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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Background is here and here if you need it. NBC Chicago’s Mary Ann Ahern


* Capitol City Now

Grammy-winning reggae icon Ziggy Marley will perform at the Illinois State Fair Grandstand on Tuesday, August 18, offering fairgoers nearly four decades of award-winning music and uplifting messages.

The eldest son of legendary musicians Bob and Rita Marley, Ziggy Marley has built his own career blending reggae with soul, rock, funk, and global rhythms, while promoting themes of love, justice, resilience, and optimism. Known for hits such as “Tomorrow People,” “True To Myself,” and “Beach in Hawaii,” Marley’s newest album, Brightside, explores perseverance and hope in challenging times. He also produced the 2024 biopic Bob Marley: One Love and performed the theme song for PBS’s Arthur.
“Part of what makes the Illinois State Fair so special is the variety of entertainment we’re able to bring to fairgoers each year,” said Illinois Department of Agriculture Director Jerry Costello II. “Ziggy Marley is an exciting addition to this year’s schedule.” […]

Tickets go on sale Saturday, May 23, at 10 a.m. through Ticketmaster, with prices ranging from $40 to $105. A $30 pre-show party ticket is also available. The 2026 Illinois State Fair runs August 13 through August 23 in Springfield.

*** Statewide ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Consumer advocates seek 80% reduction in latest Nicor gas rate request: Watchdog groups are calling on regulators to reject $178 million, or 80%, of a $220.8 million rate hike requested by Nicor Gas earlier this year, citing wasteful capital spending, excessive shareholder profits and “lavish” executive bonuses. Consumer advocate groups including the Citizens Utility Board, the Illinois Public Interest Research Group and the Environmental Defense Fund said the requested hike is about five times higher than it should be.

* 21st Show | Public health officials address Hantavirus questions: IDPH also said in its latest statement that the risk of contracting Hantavirus remains very low for Illinoisans. Dr. Vidya Sundareshan, professor and Chief of Infectious Diseases at Southern Illinois University School of Medicine and medical advisor for Sangamon County Department of Public Health and Dr. Mamadou Tounkara, a public health administrator for the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District joined the 21st Show. They discussed how people can get exposed to Hantavirus and what protective measures are helpful.

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois county clerks are preparing for mail voting amid continued attacks, changes: Like other clerks, Gray said he practices full transparency by inviting people to observe how different steps are taken — from how to request a ballot, to receiving it and turning it back in to the clerk’s office, and how it’s processed and counted. “The more you can expose how you operate, the greater trust and confidence you’ll have in your jurisdiction,” he said.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Crain’s | Illinois bill proposes 4% tax on short-term rentals to fund affordable housing: A bill proposed in Springfield last week would put a 4% tax on short-term rentals and use to revenue it generates to develop affordable housing through community land trusts. The legislation envisions what may be a first-of-its-kind funding pipeline that directs short-term rental taxes to affordable housing efforts. […] There’s no estimate in HB 5776 of how much revenue the tax would generate if adopted. It would go into effect Jan. 1, 2027.

* Fox Chicago | Civil liberty advocates sue Illinois over ’show your papers’ gun law: The New Civil Liberties Alliance (NCLA) filed a lawsuit against Illinois officials Tuesday over the state’s Firearm Owners Identification Act, also known as the FOID Card Act, a state law that requires Illinois residents to apply for and carry an identification card at all times to possess any firearm or ammunition. The civil complaint, which Fox News Digital obtained exclusively, challenges the law as unconstitutional, arguing it “entirely deprives everyone of the right to keep and bear arms – including the basic right to possess a firearm for self-defense in the home – unless and until they seek and receive the State’s permission.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson makes last-minute push to name permanent CTA leader: Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson asked the Chicago Transit Authority board to select a permanent leader just weeks before a new state law limits his control over the executive appointment process at the mass transit agency. In a May 7 letter addressed to CTA board chair Lester Barclay, Johnson directed the agency’s board to “move expeditiously to finalize the selection of a permanent President for the CTA,” which has been led on an interim basis by an acting president, Nora Leerhsen, since early 2025.

* WTTW | City Council Committee Advances Mayor’s Pick to Serve as Chicago’s Watchdog: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s pick to serve as the city’s watchdog won the endorsement of a key Chicago City Council committee Tuesday, as former Assistant U.S. Attorney David Glockner vowed to “prioritize problem-solving over finger-pointing.” The City Council’s Ethics and Government Oversight Committee unanimously approved the nomination of Glockner to serve as inspector general, setting up a final vote by the full City Council on Wednesday.

* Crain’s | Development near CTA stops growing on South and West sides but gaps remain: A policy plan the city adopted five years ago has had some success in catalyzing more development near CTA stops in disinvested neighborhoods, but there’s still room for improvement, according to a report from Elevated Chicago. The nonprofit’s report analyzed the impact of the Equitable Transit-Oriented Development Policy Plan adopted by the Chicago Plan Commission in 2021. The city’s Connected Communities Ordinance, passed in 2022, implements recommendations from the plan, including zoning and density incentives and provisions aimed at creating more affordable housing and preventing displacement. The city also put $10 million in federal funding into grants assisting those developments.

* Sun-Times | Going to a show in Chicago? Be prepared to hand over your phone till it’s over: Meanwhile, up in Edgewater, theater leaders from [producingbody] are introducing audiences to magnetically locking Yondr pouches, starting this week with the Chicago premiere of “Spaceman.” Audiences can sit with their phones in the pouches — but they won’t be accessible for the length of the 100-minute show.

* WTTW | New Exhibit at International Museum of Surgical Science Highlights Role of Filipino Nurses in Healthcare: A new temporary exhibit at the International Museum of Surgical Science aims to give visibility to an often overlooked segment of the healthcare profession: Filipino nurses. The exhibit, “Unheard Voices of Care: Filipino Nurses in America,” runs until Aug. 2. Merle Salazar is a retired nurse and board member of the Filipino American National Historical Society Greater Chicago Chapter, which co-curated the exhibit. Salazar said she wants more nurses to share their stories and be more outspoken about their experiences, both positive or negative, working in the healthcare industry.

* Crain’s | Gene & Georgetti sues concessions operator over Midway Airport outpost: The lawsuit, filed Monday in Cook County Circuit Court, is centered on Gene’s Bistro at Midway Airport, which opened in 2020. It is the latest salvo between Gene & Georgetti, which turns 85 this year, and SSP, which is part of a group that won a bid in 2017 to modernize the food options at Midway. The complaint alleges SSP used Gene & Georgetti’s reputation to cinch the Midway concession. The River North restaurant has long drawn celebrities — it has a Frank Sinatra booth — and is woman-owned. The lawsuit also alleges SSP, which operates the restaurant, violated trademark and trade secret laws in using the restaurant’s recipes, breached its contract regarding Gene’s Bistro and failed to pay agreed-upon fees to Gene & Georgetti.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Chicago Reader | Cook County expands Flock license plate reader network: All but three commissioners—Alma Anaya, Tara Stamps, and Jessica Vásquez—voted in favor of Dart’s request for more than 50 new license plate readers, bringing his office’s countywide total to 125. During a May 13 hearing of the board’s Criminal Justice Committee, the three dissenting commissioners questioned Dart’s transparency around the surveillance technology and how the contract was awarded. “I am not at issue with the goal of what the sheriff wants to accomplish,” Vásquez said. “I am at issue with this vendor, who has been highlighted across the country in terms of violating contract agreements.”

* Shaw Local | Plainfield adopts ban on sale of controversial drug kratom: The village of Plainfield has joined other communities in banning the sale of kratom, which the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has called “a drug of concern.” Village trustees on Tuesday unanimously approved an ordinance that not only bans the sale or transfer of kratom, but also bans the sale or transfer of any novel synthetic or psychoactive drugs. Those violating the ordinance could face a $250 fine. There is a statewide ban on the sale of kratom to anyone under the age of 18.

* Daily Herald | Pulte Homes asks St. Charles for incentives for development — but with no affordable housing: The proposal gained supportive comments from the council, applauding the design that accomplishes the city’s goal of cleaning up the site, developing housing that supports the surrounding neighborhoods and bringing more foot traffic to the downtown. But Pulte representatives have made one thing clear. They do not want to lose the extra $3 million cost they claim it will take to meet the city’s Inclusionary Housing Ordinance. The proposal includes a subdivision with 93 single-family homes and 12 townhouse units. The property is located northwest of downtown, north of Dean/State streets, between North 5th Street and North 12th Street. The site is south of the former railroad tracks.

* Daily Herald | ‘Protecting homes’: Officials celebrate $3.5 million drainage, flood control project in Wauconda: Wauconda’s wide-ranging project was envisioned four years ago after the village was notified of potential grant funding through a $122 million allocation from the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity. Different projects were discussed, but after being advised to “think big,” a proposal to create proper drainage for Bangs Lake and reduce flooding to more than 70 properties and eight roads was submitted, said Wauconda Mayor Jeff Sode. The stormwater commission awarded a $2.73 million grant for the work.

* Daily Herald | Buffalo Grove ranked best place to live in Illinois by U.S. News & World Report. Here’s who else made the list: “The 2026-2027 Best Places to Live rankings offer consumers a look at places throughout the U.S. that might meet their needs for livability best,” said Erika Giovanetti, consumer lending analyst at U.S. News & World Report. The report noted Buffalo Grove’s median household income of $135,543, compared with the national median of $83,181. The village also boasts a 2.1% unemployment rate, below the national average of 4.5%.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | During Rivian visit, Pritzker says new R2 model could open EV market to the middle class: Speaking steps away from the R2 production line, Pritzker noted the Model T helped cars evolve from a luxury to an accessible option in the early 20th century, ultimately transforming the middle class. He noted the R2’s lower price point – starting at $45,000, much lower than Rivian’s R1 launch vehicles that started at $72,990. “It’s a product for the middle class,” Pritzker told a crowd of elected officials and Rivian workers. “It’s a product for people who haven’t otherwise been able to afford an electric vehicle in the U.S., and I’m proud it’s being made right here in Normal and in Illinois.”

* WGLT | Bloomington City Council discusses cleaning up amendment process: The Bloomington City Council is trying to bring a little more order into how amendments are brought into council votes, attempting to avoid confusion on what’s being approved. A proposal discussed Monday night would provide advanced submission guidelines and timelines to “substantive” amendments. The goal is to clarify exactly what’s being voted on, and avoid errors that sometimes have to be corrected weeks later.

* WCIA | New national data highlights trouble with testing at Urbana schools: Of the 752 Illinois districts the report mentions, Urbana is third from last in combined math and reading scores. It said they don’t have a set of data from the 2025 school year, but the trends have been going down since 2009.

* WCIA | New apartment complex proposal draws mixed reactions from Urbana community: The Urbana Committee of the Whole is reviewing a plan that proposes a four-story 32-unit apartment complex at the intersection of Main and McCullough. Some residents have concerns about the building’s plan as a medium-high density multi-family housing in four single-family residential lots. “This is going to be a monolith compared to everything around it,” said Urbana resident and former city council member Dennis Roberts. “This is going to be a multiplex of apartments and it’s going to be tall, it’s going to be angular, it’s going to be like a spaceship dropped it into this neighborhood.”

*** National ***

* NYT | A.I. Spending Sets a Record, With No End in Sight: In the first three months of the year, the four companies reported in their financial results, they plowed a total of $130.65 billion into capital expenditures, largely spending on data centers that power A.I. That figure — which was another record — was more than three times what the Manhattan Project cost to develop nuclear bombs and 71 percent higher than what the tech giants spent in the same quarter a year earlier.

* Tech Cruch | Google Search as you know it is over: Instead of returning a simple list of links, Google Search will drop users into AI-powered interactive experiences at times. Google is also introducing tools that can dispatch “information agents” to gather information on a user’s behalf, along with tools that let users build personalized mini apps tailored to their needs.

  11 Comments      


Stop Rx Drug Deserts. Say No To HB 1443!

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

HB 1443 would create a state-appointed Prescription Drug Affordability Board with the authority to review and set upper payment limits on selected prescription drugs. While well-intentioned, this misguided legislation risks harming patients’ community pharmacies without addressing the real drivers of health care costs.

