Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Jan 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * First, a little business…
* Isabel and I have been working since Saturday, so it’s been a long and often weird week… I need a short fuse, long week longneck song
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Leaders; 60; HRO (Updated x1)
Friday, Jan 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Jan 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WTVO…
* Capitol News Illinois | Bills addressing warehouse quotas, nursing homes, prostitution pass in session’s final days: HB 2547 would also require employers to provide new warehouse employees with a written description of their quota requirements when hired, as well as any “potential adverse employment action,” essentially disciplinary actions, that they may face if the quota is not met. The employer must give the employee a written update within five days if they make any changes to quotas. * Crain’s | Illinois AG pushes back on Walmart’s plans to roll back DEI programs: Raoul, along with 12 other state attorneys general, sent a letter to Walmart President and CEO Doug McMillon calling for the company to reconsider its decision to phase out supplier diversity programs, close down the Center for Racial Equality, end equity training for staff, and remove the words “diversity” and “DEI” from company documents. * Sun-Times | Illinois joins IRS Direct File program, allowing some taxpayers to file federal taxes for free: The federal agency confirmed to the Sun-Times on Friday that the state is now a part of the program, joining 24 other states such as Wisconsin, Idaho and California. The Illinois Department of Revenue declined to immediately comment. Direct File was piloted in 2024, across 12 states, and has been pitched as the free government alternative to tax prep services like TurboTax, who have been accused as predatory by courts and the federal government. * IPM News: IVF patients in Illinois worry, feel uncertain about access and treatments as Trump returns to office: Dr. Eve Feinberg is a board member of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine and she specializes in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. “I do feel relatively safe in Illinois,” she said. “I think that Senator Duckworth has made incredible strides towards protecting Illinoisans and towards expanding access to infertility coverage in the state of Illinois, but I worry a lot about government interference in health care, and specifically government interference in the arena of IVF.” * WBEZ | Immigration advocates warn a proposal for Chicago police to help ICE could be illegal: Immigration advocates and attorneys are sounding the alarm about an ordinance that would allow Chicago police with federal immigration enforcement, saying the one-page proposal would open the door to constitutional rights violations and legal challenges that could leave taxpayers on the hook for multimillion dollar settlements. * WTTW | Overnight Closures Announced Ahead of Reversible Lanes on Kennedy Expressway Reopening Next Week: The reopening of the express lanes comes after more than 10 months of construction work on the Kennedy that began in March and that was initially supposed to wrap up in the fall. IDOT officials said additional time was needed to test the reversible lane access control system. * Tribune | Dream Team? The exec who bought Michael Jordan’s former Highland Park mansion is offering co-ownership shares for $1M: According to a new release, John Cooper, who is a general partner with Lincolnwood-based HAN Capital, is offering an unspecified number of co-ownership shares in the estate, which the retired Chicago Bulls player had tried to sell for more than 12 years. Jordan had once asked as much as $29 million for the mansion, which sits on 8.4 acres. Cooper, a Lincolnshire resident, declined to comment when reached on his cellphone Thursday evening. However, according his news release, co-owners would be responsible for 2% of the estate’s annual expenses, or an estimated $25,000 per owner, and would be allowed exclusive access to the property for the same designated week each year. Co-owners also would be permitted to invite up to 24 guests during their weeklong stay, including children. * CBS Chicago | Beloved Blue Island, Illinois high school music teacher is a finalist for Grammy: Next month, Dr. Justin Antos will be rubbing elbows with Beyonce and Taylor Swift at the Grammy Awards—and it will not be for what he is doing in the recording studio, but for his accomplishments in the classroom. […] Antos’ excellence in teaching, and passion for music, have led him to be among the 10 finalists for the 2025 Music Educator Award—given by the Recording Academy and the Grammy Museum. * PJ Star | Peoria Public Schools says new cellphone policy is helping students focus in class: Peoria Public Schools District 150 said Thursday that its new cellphone pouch initiative was showing progress in the first half of the 2024-25 school year, with improvements in student engagement and a better work environment being displayed. The district said in a news release that a majority of students, teachers and principals at its 17 middle and high schools approved of the pouches, brought in at the beginning of the school year as part of an effort to reduce student distractions and create a “more focused and engaging learning environment.” * WTTW | Eagle Watching Events Kick Off This Weekend as the Nation’s Bird Makes Itself at Home in Illinois for the Winter: On Saturday, the Forest Preserve District of Will County will celebrate the birds during its annual Eagle Watch event at Four Rivers Environmental Education Center in Channahon, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Four Rivers is ideally located at the convergence of the DuPage, Kankakee and Des Plaines rivers, where they join to form the Illinois River. * Fox Chicago | Off-duty Belvidere police officer charged with sexual assault, abuse: On March 19, Belvidere police received a complaint that a woman was sexually assaulted by Kozlowski while he was off-duty. Belvidere police contacted Illinois State police to launch an investigation and placed Kozlowski on paid administrative leave. On Thursday, Kozlowski was indicted by a Boone County Grand Jury on one count of criminal sexual assault and two counts of criminal sexual abuse, all felonies. * The New Republic | Biden Launches Hail Mary to Block Some of Trump’s Mass Deportations: The department noted that roughly 600,000 Venezuelans and more than 200,000 Salvadorans living in the U.S. would be permitted to stay for another 18 months, while the program maintaining their status faces an uncertain future under Trump. Homeland Security cited “environmental conditions” in El Salvador, such as heavy storms, “that prevent individuals from returning,” as well as a “severe humanitarian emergency” in Venezuela under the “Maduro regime.” Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro was sworn in on Friday for a third six-year term, despite a six-month-long election dispute and international condemnation. * Press Release | President Biden Signs Underwood-Backed Bill to Increase Social Security Benefits for 3 Million Americans: Under the Social Security Fairness Act, over 2.1 million retirees on Social Security will receive an average increase of $360 per month. Furthermore, over 700,000 surviving spouses will see an increase between $700 and $1,190 in their monthly benefits, on average. Underwood has been a cosponsor of the legislation since she first came to Congress in 2019 and fought for its passage into law. * CNN | Supreme Court signals it will uphold ban on TikTok over national security concerns and other takeaways from oral arguments: During more than two hours of oral arguments, many of the justices appeared to view the sell-or-ban law approved by Congress in April not as one that primarily implicates the First Amendment but rather as an effort to regulate the potential foreign control of an app used by 170 million Americans. * New York Post | Yankees fans who mauled Mookie Betts at World Series banned from all MLB stadiums indefinitely: The two fans who grabbed Mookie Betts’ wrist and tried to rip the ball out of his hand during Game 4 of the World Series at Yankee Stadium have been banned “indefinitely” from attending any MLB games, The Post has learned. The fans, Austin Capobianco and John P. Hansen, were ejected from the game and banned from Game 5 in The Bronx, which proved to be the final game of the season.
