEd that includes relief as bills skyrocket: Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36th) wants the city to finally renew the long-expired power-service agreement that ComEd is operating under, and for Mayor Brandon Johnson to negotiate more relief money for people struggling to pay their electric bills as part of the deal. “We have a franchise agreement with ComEd, from the city of Chicago, that is yet to be finalized… everything’s on the table,” Villegas said at a news conference Wednesday. “There has to be a real, candid discussion as to: What are we going to do to make sure that people are not having to choose between eggs, milk and keeping the lights on?”

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office denied pushing to weaken CPS board voting rules — but email confirms it was a ‘goal’: “There is no reform that the Mayor’s Office is currently working on that would undermine the authority of the board in any way,” Johnson’s press secretary, Cassio Mendoza, said in a May 30 statement. Arena did not respond to a request for comment this week. However, Mendoza said Arena’s email was not an attempt to “lead an effort to overturn the two-thirds requirement,” as the Tribune asked in May, but rather part of “preliminary research.”

* Crain’s | Adler Planetarium taps Smithsonian exec as CEO: The Adler Planetarium announced Elizabeth Babcock as its next CEO following a six-month search. Babcock comes to Chicago after serving most recently as director of the Smithsonian American Women’s History Museum in Washington, D.C., a newly established part of the Smithsonian Institution still in the making. She will take the reins on Oct. 6, replacing longtime Adler chief Michelle Larson, who stepped down in February after more than a decade in the post.

* Crain’s | Chicago State hopes to make a college town out of 95th Street: The state-funded institution in Roseland, almost 160 years old, in late July issued a request for proposals to build the first phase of what it calls University Village 95, which would have up to 528 student beds — all rental — and 25,000 square feet of retail space.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WGN | PACE Riders with disabilities face increased costs and drastic cuts to paratransit rides from RTA: According to the proposal in the RTA’s action plan, ride costs for PACE users who rely on the TAP and RAP programs would increase from $2 to $3.25 a ride, but that’s not the biggest concern. The number of rides allowed per month would also see a drastic decrease from 240, all the way down to 30—a reduction from four round trips per day, all the way down to one, singular ride.

* Daily Herald | ‘We’re all a little heartbroken’: Aurora’s Copley Theatre will go dark: The hiatus comes after the Aurora Civic Center Authority — which operates the Paramount, Copley and Stolp Island theaters and RiverEdge Park — said “previously communicated municipal support” from the city of Aurora could be reduced by up to 65% in response to “widespread budgetary constraints,” according to the letter.

* Daily Southtown | Online donations help Robbins Eagles youth football tackle $12,000 in stolen equipment: Coaching staff found football training equipment, shoulder pads and 60 helmets missing from the storage container outside of the Park District community center at 13800 South Trumbull Ave. As their Aug. 23 season start date approaches, the Eagles knew they needed to seek community support to buy back the equipment they needed. “Everyone in the community came together right when it happened that day,” Harris said. “It was like, what can we we do to get these kids whatever they need to be able to play in the upcoming season?”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Historic St. Charles home to remain for now, after City Council denies request to demolish it: Because it’s located within the city’s Historic District, exterior changes to the building must be reviewed by the city and its owners must receive a certificate of appropriateness before it can be demolished. The church brought a request about the property to the city in 2017, according to past reporting, but its application was withdrawn before the City Council could vote on the house’s fate.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Central Illinois homeowners, renters and businesses grapple with spiking electric bills: There’s never a good time for your electric bill to suddenly go up nearly $1,000. But this was an especially bad time for Steven Marifjeren and his two Windy City Wieners locations. Business slows down in the summer, Marifjeren said. The Illinois State University crowd thins out at his Uptown Normal location. And many people go on vacation — even judges and lawyers, which means less foot traffic at Marifjeren’s downtown Bloomington eatery. Then last month, Marifjeren’s electric bill shot up 35%, without much change in energy use.

* WAND | 2 Decatur restaurants receive packages containing KKK material: The pictures, which WAND is not posting, contain hateful and racist language, references to the KKK, symbols of Nazis and other imagery. It’s not clear why certain businesses received the mail or where it came from. It’s also unknown how many businesses received the packages and if the material is all the same. […] WAND reached out to the Decatur Police Department who told us they have not received any reports.

* BND | Metro-east apartment owner accused of ignoring tenants, defaulting mortgage: Polk and other Greystone tenants say their complaints about leaks, mold, crime and multiple summers without adequate air conditioning have gone largely unanswered — even as the property went into receivership this year during a foreclosure proceeding. Owner Moshe “Mark” Silber, a real estate investor from New York, is accused of defaulting on the mortgage and is currently serving a federal prison sentence for his part in a loan fraud scheme. He couldn’t be reached for comment through his attorneys.

* WGLT | After DOJ inquiry, McLean County election authorities explain how voter rolls are updated: The DOJ included a list of 32 counties it said reported they did not send out confirmation notices in the most recent Election Assistance Commission’s Election Administration and Voting Survey [EAVS]. Confirmation notices are part of maintaining voter registration lists. McLean County was on that list, though county clerk Kathy Michael said that is incorrect, and she hopes her office can be removed from the list next week. “We are awaiting their phone call so that we can indicate to them that we indeed do our purge, as it’s called, every two years, mandated to clean and maintain the voter rolls. So we want to clear that up right away,” said Michael.

* WSIL | SIU begins residence hall demolition on the former greek row: A lot of alumni celebrated the bittersweet moment. Sandra Beebe, a longtime resident of Carbondale, recalls many of the enjoyable times she had at SIU. She says she is excited for what’s to come. “I think the changes will be great. We need to get this back into a productive area because it’s a beautiful part of our campus,” Beebe said. Chancellor Austin Lane says once the area is cleared, a new proposed housing development called the Saluki Village is expected to fill that space for future Salukis.

* Illinois TImes | Adventure awaits at the Illinois State Fair: “Adventure Awaits” is the theme of the 2025 Illinois State Fair, and that adventure this year includes a few new wrinkles such as a pickleball tournament, craft beer contest and the return of the Budweiser Clydesdales. But it all starts on Thursday, Aug. 7, with the Twilight Parade, and this year’s grand marshal is the American Business Club of Springfield, which is celebrating its 100th anniversary this year.

* WICS | Fair officials complete final ride inspections ahead of Illinois State Fair opening day: This work includes safety inspections for all the fair rides and attractions. Officials told me they check every single bolt and screw attached to each ride. The Illinois State Fair has more than 50 rides and attractions and inspectors started their inspections last week.

* Journal Courier | Illinois, Du Quoin state fairs offering free camping night at state parks with coupon: Those who stop by Conservation World and visit the “Illinois State Parks: A Century of Fun” tent at the Illinois State Fair and at the Illinois Department of Natural Resources exhibit in the Expo Building at the Du Quoin State Fair, will get a coupon for a free night’s camping stay at any IDNR site with the purchase of at least one night of camping.

*** National ***

* WaPo | These nuclear reactors fit on a flatbed truck. How safe are they?: At least a half dozen companies are racing to develop tiny reactors, which bear no resemblance to the hulking power projects dotting riverbanks and coastlines across the United States, with their cooling towers and massive concrete containment structures. The flatbed-size reactors are designed to generate as little as a single megawatt of power — roughly one-thousandth the amount of a large legacy unit. It’s enough to power 1,000 homes, a single manufacturing plant or even a remote island owned by a billionaire (one company claims it has received such an inquiry).

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