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Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated by Rich)

Thursday, Jun 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Illinois Freedom Caucus


* FYI


Click here for the lawsuit.

…Added by Rich… The lawsuit itself is kind of a mess. They list the wrong amendments on the revenue omnibus and the wrong BIMP amendment. They refer to Senate President Don Harmon as “Tom.” Many of the cases they cite are actually minority opinions which upheld the enrolled bill doctrine.

* Illinois Times

Four development groups have told Sangamon County officials they may be interested in building a 200- to 300-bed hotel on a county-owned parking lot along South Ninth Street and collaborating with the county to double the size of the BOS Center. […]

A new hotel was suggested by [Conventions, Sports & Leisure] because it said the President Abraham Lincoln Springfield, a DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel that offers 310 rooms, and the Wyndham Springfield City Centre Hotel, with 369 rooms, “are considered substandard headquarters hotel properties relative to modern design standards for full-service, convention-quality hotel products.”

The Wyndham site, at 700 E. Adams St. and immediately southwest of the BOS Center, was described by CSL as “the most desirable” site for the new hotel. The existing 30-story structure presumably would be torn down and rebuilt, then connected to the expanded BOS Center through a skybridge.

But Van Meter said county officials haven’t told developers they have any control over the Wyndham, which is closed and whose owner, Al Rajabi of Tower Capital Group, hasn’t communicated with local officials for months.

Moreover, it may be many months before the Wyndham can reopen. The hotel was damaged by internal flooding on March 27 and has been closed since then.

* Daily Herald

A Northern Illinois University student was charged this week after police searched his dorm room in DeKalb and found more than 20,000 images depicting child sexual abuse on his electronics, many were digitally faked images of former Batavia classmates, authorities said. […]

Michael B. Erickson, 19, a graduate of Batavia High School, was charged with 21 counts of possession, creation and dissemination of child sexual abuse materials. […]

DeKalb County Deputies allege Erickson paid a third-party AI platform to create deepfake images of people he knew by having the AI remove their clothing to make them appear to be nude. Erickson used deepfakes, photographs and video to create the materials, authorities allege in DeKalb County court filings Monday.

On March 3, Erickson told a user on Snapchat that “I charge cheap too 10$ for 10 pics 5$ for 5 and 20$ for 20,” according to court records. In a different conversation March 5, another Snapchat user asked Erickson why he makes the images and Erickson replied “to sell them to boys,” records allege in court filings.

After confusion over whether AI-generated images qualified as child pornography, Governor Pritzker signed a bill into law last year clarifying that Illinois’ statutes do apply to content created by artificial intelligence.

*** Statewide ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Unsettling Accounts: How Illinois is confronting the growing student loan crisis: A recent graduate of the University of Illinois Chicago, Villalpando, 29, took out private loans to pay for college. Unlike federal student loans, private loans typically have higher interest rates and fewer forgiveness programs, making them harder for borrowers to pay off. Then, his fiancé came across the SmartBuy program – an initiative set up by the state to help incentivize residents to purchase a home while paying off their student loan debt, one of the leading factors delaying homeownership among young adults. SmartBuy pays up to $40,000 in student loans and contributes up to $5,000 towards a down payment or closing costs at the time of purchase.

* Axios | Illinois lands in top 5 in Fortune 500 HQs: Illinois ranks in the top 5 when it comes to the number of Fortune 500 companies headquartered in the state, according to the magazine’s annual list. U.S. companies are staying put in Illinois even as Republicans claim Gov. Pritzker and the Democrats are taxing them out of town.

* Daily Herald | Weather, disease challenge Illinois’ strawberry growers: Austin Flamm with Flamm Orchards in Union County said their struggles began early when a disease called Neopestalotiopsis infected greenhouses in Canada where the Flamms purchase their plugs. “Of the 100,000 plants for our early variety, we only planted 35,000 of them and of those 35,000, I’d say there was less than 5,000 that survived,” Flamm told FarmWeek, noting a late start to the picking season due to poor stands.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Illinois rental assistance program sees funding cut for 2026 budget in another blow to state, city housing programs: Dalton is one of 7,129 renters who has received assistance this fiscal year from the state program. The state housing authority’s goal was to assist 8,900 households through the new program but will likely see closer to 8,000 households supported, said Illinois Housing Development Authority Executive Director Kristin Faust in an interview with the Tribune. The state agency administers the rental assistance program. Faust said the 8,900 number was based on an authority projection.