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Mayor Johnson again claims to actively work with the state when no such work appears to exist (Updated)
Friday, Jan 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson said this last night at the University of Chicago’s Institute of Politics…
I checked with the governor’s people earlier today, so they ran their traps and could find no evidence of the mayor’s latest claim. * As you’ll recall, Gov. JB Pritzker said earlier this week that the mayor had called him maybe five times since Johnson has been in office…
…Adding… Now he’s making threats about something that may never even happen…
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Voting open for Illinois flag redesign
Friday, Jan 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
Click here to cast your vote! You can submit one vote every day. Also, please tell us which flag you’re supporting.
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Dr. Ngozi Ezike agrees to $150K fine for violating Ethics Act
Friday, Jan 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Illinois Answers Project back in 2022…
* The Executive Ethics Commission issued its decision today…
* From Ezike’s mitigation statement…
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It’s just a bill
Friday, Jan 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The first bill filed in the new GA is about hemp. HB1…
* BenefitsPro, a magazine focused on employee benefit news…
* Rep. Rita Mayfield filed HB1170…
* HB1205 from Rep. David Friess…
* HB1155 from Rep. Will Guzzardi…
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Open thread
Friday, Jan 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Jan 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sun-Times | Illinois joins Justice Department lawsuit against RealPage and big landlords: The civil antitrust complaint filed Tuesday alleges the companies coordinated to keep rents high by using an algorithm to help set rents and privately sharing sensitive information to boost profits. The amended lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina against RealPage and six landlords. They include Chicago-based LivCor; Cushman & Wakefield, whose residential property management business formerly operated independently as Pinnacle; Camden Property Trust; Greystar; Willow Bridge Property and Cortland Management. * CBS | Earth records hottest year ever in 2024, passing major symbolic climate threshold: “It’s a red flag”: American monitoring teams — NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the private Berkeley Earth — were to release their figures later Friday but all will likely show record heat for 2024, European scientists said. The six groups compensate for data gaps in observations that go back to 1850 — in different ways, which is why numbers vary slightly. * Capitol News Illinois | Lawmakers give small boost to renewable developments, delay broader reform: Lawmakers this week passed a bill aimed at boosting the development of renewable energy generation, but its proponents said the final measure was a “skinny” version of what they had hoped to pass. The bill comes as several state officials warn that Illinois is falling behind on its clean energy goals. The state’s main funding mechanism for renewable energy projects also faces a potential $3 billion budget shortfall in the coming years. * Capitol News Illinois | Potawatomi land transfer clears General Assembly: Nearly two centuries after losing its reservation in Illinois in a land sale that most people now concede was illegal, the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation could soon get its land back. In the final hours of a lame duck session Tuesday, the Illinois House gave final approval to a bill authorizing the state to hand over to the tribe a 1,500-acre state park in DeKalb County, land that largely overlaps the tribe’s original reservation. * Center Square | Illinois General Assembly approves rules Republicans say are unfair: Without debate, the Senate approved its rules. Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford, D-Maywood, explained a few committee additions, and changes to how senators conduct themselves. “We will specifically require senators to avoid threats, inciting violence or other assaults in debate,” Lightford said. * Tribune | Federal government to deliver Chicago and Cook County millions in disaster relief funds for severe storms and flooding: Communities in Illinois will receive a portion of $12 billion in federal disaster recovery funds for severe storms and flooding over the last two years, including $426 million for Chicago, $244 million for Cook County, $96 million for the town of Cicero and $89 million for St. Clair County. * Tribune | Bird flu: Here’s what Illinois residents should know, following the first US death from the virus: Nationally, there have been 66 confirmed cases in humans during this latest outbreak, and a man in Louisiana recently died from the virus. He became sick after he was exposed to a backyard flock and wild birds, and he was older, with underlying health conditions. In Illinois, there have been no confirmed cases yet of humans with the virus. But there have been detections of bird flu in two commercial flocks of poultry in the last 30 days in Illinois, affecting 81,200 birds. The Illinois Department of Natural Resources also said in late December it was monitoring “a large event of waterfowl mortality” at numerous locations due to bird flu. * Crain’s | Moody’s flags the risk that O’Hare project costs could rise: Aviation watchers breathed a sigh of relief late last spring when the city of Chicago sewed up a deal with the airlines at O’Hare International Airport to move ahead with a major terminal upgrade and expansion. Although the two sides have agreed on a budget, ratings agency Moody’s is keeping a close eye on the potential risk that costs could keep climbing until the airport locks in construction contracts. Work is scheduled to start late this summer on a satellite concourse before starting on the centerpiece of the project, a new global terminal. * Sun-Times | Casino operator Bally’s faces no city fines for demolition debris dumped into Chicago River: Bally’s will not be fined for a mishap at the site of its future casino that sent demolition debris into the Chicago River last month, officials confirmed Thursday. Demolition work at the site can resume as early as Friday, according to a city spokesperson. Bally’s and its general contractor were required by the city’s buildings department to submit a “corrective action plan” after the incident. * NPR | Chicago has started powering its municipal buildings with renewable energy: In effort to fight climate change, cities across the country are working to go green - think solar panels, trees, electric buses. Well, the country’s third-largest city just took a major step. At the start of the year, Chicago began sourcing all of the electricity in its municipal buildings from 100% renewable energy. Juanpablo Ramirez-Franco, of member station WBEZ and the environmental newsroom Grist, has this story. * Tribune | Chicago area to see some snow, accumulation during Friday morning commute, Weather Service says: Chicago-area residents will wake up to a light blanket of snow Friday morning that could complicate the morning commute, according to the National Weather Service. Snow was forecasted to begin falling between 5:30 and 6 a.m. Friday and would likely amount to about an inch or an inch and a half, tapering off around midafternoon as the snowstorm moves to the east, according to David King, a meteorologist with the weather service. * Sun-Times | Slain gunman who targeted far-right provocateur Nick Fuentes had mounting legal battles: Lyons had been scheduled to appear in Cook County court the following morning in a pending criminal case stemming from a hit-and-run crash in Proviso Township in September, court records show. Reports