Allowing government appointees to intervene in decisions between patients and their physicians raises serious concerns. Moreover, despite being enacted in multiple states, these boards have failed to deliver meaningful savings. Two states have set upper payment limits, yet in the seven years since the first board was established, there is no evidence of a single dollar saved for patients.

In Illinois, community pharmacies are essential to the communities they serve, providing access to critical medicines and treatments. If upper payment limits are set below pharmacies’ acquisition costs, pharmacists could be forced to dispense drugs at a loss or stop carrying certain drugs altogether. This puts patient access at risk, especially those who depend on nearby, trusted community-based pharmacies.

Illinois’ health care system is already incredibly fragile. HB 1443 advances policy with no record of lowering costs for patients or supporting the sustainability of community pharmacies. Don’t force community pharmacies to choose between financial loss and patient access. We urge you to oppose HB 1443.

Paid for by PharmaScript and the Greater Chicagoland Black Chamber of Commerce

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Here we go again

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a letter ostensibly to Michael Sacks that was apparently only sent to CTU leaders by President Stacy Davis Gates

Dear Michael:

I’m writing to you because the events in the South show we are in a full-blown crisis of democracy. And while the disenfranchisement in Tennessee and elsewhere is the clearest face of the authoritarian power grab, it is not the only one.

I am hopeful we can agree that we should not have Jim Crow decide elections in the South and also that we should not have billionaires decide them in the North.

When I read your March op-ed in the Chicago Tribune, I noted your remarks: your invocation of Karen Lewis, your opposition to school closures, your support for progressive revenue, and your call for an independent, student-centered Chicago Board of Education. On these points, we agree. And, at this moment, that agreement matters more than any of our disagreements.

For those objectives to come to be, we must get outside interests and the outsized influence out of what is supposed to be a democratic process among Chicagoans to elect a school board to reflect their interests and deliver quality public education for their children.

At CTU, we recently partnered with the district for the May 1st day of civic engagement where students learned voting rights from Operation Push, imagined their dream communities at BUILD on the West side, and studied the constitution and bill of rights in multiple classrooms. Nowhere in their civic education does it discuss the outsized role of billionaires in democracy today.

Yet, the Illinois Network of Charter Schools Action PAC has reported more than $3.2 million in cash on hand. By public reporting, you are the single largest funder of the Common Ground Collective which opposed the corporate head tax. And in 2024, out-of-state promoters of school privatization flooded Chicago’s first-ever elected school board races with no accountability to a single CPS family. Jim Walton, the Arkansas-based Walmart heir, and Reed Hastings, co-founder of Netflix wrote $400,000 and $100,000 checks to the INCS PAC in one sitting.

These are not Chicagoans investing in Chicago’s children. They are national actors with an ideological agenda. This spring’s congressional primaries showed us what happens when that model scales: roughly $21 million flowed through pop-up super PACS that registered with the FEC weeks before voting began, deliberately concealing who was paying for them until after the votes were counted.

Michael, we owe it to Chicago’s children and their families to protect democracy and do elections differently in the upcoming school board races.

Democracy works when we have more people in the process, not more money. With all 21 seats of the Chicago Board of Education on the ballot for the first time in this city’s history, we have to work together for Chicagoans to have their say.

Especially as we see what is happening in the South and at a moment when the President is forecasting that he will end free and fair elections, send armed agents to the polls, and candidates who outright support the end of public education and the rise of fascism will be on the ballot everywhere, there are larger and more urgent places to contribute to defend democracy and democratic norms, not overtake the will of Chicagoans.

I am writing to ask you to demonstrate your commitment to an independent, student-centered board by not contributing to the fly-by-night operators we witnessed in the primary and suspending any further contributions to empower Chicago’s parents, educators, and families to vote their preferences.

If Chicago’s civic, labor, and philanthropic leadership can find the discipline to set the standard and keep this election in the hands of the people, the collective attention and resources of this city can remain available for the fights that follow — fights that, based on your public statements, I hope that you and I may find ourselves on the same side of.

Chicago’s voters deserve a level playing field to make their choice for school board, not an uphill battle in an arena where investment capital and out-of-state interest tip the scales.

We owe Chicago’s voters a school board election that belongs to Chicago’s voters. Not to Wall Street. Not to Silicon Valley. Not to a constellation of shell committees that will move on to the next race the day after ours is decided.

I would welcome a private conversation to discuss this further and would look forward to jointly spreading this message together.

In service of our shared city,
Stacy Davis Gates
President, Chicago Teachers Union President, Illinois Federation of Teachers

* Sacks’ reply

Dear Stacy,

A copy of a letter you purportedly sent to me was shared with me after you distributed that letter to your entire 800-person House of Delegates. I have yet to actually receive the letter.

Let me be direct, your letter may be the most transparently disingenuous outreach I have seen. Therefore please forgive the blunt nature of this reply.

You and your lieutenants, including Brandon Johnson and his senior staff, who all come from organizations or political campaigns you led, lead or funded, have defamed me with limited breaks since December. You have done this on air, in print, on social media, and from the podiums and bully pulpit available to all of you.

You made a claim in a TV interview that you know I am endorsing “a platform to close Chicago Public Schools on the south side and west side,” and you made this claim knowing it is false. After I responded to the report that your claim was false, you again claimed I support a list “circulated by former CPS CEO Pedro Martinez” that puts “dozens of schools on the southwest, south, and west sides on the chopping block.” For the record again, that is false. Further I do not believe I have ever met or spoken with Pedro Martinez.

You also falsely claim that I, through an organization I support, opposed Mayor Johnson’s corporate head tax proposal. I have stated that I support progressive revenue, and neither I nor the organization (Common Ground Collective) spent one penny opposing the proposed tax. What Common Ground Collective did do is reveal that the Mayor, while divisively seeking to raise $100 million for a so-called “Community Safety Fund,” was not using any of that funding to increase resources for public safety and youth in 2026, and was in some cases providing less funding. The goal of Common Ground was to see the Mayor increase public safety funding with the new revenue.

The worst of your letter is your questioning whether I support the very people and policies in Washington you know perfectly well I oppose. You know that I oppose the assault on the Voting Rights Act and public education, as well as the use of ICE that we have all been horrified by, and the rollback of DEI. And you know my record of fighting for choice and marriage equality, and as a pro-union advocate who consistently supports labor unions and working people and has been aligned with labor in numerous fights, including the fight for evidence-based school funding for Illinois and Chicago. As a lifelong Democrat who has fought for equality and for increased funding for public education, my opposition to those deleterious wrong-minded efforts is easily verifiable and beyond question by anyone even loosely acquainted with the truth or anyone who cares to be acquainted with the truth.

Setting the false claims and defamation aside for now, the letter itself is farcical. No one in this city is focused more on spending big money on politics, or deploys that money more forcefully or creatively, than you do. You have fully embraced funneling CTU money through ”shell committees,” friendly sounding PACs like “Our Schools PAC” and “Grassroots PAC.” And you are raising dues on CPS teachers now precisely to be able to spend more money on politics.

Now you suggest that Chicagoans who believe your outsized influence over the district has failed CPS students and families (and by extension your own teachers) ought to simply stand down? My grandmother would have called that chutzpah.

You are putting forward Hilario Dominguez, a paid deputy on your political staff, for the citywide role of CPS Board President, despite his being entirely unqualified to lead a system the size of CPS, the largest unit of government in Cook County. Previously you welcomed Brandon Johnson’s appointment to CPS Board President of a disbarred lawyer who entertains 9/11 conspiracy theories and appears to regard women’s economic independence as a problem. And you think others should step aside and cede the field to you?

For an experienced political operative, the cynicism, transparency and weakness of your gambit with the letter genuinely escapes me. Who exactly is buying it?

If you were serious about wanting to speak with me privately, then you would have simply picked up the phone and called me as you have in the past, and not routed your overture through a House of Delegates deck that was quickly leaked.

To be clear, if you ever want a real conversation, you know how to find me. But please know that so long as you are pouring ever more money into politics while championing candidates like Hilario Dominguez, I intend to continue supporting Democratic and progressive candidates and causes and engaging along with the large percentage of Chicagoans and CPS families who want a truly independent student-centered school board.

I am sure you understood that when you distributed your “letter” to 800 people before there was a reasonable chance I would see it.

Regards,
Michael J. Sacks

* An Equal Opportunity Compliance Office complaint filed against Hilario Dominguez, the CTU’s preferred board president candidate, is making the rounds. Click here and scroll down to H.D_EOCO_Complaint_Redacted. Whew.

* From that link posted above about Mitchell Ikenna Johnson

Mayor Brandon Johnson’s newly appointed school board president is facing new criticism for Facebook posts that appear to show him agreeing that the September 11th terrorist attacks were an inside job.

WGN Investigates found a Facebook post in January from an account that appears to belong to Rev. Mitchell Ikenna Johnson. The post said “facts!!!” above a shared video titled “3,000+ experts agree: 9/11 really was an inside job.”

Rev. Johnson was already facing calls to step-down from 40 of Chicago’s 50 alderpersons over social media posts involving the Israel-Hamas war. One post after the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack in Israel that said, “People have an absolute right to attack their oppressors by any means necessary.” In another post, Johnson wrote, “My Jewish colleagues appear drunk with the Israeli power and will live to see their payment.”

More…


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No Cuts. Increase Funding. Save Lives.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

40 lawmakers from Illinois’ Black and Latino Caucuses are united: cutting funding to safety-net hospitals is not an option and maintaining the status quo isn’t enough.

These hospitals are lifelines for Black and Brown communities, providing critical care, supporting local jobs, and stabilizing entire neighborhoods. After years of chronic underinvestment, many are already operating on the edge. Even small cuts could lead to closures, fewer services, and dangerous gaps in care.

The message is urgent and clear: Illinois cannot balance its budget on the backs of vulnerable communities. Protecting these hospitals means more than preventing cuts, it means increasing investment so they can meet the growing needs of the people they serve.

Fully fund and strengthen safety-net hospitals. Lives depend on it.

Paid for by Association of Safety-Net Community Hospitals

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Pritzker talks about data center regulation, but actual movement is in doubt

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Gov. JB Pritzker’s State of the State address in February

We need to think critically about our future energy usage with the needs of Illinois households at the forefront. So, in the face of rising demand and surging prices, I’m proposing a two year pause on authorization of new data center tax credits. With the shifting energy landscape, it is imperative that our growth does not undermine affordability and stability for our families.

He cannot unilaterally impose a two-year moratorium. That will require legislative action, although his administration can slow-walk the approval process.

* Gov. Pritzker today

Reporter: I’ll start on data centers. What sort of regulations would you support on that? And are you worried that any sort of regulations, including maybe suspending the tax incentives for it, could prevent more companies from wanting to come to Illinois to build data centers?

Pritzker: Well, I think the whole purpose here is we want to slow down and take an assessment of what it is that we need to accomplish in order to grow the data center industry in the future. Very importantly, we need electricity in order to make sure that we’re feeding our homes, our businesses that are already here in Illinois, and then, of course, the data center companies need to be able to provide their own energy for their needs. And so from my perspective, very important that we put some regulation on data centers coming to Illinois and just slow down while we’re trying to build up our capacity in the state.

Whether those “very important” regulations will actually pass this spring is unknown at the moment, but it’s not looking all that likely. If he wants this done, he needs to put his shoulder to the wheel.

* Back to the governor

One last thing, as you recall, we lifted the moratorium on nuclear plants that has a specific purpose of increasing the amount of electricity in our state, which will be an important precursor to us allowing back the tax credits for data centers. Doesn’t mean we have to have opened a nuclear plant, but we need to be able to see what electricity capacity will look like in the state before we can provide the kinds of incentives we used to on data centers. […]

Reporter: Back to data centers, there’s been concerns from the community about the resources it takes to run the data centers [garbled audio]

Pritzker: I think it’s perfectly rational in this moment to have concerns about building new data centers. Data centers serve an important role in our newly AI-driven society, and whether we like that or not, we are going to see more and more technology available to people in their daily lives, in their work, and so on. It will increase productivity, and I think importantly, we need to focus on generating more electricity across the United States, here in Illinois, too. It’s what I’ve been doing. It’s why we passed the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, which is increased solar. I talked about that a little bit in my remarks about the fact that we now have, well, it’s more than 35 times the amount of solar as we were producing before I took office, so we’ve got to continue on that path with nuclear. It’s why we lifted the nuclear moratorium, and we’re going to continue to look at all the sources of electricity that we can build over the next 15 years, because that’s the time in which we’re going to have this significant increase in need, even if you put data centers aside. By the way, we would still need more electricity, and so data centers just add to the pressure on all of us to make sure that there’s energy, and particularly clean energy, available to serve the needs of job creation as well as people’s living standards.