* Capitol News Illinois | ISP backs bill expanding its mission to investigate internet crimes against children: While Illinois State Police has long investigated child sex crimes, a new measure would explicitly name addressing internet crimes against children as a core mission of its criminal division. House Bill 2586, also called Alicia’s Law, would add to the current 13 missions of the Illinois State Police Department of Criminal Investigations. It passed both chambers of the Illinois General Assembly unanimously in late May.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Former aldermanic candidate wins $1.4M in defamation suit over campaign mailers: Ebony Lucas, a real estate attorney who lost in the first round of the aldermanic elections in the ward that includes Hyde Park, filed suit in December 2023 over what she described as a “coordinated smear campaign” alleging she had a series of unpaid liens and fines related to her business and violations of the city’s landlord tenant ordinance. Preckwinkle’s organization paid for three mailers alleging Lucas was a “bad landlord,” who “can’t manage her own business” and “doesn’t care about doing the right thing.”

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Waiting To Learn: How Bilingual Education In Chicago Falls Short: And every day, students — like one Ecuadorian fourth grader who struggled to read and write in English — were left without the support guaranteed to them in state law. “He shouldn’t have had to suffer for almost three years before he was able to receive the type of help that he needs,” said Sylvelia Pittman, a 20-year teacher at Nash who advocated for more bilingual resources in the new Chicago Teachers Union contract.

* Tribune | Aldermen call for hearing into Chicago police response to ICE demonstration: Twelve of the 14 aldermen in the caucus signed a letter condemning the high-profile showdown at 2245 S. Michigan Ave. The council’s Committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights — which Latino Caucus Chair Ald. Andre Vasquez leads — will hold a hearing “to examine the extent of ICE’s misconduct and determine whether the Chicago Police Department played any role in (Wednesday’s) actions,” according to the letter. In a Wednesday evening statement, the Police Department denied that officers aided the federal agents.

* Sun-Times | CBS producer Deb Boulac set to make more history with Fever-Sky broadcast: Deb Boulac is an award-winning, groundbreaking TV producer. So it’s fitting that she’ll lead a historic broadcast Saturday when CBS airs the Fever-Sky game at the United Center — the first regular-season game in WNBA history to air on broadcast TV in prime time.

* Sun-Times | Chicago Sports Network expected to air on Comcast cable Friday: Chicago Sports Network is expected to launch on Comcast cable Friday on Xfinity’s Ultimate tier, the Sun-Times has learned, finally putting the new home of the White Sox, Bulls and Blackhawks on the area’s dominant cable operator. Network officials declined to comment. NBC 5 Chicago was the first to report the deal.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Former Ascension hospitals’ new owner to senators: We’re saving hospitals no one else would: Durbin and Duckworth’s May letter to Prime asked for justifications for eliminating pediatric services at St. Joseph Medical Center in Joliet, the loss of a Level II trauma designation at Mercy Medical Center in Aurora, and shrinking of obstetrics and maternal care at St. Mary Hospital in Kankakee. The senators urged the company to reconsider those cuts and requested a response by June 10. This week’s letter from Prime laid out details of shrinking demand for the services cut at the three hospitals and said, “We cannot, in good conscience, maintain services that lack sufficient volume to support clinical excellence.”

* Press release | Gov. Pritzker Cuts Ribbon at Jel Sert Company’s Expanded Manufacturing Facility: Governor JB Pritzker, the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) and the Jel Sert Company joined local leaders to cut the ribbon on the company’s West Chicago expansion project. The company invested over $10 million to construct a new manufacturing operation that will enhance production of its popular powdered stick packs and ensure it can meet growing consumer demand. The expansion project will create more than 100 new manufacturing and packing operations jobs while retaining nearly 1,000 existing jobs.