obtained from the Berwyn and Mahomet police departments offer a window into Lyons’ psyche at the time of the crime spree. But the records don’t provide any indication why he targeted Fuentes, whose apartment building had become a magnet for his critics after the address was leaked online in response to a controversial social media post he made. * WIFR | Winnebago Co. veterans speak about battle between the county board and VAC: At Thursday night’s county board meeting, the VAC’s former community outreach liaison, Ray Richmond, raised his concerns over the commission’s most recent annual report, citing issues such as financial mismanagement. Richmond says despite what’s being claimed, the VAC’s budget has not been cut but has been going up the past couple of years, as well as its expenses. “I’m a veteran, I’m a taxpayer myself, I’m a homeowner myself, and I understand that other taxpayers and homeowners would like to know what’s happening with their tax dollars,” Richmond says. “Well, it goes to the Veterans Assistance Commission, but how? How’s it being utilized? Why is it being utilized the way that it is? Those questions need oversight and if we do not do that, it’ll continue to run amuck.” * Capitol News Illinois | “All our future money is gone”: The impossible task of providing child care in rural Illinois: Over the past decade, Illinois has lost nearly 4,300 licensed child care providers, a 33% decline. As a result, it has also lost nearly 38,000 licensed child care slots for kids, outpacing the rate at which the child population is shrinking. * SJ-R | Rochester school board hires law firm to investigate superintendent on leave: The Rochester Board of Education has hired an Monticello, Illinois-based law firm to investigate the district superintendent who was placed on paid administrative leave. Board President Amy Reynolds didn’t detail following Thursday’s special board meeting why Dan W. Cox was being investigated. Miller, Tracy, Braun, Funk & Miller, Ltd. was hired by the board, Reynolds said at the meeting. The announcement followed a two-and-a-half hour executive session. * WCIA | Tuscola potential home of $750 million corn wet-milling plant: The China-based company, Fufeng USA Inc., is looking to build a $750 million corn wet-milling plant somewhere in the country, and Tuscola is one of their options. Their nationwide search includes the site of the former LyondellBasell plant that closed three years ago. Brian Moody, Douglas County Economic Development Corp. executive director, said Tuscola could see a huge economic impact if selected by the company. * Rockford Register Star | Hard Rock Casino Rockford rakes in nearly $100M in 2024: Despite closing for more than two weeks starting Aug. 12 as the casino transitioned to the big joint and out of the temporary location on Bell School Road, the Hard Rock made 41% more in revenue than the $69.1 million it did in 2023, according to data from the Illinois Gaming Board. * Bloomberg | LA Fire Hydrants Running Dry Poses New Danger in Combating Blazes: As the Palisades and Eaton fires spread on Tuesday night, multiple crews reported losing that crucial firefighting tool. The issue wasn’t California’s water management, as some including President-elect Donald Trump and Elon Musk have suggested, but rather systems that simply aren’t designed to handle fires of such ferocity burning in or near urban areas. * Better Conflict Bulletin | Meta Drops Fact-Checking Because of Politics, but Also Because It Wasn’t Working: There were 302 fact checks of Facebook content in the U.S. conducted last month. But much of that work was conducted far too slowly to make a difference. For example, Politifact conducted 54 fact checks of Facebook content in January 2020. But just nine of those fact checks were conducted within 24 hours of the content being posted to Facebook. And less than half of the fact checks, 23, were conducted within a week. This is slightly less than 10 fact checks per day in the US. And if fact checks take days to complete, then most people will view viral falsehoods before any label is applied.
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Live coverage
Friday, Jan 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Jan 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Jan 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Earlier today, I told you about SoS Giannoulias’ push to raise the age for mandatory road tests to 87. From AAA…
* Sun-Times…
* Governor JB Pritzker attended President Carter’s funeral today…
* Bloomberg | Pritzker says Illinois is ‘on guard’ for any Trump hit to budget: Pritzker is expected to propose a spending plan for the year starting July 1 in just over a month, and his budget office’s five-year analysis is projecting a deficit of about $3 billion for fiscal 2026. Pritzker described the upcoming budget as “challenging” but added that since taking office, he’s addressed a number of fiscal crises in Illinois. “We are doing the best that we can to try to predict the things that might happen,” Pritzker told reporters in Springfield on Wednesday. He said he’s weighing the possibility that potential changes “will create another hole in the budget,” adding that President Donald Trump’s actions are “so unpredictable.” * Press release | IDPH Approves New Conditions for Treatment with Medical Cannabis: The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) has approved four conditions to be added to the list of medical issues that may be treated with medical cannabis. The four newly approved conditions are endometriosis, ovarian cysts, uterine fibroids, and female orgasmic disorder. The approval by IDPH Director, Dr. Sameer Vohra, comes following a thorough review by the Medical Cannabis Advisory Board (MCAB) and IDPH staff. * Illinois Soybean Association | Illinois Declares Soybean as Official State Bean : “I would like to extend our gratitude to Representative Matt Hanson and the Illinois General Assembly for officially designating the soybean as the state bean of Illinois. This bill helps raise awareness of the importance of soybeans to our state’s economy and agricultural sector,” said Andrew Larson, Director of Government Relations & Strategy at the Illinois Soybean Association. “We thank Representative Hanson for his work highlighting the importance Illinois farmers play in our state.” * Tribune | CPS CEO Pedro Martinez injunction hearing postponed by judge: On Dec. 24, Judge Joel Chupack granted Martinez’s request for a temporary restraining order to prevent Board of Education members from attending contract negotiations with the Chicago Teachers Union without his approval; or block him from the “performance of his job duties.” Representatives for Martinez and the school board agreed to defer the hearing because the school chief’s court order — or injunction — is complicated by the Jan. 15 meeting in which 10 newly elected and 11 members appointed by the mayor will be seated, William J. Quinlan, Martinez’s attorney said. * Block Club | One Alderwoman’s Crusade To Ban Legal Weed Dispensaries In Her Southwest Side Ward: Ald. Silvana Tabares (23rd) does not want the marijuana business in her ward. So she’s going door-to-door with a pen and a clipboard, asking neighbors to sign petitions to block licensed dispensaries from setting up shop at all. “As an alderman, I want family-friendly businesses that anybody can enjoy. Like an Andy’s Frozen Custard,” Tabares said. “Residents are signing. They agree with that.” * Sun-Times | Three of CPD’s most notorious bad actors trigger $33.75 million in settlements: Three former police officers implicated in scores of wrongful conviction cases are coming back to haunt Chicago taxpayers yet again. Former Detective Reynaldo Guevara and former Sgt. Ronald Watts took their place alongside Jon Burge and his midnight crew of Area 2 detectives as the Chicago Police Department’s most notorious bad actors and legal liabilities. Another round of costly proof