We’re gonna need lots more electricity way before his “next 15 years” claim. From earlier this year

A recent study published by three state agencies warns electricity shortages are coming to Illinois.

The shortages will start in PJM Interconnection’s regional transmission system by 2029, with the shortage hitting Illinois’ ComEd territory (which is within PJM) beginning in 2030, and then kicks in hard by 2032.

Capacity shortages in downstate Ameren’s territory are expected to begin in 2031 and escalate through 2035, when the stuff hits the fan. Ameren is in the Midcontinent Independent System Operator’s, or MISO’s, regional transmission network.

* Back to Pritzker

So, I mean, we’re an attractive place for companies to move to that need water, in whether it’s manufacturing or data centers or anything else. My job, our job is to make sure that we protect the fresh water that we have here. I want to remind you that here in Illinois, we are on the shores of and sitting on top of 80 percent of the United States fresh water, 80 percent. 20 percent of the world’s fresh water. So that’s a resource that more and more people are recognizing as a highly valuable resource, again, we have to protect it from an environmental perspective. We have to protect it in terms of the needs of the people of Illinois. And then it’s a resource that also, again, is attractive for industry, many of them in need of fresh water, not to mention if you look at all the studies, residents around the United States, just families who live across the United States, more and more are going to be seen moving to the Midwest, because you can’t have - there isn’t enough water in Arizona, there isn’t enough water in Wyoming, there isn’t enough water in Colorado, or California, and there is an abundance of water here, and we should make sure that we are taking full advantage of the resource that is part of what Illinois.

From Fox Chicago this week

“The real concern here in Illinois is the fact that we have this limit on how much water we’re allowed to use from Lake Michigan. So the limit in this case isn’t being made by the level of Lake Michigan, it’s being made by the fact that Illinois has to keep itself under this limit that’s been imposed by the Supreme Court,” [Joel Brammeier, CEO of the Alliance for the Great Lakes] said.

From the Chicago Reader

Data center developers are also seeking out the midwest for its plentiful fresh water and cool climate. But [Helena Volzer, senior source water policy manager at the Alliance for the Great Lakes] cautioned that water conservation is important even in places with abundant water and said the region’s local water systems are still at risk from data centers. “I think that [data centers] have ignited a conversation in a water-rich region. [That] conservation is still important, it still matters. Managing those water resources sustainably is important,” she said. […]

Volzer mentioned that many data centers claim to use very little or no water, “and I think that’s very much not true.” Water usage can’t just be boiled down to a single facility. Instead, the entire lifecycle of water usage involved in operating that facility must be taken into account. “These are large, energy-using facilities, regardless of whether or not they’re using a closed loop system or immersive cooling or whatever the cooling method is,” Volzer said. Because data centers require computers that tend to heat up very quickly, cooling is a key component in helping a data center function—particularly one that’s being used to run generative AI.

“Most of our energy is generated through fossil fuels, oil, gas, [and] nuclear, and that requires water for cooling, too. So, water is going to be involved no matter what,” she said. The indirect water usage from power generation is often not included in projects presented to the community or to local politicians.

Of course, this goes far beyond Lake Michigan. Data centers have been popping up all over the state.

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Illinois Swipe-Fee Law: A Win For Big Retail, A Loss For Consumers

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The Illinois swipe-fee law shifts billions from consumers to large retailers, without any guarantee of lower prices at the register. By cutting interchange fees, the policy takes resources away from the services consumers rely on and boosts mega retailers’ profits.

Interchange fees help fund fraud protection, rewards programs, and affordable banking options. Reducing them doesn’t eliminate costs; it simply moves them. Consumers are likely to see fewer benefits, weaker protections, and higher fees elsewhere, while retailers keep the savings to line their pockets.

There’s little evidence that merchants pass these savings on to shoppers. Effects from similar laws prove price reductions do not materialize. Instead, the biggest gains have flowed to large national chains, not everyday consumers.

The law also risks creating a costly patchwork of state rules that complicate payments, reduce security, and increase friction at checkout. That added complexity ultimately lands on consumers through higher costs, fewer choices, and a less reliable payments system.

This isn’t about lowering prices. It’s about redistributing value. If enacted, consumers will pay more in lost benefits and reduced safeguards, while major retailers come out ahead.

For more information, visit https://www.icul.com/advocacy/ifpa/.

Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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It’s just a bill

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rep. Rick Ryan…

State Rep. Rick Ryan, D-Evergreen Park, will join FX’s The Bear actor Corey Hendrix on Wednesday, May 20, at 12:45 p.m. in the parking lot between the Capitol and Howlett Building to celebrate the ongoing work designating the Italian Beef sandwich as the official state sandwich of Illinois, including the passage of House Bill 4669 and House Resolution [912.]

“There is a rich history behind the Italian beef sandwich,” Ryan said. “It’s our state’s most famous sandwich, brought to the United States by working class Italian immigrants who found resourceful ways to make meals stretch and ends meet. And it is still extremely popular today.”

Ryan sponsored House Bill 4669 to officially name the Italian beef sandwich as the state sandwich of Illinois. The measure passed out of the House and awaits a vote in the Senate. House Resolution 910 declaring Saturday, May 23 as Italian Beef Day in Illinois was also introduced and plans to be heard later this week for adoption.

Coincidently, the global hit Chicago-based show “The Bear” helped reinforce the cultural impact of Italian food and specifically, the Italian beef sandwich. Chicago native Corey Hendrix will also join Ryan at the press conference. Hendrix stars in FX’s The Bear as “Sweeps,” a longtime employee of The Bear. Hendrix grew up in the North Lawndale neighborhood in Chicago. FX’s The Bear returns for its fifth and final season on June 25 on FX and Hulu.

“We’re thrilled to have members from The Bear and the film industry joining us as we celebrate,” Ryan said. “The show has combined culture and entertainment and encouraged viewers to enjoy some of the delicious meals that they’ve seen be prepared on the set.”

Please be advised that, weather permitting, the press conference may change locations.

* WAND

State lawmakers have not taken a vote on the Chicago Bears-endorsed megaprojects bill since April 22, but Gov. JB Pritzker told reporters Monday that he is optimistic the General Assembly will pass the plan before session ends. […]

“My north star is protecting the taxpayers of Illinois,” Pritzker said. “We need to have something that works for the state of Illinois that’s fair, as we are being fair with other businesses that want to come to Illinois or expand here, that we’re being fair in the allocation of support for a business expanding in the state while also protecting taxpayers.” […]

While the plan is up in the air, Pritzker stressed one thing is clear — the Bears will not be staying in Chicago despite Mayor Brandon Johnson’s last-minute push to keep the team.

“I’d love them to be in the city, but we’re three years in now, and he still has no plan,” Pritzker said. “The Bears have said publicly, and I think they said so last Friday, that they have now only two options, which [are] the state of Indiana or Arlington Heights.”

* Sen. Mike Simmons…

State Senator Mike Simmons will host a press conference alongside State Representative Norma Hernandez and advocates from AIDS Foundation Chicago to support and advocate for HIV funding infrastructure in Illinois through Senate Bill 2814, which proposes to restore funding for Illinois’ PrEP Medication Assistance Program and allocate funding for STI screening.

WHO: State Senator Mike Simmons (D-Chicago), State Representative Norma Hernandez (D-Melrose Park), Alderman Lamont Robinson, Timothy Jackson (AFC)

WHAT: Press conference on Senate Bill 2814/House Bill 4410

WHEN: Tuesday, May 19 at 4 p.m.

WHERE: Blue Room, Illinois State Capitol and live on BlueRoomStream.com

* Illinois Insurance Association Executive Director Kevin Martin

Illinois has long benefited from one of the most competitive auto insurance markets in the country. A recent U.S. News & World Report study found that Illinois has the sixth‑lowest auto insurance premiums in the nation — a ranking driven by strong competition, consumer choice and a regulatory framework that allows insurers to respond quickly to changing market conditions.

Legislation being debated in Springfield (Senate Bill 714) would upend this system by imposing a form of prior approval rate regulation that has failed consumers elsewhere. The consequences are predictable and well documented: higher premiums, fewer choices and insurers reducing their footprint or leaving the market entirely. […]

The timing of this proposal is especially puzzling because Illinois auto insurance premiums have been declining over the past year. With fewer traffic crashes, claims frequency fell, and insurers responded by lowering rates — exactly what a competitive market with more than 200 insurers is supposed to do.

Yet an amendment to SB 714, introduced with little warning on the evening of May 11, threatens to undermine this progress. The bill advances a politically driven proposal by Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias without meaningful stakeholder review or debate. It injects politics into rate decisions and slows insurers’ ability to adjust prices — up or down — based on actual claims experience.

* Harness Racing Update

With bankrupt Hawthorne Race Course in suburban Chicago on life support and the spring session of the state legislature in its final month the push for passage of a law permitting a standardbred track/casino to be built in downstate Decatur has taken on added urgency for members of the Illinois harness racing community.

“We’ve got our [lobbying] team down here,” said Illinois Harness Horsemen’s Association executive director Tony Somone, speaking from the state capital in Springfield. “We’re trying to get a House bill across the finish-line before the end of the session on May 31.”

A bill calling for the Decatur racino and also for an end to the provision in state law that allows Hawthorne to veto any racetrack/casino project within 30 miles of its property passed the Illinois Senate 49-8 last fall.

While no one has made a concerted effort to build in suburban Chicago if the boundary is eliminated Conor Lucas and his father, Larry, (son-in-law of the late Illinois Racing Board chairman Gene Lamb) are the prime-movers in the Decatur project.

For more press releases on legislation and other matters, click here.

* More…

    * WCIA | ‘A bill like this would be really key’: Doctor talks new IL bill addressing asthma, allergy preparedness in schools: Dr. Dareen Siri, the CEO of Midwest Allergy Sinus Asthma Respiratory, said that she has been advocating for this bill for years. House Bill 4247 is addressing asthma and epinephrine emergency preparedness at schools and events held there. She said that it would allow schools to keep asthma medication readily available, especially near sports fields and gyms. It would also require staff to be educated on how to give epinephrine and asthma medication. […] The bill is now heading to Governor JB Pritzker’s desk to be signed into law.

    * WGN | Bears scheduled to meet with NFL during league meeting as Illinois lawmakers face looming deadline on megaprojects bill: The Chicago Bears’ front office is scheduled to meet with the NFL on Tuesday during the league’s Spring Meeting in Orlando, Florida, to discuss plans for a new stadium. The NFL Spring League Meeting runs Tuesday and Wednesday. Meanwhile, Illinois lawmakers are on a short deadline to finalize the so-called megaprojects bill that could help keep the Bears in Illinois. The Illinois House passed the bill last month, though the Bears have requested some changes.

    * Press release | Grasse Public Health Measure to Prepare for Potential Infectious Diseases Passes General Assembly: House Bill 4977 makes a simple change to Illinois’ Hospital Licensing Act by including “pathogens of epidemiological concern” as a form of multidrug-resistant organisms. These pathogens are defined by a range of traits that indicate a propensity for rapid transmission, especially within healthcare facilities. It also repeals the MRSA Screening and Reporting Act, which will now be covered by the expanded definition. This legislation passed the General Assembly with bipartisan support and now moves to the governor’s desk for signature.

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Transparency Is A Central Part Of 340B Bill: Protect Access To Care – Vote YES On HB 2371 SA 2

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois hospitals support transparency in House Bill 2371 SA 2—the Patient Access to Pharmacy Protection Act—even as rigorous audits performed regularly on 340B providers over decades do not support drugmaker claims that the federal program lacks transparency.

The current status quo of drugmakers restrictions on 340B discounts, contrary to federal law, is causing significant harm to low-income and uninsured patients who benefit from the federal program. Hospitals agree with additional transparency requirements in the 340B bill because of this program’s importance in providing patients with lifesaving healthcare services.