* Daily Herald | Residents ask Mount Prospect to fly Pride flag, but village sticks to flag policy: Mayor Paul Hoefert, however, said the village’s policy is to fly only the American flag, the state of Illinois flag, and the Village of Mount Prospect flag at village hall. “We don’t fly any other flags, not even the (POW/MIA) flag,” Hoefert said. “Our feeling, based on legal advice, is that once you allow any other flag on that flagpole, you’re open to any request that comes. It makes total sense to me, and it makes total sense of the board.”

* Trains | Illinois man sentenced to more than four years in prison in Amtrak bribery case: An Illinois employee of an Indiana masonry firm has been sentenced to 57 months in prison for his role in a federal bribery case over Amtrak’s renovation of its 30th Street Station in Philadelphia. Donald Seefeldt, 65, of Wilmette, Ill., was also sentenced to a year of probation, 59 hours of community service, and a $50,000 fine after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit federal program bribery, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the eastern district of Pennsylvania announced.

* CBS Chicago | Mosquitoes in 2 Illinois counties test positive for West Nile virus: The DuPage County and McHenry County health departments confirmed that mosquitoes tested positive for West Nile virus for the first time this year. The mosquitoes tested in McHenry County for the virus were found in Lake in the Hills. DuPage County health officials tested mosquitoes from Roselle, Medinah, Clarendon Hills, and Burr Ridge in May.

*** Downstate ***

* WSIL | Southern Illinois Back to School expo canceled; donations sought for 2026 event: The Franklin-Williamson Positive Youth Development Action Team (FW-PYD) announced the cancellation of the 2025 Southern Illinois Back to School Expo. Funding challenges led to this difficult decision. The organization said this decision will, unfortunately, be inconvenient and challenging for families in Southern Illinois for the upcoming 2025 - 2026 school year. However, they are actively seeking new opportunities to hold the event in 2026.

* PJ Star | ‘Our efforts paid off’: Peoria Ag Lab to remain open, could see growth, congressman says: The National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research – known as the Peoria Ag Lab – will remain open and may even see growth, according to the office of U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen. A June 4 news release said the proposal for the administration’s Agricultural Research Service budget for fiscal year 2026 included “potential growth for the NCAUR with research expansion.” Congress must still make final funding decisions.

* WCIA | University of Illinois names computer scientist, Wisconsin provost as new Chancellor: In a news release, System President Tim Killeen said Charles Lee Isbell Jr. will be the 11th Chancellor of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He comes to Illinois from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he served as a computer scientist and provost. “It’s the honor of a lifetime to be appointed to the role of chancellor and I’m deeply grateful to President Killeen and the Board of Trustees,” Isbell said. “I’m energized by this chance to serve the citizens of Illinois and advance the mission of learning, discovery, engagement and economic development.”

* NPR Illinois | Springfield mayor announces chief of staff is leaving: Springfield Mayor Misty Buscher announced a change Wednesday in her leadership team. Mike Disco, who has been Chief of Staff since Buscher took office, is leaving the position. No reason was given. Disco came to the position from the private sector. “I want to thank Mike Disco for his service and contributions to the City of Springfield,” said Mayor Buscher. “I appreciate his efforts on behalf of our residents and wish him the very best in his future endeavors.”

* WSIL | Black Vultures on the Rise: Southern Illinois Farmers Battle Aggressive New Predator:Unlike their red-headed cousins, the turkey vultures, which only feed on carcasses, black vultures are bold, territorial, and known to attack living animals, especially newborn livestock or weakened mothers during birth. Farmer’s have seen attacks on baby calves, lambs, and even piglets. Once uncommon in Illinois, black vultures are now migrating farther north, with officials noting a marked increase in sightings and damage reports over the past few years.

*** National ***

* NYT | The Age Issue: More of Congress Is 70-Plus Than Ever Before: When the current Congress was convened in January, there were nearly 120 members who were 70 or older — 86 in the House, including nonvoting delegates, and 33 in the Senate. This number, which is unmatched in modern history, included 14 octogenarians in the House, five in the Senate, and 91-year-old Senator Charles E. Grassley, Republican of Iowa.