is on Monday’s agenda for the City Council’s Finance Committee. * Sun-Times | After decades in prison and 8 years in court, Mark Maxson settles wrongful conviction suit for $8.75 million: Eight years after he was freed from prison for a South Side murder that another man has confessed to, alleged police torture victim Mark Maxson has settled his federal wrongful conviction lawsuit against the city for $8.75 million. […] Maxson’s settlement must be approved by the City Council. He and the city’s Law Department have signed off on the agreement in federal court, records show. It’s among almost $40 million in legal settlements the Finance Committee will consider Monday, including $17.5 million for Thomas Sierra in his wrongful conviction case against retired Chicago Police Detective Reynaldo Guevara. * WTTW | Developer Moves Forward With Lincoln Park Apartment Complex, Setting Stage for Fight Over Aldermanic Prerogative: Sterling Bay will hold a community meeting at 6 p.m. Jan. 15 at 1840 N. Marcey St., the site of the planned development that would build two towers — one reaching 25 stories and the other 15 stories — across the north branch of the Chicago River from the planned Lincoln Yards megadevelopment, which has yet to get off the ground. That meeting, designed to again give community members a chance to weigh in on the project, is the first step on a path that could result in the apartment complex’s approval by the City Council despite the opposition of Ald. Scott Waguespack, whose 32nd Ward includes the proposed development. * Tribune | Bird deaths plummet at McCormick Place Lakeside Center after safety film installed: In 2023, the death toll for a single day was so high — at least 960 birds — that the carnage became national news. But this fall, when bird collision monitors performed their usual daily searches of the building’s grounds, they found something remarkable: just 18 dead birds. * Tribune | Chicago couple first to sue ex-Sgt. Ronald Watts in line for $7.5M settlement: Attorneys have proposed a $7.5 million payout to settle the first of more than 150 federal lawsuits alleging phony arrests by corrupt ex-Chicago police Sgt. Ronald Watts and his team, records show. Ben Baker sued Watts and the city in 2016, alleging the longtime tactical sergeant in charge of the Ida B. Wells housing complex pinned bogus drug cases on him — and in one instance, his partner, Clarissa Glenn — in retaliation for refusing to pay Watts a $1,000 bribe. Baker spent about 10 years in prison before his conviction was thrown out. * Tribune | Today in Chicago History: ‘McCaskey, you’re a bum!’ The coin flip that cost the Chicago Bears Terry Bradshaw: “McCaskey, you’re a bum!” former Chicago sportswriter Jack Griffin hollered from the back of the room to Bears owner George Halas’ son-in-law. “You couldn’t even win a coin flip!” The Steelers used the No. 1 pick to draft quarterback Terry Bradshaw, who led owner Art Rooney’s team to eight American Football Conference Central Division titles and four Super Bowl titles in 14 years. * Crain’s | What’s next for the controversial hot tub boats on the Chicago River: Hot tub boats on the Chicago River captured the attention of the masses last winter when a couple was caught on camera publicly fornicating aboard one of the new vessels. Other river users had also reported negative interactions with the boats and wanted the program to end. We are now well into season two of hot tubs cruising the Chicago River, and not only are the controversial boats not going away, the company behind them is doubling down. The Chicago Electric Boat Co. introduced two new vessels in December and plans to add another two in February, bringing the total fleet to six. * WBEZ | Highland Park massacre suspect regains some phone privileges; trial to begin next month: Robert Crimo III is now allowed to call his parents from Lake County Jail, Judge Victoria Rossetti ruled during a brief court hearing Thursday. Crimo has had his communication privileges revoked several times over the two years he’s been jailed on charges he fatally shot seven people and injured at least 48 others from a rooftop overlooking the north suburb’s 2022 Fourth of July parade. * Daily Herald | Suburban schools using PowerSchool software affected by data breach: Mundelein High School District 120 Superintendent Kevin Myers posted information to his community on the district’s website. “While information from District 120 students and staff was accessed, PowerSchool informed us they are confident data collected during this breach has already been destroyed without evidence of being misused or shared,” Myers wrote. “The breach occurred on Dec. 28 and was reported to D120 on Jan. 7. We were one of many school districts impacted.” * NBC Chicago | Shabbona Lake State Park to be transferred to Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation: The state park, located in DeKalb County, is situated on land that was illegally seized and auctioned off by the United States government in the 1800s, with officials saying in statements that they were rectifying an historic wrong in transferring ownership of the park to the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation. […] According to the Chicago Sun-Times, the legislation would require the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation to maintain the land as a public conservation area. A spokesperson told the newspaper when the bill was introduced that the state park would remain open to the public. * SJ-R | Feeling lucky? Springfield alderman wants to revive talk about a casino here: A Springfield alderman wants to revive discussion about the possibility of Springfield getting in line for a casino license from the State of Illinois. A resolution that the city be included for consideration of receiving a casino license was shelved by the Springfield committee of the whole in 2022. But possible revenue streams and jobs has Ward 2 Ald. Shawn Gregory more than interested in the venture. * Columbia Journalism Review | Net Neutrality Is Dead (Again). Journalism Could Suffer.: Matt DeRienzo, the executive director of the group Local Independent Online News Publishers, also wrote in 2017 about what the repeal would mean for local journalism. Independent sites that had sprung up to fill gaps in the sector rely on “an Internet based on a level playing field for all publishers and readers, regardless of size or resources,” he argued. The end of net neutrality would mean that big internet and wireless providers could charge individual publishers for differing levels of speed and access, “a scenario in which a handful of big companies with deep pockets could squeeze out” small outlets. This, DeRienzo wrote, would “severely limit citizens’ access to information and could be devastating to local news.” Since then, there hasn’t been a lot of clear evidence that these negative effects have occurred. But they could feasibly have been obscured by the general decline in the industry’s financial health. Either way, the recent verdict is clearly not good news for beleaguered smaller publishers fighting for every competitive advantage they can get.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - New stuff (Updated x2)
Thursday, Jan 9, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Roundup: Ex-Speaker Madigan back on the stand
Thursday, Jan 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Madigan on the Chinatown deal…
* Sun-Times…
* Courthouse News reporter Dave Byrnes…
* Fox Chicago…
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It’s just a bill
Thursday, Jan 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sun-Times…
* Politico…
* HB1089 filed by Rep. Maurice West…
* HB1141 filed by Rep. Will Hauter…
* Rep. La Shawn Ford filed HB1143…
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Open thread
Thursday, Jan 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Jan 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: New General Assembly sworn in as House, Senate take different tones. Capitol News Illinois…