HB 2371 SA 2 requires covered entities to submit annual reports to the General Assembly that include:

    • A copy of the covered entity’s annual 340B program recertification;
    • The covered entity’s community benefits report, including the amount of charity care they provide;
    • The number of claims for prescription drugs received under 340B;
    • A description of any adverse 340B audit findings in the preceding year; and
    • A description of the 340B program’s impact on patients and communities the covered entity serves.

SA 2 also prevents duplicate discounts via policy and requires a process to pay back drugmakers for any duplicate discount.

340B is a vital lifeline for hospitals serving vulnerable Illinoisans. Vote YES on HB 2371 SA 2 to protect access to care. Learn more.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. ICYMI: Kathy Salvi ousted as Illinois GOP chair, Bob Grogan takes over. WGN

    - Kathy Salvi is out as Illinois Republican Party chair less than two years after being elected by the State Central Committee.
    - In a Monday release, the Illinois Republican Party announced the election of Bob Grogan, effective immediately. A native of DuPage County, Grogan previously served as county auditor from 2008 to 2020.
    - “I am honored and humbled to be elected as the next Chair of the Illinois Republican Party. I’m grateful to my good friend, Chair Salvi, for her dedication to the party and her work to build a brighter future for Illinois families. Illinois Republicans are united and I’m excited to get to work electing Republicans up and down the ballot in November,” Grogan said in a statement.

* Related stories…

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* At 10:20 am, Gov. JB Pritzker will deliver remarks at the Rivian R2 announcement. At noon, the governor will deliver remarks at the grand opening of the Peoria Golf Learning Center. Click here to watch.

* BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Chicago Bears’ proposed stadium site in Hammond would be built on giant slag heap, near hazardous waste sites: As the mayor of Arlington Heights, Jim Tinaglia leads the charge to build a Chicago Bears stadium there. In his private job as an architect, Tinaglia said he would be very leery of building on the rival proposed site in Hammond, Indiana. “I would throw up the red caution flags immediately,” he told the Tribune. “I’ve worked on enough sites with gas stations or dry cleaners or some sort of hazardous material to know it contaminates the ground. I would be very concerned about selecting a site like that.”

* Tribune | State’s attorney launches transit crime prosecution task force: The task force will include a plethora of law enforcement agencies — including the Cook County sheriff’s office, the Chicago Police Department, the U.S. attorney’s office and the FBI — as well as the Chicago Transit Authority, Metra and Pace. At monthly meetings to begin next week, task force members will “review processes that will assist in effective and efficient charging and prosecution of transit crime,” according to guidelines released by the state’s attorney’s office.

* Capitol News Illinois | Remaining ‘Broadview Six’ protesters set for rare federal misdemeanor trial next week: Prosecutors are set to try the remaining “Broadview Six” immigration protesters in a rare federal misdemeanor trial next week, after a lengthy pretrial conference Monday ironed out final details right down to the configuration of defense tables in the courtroom. The trial is scheduled to begin after Memorial Day and run for two weeks. But defense attorneys are still hopeful it might be avoided after U.S. District Judge April Perry agreed to read unredacted transcripts from inside the grand jury room.

*** Statewide ***

* Brownfield AG | Three quarters of Illinois crops planted: Jim Reed, who grows corn and soybeans in Piatt County, tells Brownfield… “We’ve got maybe a couple days of planting left.” He says, “The rain every three to five days has been so unusual compared to last year. Everything that is in looks pretty good. Corn and beans both, a lot of it’s up, a lot of it’s growing well.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* NBC Chicago | Johnson office gives rebuttal after Pritzker criticism over Bears stadium talks: The mayor’s office fired back Monday, saying Johnson does not support a privately owned stadium funded in any way by increased property taxes on residents while the Bears get property tax breaks. “The City’s proposal remains the only plan centered on public ownership alongside a funding mechanism that does not burden property taxpayers while keeping the Bears in Chicago. We look forward to continuing to work with the legislature, the State, and all stakeholders to advance a solution that centers the needs of working Illinoisans while preserving the Bears’ future in Chicago,” a statement from Johnson’s office read.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Council panel backs deal ensuring 2,800 affordable housing units for people with disabilities: Chicago must ensure the availability of 2,000 affordable housing units for people with disabilities and 800 units for hearing and visually-impaired residents, under a $2.25 million settlement advanced Monday by a City Council committee. Last week, the Chicago Sun-Times reported the cash portion of the settlement with Access Living, an advocacy organization for people with disabilities that receives city grants. At Monday’s Finance Committee meeting, other major elements of the settlement that are likely to prove to be far more complex and costly were disclosed.

* Stacy Davis Gates sent a May 12 letter to billionaire Michael Sacks saying Chicago school board elections should not be decided by billionaires, writing, “we owe it to Chicago’s children and their families to protect democracy” in upcoming races. Click here to read the full letter.

* NBC Chicago’s Paris Schutz


* Sun-Times | Chicago’s parking meters could be sold again under deal requiring City Council approval: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office on Monday confirmed the tentative agreement between Chicago Parking Meters LLC and New York-based Stonepeak Partners. The deal, which would change ownership of the meters and who collects their profits, now sits before City Council, which could seek concessions in favor of the city before approving it.

* Block Club | Ald. Gardiner Defends $1 Million Suit Against City: ‘What Price Can You Put On Your Reputation?’: During a Monday news conference, Gardiner and his attorney, Craig Tobin, said they arrived at the $1 million figure by calculating the emotional and financial toll the ethics investigation took on the alderperson. “This is about transparency and accountability, and to be frank, what price can you put on that? What price can you put on your reputation?” said Gardiner, who also confirmed he is seeking a third term in office.

* Sun-Times | Ald. Fuentes sues federal government, alleging abuse during Operation Midway Blitz: Ald. Jessie Fuentes’ lawsuit seeks $100,000 in damages from the Oct. 3 confrontation. But she told the Sun-Times last fall that she couldn’t “care less about the money,” adding her motive is to hold federal agents accountable for “terrorizing and brutalizing” her constituents in the name of immigrant enforcement.

* Sun-Times | Lollapalooza awards $1.7 million grant to CPS for arts education: The grant, doled out over the next five years, is one of the largest financial awards CPS has received for arts education, according to CPS. The district and musical festival organizer announced the grant Sunday. The donation will go toward two initiatives. Part of the funds — $634,000 — is earmarked for All-City Performing Arts, an after-school program for music, dance and theater. The remaining $1.1 million is for the Lollapalooza Arts Education Fund, which provides grants to schools for in-school arts programs across artistic disciplines.

* Sun-Times | Few Chicago residents buy flood insurance, but should they?: Almost every community in the Chicago area is at risk of flooding. Neighborhood sewers are designed to hold 2 inches of rain in a 24-hour period. Some storms are dumping four times that amount. The same goes for suburban Cook County. The rain is landing so hard and so fast that it overwhelms the sewers and doesn’t allow the water to run through a massive flood-mitigation system known as Deep Tunnel.

* Sun-Times | Chicago Reader names new publisher: Malik Johnson, who was previously the executive director and publisher of South Side Media Works, which oversees South Side Weekly and Hyde Park Herald, will join the newsroom June 1, the publication announced Monday. “The Reader has a rich and storied history that stands on its own, and I’m thrilled to help usher in a new beginning for the publication,” Jackson said in a news release.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | St. Charles faces 500K gallon-per-day water deficiency, even with new well nearing completion: The city of St. Charles is currently staring down a water deficiency of 500,000 gallons per day. This is despite a recent well project being completed and another one approaching its finish in 2027. Already, the search is beginning for a new drinking water well. City officials say the discovery of a larger water source is crucial for accommodating the city’s long-term growth. The search is proving to be a costly one. The city council is likely to approve a four-year service agreement with Layne Christensen Company at an estimated cost of $350,000 annually. Over the last 50 years, the same company has drilled all the city’s wells.

* Oak Park Journal | D97 takes steps to cut student screen time: At its May 12 school board meeting, Michael Arensdorff, the district’s technology chief, presented the school board a technology plan for the next school year. Two of the biggest changes are eliminating students’ ability to directly access YouTube, something many parents have complained about, and not allowing students to use their devices during free time or indoor recess.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Still seeking ways to solve looming shortfall, Kane County Board OKs some 2027 budget measures: Several budget-related items secured approval at the board’s regular meeting last week, including plans to use the Consumer Price Index of 2.7% in the budgeting process as the planned property tax hike for the year, raises for non-union employees and the doling out of some of the county’s Grand Victoria Riverboat funds toward county projects. Another measure allocating the county’s mass transit sales tax funds for the coming year, however, failed to secure board approval last week.

* Daily Southtown | Markham Park District agrees to not land helicopters, but larger city lawsuit is still pending: The restraining order is part of a larger lawsuit filed by the city against the Park District last October, where the city alleges the park board mismanaged funds, left parks in disrepair and violated a 2012 intergovernmental agreement. The Park District has argued recent loss of city grant funding, despite promises by the city to fund projects, has created financial distress.

* Evanston Now | Divided D65 board picks new president: In a meeting reminiscent of last fall’s closely split battle over school closings and filling a vacancy, the District 65 Board of Education chose Nichole Pinkard as its new president by a one-vote margin on Monday night. Pinkard defeated Andrew Wymer, 4-3, and replaces Pat Anderson as president in the one-year term. Anderson, who remains on the board, told Evanston Now that she didn’t run for president again due to “family obligations.”

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Normal Town Council OKs 6-month data center moratorium; Bloomington poised to do the same: Normal’s moratorium will last until Nov. 30. It pauses applications and approvals of permit issuances for data centers. That time will give the town a chance to prepare rules and regulations that address town needs if a land use application is to be considered. “We are suggesting that a moratorium for up to six months gives us time to determine appropriate land use regulations and come back to council with recommendations,” said Pam Reece, Normal’s city manager. “And we would go through the process with public input and through the planning commission process for appropriate regulations associated with data center installations in our community.”

* WGLT | As McLean County weighs data centers, Joliet’s massive project puts water use in context: Joliet Public Utilities director Alison Swisher said the amount of water use the company gave for that complex of buildings is an average of 120,000 gallons per day, or 3.6 million per month. Data centers are increasingly moving to closed-loop cooling systems, which cost less than using a constant stream of water. “And a lot of that water wasn’t even for the closed loop. The closed loop — you fill it, and then the water stays in there, and it minimally needs recharging. Every 10-15 years, they drain it and refill it,” said Swisher.

* WAND | Williamsville Public Library and Museum seeing pay off of switching to solar panels: In fall 2024, the Williamsville Public Library and Museum installed solar panels on its roof. The panels have cut thousands of dollars from the building’s power bills. “I sat down with the library museum board, and we just crunched some numbers, and we looked at how much our power bills were, how much money we could save with solar,” said Natalie Albers, director of the Williamsville Public Library and Museum. “We looked at the state and federal incentives, net metering with Ameren, and when we looked at all of that, we just thought, we can’t not do solar.”

* WAND | $1.3M botanical garden dome reopens in Springfield’s Washington Park: A $1.3 million project renovated the Conservatory Dome. The original dome was built in 1971 and was demolished to make way for the new dome, which was built on the same footprint as the old dome. “We had to hire engineers to come in and advise us on how to replace the pieces of glass so that it would survive another 50 years and be available to the public to enjoy,” Park Board President Leslie Sgro told WAND News. “We have 3,200 different species of plants just inside of this dome.”

* Illinois Times | From India to Springfield: “That was my initial goal because with the work visa and getting a permanent residency Green Card and citizenship was a long process,” Manivannan told the Illinois Times. “I just had to be with the faith that if it’s supposed to happen, it happens, because nothing is guaranteed that you’re, first, going to be a citizen or you’re going to be a permanent resident of the U.S., so that was my mindset back in 2015.” Manivannan’s immigration process is profiled in The Mosaic Project, a podcast hosted by pastor Tony Stang of Central Baptist Church in Springfield.

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Good morning!

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tinariwen’s “The Song of the Wild Beasts”

How’s life treating you?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, May 19, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Fox Chicago

Rising utility bills and increased noise aren’t the only concerns surrounding data centers. They’re also making headlines over fears they could contribute to lower water levels in Lake Michigan. […]

“So I’ll be just very clear, data center water use is highly unlikely to affect the level of Lake Michigan,” said Joel Brammeier.