* WaPo | Supreme Court sides with woman claiming anti-straight job discrimination: The Supreme Court on Thursday sided with a straight woman who claimed she faced bias in the workplace after she was passed over for positions that went to gay colleagues. The decision will make it easier for people who are White, male or not gay to prove bias claims. The justices unanimously struck down a standard, used in nearly half of the nation’s federal circuits, that required members of groups that historically have not faced discrimination to meet a higher bar to prove workplace bias than members of minority groups.

  10 Comments      


Question of the day (Updated by Rich)

Thursday, Jun 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Legislative Information System’s General Assembly website has been a workhorse for years - simple, functional and familiar. Last year, we told you about a new “beta” version of the website. Now, the full switchover is set for next month



Click here to check out the beta site.

* The Question: What do you think about the change? Have you tried the beta site yet? If so, how has it worked for you?


…Added by Rich Miller…
A legislator sent me this test of the new site’s “virtual assistant” and the same thing happened to me when I attempted to replicate it…

From the same legislator…

It takes 5 clicks to open a bill page on the new site and only 3 clicks on the old site. Does this new site improve anything? What is going on here?

* I have been warning subscribers about this silly AI feature since last December…

The new beta looks a little better, but the LIS folks apparently couldn’t help themselves and added a cheap “artificial intelligence” element to the site.

The LIS “Virtual Assistant” is designed to answer questions that registered users submit. A buddy of mine and I were playing with the function last night and a rethink is definitely in order.

For example, my buddy typed, “Can you please tell me what the dumbest bill introduced in the 103rd General Assembly is?”

The “Virtual Assistant” answered not with a bill number, but with a committee name: “Appropriations-General Services - House Committee.” Rep. Fred Crespo, who chairs that committee, might not be too happy with that [although now, in retrospect, Speaker Welch might agree, since he removed Crespo from the committee].

I asked the virtual assistant “Which bills will hurt economic growth?” Its answer didn’t include any bill numbers, but it instead responded with a committee name (House Economic Opportunity & Equity Committee) and the names of two state Representatives (Jawaharial Williams and Ann Williams).

When I asked it who the worst House member was, the virtual assistant returned a partial list of ten House committees, in alphabetical order.

“Please make me laugh,” my buddy asked the virtual assistant. It responded with the names of Reps. Martin McLaughlin and Justin Slaughter – both of whom have “laugh” in their names.

This goofy AI chatbot could easily cause a lot of problems.

But could it be useful to the average person? I asked the chatbot a more practical question last night: “What abortion bills have been introduced?” The response: “Well now I am embarrassed, I do not know the answer.”

I asked, “Which bills would raise taxes?” and it returned the same “I dunno” answer. I asked the AI monster which bills would lower taxes, and it pointed me to retiring Rep. Mary Flowers (D-Chicago). Heh.

I mean, c’mon. Literally nobody asked for this.

I just asked the silly chatbot the same questions and it returned basically all of the same answers, except for the Mary Flowers answer because she’s no longer a member.

In other words, I warned about this problem six months ago and they made no effort at all to change it.

Dumbest upgrade ever.

  36 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)

Wednesday, Jun 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ABC Chicago

Young people are scrambling, as Job Corps centers are shutting down in Chicago and across the country.

The Chicago center that educates young people and helps them find jobs is slated to close down with only a couple of days of notice, after a federal funding pause.

The decision means hundreds enrolled may not be able to complete their training, and, because most live in housing on the center’s campus, could be left homeless, as well. […]

Some 187 students live there.

The Trump administration says the program was operating at a $140 million deficit last year, is not cost-effective, has a low graduation rate and was not placing participants in stable jobs. But, both staff and students say those claims are not true.

…Adding… Blocked for now…


* The Illinois Department of Central Management Services…

Following the passage of Governor JB Pritzker’s seventh consecutive balanced budget, the State of Illinois today highlighted a historic $500 million investment in site readiness—marking a bold step forward in transforming unused state properties into hubs of economic opportunity. This investment—which represents the largest site readiness investment in state history—will prepare sites across the state to attract new industries, create jobs, and bring new life to communities that have long been impacted by shuttered or unused facilities.