* Related stories…
∙ Sun-Times: Freshly inaugurated Illinois legislators meet ‘critical moment’ after lame-duck infighting ∙ WCIA: Legislators inaugurated for 104th Illinois General Assembly * Tribune | Illinois’ plan to transition residents from downstate developmental facility has residents waiting months to leave, report says: Equip for Equality, a federally mandated independent organization helping oversee the governor’s plan, said Wednesday in a midpoint assessment report that Choate residents who are supposed to be transitioning to more home-like settings are waiting too long to be moved or that Illinois officials are sending those residents to other large, state-run facilities. * Tribune | Lawsuits allege negligence in mental health center suicide, another issue for embattled state agency: Anthony Stringfellow Jr., 19, died by hanging on Feb. 7, 2023, at the Madden Mental Health Center near Maywood, according to two lawsuits that between them list the Illinois Department of Human Services, the state, the facility and individual care providers as defendants. His death occurred despite guidelines intended to make hospitals treating patients with mental illness safer for those who would attempt to harm themselves. The negligence allegations are in a November 2023 complaint filed with the Illinois Court of Claims that names IDHS as a defendant and in an amended complaint filed in Cook County in June 2024 that names three doctors and a nurse as defendants. * WAND | Protections for domestic violence survivors: Pritzker plans to sign Karina’s bill: “We’ve heard from law enforcement the challenge of moving guns from a home or a person,” Pritzker said. “I think law enforcement got to a point where they felt they could effectuate the Karina’s law and it’s the right idea, the right thing to do, I will sign the bill.” * 21st Show | Four More Years: State Rep. Kelly Cassidy discusses Illinois protections for reproductive, transgender healthcare: State Rep. Kelly Cassidy has been a member of the Illinois House since 2011. She was lead sponsor on the Reproductive Health Act, which, among other things, made abortion access a fundamental right in Illinois. Cassidy was also lead sponsor of legislation a few years ago creating legal protections for people who provide or receive reproductive and gender-affirming care. She gives her take on what protections Illinoisans have and what type of actions might be expected from the federal government in regards to this type of care. * WCIA | ISP could be required to inform witnesses of dash cam recordings with bill on Pritzker’s desk: State Troopers may soon be required to tell witnesses they are still being recorded from dash cameras if a bill on Governor J.B. Pritzker’s desk is signed into law. A bill that passed both chambers of the legislature unanimously requires State Police officers to tell victims their car’s dash cameras will continue to stay on and record if they ask to turn their body cameras off. * WAND | Pritzker on Trump’s talks of a Canadian 51st state: ‘Just a distraction’: On Truth Social, the president-elect posted an image of a map of Canada with the words “51st State” inside its borders. Pritzker says it’s just a distraction. “Donald Trump says an awful amount of things that I think are intended to distract us from other things,” Pritzker said. “I think this idea of attacking or making Canada the 51st state that’s just another one of those.”
* Tribune | Illinois casinos close out 2024 with holiday boost from new Wind Creek and Hard Rock Rockford gambling venues: The state’s 16 casinos generated $157 million in adjusted gross receipts — up 11% over December 2023 — and drew nearly 1.25 million visitors last month, according to data published Wednesday by the Illinois Gaming Board. Rivers Casino Des Plaines remained the state’s busiest casino in December with $43 million in adjusted gross receipts and 264,000 visitors, but newcomers are making their mark on the Illinois gambling landscape. * WGN | Mayor Johnson says his relationships in Springfield transcend politics: Mayor Brandon Johnson on Wednesday responded to a not-so-subtle jab made by Gov. JB Pritzker a day earlier about the mayor’s relationships in Springfield, saying they go deeper than politics. “I have personal relationships with individuals who are friends of mine, which quite frankly go far deeper than a political office,” Johnson said at a press event for the opening of the new Roseland Health Hub. * Sun-Times | Johnson running out of time for course correction with Pritzker, City Council: An already contentious relationship still can be salvaged if a mayor and governor who need each other to solve their respective budget troubles start communicating frequently and privately, instead of taking public shots at one another. * ABC Chicago | Roseland mental health clinic reopening, CARE program expanding, Chicago mayor says: What had been a shuttered mental health clinic is reopening to provide no-cost mental health resources to the people of Roseland. Mayor Brandon Johnson joined Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Olusimbo “Simbo” Ige, elected officials and community leaders for the ribbon cutting for the facility that has been renamed the Roseland Health Hub. * Tribune | Board of Ethics said it did not give Mayor Brandon Johnson an opinion about CPS leave: Despite City Hall’s claims, the Chicago Board of Ethics said it did not provide Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration with an opinion about whether he should resign from Chicago Public Schools to avoid a conflict of interest. The ethics board told the Tribune this week it has “no documents showing any written opinions” about Johnson taking a leave of absence from CPS, nor has it ever issued any written or oral opinions or guidance about CPS leaves by city officials or employees.” * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson talks class size, contract talks, school board appointments: Chalkbeat sat down with Johnson in his office on the fifth floor of City Hall for a brief interview Tuesday to discuss that and other topics like class size, migrant students, and Martinez. The following has been edited for length and clarity. * Daily Herald | District 203 board member censured for ‘unprofessional’ conduct: The resolution outlines various instances in which Kelley Black made “false or disparaging” comments on social media about the school board, made statements harming the district’s bargaining position in ongoing negotiations or improperly used her standing as a board member with regard to her own student. * BND | Feds send $120M to help in metro-east recovery from July flooding: The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development announced Tuesday that St. Clair County will get $89.5 million in grant money to help in disaster recovery from the flooding caused by 8 inches of rain that fell on July 16. The agency said in a news release the money could be used to rebuild homes, develop affordable housing, help small businesses, repair roads and support projects to reduce the risks of damage from future storms. * Herald-Whig | Quincy prepares to cut operating budget by $2 million: After receiving new personal property replacement tax projections Monday, the City Council introduced an ordinance to cut $2 million from the city’s operating budget in fiscal year 2026. Although the amount matches the 2024 property tax subsidy, highlighting another route aldermen could have taken to meet departments’ needs this year, the immediate force behind the budget cut is falling state-allocated personal property replacement tax revenue said Comptroller Sheri Ray. * Herald-Whig | Three airlines make their case for Quincy passenger service contract: In November, the city asked the U.S. Department of Transportation to terminate the current contract with Southern Airways Express due to