Brammeier is the president and CEO of the Alliance for the Great Lakes.

“The real concern here in Illinois is the fact that we have this limit on how much water we’re allowed to use from Lake Michigan. So the limit in this case isn’t being made by the level of Lake Michigan, it’s being made by the fact that Illinois has to keep itself under this limit that’s been imposed by the Supreme Court,” he said.

* Chalkbeat

The Illinois State Board of Education unanimously approved an overhaul to its system for deciding how well schools across the state are performing.

The changes to the federally required school accountability system include some new labels that indicate how well a school is doing. The new system would also calculate the designations differently.

The proposed changes now go to the federal government for final approval; State Superintendent Tony Sanders said he expects a green light. With federal approval, the new accountability system would go into effect by this fall.

* Daily Herald

Three consumer and environmental protection agencies shared their testimony against Nicor’s proposed rate hike, warning it would cost consumers an additional $221 million annually.

Representatives from Illinois PIRG (Public Interest Research Group), Environmental Defense Fund and the Citizens Utility Board (CUB) spoke during Monday’s online news conference.

They noted that Nicor’s hike, proposed in January, came just seven weeks after the company received a $168 million increase. Regulators had cut that request in half.

This new hike marks Nicor’s sixth since 2017. Since then, the company has raised delivery rates by 137%, totaling $898 million. Meanwhile, its parent company, Southern Co., made over $29 billion in profits. […]

CUB Communications Director Jim Chilsen stated the requested hike is five times what Nicor can justify. While gas supply costs fluctuate, the delivery costs, which make up half to two-thirds of bills, are worsening the impact on consumers.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Subscribers were kept up to date on all of this spending and more during the primary. Bloomberg | DraftKings, Meta, AI Firms Have a New Election Playbook: Flood State-Level Races With Cash: With months to go before the November elections, the numbers are already staggering: Meta’s Democratic super PAC Making Our Tomorrow spent $750,000 on just three Illinois state legislative primaries this year. That’s more than 15 times the $48,500 total Meta spent on Illinois’s last midterm elections in 2022. […] Three out of the four candidates Meta’s super PAC backed in Illinois’s March 17 primaries lost. The sports gambling companies’ super PAC did better there. After spending more than $2.5 million in 10 Chicago-area state legislative races, their chosen candidates won in seven of them.

* Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker dismisses questions about urology procedure complication: ‘I’ve given you the information’: Gov. JB Pritzker on Monday dismissed questions about a complication from a urology procedure last week, declining to provide any significant details beyond what his office had already disclosed. “Literally, I’ve given you the information. I had a urological procedure, and there’s — I would tell you and release any information if it was life-threatening or anything that would interfere with my ability to do my job,” Pritzker said when asked whether he planned to have his doctors make any statement about his health.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Chicago school board hopefuls file to enter historic race: Henderson, a business attorney who serves the board of Urban Prep Academies charter network, called it “important” to be first in line. Any candidate who arrived prior to 9 a.m. will be entered in a lottery to appear at the top of the ballot. “It shows the work that we’re putting in, it shows our commitment, it shows our dedication, it shows that we’re serious,” Henderson said.

* Crain’s | Power families of Chicago: The 14 families at the top of the power structure have influence across Illinois’ civic, cultural and business life. Some built global companies. Some reshaped neighborhoods. Some fund campaigns, foundations and institutions that help set the city’s and the nation’s agenda. Others carry forward names that have mattered here for generations. Their power is not always public and it’s not always uncomplicated.

* Sun-Times | Chicago History Museum violated labor laws after firing employees for unionizing, NLRB alleges: The Chicago History Museum violated federal labor laws after management disciplined and fired employees for unionizing last year, the National Labor Relations Board alleges in a complaint filed last week. The NLRB says the museum’s former president and former HR head started retaliating against employees after they voted to form a union last April, according to a news release from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Council 31, the union representing museum employees.

* Press release | Borealis Carries More Than 416,000 at Second Anniversary: BorealisSM train service between the Twin Cities and Chicago continues to exceed expectations as it celebrates its second birthday. The partnership between three states and Amtrak began in May of 2024 and more than 416,000 passengers have enjoyed the comfortable and reliable service, demonstrating the need for safe and accessible transportation options in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Illinois.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County approves pay raises for countywide positions: ‘We want people that are highly experienced’: According to the 2026 Lake County employee compensation report, the annual salary for county clerk, circuit court clerk, coroner and treasurer is just over $134,000 each. A 3% increase for all four positions comes to a total of about $16,000, or roughly $4,000 per position.

* Oak Park Journal | West Suburban hospital owners in court again as final hearing nears: Counsel for the business-partners-turned-legal-foes at the heart of the West Suburban Medical Center were in court again Monday morning as a third party continues its review of contested financial records. The hearing comes after Resilience Healthcare CEO Manoj Prasad and Hospital Landlord Rathnakar Reddy Patlola filed lawsuits against each other last month, with Patlola seeking a judge’s order that could start the process of reopening West Suburban under new management.

* Evanston Now | Mung Chiang named new NU president: Mung Chiang, the president of Purdue University, has been named the 18th president of Northwestern University, Northwestern’s Board of Trustees announced Monday. Chiang, who has led Purdue since January 2023, will start at NU on July 1.

* CBS Chicago | Judge delays decision on Markham restraining order against Park District over prom helicopter incident: The judge did not grant a TRO Monday, instead saying he wanted to allow for discovery. A hearing on a possible preliminary injunction will be set for 28 days from now, though an exact date was not set at the end of the hearing.

*** Downstate ***

* WJBD | Continental to Build $76-Million Highly Automated Warehouse in Mount Vernon: Continental has announced plans to construct a new, highly automated finished-goods warehouse in Mount Vernon, Illinois. The company plans to invest approximately $76 million in the project. The facility is designed primarily to meet the growing demand in North America while enhancing service levels and customer support. Covering an area larger than six American football fields, the warehouse will have capacity for approximately 500,000 passenger car tires. Construction is expected to start in summer 2026, with operations scheduled to begin in 2027.

* CBS Chicago | Test finds patient in Winnebago County, Illinois, did not have hantavirus, officials say: The Illinois Department of Public Health said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention conducted a confirmatory test on the person with the suspected case of hantavirus in the county, far northwest of Chicago. It turned out the person did not have hantavirus after all, the department said. The resident is no longer considered a potential hantavirus case, and no further public health action is necessary in this case, the department said.

* Press release | Country Superstar Tyler Hubbard Joins Du Quoin State Fair Grandstand Lineup: Hubbard, who first rose to fame as one-half of the multi-platinum duo Florida Georgia Line, helped shape the sound of modern country music with a string of No. 1 hits and genre-defining anthems. With 23 career No. 1 singles as a songwriter and artist, he has already built a remarkable legacy—and now, as a solo artist, he’s carving out an exciting new chapter, amassing more than 2 billion global streams to date.

* Capitol City Now | Opinions split on fines for Springfield parking violations: Ald. Shawn Gregory, noting that parking has been free since the pandemic yet people still feed the meters, said, “Ten dollars more is not going to move the needle. I’m not going to vote for it, because I am not in favor of that. People don’t know it’s free. And it’s not free. It’s free for two hours.” Gregory suggested using the proceeds from the parking meters – “free money” – to improve parking services, such as adding digital signs.

*** National ***

* NPR | The Supreme Court avoids taking up a fight over Voting Rights Act enforcement for now: Weeks after further weakening the Voting Rights Act, the U.S. Supreme Court sidestepped weighing in on a legal question that could severely limit enforcement of the law’s remaining protections for minority voters. In a brief, unsigned order on Monday, the high court announced it is sending cases about Mississippi and North Dakota state legislative maps back to lower courts to be reconsidered in light of its recent ruling in Louisiana v. Callais. That landmark decision in April weakened the Voting Rights Act’s protections against racial discrimination in redistricting and as a result reignited the congressional gerrymandering battle sparked by President Trump ahead of the 2026 midterm election to help Republicans keep control of the House of Representatives.

* Futurism | Doctors’ AI Systems Are Hallucinating Nonexistent Medical Issues During Appointments With Patients: First reported by Global News, the audit took a look at 20 AI scribe platforms and found that “all AI scribe systems from the 20 [government] approved vendors showed one or more inaccuracies at the procurement testing phase,” such as “hallucinations (fabrication), incorrect information, or missing or incomplete information.” “Inaccuracies in medical notes generated by AI Scribe systems could potentially result in inadequate or harmful treatment plans that may potentially impact patient health outcomes,” the report declared.

* NYT | Ebola Raged for Weeks in Congo Before Anyone Raised the Alarm: Congo has surveillance systems meant to identify outbreaks early so that they can be effectively contained. The country has added several laboratories in recent years and has extensive experience with previous, devastating Ebola outbreaks. And yet, precious time was lost when officials in Ituri, the province at the heart of the current outbreak, did not raise the alarm when patients began to show symptoms. Samples may not have been sent quickly enough to Kinshasa, the capital, for testing.

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It’s just a bill

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rep. Will Guzzardi filed HB5776 on Friday. WTVO

Short-term rentals booked through platforms like Airbnb and Vrbo could soon cost a little more under legislation advancing in Springfield that would create a new statewide tax on stays shorter than 30 days.

House Bill 5776 would impose a 4% excise tax on short-term rentals across Illinois, with the money dedicated to a new Community Land Trust Fund to support affordable housing initiatives. The bill applies to rentals of fewer than 30 consecutive days and would take effect once it becomes law, with tax collections starting Jan. 1, 2027. […]

Platforms that handle at least $100,000 in short-term rental bookings in Illinois over a 12‑month period would be required to collect the tax directly from renters and remit it to the Illinois Department of Revenue. In most cases, that would shift the tax‑collection responsibility away from individual hosts and onto the platform itself. […]

Under the bill, a short-term rental includes nearly any type of residential property offered for stays under 30 days, as long as the booking is reserved in advance.

That includes:

    - Owner‑occupied homes where a room is rented out
    - Tenant‑occupied units that are legally sublet
    - Non‑owner‑occupied houses or apartments used solely as short-term rentals
    - Condos, cottages and similar dwellings
    Long‑term rentals of 30 days or more are not covered by the tax.

* Capitol News Illinois

Backers of a bill aimed at limiting law enforcement’s use of biometric surveillance say they’re not looking to move the measure this legislative session.

House Bill 5521, the proposed Biometric Surveillance Act, would prohibit law enforcement agencies from using or accessing facial recognition tools. But it failed to meet a March 27 committee deadline and was sent back to the House Rules committee the same day a man suspected of killing a Loyola University freshman was arrested with the help of facial recognition, according to authorities. […]

Many witness slips filed in opposition to the bill have come from law enforcement groups like Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police, the Illinois Sheriffs’ Association and a few individual police departments. […]

The ACLU of Illinois has worked closely with bill sponsor Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago, on the legislation. Cassidy didn’t respond to a request for comment, but the ACLU argued biometric surveillance poses risks to privacy and could deter people from activities such as protesting, practicing religion or expressing political views. Privacy advocates warn the technology could eventually be used to track individuals and suppress dissent.

ACLU of Illinois Director of Communications Ed Yohnka said efforts to advance the bill will likely be delayed for several months, in part because the debate has become tied to the March 19 shooting of Loyola University freshman Sheridan Gorman in Rogers Park, in Cassidy’s district. Authorities said the suspect, who has drawn national attention because of his undocumented immigration status, was identified using facial recognition tools.

Yohnka said the ACLU of Illinois hopes to see the bill discussed through broader concerns about privacy, technological accuracy and potential misuse rather than through the lens of high-profile violent incidents.

* Sen. Steve McClure

Illinois patients could soon have an easier time accessing needed medications under legislation recently passed by the Illinois Senate.

Senate Bill 3213, filed by Senator Steve McClure, addresses situations where a patient arrives at a pharmacy only to learn that their prescription cannot be filled because the medication is out of stock. Under current Illinois law, some prescriptions cannot be transferred to another pharmacy, even if that pharmacy has the medication available. As a result, patients may be forced to contact their doctor to request a new prescription.