The Site Readiness initiative includes two major components:

    - $300 million for the “Surplus to Success” program led by the Illinois Department of Central Management Services (CMS), which will prepare idle state-owned properties for private development.
    - $200 million for the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) to expand its existing Site Readiness programs and fund large-scale business attraction efforts. […]

Subject to available funds, the “Surplus to Success” program will target five high-priority properties including:

    - Dwight Correctional Center (160 acres)
    - Singer Mental Health Center in Rockford (100 acres)
    - Jacksonville Developmental Center (100 acres)
    - Lincoln Developmental Center (100 acres)
    - Shapiro Developmental Center unutilized land in Kankakee (70 acres). The Developmental Center will be unaffected.

Under the new initiative, these sites will be remediated and marketed for development, supporting job creation, local revenue generation, and economic resilience. […]

Through the $200 million DCEO component, the state will expand its efforts to make sites ready for business attraction and business development. This includes funding energy infrastructure to reduce long lead times, and help municipalities, economic development organizations, and landowners prepare sites for investment. ​

*** Statewide ***

* Investigate Midwest | Rare Illinois dust storm shows how far climate shifts are reaching: The number of dust storms recorded annually across the U.S. doubled in just over a decade. As bare cropland and rising temperatures dry out the Midwest, even states like Illinois are seeing warnings once reserved for the Southwest.

* Governor JB Pritzker

Today, Governor JB Pritzker announced his appointment of Michele L. Pankow, public safety expert and seasoned fire chief, to serve as the Illinois State Fire Marshal pending senate confirmation. Chief Pankow has spent over 32 years in the Illinois fire service, and will be the first woman to serve as the Illinois State Fire Marshal beginning in mid-July.

“With 32 years of exemplary service, Chief Pankow’s unique knowledge and skillset have more than earned her this new role as Illinois State Fire Marshal,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Having risen in the ranks since her first day on the job, she understands the needs of Illinois firefighters, and is versed in the public safety functions of our state. I am grateful for her ongoing commitment to Illinois, and look forward to seeing her strengthen our team.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* 25News Now | Illinois K-2 expulsion and suspension reform bill fails to pass: The bill passed the Senate on a 30-23 vote with some Democrats voting against it or leaving the room as the vote was called. Now, it just needed House approval to pass. However, it had passed midnight of May 31, which means any plan wanting to pass either chamber needs a two thirds majority. That means a legislation needs 71 votes instead of the usual 60 votes to pass.

* WAND | TICK Act: Alpha-gal awareness bill gains unanimous support, heads to Pritzker’s desk: Rep. Dan Swanson (R-Alpha) said he filed the legislation because his mother suffers from the disease. “She’s lived with this now for several years but has never sought treatment because she knows how to control it,” Swanson said. “She can’t go into McDonald’s or a restaurant where they actually fry burgers on an open grill because that aroma will cause the shock that she goes through.”

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Inside Illinois’ FY 2026 budget: little to no new funding for K-12 schools, early childhood education: The General Assembly’s budget for the Illinois State Board of Education will increase from almost $10.8 billion to almost $11.2 billion. The final budget includes a $307 million increase for K-12 school districts around the state through the state’s evidence-based funding formula. This is the first time since 2020 that the General Assembly did not increase the budget by at least $350 million.

* CBS Chicago | Illinois lawmakers pass legislation aimed at helping solve missing persons cases: The Missing Persons Identification Act requires law enforcement to report immediately when they learn of a missing person and enter it into the Law Enforcement Agencies Data System. If a person is missing for more than 60 days, investigators will be required to also collect any existing fingerprint or dental records and photos and enter that info into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System database.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | CTU threatens to sue over proposed CPS budget cuts: CTU President Stacy Davis Gates sent a letter to the school board Tuesday, characterizing Martinez and his team’s proposals to balance the Chicago Public Schools’ 2026 fiscal budget as “attempts at vindictive sabotage.” The new fiscal year begins July 1. The union settled a new $1.5 billion four-year contract in late April, following a year of negotiations. CPS has said there is enough money to cover the first year of the contract, but has not detailed plans for the other three.