excessive cancellations and delays, leading to lower numbers of users flying out of Quincy. The three finalists include Cape Air, which intends to primarily fly newer Tecnam P2012 aircraft configured with nine seats, similar to the current planes used by Southern. Cape Air was Quincy’s EAS provider until 2022 when the company requested to be removed due to their own struggles meeting schedules while battling post-pandemic pilot shortages. * SJ-R | Springfield officially appoints new director of Planning and Economic Development: Amy Rasing was approved for the position at Tuesday night’s city council meeting with a 9-0 vote. […] “Business development is something that falls into the rolls I’ve had over the years,” Rasing said. “I have partnered with businesses and helped businesses develop marketing plans. Working in a nonprofit many of you know nonprofits are looking for ways to promote themselves and promote the good things they do.” * WCIA | Ameren IL gives tips to restore power in winter weather: The most recent snowstorm knocked out power for people across Illinois and some cities ended up with 20,000 homes in the dark. If you’re still waiting for it to be fixed… it may be a problem that you have to deal with. There’s a couple of different things to look at like your weather head and meter base. One Ameren employee said ice is his worst enemy — and it can cause a chain reaction. * The Southern | SIU political experts: History will treat Jimmy Carter ‘kindly’: John Shaw and John Jackson of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute point toward Carter’s efforts in brokering a peace between Israel and Egypt that continues today, creating the Department of Education and Department of Energy and pioneering work regarding climate change among a list of accomplishments. Carter died Dec. 29 at 100 years old, more than a year after the death of his wife, former first lady Rosalynn Carter. Services to honor the former president will be held in Georgia and Washington, D.C., from Saturday, Jan. 4, through Thursday, Jan. 9.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Thursday, Jan 9, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Thursday, Jan 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, Jan 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Pritzker on taxes, budget, Trump and a third term
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Here’s what Gov. JB Pritzker said today when asked about tax hikes to balance the state’s budget in the face of a $3.2 billion projected deficit…
Notice that he didn’t directly address Chicago’s city budget. * More…
He later clarified that he wasn’t able to reduce the franchise tax every year, saying “we can only do a certain amount each year in order to be able to afford it within the context of our budget.” Please pardon any transcription errors. * On Trump and the budget…
* Illinois has a trigger law that would decrease state Medicaid spending in case the federal government cuts the programs it’ll pay for. Is he preparing for that?…
* Third term…
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Pritzker talks about ongoing issues with HDem caucus (Updated)
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * From Gov. Pritzker’s press conference today…
Pritzker said he hasn’t talked with the House Speaker in the past 24 hours. …Adding… Senate President Don Harmon weighed in on this during his inaugural address…
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sun-Times…
* Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias’ office rejected more than 300 vanity and personalized license plates in 2024… * President Jennifer Welch is stepping down from her role at Planned Parenthood of Illinois…
* WCIA | Legislators inaugurated for 104th Illinois General Assembly: Senators gathered in their newly reopened chamber in the Capitol after being closed for renovations for years. The new and returning members of the Illinois House of Representatives have convened on UIS’s campus. The four leaders of each caucus have remained the same. * Capitol City Now | IL Senate passes warehouse work rules bill: A labor-related bill is a step away from the governor’s action. The bill, sponsored by State Sen. Celina Villanueva (D-Chicago), covers warehouse workers by requiring their employers to notify them of the daily production quote and also provide adequate break and meal times. * NPR | Lunch and Learn Series explains how Illinois rejected slavery but wasn’t free for all: The UIS Alumni SAGE Society and the Illinois State Historical Society recently hosted a presentation titled “Illinois Rejects Slavery,” featuring Illinois Humanities Road Scholar Dr. Caroline Kisiel. The presentation discussed the summer of 1824 in Illinois when the Illinois General Assembly was on the brink of changing the state constitution to permit slavery outright. Dr. Kisiel explained the sentiments at the time from both abolitionists and enslavers. She also shared how despite Illinois being a free state, slavery found its way within the state’s borders. * Illinois Answers Project | Chicago is Debating Lowering its Speed Limit. Other Cities Aren’t Waiting: In Chicago, though, council members are debating the safety benefits of lowering the speed limit from 30 to 25 miles per hour versus the economic impacts on drivers. The measure passed out of committee in October but has been held from a vote from the full City Council while proponents whip support. Some cities have rolled out their lower limits gradually, others all at once. Some tied their policies with other tools to slow traffic, like speed cameras or curb extensions. Others simply changed the signs and watched what happened. * ABC Chicago | CPS Inspector General investigated 300 cases, including sports fraud, annual report says: The CPS watchdog investigated more than 300 complaints beginning July 1 2023, ending June 30 2024. They involved sports fraud, sexual misconduct cases and improper conduct from former Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s campaign. Highlights of the CPS Inspector General’s annual report include ongoing fraud involving high school sports. * CBS Chicago | CTA trains require a lot of power, but only 11% is currently from renewable sources: And while the average CTA commuter may not think about it, all that power has to come from somewhere. And it turns out more of the electricity that powers the trains is generated by fossil fuels that warm the climate than by renewable sources like wind or solar power. Primarily, the CTA’s power comes from nuclear power plants—a total of 67%. Another 22% comes from fossil fuels, while only 11% comes from renewable sources. * Tribune | How big could the Chicago Bears candidate list become? Brad Biggs’ 6 thoughts on the end-of-season news conferences: “We’ve been in information-gathering mode,” Ryan Poles said, “looking at data research, making countless calls to make sure that we have everything we need to make a sound decision. We’re looking for clear vision, a developmental mindset, really good game management — and obviously a plan to develop a quarterback is going to be a key part of that as well. * Daily Southtown | Will County judge rejects effort to restore Homer Glen candidates to April ballot: Attorney Alan Bruggeman filed a petition for judicial review with the Will County Circuit Court on behalf of potential candidates Cesar Marin, Ethan Fialko, Jennifer Trzos-Consolino, John Walters, Theresa “Tammy” Hayes, James Roti, Heidi “Hadley” Pacella and Daniel Gutierrez. The Homer Glen Electoral Board in November and December removed each of the candidates from the ballot after a series of hearings. Because 17 candidates initially filed to run for three trustee spots, there would have been a primary in February before the April 1 election. * Naperville Sun | Naperville D203 board member censured for ‘detrimental’ actions, including disclosing student and closed session information: Naperville District 203 