The legislation allows more types of prescriptions to be electronically transferred from one pharmacy to another. The measure is designed to bring Illinois law more closely in line with federal law, which allows broader prescription transfer options.

The legislation is a practical step to help patients avoid unnecessary delays when trying to obtain important medications. Allowing pharmacies to transfer eligible prescriptions can help reduce frustration for patients, families, doctors, and pharmacists.

The idea for the legislation was brought forward by a doctor who raised concerns about the challenges patients face when prescriptions cannot be filled at a particular pharmacy.

Senate Bill 3213 passed the Illinois Senate unanimously and now awaits action in the House.

* WAND

A plan heading to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk could expand access to life-saving asthma medication at schools.

The bill allows schools to keep a supply of asthma medication in secure locations that are accessible before, during, or after school where someone may be at risk, including practice fields, gyms and other athletic facilities. This comes as exercise-induced asthma can put student athletes at heightened risk of sudden respiratory distress.

“It expands the trained personnel who may administer asthma medication to a student to include coaches and athletic trainers,” said Sen. Adriane Johnson (D-Buffalo Grove).

House Bill 4247 passed unanimously out of the Senate Thursday. The measure received unanimous support from the House in April.

* Scott Holland

Halfway through May is a fine time to revisit some of the legislation covered earlier in the session, among more than 11,800 bills and resolutions filed since the current General Assembly started in January 2025.

March 31: The second time might be the charm for a “junk fees” ban. House Bill 288 was among about 150 proposals to advance from committees in late March, then in early April, the full House endorsed the measure 77-18. That gets the plan to a similar proposal in 2024 that never reached the full Senate floor. This version has six Senate sponsors, and on May 6, the Judiciary Committee advanced it 6-2.

According to Capitol News Illinois, House sponsor Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield, said the “bill delivers on a promise that’s quite simple: The price that you see should be the price that you pay.” I’m all for making sure nothing gets buried in the fine print only to be sprung on consumers near the end of a transaction, but I won’t be holding my breath on what I really want: a truth in taxation law that spells out which government unit gets what cut on every cash register receipt. […]

April 11: HB 4948, which sets conditions allowing problematic drivers to avoid a suspension by consenting to the installation of a speed control device in their vehicle, has cleared two major hurdles: the House voted 77-24-1 on April 16 to send it to the Senate, where on Wednesday the Transportation Committee approved 18-0.

State Rep. Marti Deuter, D-Elmhurst, has told Capitol News Illinois that “Data indicates that about 75% of the people whose licenses are suspended continue to drive.” As noted earlier, HB 4948 basically concedes that those people have and will continue to beat the system. Which means the other 25% get what benefit exactly?

No driver lands in this precarious position without first earning a license suspension or revocation, so sympathy is scarce. But whether this new technology actually improves roadway safety definitely remains to be seen.

* Rep. Mary Gill

State Rep. Mary Gill, D-Chicago, is trying to protect consumer experiences by prohibiting streaming services and the companies that manage their advertisements from showing ads that are louder than the show that a viewer is watching. […]

Senate Bill 3222 would require streaming services and third-party ad managers to take “reasonable care” to ensure that the audio of ads shown match the volume of the show. An already existing federal law sets this requirement for broadcast TV. Streaming services and ad management companies can follow these same guidelines to be in compliance. If passed, this law would take effect on July 1, 2027.

“This not only makes the viewing experience more stable and smoother for all audiences,” Gill said. “But it could help specific groups feel safer while watching shows. Older people won’t have to worry about being blasted with uncomfortably high audios or unexpected noise levels.”

The bill passed unanimously in the Senate and is awaiting further review in the House.

For more press releases on legislation and other matters, click here.

  8 Comments      


Incentivized lying?

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* 2023

An Illinois State Police trooper is “Illinois’ Top Cop” making 145 DUI arrests in 2022, according to the Alliance Against Intoxicated Motorists.

The report released Thursday provides DUI arrest data for various police agencies statewide. AAIM has conducted the annual surveys for 33 years with taxpayer-funded grants from the Illinois Department of Transportation.

Topping individual law enforcement officers, Illinois State Police Trooper Kevin Bradley was listed as Illinois’ Top Cop. Bradley had 145 DUI arrests in 2022.

* ABC 7 a couple of weeks ago

For several years, an Illinois State Police Trooper was named by a nonprofit the “Top Cop”: a moniker given to the member of law enforcement who has made the most DUI arrests in a single year statewide.

But many of those arrested drivers tell the ABC7 I-Team they were sober, and in some cases, it took years to clear their names of serious criminal charges.

A driver from Wisconsin says he owned his own trucking company but had to shut it down after losing his commercial driving license following a DUI arrest by the state trooper. Nearly two years later, the charges against him were ultimately dismissed, and he’s since filed a lawsuit. […]

After reviewing more than 300 DUI prosecutions listing Trooper Bradley as the arresting officer since 2023, the I-Team found 174 drivers were found not guilty at trial, or their cases were dismissed before adjudication, like in Ian Renfro’s case.

According to court records, 105 drivers were found guilty, with 96 of those drivers accepting plea deals for lesser charges. As of last month, 40 cases are still pending.

* May 7

A restaurant executive arrested by an Illinois State Police trooper on DUI charges told the ABC 7 I-Team when he discovered his MacBook was missing from his car, he tracked it to the house of the trooper who arrested him.

What followed was captured in a 911 call recording, a cell phone video, and an internal investigation by the Illinois State Police, all obtained by the I-Team. […]

The son of a Chicago police officer, Holland says he was the designated driver for a co-worker after working overnight when he was pulled over by Trooper Bradley. […]

Bradley then asked Holland to “relocate” by driving down the road to a gas station in Worth Township, passing through several intersections and traffic lights. […]

Later that day, when Holland needed his MacBook, he said he noticed it wasn’t listed on his inventory slip, so he assumed it must be with his car at the tow yard.

“I decided to ping my MacBook,” Holland told the I-Team, “and it pinged to an address.”

Using Apple’s “Find My” feature, Holland says his MacBook was not pinging at the tow yard with his car, rather it was showing up at a Tinley Park home.

“I was fearful of going to retrieve my item,” Holland explained. “And I just had to motivate myself and say, ‘Hey, I’m going to go get it.’”

Holland says he found his courage, and drove over to the address, where after knocking on the front door, he was eventually met by Trooper Bradley.

* May 14

In cases where field sobriety tests were performed, the attorneys found the results were the same across nearly the entire board among Bradley’s arrests.

“They [the tests] just didn’t come back in a way that was scientifically plausible,” Segal said. “If someone’s conducting a test 463 times, and in 462 of them, the individual has not only failed, but shown all six clues… It’s not like there’s a normal distribution, where some people show zero, few more show one. The most is three, kind of a bell curve.”

Segal continued, “With Trooper Bradley’s scientific results, you just see one column to the max and another and all the other columns basically blank.”

In addition, Segal and Sansonetti told the I-Team they discovered what they considered a “smoking gun.”

“We actually came across what we consider a smoking gun, which was a full field report, which was copy and pasted verbatim from one arrestee to another arrestee,” Segal said. “And that was shocking.”

The field reports were for two DUI arrests that occurred in March 2022. In the first arrest, according to the report, a driver was arrested for DUI on March 20, 2022, after telling Bradley they were taking the medication Lexapro. More than 24 hours later, according to a separate report, Bradley arrested another driver for DUI but the narrative section of the report appears to be copied word for word, including the first driver’s name and details from the prior night.

“The reports were 100% verbatim,” Sansonetti said. “It included the wrong person’s name. The first person who was arrested, Trooper Bradley had written his name wrong, and that same typo was in the second report. So that was startling to me.”

According to court records, in both cases, DUI charges were dismissed by prosecutors.

* Also

The attorneys believe there’s a connection between the number of arrests made by Trooper Bradley, and the amount of overtime he has earned through court appearances.

As the I-Team previously reported, Bradley tripled his salary in 2024, earning nearly $250,000 in a single year.

“As his DUI totals went up, year after year after year, so did his salary,” Segal said. “[Troopers] make overtime pay for just showing up at court. So even if they show up at court, they testify and the case is garbage and they lose, the trooper still gets paid.”

I reached out to the Alliance Against Intoxicated Motorists a week ago Friday. I have not yet heard back.

  28 Comments      


Semantics

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Chicago Tribune editorial board

We’re still wondering whether Gov. JB Pritzker will opt into a new federal school choice program, and we know we’re not alone. The governor’s public messaging has ranged from bashing the program (and the president) to saying he just needs more time to consider the facts.

While he tries to buy more time, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office is now saying the governor is “supportive of the federal tax credit scholarship and its potential to help New York students and schools,” Chalkbeat reported last week. A Hochul spokesperson did tell Chalkbeat that they’re still waiting for information from the federal government on the full program details, and the Treasury Department reportedly is working on program guidelines ahead of the Jan. 1, 2027, deadline for states to opt in.

Signaling support isn’t the same thing as signing on the dotted line, but going on the record in this manner is a big deal, especially in a blue state. Hochul’s team surely understood the governor was opening herself up to attacks and a coordinated effort from teachers unions to stop her from making good on her support.

We view her positioning as cautious and courageous acceptance. Pritzker’s stance conveys mostly skepticism.

This is a semantics argument.

* New York Daily News

Other Democratic governors, including Hochul, have said they are waiting on more information from the federal government before formally opting in, including if the dollars can be used to the benefit of public schools.

“I want to see what the regulations look like,” Hochul said at the news conference. “Because if it says something that’s detrimental to public schools — for example, saying none of this money can be used for a public school — that’s a big issue for me. That’s a big issue.”

The governor even suggested that teachers unions could become scholarship-granting nonprofits, though it’s unclear if labor organizations would meet federal statutory requirements for the tax-credit program. The program was billed by the Trump administration as an effort to promote school choice through what officials have dubbed the “Education Freedom Tax Credit.”

Nowhere in the Tribune editorial is Hochul’s actual stance explained.

There’s really no wisdom in opting-in until you see the fine print. But give Hochul credit for pointing the way toward gaining her support.

  15 Comments      


Stop Rx Drug Deserts. Say No To HB 1443!

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

HB 1443 would create a state-appointed Prescription Drug Affordability Board with the authority to review and set upper payment limits on selected prescription drugs. While well-intentioned, this misguided legislation risks harming patients’ community pharmacies without addressing the real drivers of health care costs.

Allowing government appointees to intervene in decisions between patients and their physicians raises serious concerns. Moreover, despite being enacted in multiple states, these boards have failed to deliver meaningful savings. Two states have set upper payment limits, yet in the seven years since the first board was established, there is no evidence of a single dollar saved for patients.

In Illinois, community pharmacies are essential to the communities they serve, providing access to critical medicines and treatments. If upper payment limits are set below pharmacies’ acquisition costs, pharmacists could be forced to dispense drugs at a loss or stop carrying certain drugs altogether. This puts patient access at risk, especially those who depend on nearby, trusted community-based pharmacies.

Illinois’ health care system is already incredibly fragile. HB 1443 advances policy with no record of lowering costs for patients or supporting the sustainability of community pharmacies. Don’t force community pharmacies to choose between financial loss and patient access. We urge you to oppose HB 1443.

Paid for by PharmaScript and the Greater Chicagoland Black Chamber of Commerce

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Pritzker knocks Johnson’s “late in the game” ISFA takeover pitch

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. Crain’s last week

Hoping to keep the Chicago Bears in the city, Mayor Brandon Johnson has floated giving Chicago more control of the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority, a complicated plan likely to receive significant pushback in Springfield.

The discussion is part of the mayor’s broader effort to convince members of the General Assembly to stall or shoot down a megaprojects bill that would help the Bears move to Arlington Heights and creates new tiers of tax subsidies meant to spur development in Chicago.

The mayor’s plan would give the city the reins of the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority, or ISFA, to control how future money is allocated while potentially expanding the agency’s authority to finance other tourism-related infrastructure projects.

Johnson would not detail his conversations with state lawmakers or share specifics of his proposal, but told Crain’s the city should have “the ability to be able to control our destiny at a time in which more and more development is happening in Chicago.”

The governor appoints four members of the ISFA board, while the mayor appoints three.