* Block Club | Chicago’s Grocery Tax Was Slated To End In 2026. Now, Mayor Wants To Keep It Going: Chicago has not yet taken action on reimplementing the grocery tax, which must be passed as an ordinance and submitted to the state by Oct. 1 for collection to continue uninterrupted in 2026, according to a fact sheet from the Illinois Municipal League. With that deadline quickly approaching — especially considering the City Council does not meet in August — Johnson and members of his budget team on Tuesday separately spoke in favor of continuing to collect the tax to help the city balance its budget.

* Fox Chicago | More than 125 CPS students nailed a perfect ACT score — here’s where they go to school: At least 125 high school students across Chicago Public Schools earned a perfect score on the ACT this year — something fewer than 1% of students pull off nationwide, according to preliminary data shared by CPS. The standout among CPS schools was Walter Payton College Preparatory High School, where 40 students scored a 36. Lane Tech College Prep followed with 24, and Whitney M. Young Magnet High School reported 23 perfect scores.

* Block Club | Pilsen Residents On Edge Day After ICE Arrests: ‘People Are Feeling Siloed’: Hernandez said that after the arrests Monday morning, the normally busy stretch of 18th Street that serves as the heart of Pilsen quickly emptied. Students from Jungman Elementary, who normally frequent his store after classes get out, went home instead, he said. “After that, this neighborhood was quiet,” Hernandez said. “The kids from the school, nobody came.”

* NYT | Bears minicamp takeaways: Ben Johnson’s obsession with details takes hold at Halas Hall: “I think what sticks out (with) Ben and this staff … is just how detail-oriented they are,” Kmet said. “You can feel that in the meetings; they’re relentless on the details. I think that’s something that may be a little unique from what I’ve had in the past. Not saying other coaches weren’t detailed, but it’s like an obsession with the details. … He just can’t let it go. You feel that from him. Whether it’s on the field, in the meeting room, he brings that with him wherever he’s at.”

* Tribune | Blackhawks show off Fifth Third Arena expansion construction — and the future home of the Chicago Steel: The Chicago Blackhawks gave the media a sneak peek at the Fifth Third Arena expansion — still a skeletal collection of steel beams, HVAC systems and construction dust — but they dropped some meatier news during Tuesday’s tour: The Chicago Steel are coming. The United States Hockey League team will play a final season starting this fall at Fox Valley Ice Arena in Geneva, its home since 2015, before moving its offices and home ice into the expanded, fancier digs at Fifth Third, the Hawks training facility.

* Tribune | In unlikely relationship, endangered herons seek out Lincoln Park Zoo’s red wolves for protection: For the last 15 years, however, Chicago has become a popular summer hub and the location of the last remaining breeding colony of the species in the state, specifically atop the red wolf enclosure at the Lincoln Park Zoo. Hundreds of black-crowned night herons flock there starting in mid-March every year, migrating from nearby Indiana and Kentucky, and from farther away like Louisiana, Florida and Georgia, and more recently, even Cuba. […] In Chicago and, in the obvious absence of alligators, the birds have found the largest carnivorous animals and apex predators around. They rely on the red wolves to scare away smaller threats, such as raccoons and other birds of prey, from their nests. The wolves remain undisturbed and, for the most part, uninterested.

* WBEZ | Prejudice ‘follows us to the grave’: The segregated past of Chicago cemeteries: In that era filled with civil rights protests, this group of Chicagoans fought to end the racial segregation of local cemeteries. They focused most of their anger on Oak Woods, the largest graveyard in the South Side’s Black neighborhoods. The nonsectarian cemetery had been excluding African Americans since around 1913, when it sent out a circular ad that declared, “Chapel, vault and cemetery are for the exclusive use of the Caucasian race.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Charges dropped against Harvey Ald. Colby Chapman, arrested at April City Council meeting: Cook County prosecutors dropped charges Wednesday against Harvey Ald. Colby Chapman, who was arrested and removed from a recent City Council meeting, marking the second time charges were against her were not prosecuted. Prosecutors said Wednesday that charges of disorderly conduct and resisting a police officer were being dismissed. Charges filed against Chapman’s mother in the April 28 arrest were also dropped.