School Board member Melissa Kelley Black was censured by the School Board Tuesday for “unprofessional” and damaging actions, including disclosing private student information, spreading false information and releasing collective bargaining details. “Member Kelley Black has repeatedly acted in such a way that is detrimental to District 203, its students and its staff, specifically as it relates to the unification of the board leadership and ultimately to student achievement,” the board’s 10-page censure resolution said. * SJ-R | The Rochester schools superintendent is on leave. Letter critical of district may provide details: A memo Monday to Rochester school district parents from the board of education president and acting superintendent about Superintendent Dan W. Cox being placed on paid administrative leave while an investigation is being conducted offered scant details. But a letter to the editor in the Rochester Times last fall from the district’s former director of business services and treasurer raised issues about questionable business trips, budget overspending to the tune of $500,000 and other issues. Robert McDermott spent 22 years in the district before retiring on June 30, 2023, after butting heads with Cox. * WCIA | Champaign activates sidewalk snow removal ordinance: The City of Champaign is asking residents to remove the snow and ice from their sidewalks before noon on Thursday. The Public Works Director said that the sidewalk snow and ice removal requirement in the Downtown, Midtown, and Campustown areas is now in effect. * Chicago Mag | John H. White: The Pulitzer Prize–winning photojournalist, 79, on covering Ali and having a gun pointed at him: My father was a minister who said, “Love those who do evil against you.” But it was hard for me. I’m a visual person, and I’d retain everything I’d see. I remember one time when I was growing up in North Carolina, Daddy said, “Everybody be still and be quiet. Get in that room and don’t look out.” I looked out. The Klan were all in robes. They had burned a cross in our yard and put our car in neutral and made it roll down the road. I saw that. * The Atlantic | Why Poor American Kids Are So Likely to Become Poor Adults: In a new study published in Nature Human Behaviour, my co-authors (Gøsta Esping-Andersen, Rafael Pintro-Schmitt, and Peter Fallesen) and I quantify the persistence of poverty from childhood to adulthood in the U.S. We find that child poverty in the U.S. is more than four times as likely to lead to adult poverty than in Denmark and Germany, and more than twice as likely than in the United Kingdom and Australia. These findings hold across multiple measures of poverty.
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A programming note
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * I put Speaker Chris Welch’s acceptance speech into the daily press release post. We’re also adding press releases from members who were sworn in today. Click here to follow along.
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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small. We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Ade, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.
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Handful of Republican House members call inauguration ‘political theater,’ stage counter-programming stunt (Updated x2)
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Looks like they couldn’t even get the entire Freedom Caucus to join in on this stunt…
* Flashback on Judge McHaney…
…Adding… Upon further consideration, I’m wondering if this publicity attempt is more about getting out of voting for Tony McCombie in the House Speaker’s election. …Adding… Speaker Welch’s speech had a message for the folks above…
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CUB urges rejection of Nicor’s $309 million rate hike request
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Sun-Times…
* Citizens Utility Board Executive Director Sarah Moskowitz…
Thoughts?
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Roundup: Madigan takes the witness stand
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Tribune…
* Sun-Times…
* Related… * Fox Chicago | Ex-Illinois Speaker Michael Madigan takes stand in his own corruption trial: Such a move by a defendant to take the stand is rare in criminal trials and comes with risks. “It’s really a high-risk, high-reward situation,” said Ron Safer, partner, Riley Safer Holmes & Cancila LLP.
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Open thread
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * It’s only Wednesday! How are things in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Hemp regulation bill stalls amid Democratic infighting. Capitol News Illinois…
- Pritzker also called Democratic House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch’s decision not to call the bill “irresponsible.” - Welch’s spokesperson noted that he is a cosponsor of the bill and would continue working to pass it in the new legislative session that begins Wednesday. * Related stories… ∙ WTTW: Pritzker, Johnson Clash Over Hemp Regulation as Bill Stalls in Springfield ∙ Crain’s: Johnson defends Springfield relationships, handling of CPS ∙ Tribune: Feud over hemp bill dominates final days of Illinois legislative session * Sun-Times | Citizens Utility Board vows to fight Nicor’s $309 million rate hike request: The Citizens Utility Board calls the proposal a “money-grab.” If approved, the hike would be a state record, consumer advocates say. A typical monthly bill would rise by about $7.50. Nicor serves more than 2 million customers in northern Illinois and the suburbs. * Journal Gazette | Pritzker: Illinois ‘fighting like heck’ to support Rivian, Stellantis amid EV uncertainty: “I feel like Rivian is very much on its feet and doing well,” said Pritzker, who visited the Normal plant in May to announce $827 million in tax incentives to support the company’s expansion. “And I don’t want the federal government to interfere with the success of any business in Illinois.” * Sun-Times | State lawmakers send Karina’s Bill to Gov. Pritzker’s desk to address domestic violence: Karina’s Bill passed the Illinois House by a vote of 80-33 in the waning hours of the General Assembly’s lame duck session, advancing the measure that would require police to confiscate guns within 96 hours of a judge’s order from people whose FOID cards have been revoked due to emergency restraining orders. “Our hope is that this important change will give strength to survivors everywhere and help ensure no family ever has to experience this type of tragedy again,” Manny Alvarez, Gonzalez’s son, said in a statement after being invited to the House floor by state Rep. Edgar Gonzalez, D-Chicago, to urge an “aye” vote. * Sun-Times | Lawmakers pass nursing home retaliation bill as lame-duck session wraps up in Springfield: Illinois lawmakers passed a measure making it easier for nursing home residents to sue facility owners over claims of retaliation, following more than a year of legislative efforts that advocates had claimed were stalled by Illinois Senate President Don Harmon at the behest of the nursing home industry. A compromise bill cleared the Illinois House 89-16 late Monday, following a 48-2 Senate vote on Sunday, paving the way for more civil suits against nursing homes accused of punishing residents or employees for reporting complaints about facilities — an issue that advocates say is widespread. * WAND | Plan improving Illinois drinking water quality heads to Pritzker’s desk: The Illinois House unanimously voted Monday night to require the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency to conduct statewide samplings of certain community water supplies to assess the levels of dangerous chemicals. Sponsors and advocates said the state should test and create action plans to address these harmful contaminants in drinking water. * WIFR | Bill that