* The Sun-Times

“After years of shifting proposals, the Mayor’s Office still has not presented a concrete plan that could pass the General Assembly and with support from the Bears. Now, the Mayor is floating a new idea to directly spend hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars from IFSA…” Pritzker’s office said in a statement released to the Sun-Times. “The Governor has been clear for years that we must protect taxpayer dollars from being spent on a privately-owned stadium. Instead, the Governor has brought together legislators, local stakeholders, and the Bears to work towards a fair deal that keeps the team in Illinois, requires them to pay property taxes, and supports public infrastructure around major economic development projects.”

* Gov. Pritzker was asked about Mayor Johnson’s pitch for the City to takeover the stadium authority at an unrelated press conference this morning…

Reporter: I’d like to get a little more informations about the Mayor of Chicago. He has said repeatedly he has the only fleshed-out plan—

Pritzker: He has no plan, there’s no plan [laughs]

Reporter: He’s also floated this idea now to have the city take over the ISFA. Have you seen that? Have you said anything to him about it?

Pritzker: No. And in fact, this is kind of typical. The mayor has shown up every spring at the end of session to pronounce what he would like to see happen. And as you know, the budget gets put together starting in November. I present my budget. Well, really, we start at the beginning of a fiscal year, but about in November we’re in the details of the budget. I present that budget to the legislature in February, so that seems like a good time period to come talk to the governor’s office. Then there’s February to May, there’s all that time to come talk to the legislature, which has my budget in hand or the governor’s office again, we’ve seen almost nothing out of the mayoral administration here on that subject, or really any other. And so to show up in May and have a bunch of demands seems like late in the game, and it’s unfortunate that’s happened most years.

Thoughts?

* More…

    * Politico | What’s old is new again: Mayor Brandon Johnson is working to keep the Chicago Bears in the city. His proposal would allow the city to have greater control of the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority, the independent government agency that currently finances stadiums. The mayor sees the agency as growing to also fund, with hotel tax dollars, future tourism-related projects. […] “That’s a new proposal I’m just hearing about,” said House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch in a separate interview. “Everything is on the table.”

  47 Comments      


It’s Time To Bring Safer Rides To Illinois

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Waymo is ready to bring safe, reliable, autonomous rides to Illinois – but we need your help! Waymo is already mapping Chicago’s unique streets and traffic patterns to lay the groundwork for operations.

Never tired or distracted, Waymo provides hundreds of thousands of fully autonomous rides every week across ten major U.S. cities, from Los Angeles to Atlanta — from multi-lane expressways to dense city streets, including the demands of winter weather. The data shows Waymo’s autonomous vehicles are involved in thirteen times fewer injury-causing collisions compared to humans (as of 3/20/26, see waymo.com/safety). Let’s bring safer rides to Illinois.

Ready to ride? Help bring Waymo to Illinois.

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So far, it’s a whole lot of nothing, but we’ll see

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Every year when the Legislature arrives at mid-May, it’s always tempting to look around, see the absence of real bicameral movement on legislation and conclude that nothing’s gonna happen in time for the scheduled May 31 adjournment.

Succumbing to that temptation this year may not be a bad bet, but things can change. Right now, though, evidence of major movement is super-slim.

The artificial intelligence packages in both chambers seem designed only to pass one chamber, and with every day that goes by, there’s less time to work out differences. Not coincidentally, lobbyists for the massive AI companies prefer it that way.

An accusation was made last week by a House Democrat that the Senate hadn’t kept the House informed about its AI plans, which was seen as more evidence of this year’s stark split between the two chambers. But some Senate Dems later told me they did reach out to people within House leadership.

Could something still happen? I never rule anything out.

But communication may be difficult in the wake of a House Democratic ally and lobbyist posting a leaked internal email from top Senate staff last week on Facebook. Very high-level folks in the Senate and the governor’s office were furious about the leak, which was designed to “prove” that the House was acting in concert with the Senate and the governor’s office on the megaprojects bill, which includes language for a new Bears sports complex in Arlington Heights. The email did no such thing, however, which further exacerbated the situation.

The proliferation of electricity-sucking data centers is a super-hot issue all over the country right now.

In Illinois, Gov. JB Pritzker used his State of the State Address in February to call for a two-year moratorium on state tax breaks for data centers. But that prompted trade unions to criticize the governor’s idea because it could lead to non-union data center construction jobs in Illinois, and more likely, in other states that have robust tax incentives and no labor protections.

As a poll I shared with you earlier this year showed, opposition to data centers is probably the one thing that unites almost all Illinoisans (and Americans) these days.

But data center regulatory efforts have stalled in the face of opposition, including from local government leaders, who want those abundant new property taxes without having to expand schools or other local services because completed centers have so few on-site employees.

A narrow bill may emerge dealing with transparency issues and maybe some other items. But it’s not lost on some that Florida’s Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis just signed a significant data center regulation bill into law.

One Illinois lobbyist complained last week that the governor’s “lack of engagement” was hindering progress on passing a bill here, according to Capitol News Illinois.

And then there’s the governor’s housing proposal, which has been met with fierce opposition by local mayors who oppose constraints on their zoning powers.

A lot more appears stalled right now, including an energy bill and a gaming bill, but you get the idea. Sometimes a spark occurs, and stuff starts moving again. Sometimes, stuff is set aside until more talks can be held over the summer. Sometimes, stuff just dies.

And unless progressives are successful at taxing wealthy individuals and giant corporations this year, the new state budget looks like it’ll basically be what’s known as a “maintenance” spending plan.

The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget and the Legislature’s Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability both released revised revenue projections last week. The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget also released a spending report for this fiscal year, which is up a little more than initially budgeted.

For the coming fiscal year, which begins July 1, the office predicts the state will bring in $55.883 billion, which is $173 million below its last projection in February and just $210 million above its revised projected growth for the current fiscal year.

The fiscal year 27 forecast by the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability has the state bringing in $55.335 billion, which is $190 million below its own March forecast and a significant $573 million below its projected revenue for the current fiscal year.

Meeting somewhere in the middle, you’re looking at basically a no-growth year next year.

The governor’s budget office also released an update on state spending during this fiscal year. Outlays are over budget by $261 million, which would be covered by the revenue increases projected by both agencies for the current year.

* Related…

    * Chicago Reader | Data centers are cropping up all over Illinois. How do they work?: [Helena Volzer, senior source water policy manager at the Alliance for the Great Lakes] mentioned that many data centers claim to use very little or no water, “and I think that’s very much not true.” Water usage can’t just be boiled down to a single facility. Instead, the entire lifecycle of water usage involved in operating that facility must be taken into account. “These are large, energy-using facilities, regardless of whether or not they’re using a closed loop system or immersive cooling or whatever the cooling method is,” Volzer said. Because data centers require computers that tend to heat up very quickly, cooling is a key component in helping a data center function—particularly one that’s being used to run generative AI.


  18 Comments      


RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Rising food costs are making it harder to maintain a healthy, balanced diet. But Green Top Grocery in Bloomington is working to change that narrative. This vibrant, community-owned co-op offers fresh produce, natural foods, and locally sourced products. With more than 2,600 local owners and a mission rooted in access and quality, Green Top Grocery supports healthier living and a stronger community.

Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments.

Policies that support small businesses help communities thrive as retailers like Allison in Bloomington are better equipped to meet local needs. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work. Please visit https://WeAreRetail.IRMA.org/.

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Crosstown Series open thread

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Wow…


We’re relaxing our usual “uncivil” constraints on comments today. No profanity, racism, etc. of course. But, otherwise, go for it. Consider this a post where you can let off some steam. But, just remember, I’ll eventually dive in. After all, I could use an outlet as well…


Heh.

  30 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. ICYMI: Federal drug discount expansion proposal may cost Illinois millions, agency head says. Capitol News Illinois

    - A proposal that would expand access to a federal program that discounts the price of prescription drugs could end up costing Illinois employers an additional $89 million a year, including more than $12 million a year for the state of Illinois itself.
    - “Independent analysis estimates that the current 340B program costs Illinois employers approximately $224 million annually, with the proposed legislation expected to increase those costs by an additional $89 million,” CMS said in the memo. “For SEGIP specifically, lost rebates are estimated at $31 million annually, with an additional projected impact of $12.4 million under the proposed legislation.”
    - The memo released this week by CMS simply regurgitated Big Pharma’s testimony from the April 14th COGFA hearing,” Illinois Health and Hospital Association president and CEO AJ Wilhelmi said in a statement. “The footnotes in the memo clearly indicate that the research referenced in the memo was funded by Big Pharma. So, unsurprisingly, Big Pharma is trying to misrepresent the government’s position on the legislation.”

* Related stories…

***************** Advertisement *****************


Sponsored by PhRMA



*************************************************

* At 9 am, Gov. JB Pritzker will deliver remarks at the Chicago Cares 35th Anniversary Leadership Breakfast. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Cook County Record | IL biometric privacy suits say tech companies used broadcasters’ work to train AI: Some of America’s biggest tech companies have been hit with class action lawsuits under Illinois’ stringent biometrics privacy law, accusing them of illegally using the voices of prominent Illinois broadcast journalists, voice actors, podcasters and others to train their AI text-to-speech and voiceover software systems and then use those systems to compete with the people whose work was used to train and create the systems. Beginning May 11, attorneys with the firm of Loevy & Loevy, of Chicago, filed suit in Chicago federal court against Facebook- and Instagram-parent company Meta; Microsoft; NVIDIA; Google, Amazon and Apple.

* Tribune | Illinois passed a law to expose diversity gaps at top nonprofits. Almost none are complying.: Some cited the Pritzker administration’s slow pace in releasing “a standardized list of demographic classifications” for nonprofits to report. One nonprofit said it simply didn’t know the requirement existed. “Frankly, it’s a bit of a head-scratcher that we’re hearing about this from you and not the state, or our compliance partner, or our attorney,” Jim O’Kelley, the director of the Elks National Foundation, told the Tribune.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | A mysterious company abandoned 603 oil wells, costing Illinois millions. Here’s how they did it: A four-month Chicago Tribune investigation, drawing on hundreds of pages of previously unreleased public records and interviews with former state officials and oil operators, has revealed the startling ease with which Fireball was able to evade its legal responsibility for plugging wells that have stopped producing, exposing downstate communities to a host of contaminants — above and below ground — while saddling the state with millions in cleanup costs. In Fireball’s case, state data show, the company ultimately abandoned 603 wells.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | School choice option at standstill as legislators weigh benefits, political fallout: n a statement on May 8, a spokesperson for the governor’s office confirmed the governor’s team is reviewing the federal tax credit. “We will evaluate the issue through a lens focused on affordability for working families and what best supports Illinois students, families, and public schools,” the spokesperson wrote in an email to CNI. As the states await federal guidelines, Pritzker and state legislators in Illinois are measuring the costs, benefits and political calculus behind the decision to opt into the program.

* Chicago Mag | JB Pritzker Isn’t Thinking About Running for President (or so he says): “Running for president is something other people, probably on some prediction markets, would contemplate. All I can say is it’s not something that’s occupying my psyche. It’s flattering that people have talked about me in the same conversation they’re talking about others.”

* WCIA | Community violence intervention groups push for support in Springfield: Community and faith leaders gathered at the capitol on Thursday to urge lawmakers to continue investing in programs which they believe are helping reduce gun violence in some of the state’s hardest-hit communities. More than 100 groups belonging to Community Violence Intervention Services, also known as CVI, made the trip to Springfield. Their outreach workers are tasked with mediating tensions in their community — before it erupts into gun violence.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | ICE detains Chicago Public Schools senior and his mother: ‘We had done everything by the rules’: Originally from Colombia, Ricardo and his mother came to the United States in 2022, when he was 15 years old. She filed for asylum and that petition remains pending, court records show. Each of them was taken to Kentucky jails for detention, but the government separated them and is holding them in different facilities. For two months, the mother and son have had almost zero face-to-face contact, Ricardo told the Tribune in an interview from jail. “I miss my mother,” he said. “I miss playing soccer.”