* Crain’s | Legislator calls for do-over on Wirtz family’s Ivanhoe Village project: A state legislator hopes to reopen talks about the financial impact the Wirtz family’s proposed $2 billion Ivanhoe Village development will have on local schools, fueled by two recent changes: legislation passed in the closing days of the legislative session in Springfield and a new mayor in Mundelein’s village hall. The case was seemingly closed in mid-April, when the village board voted to approve the package of impact fees the developers and village officials negotiated. That 5-1 vote came after a few months of tension between village officials and leaders of the local school districts, who claimed they would be saddled with about $80 million in new costs not covered by the fees.

* Shaw Local | Old Joliet Prison offers new tour, hard-hats required: The Administration Building at the Old Joliet Prison now is open for hard-hat tours, the Joliet Area Historical Museum announced Tuesday. The building, familiar from the outside to prison visitors because of its location at the entrance to the prison off the main parking lot, has been closed since a 2020 roof collapse.

* Daily Herald | Aurora Farmers Market, the oldest in Illinois, opens for its 114th season Saturday: “We are so excited to kick off our 114th season,” market manager Felicia Freitag said in a press release. “We have a new layout this year that will help us fit up to 75 vendors — more than we’ve ever had at the Water Street Square location.” New this year is the Sprouts Club, a free entertainment and activity hub for children that runs from 9 to 11 a.m. Activities will promote sustainability, creativity and farming and produce knowledge. They also will give children the opportunity to socialize.

* Chicago Mag | Jimmy Bannos Jr. Will Open Kouklas This Summer: Jimmy Bannos Jr. made his name in Chicago as the chef-owner of Michigan Avenue stalwart the Purple Pig, but since departing the restaurant a few years ago, Bannos has been quiet. But not for much longer — Bannos is preparing to open Kouklas, a Greek spot in Niles (7620 N. Milwaukee Ave.), later this summer. He’s working on the project with his father, Jimmy Bannos, best known for the beloved Cajun-Creole spot Heaven on Seven.

*** Downstate ***

* ABC Chicago | Nearly 300 lose jobs after company announces abrupt closure of IL facility: The sausage manufacturer notified 274 people that the Momence, Illinois facility was closing effective immediately. The Momence Packing Company building has been a steady place of employment for the city for more than six decades. […] “It’s like they didn’t even care about us. You know, same day?” former employee Lupe Hernandez said.

* PJ Star | Former Peoria fire chief appointed to interim role with Peoria Heights department: Former Peoria Fire Department Chief Tony Ardis has been named the interim fire chief in Peoria Heights. Ardis was officially appointed to the position on an interim basis by Peoria Heights Mayor Matt Wigginton on Tuesday night, where he was given a round of applause by the members of the Village Board.

* BND | Metro-east city consolidates three fire departments into one: The advantage, city officials say, should be faster response times, easier recruitment, and tax dollar savings. In the meantime, Cahokia Heights Mayor Curtis McCall worked with members of the Cahokia, Camp Jackson and Alorton fire departments on intergovernmental agreements to temporarily bring the three units under one roof immediately. They’ll go back to three separate departments if voters reject the referendum next spring.

* WSIL | Vienna High School leads Illinois in FAFSA completion success: Vienna High School achieved a significant milestone by reaching 100% FAFSA completion among its seniors, according to the Illinois Student Assistance Commission’s latest data. Vienna is the only school outside of Chicago to make the top seven list, which includes six academies and prep schools in Chicago.

*** National ***

* CJR | Don’t Mourn the Death of Alt-Weeklies. They’re Alive and Well: To survive, alt-weeklies have had to evolve. Several years ago, AAN expanded its membership beyond general-interest papers to include LGBTQ, Black, Latinx, and other niche publications; consequently, AAN currently has a membership of 120 papers, its largest since 2009. Some AAN publications no longer publish weekly; some have dispensed with print and publish daily online. Some no longer use the label “alternative,” having taken the place of local dailies that went out of business. (Boegle also points out that the term “alternative” has been co-opted by the far right, never a constituency represented in alt-weeklies.)

  9 Comments      


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