returns Shabbona Lake land to Potawatomi Nation heads to Illinois governor’s desk: Senate Bill 867, which was passed by senators last May, essentially honors an agreement made in 1829 between the federal government and the Potawatomi Nation. The land, which includes Shabbona Lake and State Park, was gifted to the tribe but illegally sold years later. The state of Illinois purchased the land in the 1970s. * Chalkbeat Chicago | The mayor’s on ‘union leave’ from CPS despite leaving CTU. Does that undermine contract talks?: Mayor Brandon Johnson taught for four years at Chicago Public Schools before going on leave in 2011 to work for the Chicago Teachers Union and ultimately launch a career in politics. But even though he no longer works for the union, Johnson remains on “union leave” from the school district. That means, after all these years, he could return to the classroom — and earn a six-figure salary as if he never left. * Block Club | Chicago ‘Should Explore’ Congestion Tax To Reduce Traffic, Mayor Says: During a brief interview with Block Club on Tuesday afternoon, Johnson also defended his handling of the protracted and often bitter 2025 budget process while looking ahead to what he hopes to accomplish this year — if he can find the necessary backing from an increasingly defiant City Council. * Block Club | ‘Stomach Flu’ Hitting Chicago Harder Than Usual As Norovirus Cases Surge Nationally: Rates of norovirus infection – often referred to as the stomach flu – have been noticeably higher this winter than in previous years, said Dr. Alfredo Mena Lora, Saint Anthony Hospital’s director of infectious disease. The virus has surged across the United States, with 91 individual outbreaks recorded in the first week of December, the highest spike in cases since at least 2012, according to the CDC. * Rick Morrissey | Raise your hand if you’re bone-tired of the Chicago Bears: Bears general manager Ryan Poles stood at a lectern Tuesday at Halas Hall and did what too many other team officials have done the past four decades: He tried to explain where a season went awry and how the Bears were going to get it right this time. I’m exhausted by my belief that they won’t, that they’ll pick the wrong coach and that we’ll be doing this all over again in two or three years. * Sun-Times | Bald eagle’s death from bird flu in Chicago suburb part of spike in cases in Illinois: The increase in cases in the state comes as a Louisiana man with underlying health conditions died from the disease on Monday. Experts stress the disease should not be of huge concern to the general public, but say those who come into contact with wild birds or other animals like cattle should take precautions. * Daily Herald | Ahoy, suburbs: Chicago Boat Show sails into Rosemont after 93 years in city: The Midwest recreational boating industry’s largest and longest-running annual boating event opens Wednesday afternoon for a five-day tour of the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont — regarded by organizers as geographically closer to boat dealers and their core customers who live in the suburbs. * Daily Herald | Mount Prospect resident critical over handling of attack by teenagers on men using an LGBTQ dating app: A Mount Prospect resident called the village’s delay in sharing information about an attack by mobs of teens on two men over the summer a betrayal of the community. […] “The gay community was not protected,” said resident Carole Martz, who delivered her remarks at Tuesday’s village board meeting. * Crain’s | Developer plans 31-story tower in downtown Evanston: A 31-story apartment tower proposed in downtown Evanston would be the suburb’s tallest building and a pivot from a previous plan to build offices. Chicago-based Vermilion Development has submitted a zoning analysis application for a 447-unit, 330-foot-tall building at 605 Davis St., with ground-floor retail space, according to a report from the city manager. * WICS | Sangamon County Lifts Winter Weather Emergency: This declaration applies only to county highways. Road crews made significant progress clearing the roads this morning. Drivers should still proceed with caution, maintain reduced speeds, and give plows and first responders the space they need to continue their work safely. * WICS | Chuck Redpath nominated and confirmed as new Springfield City Clerk: Tonight’s Springfield City Council special meeting ran for two hours and ended with the confirmation of Chuck Redpath as the new city clerk. Redpath’s nomination comes just six days after the former city clerk, Frank Lesko, resigned after winning the Sangamon County Recorder’s office. * WCIA | Decatur eyes potential new casino, horse race track; Springfield officials to decide next steps: Right now, details are limited and a lot of plans have to do with decisions being made in the capitol. Tim Gleason, Decatur’s City Manager, said he’s familiar with plans for a “racino.” “The City awaits to discuss potential next steps after necessary action is taken in Springfield,” he added. * WCIA | Is Bird Flu headed to Central Illinois?: Douglas Kasper, an infectious disease doctor at OSF said people shouldn’t be too worried. […] “There’s testing, there’s monitoring, there’s isolation, there’s a variety of things that’s recommended for the animal populations. And anyone that’s working with those populations is getting special instructions,” Kasper said. * WCIA | UIS to start another Cannabis education class: “They were needing to stand up a workforce, but there was very little in the way of credentials to for someone to be able to pursue legitimate credentials and put that on their resume and say, hey, look, I’ve had this this kind of training. I’m ready to be a successful employee,” Dr. Robert Kerr with the University of Illinois said. * Rockford Register Star | Back-to-back bowl wins and a win over CFP semifinalist Notre Dame puts NIU in spotlight: For years, NIU hung its hat on beating Alabama in 2003. No one seems to remember that win having more to do with the Crimson Tide being ordinary—4-9 that year, 2-6 in the SEC—than about the Huskies being extraordinary. Yes, NIU won all three of its games against the SEC, Big 12, and ACC, but only Maryland (10-3) lived up to its pedigree, with Iowa State (2-10) collapsing even worse than Alabama. That pales in comparison to this year. A 16-14 win at No. 5 Notre Dame in the second week of the season was truly history-making. Not just for NIU. For its entire conference. The Mid-American Conference had been 0-51 lifetime against top-five teams before NIU rolled into South Bend. * 404 Media | Researcher Turns Insecure License Plate Cameras Into Open Source Surveillance Tool: Will Freeman, the creator of DeFlock, an open-source map of ALPRs in the United States, said that people in the DeFlock community have found many ALPRs that are streaming to the open internet. Freeman built a proof of concept script that takes data from unencrypted Motorola ALPR streams, decodes that data, and adds timestamped information about specific car movements into a spreadsheet. A spreadsheet he sent me shows a car’s make, model, color, and license plate number associated with the specific time that they drove past an unencrypted ALPR near Chicago. So far, roughly 170 unencrypted ALPR streams have been found. * The Atlantic | The Truth About NIMBYs: On today’s episode of Good on Paper, I talk with the political scientist David Broockman about the limits of using self-interest as a lens for understanding people’s opposition to new development. His research, with the scholars Chris Elmendorf and Josh Kalla, points to symbolic-politics theory, a framework that de-emphasizes personal impacts and financial self-interest and instead looks at how people feel about symbols such as cities, developers, and affordable housing.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Jan 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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