* Tribune | DraftKings closing its 2-year-old retail sportsbook at Wrigley Field: Blaming increased Illinois wagering taxes, DraftKings is shutting down its two-year-old retail sportsbook at Wrigley Field, a high-profile but small part of its business. DraftKings, one of the leading sportsbooks in the state, will continue to operate online across Illinois, but the last day to place your bets in-person at the Friendly Confines will be May 31. “DraftKings has made the decision to discontinue onsite sportsbook operations at DraftKings Sportsbook at Wrigley Field following a review of our retail presence in Illinois,” the company said in a statement. “The venue itself will remain open, but in-person sports betting will no longer be offered at the location.”

* Press release | Mayor Chris Getty to file Independent candidacy for IL-04 Monday morning in Springfield: Filing of nominating petitions with the Illinois State Board of Elections. Getty collected nearly 20,000 signatures — well above the 10,816 required — becoming the first Independent candidate to file in the IL-04 race. Organizers describe the effort as one of the largest independent congressional petition drives in recent Illinois history. Getty will be available for media questions immediately following the filing.

* Sun-Times | U. of C. faculty and parents protest Lab School policy they say limits classroom discussion, inclusion: A new policy at the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools, which serve around 2,000 students from preschool through high school, establishes “standards for viewpoint-neutral education” and gives teachers guidance on how to handle “contested issues.” School administrators say the policy, which had gotten pushback since a draft was first shared in January, is meant to encourage students to become “independent thinkers” and support “open inquiry.”

* Crain’s | Spirit Airlines shutdown costs Chicago hundreds of jobs: Most of the 356 jobs cut here involved flight crews, including 100 pilots and 239 flight attendants, according to a new filing with the state. Chicago had become a relatively small market for the Florida-based discount carrier, but it’s a major hub for pilots and other aviation employees because of the presence of United, American and Southwest airlines at O’Hare and Midway airports.

* Tribune | At Montrose and Waukegan beaches, piping plovers lay the first eggs of the season: Sharing the news on Saturday, volunteer monitors said they expect three more eggs from Imani and Searocket. In 2025, the pair had a successful nesting season with three new hatchlings. The previous summer, the pair hatched one surviving chick. Imani and Pippin returned to the area for the summer on the same day in mid-April, before the latter made his way up to Waukegan, where he’s received a warm welcome.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Convenience or concern? Projections of thousands of flying packages worry some suburbs as Amazon pitches drone deliveries: Amazon has been a “great partner,” Winfield Village Manager Evan Summers said. But “we obviously have concerns regarding protecting the quality of life for our residents. It’s up to the FAA to ensure that commercial objectives are balanced with smart regulations.” Other issues include drone weight, the newness of the technology and the fact the village has little control over what happens, Summers noted. “The FAA has made it very clear: The village has no jurisdiction in the regulation of drones,” he said.

* WBBM | Illinois park district director used taxpayer credit card for daughter’s prom helicopter, invoice shows: The Park District’s executive director, Quintina Brown, told officers she had the OK for the helicopter landing, but city leaders never authorized the landing in the public park where children were playing. The pilot told officers that day he had approval to land, even presenting a signed notice by the park director herself to the questioning officer The company later handed over an invoice to the city attorney. The receipt raises many deeper questions. The bill was for a minimum of $800 for one hour. At the bottom, there’s a credit card number linked to Brown. She named Markham Parks as the company and even used the address of the fieldhouse and provided her signature on a taxpayer-funded credit card.

* Daily Herald | Arlington Heights’ neighbors want in on Bears talks: The mayors of Palatine, Rolling Meadows and Schaumburg have asked state leaders for a seat at the table in discussions about infrastructure upgrades that would be needed around a Chicago Bears stadium in Arlington Heights. The mayors say they also want to see a transportation/traffic study the NFL club’s consultants have been working on — since that would guide the kind of infrastructure work that needs to be done — while expressing frustration such an analysis isn’t yet complete more than three years after the team acquired the 326-acre Arlington Park property.

* Daily Herald | Rookie suburban mayors navigate growth, conflict and change during first year: Arlington Heights Village President Jim Tinaglia described his first year in office as “wonderful,” crediting his service as a village trustee since 2013 with preparing him for the job. […] He cited his 35 years as a practicing architect as vital experience in helping guide development of the Chicago Bears’ proposed stadium project on 326 acres in the village. He has a standing weekly call with the Bears organization, and outlined four criteria for any development: safety, economics, traffic and infrastructure.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora residents push for way to recall a sitting mayor and at-large aldermen from office: If the referendum questions make it onto the ballot in November, they would ask voters if the city should adopt mechanisms that allow the mayor or an alderman at-large to be recalled. Under the proposed mechanism, residents looking to recall an elected official would need to circulate petitions and collect at least enough signatures to equal 20% of the total votes cast in the most recent mayoral election, according to the proposed referendum question. If a recall petition got enough signatures, then the recall would go to a general vote in the next election.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora launches grant program for neighborhood festivals: The Neighborhood Festival Funding Grant Program is offering up to $1,000 per event, which could be used to pay equipment rental, rental of tables or chairs, general liability insurance, security or emergency personnel and other similar needs, according to a news release from the city of Aurora. The grants are available to organizations and neighborhood groups planning public community events that connect residents with each other, while also educating them about Aurora, city officials said in the news release.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora City Council approves millions of dollars for road and water infrastructure projects: The largest dollar amount of any single one of the projects was the $4.6 million allocated towards annual road resurfacing work on the west and north sections of the city. A similar project, which focused on the East Side at a cost of around $4.4 million, was approved late last month.

* Daily Herald | ‘People don’t want to pay for parking in the suburbs’: Rosemont mayor blasts mall’s new policy: Rosemont Mayor Brad Stephens has expressed frustration with, and opposition to, a new paid parking policy at the Fashion Outlets of Chicago mall. “What they’re doing there is not sitting well with me. People don’t want to pay for parking at a mall in the suburbs,” Stephens told the Daily Herald this week. The 19-year chief executive of the tiny-yet-powerful entertainment and business mecca has had a friendly relationship with executives at mall owner Macerich since the two-level, 530,000-square-foot indoor shopping center opened in 2013.

* Daily Herald | Suburban single-story office buildings without amenities experiencing surge in demand: This unsung parallel growth is summed up as “no amenities are the new amenities” by Jason Wurtz, executive vice president of commercial real estate firm NAI Hiffman. The alternate attraction is based on a desire for affordable, accessible space where employees can park, work and head home without a hassle.

* Daily Southtown | Subjects in Park Forest documentary share stories of town’s racial ‘Utopia’ era: About 70 people were interviewed for the film, including former NBA player Craig Hodges plus Hiro Yamamoto and Kim Thayil, who are members of the rock group Soundgarden. They all grew up in the community. For the most part, interviewees had glowing remarks about growing up during what Rockrohr calls the “sweet spot” between 1972-86. Many in the documentary said it was a time when whites, Blacks and other groups grew up socializing and playing sports with each other. Some described it as living in a bubble and when they left Park Forest for college or other reasons, they saw racial tension they didn’t know existed.

*** Downstate ***

* Tribune | As data centers seek more power, Constellation launches nuclear plant upgrades to meet rising demand: As the state faces grid reliability concerns, Tomc said it’s encouraging to see Constellation make “a positive contribution of filling the gap in supply.” Still, both Tomc and ComEd, the primary electricity provider for Chicago and northern Illinois, cautioned that increasing nuclear power alone won’t be enough to solve the state’s looming energy challenges. A ComEd spokesperson said increased PJM prices expected to take effect June 1 are a signal that more generation is urgently needed.

* WAND | Macon County Board considers large solar farm project north of Argenta: The Macon County Board approved the next step for clean energy company Apex’s Spring Creek solar project on Thursday night. It’s a large solar panel farm proposed to be north of Argenta, outside Maroa, along the Macon-DeWitt County line. A development manager from Apex says if the county issues a building permit, construction would start sometime this summer.

* BND | Inaction is unacceptable after tests show E. coli in Cahokia Heights water, soil: It is extremely disheartening to both hear and see the mischaracterization of the residents affected due to inhumane, unsafe water contamination that is being publicly labeled as “erroneous.” For decades, area residents have voiced concerns over and complaints of their ongoing problems with water quality. The seriousness of the issue was downplayed, dismissed, and ignored, as evidenced by the lack of actions from elected local politicians and companies that did absolutely nothing (investigate nor research) for years.

* WICS | Economic pressures, rising intakes push Sangamon County Animal Control to max capacity: Jeanne Keenan, director of operations for Sangamon County Animal Control, said this week alone has been pretty bad. She said they took in a lot of strays and dogs that were confiscated for animal cruelty. She said their facility has taken in more than 100 dogs over the last three weeks. Pet owners surrendering their dogs also make up part of that number. Keenan said intakes are worse this year than they have been in the past.

* WGLT | With enhanced website, McLean County government leaps ahead in ADA compliance: The new software module also does something even more difficult. Until now, image files on the county website that have words in the picture could not be read out loud for visually impaired people. “This one actually can take a scanned document and turn it into something that can be read and copied and pasted and I kind of geeked out about it,” said Johnston.

* BND | Swansea to decide fate of crime-free housing program. What residents should know: The program, established in 2018, requires participating landlords to evict renters if the tenants or their guests are charged with a felony in a crime that takes place at the rental property. Swansea’s rules also require eviction for three ordinance violations at a rental property within a six-month period. It offers exceptions to tenants who are disabled. But police and village officials who support the repeal describe the program as burdensome and ineffective, producing no “measurable improvements to rental property conditions or community safety.”

* BND | What we know — and don’t know— about Justice Department’s O’Fallon schools probe: Rodriguez said many of the 35 districts’ leaders theorize the common thread is that they all received federal School Violence Prevention Program grants from the Justice Department’s Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, or COPS. The Department of Justice has not confirmed the theory’s accuracy to the BND.

* WAND | Springfield community celebrates LGBTQ+ community at Pridefest: The event featured local drag performers, community artists, a parade and a variety of food and drink options from local businesses. There were also over 120 vendors. Organizers said the goal of the event is to create a safe and inclusive space that celebrates and uplifts the LGBTQ+ community.

*** National ***

* ProPublica | In a Private Meeting, Colorado Marijuana Regulators Acknowledge the Extent of Illegal Hemp Sales: During the meeting, Kyle Lambert, the enforcement division’s deputy senior director, said the number of hemp-derived products is “larger than we can quantify.” He said the agency feared the prevalence of banned hemp was driving down the price of marijuana in the state and helping facilitate the diversion of high-grade marijuana out of Colorado and into the black market in other states.

* Tribune | Gas surges past $4 a gallon while tomato and beef prices notch new records. A look at rising costs amid the Iran war: Stateside, this has translated into higher fuel costs. Since the start of the war, retail gas prices have spiked more than 50% nationwide, and diesel, which trucks use to transport all kinds of goods and agricultural products across the country, has similarly sprung up 48%, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. And increased shipping and transportation costs? That means higher prices on everything from groceries to airline tickets and your morning latte.

* NYT | Political Money Is Flowing to Influencers. But From Whom?: Last month, Carlos Eduardo Espina, a progressive influencer, revealed a surprising endorsement to his 14.5 million followers on TikTok: He would support Tom Steyer, the billionaire running for California governor as a Democrat. “I really believe Tom Steyer is different,” Mr. Espina said in a speech that he posted on social media. “He could be traveling around the world or doing whatever he wants, but he wants to serve the people of this state.” Unmentioned in Mr. Espina’s post: Mr. Steyer’s campaign was paying him $100,000 to help win the election.

* Time | Mary Todd Lincoln and the Double Standard of Mental Illness: In the 1840s and 1850s, Lincoln was so depressed that he routinely ingested “blue pills,” which contained dangerous levels of mercury. He had, at one point, a complete nervous collapse that many Springfield politicians were well aware of. And, even when his behavior panicked his friends to the point that they feared he would harm himself, Lincoln was not stigmatized. When his career hit bumps, his friends later reported he would sink into a trance-like gloom. Still, historians never suggested his depression was disqualifying.

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Good morning!

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* First, a baby robin update from my front porch Saturday night and Sunday afternoon…

Looks like I’ll be getting my mail again very soon. /s

* I saw Paul McCartney at the United Center a quarter of a century ago because I thought it could be his last tour. Man, was I ever wrong. He’s a year older than my parents (who generously bought me two tickets for my birthday to that long-ago show), but he just keeps going

The promise that I made
Will never be broken

What’s up by you?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Monday, May 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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