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Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

IBM plans to dramatically increase its presence in Chicago with a commitment to hire 750 technical workers at the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park on the South Side.

The company will create jobs in AI, cybersecurity, data science, quantum and other technologies, in part through an apprenticeship program with City Colleges of Chicago. […]

IBM, which already planned to be part of the R&D park as an anchor of the National Quantum Algorithm Center along with the University of Illinois, also will house its FutureNow Chicago delivery center at the park.

“IBM’s investment in Illinois is a powerful vote of confidence in our state’s growing technology and quantum ecosystem and the world-class workforce that powers it,” Pritzker said in a written statement announcing the partnership.

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

Sponsored by Phrma

Illinois is paying the price for 340B medicine markups.

Through the federal 340B program, nonprofit hospitals can buy medicines for pennies, then charge huge markups – even on life-saving medicines. Those markups have become big business for large hospital systems, driving higher costs for Illinois patients, employers and taxpayers.

And the problem is getting worse. The program’s lack of oversight has allowed 340B to become a revenue stream for hospitals, PBMs, private equity firms and big chain pharmacies — with no requirement that the money be used to help patients afford medicines. It’s time for Washington to hold hospitals accountable and fix 340B. Read more.

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

…Adding… From Rich: The sports talkers convinced themselves that today would be the day that Indiana finally beat Illinois. Nope

* Gas prices just keep going up

*** Statewide ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois retailers celebrate early successes of state-funded apprenticeship program: Tribin is one of 11 apprentices in the early stages of the program, which comes during a time of significant workforce investment in Illinois. A little over a year into the program, which was formally announced in February but began recruiting last year, organizers and participants already claimed individual success stories, touting a 100% apprentice retention rate as they focus on sharpening the skills of current retail employees.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | Bears megaproject bill takes baby steps in Senate, but ‘lots of work to be done’: “There’s lots of work to be done,” said Murphy, a member of the Assignments Committee. “We’re going to take our time and analyze everything that’s in the bill. We have one chance to get this right.” […] “We’re going to review what the House passed, gather input from senators and stakeholders and assess the path forward,” said John Patterson, spokesman for the Senate Democrats.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Overtime Cost Chicago Taxpayers $544.4M in 2025, Including $285.8M for Police, Down 6.3% From Last Year: The $544.4 million includes approximately $77.3 million in holiday and compensatory time and more than $467 million paid directly to employees who worked more than eight hours a day or 40 hours per week, according to data published by the city’s Office of Budget and Management. By comparison, the city spent $581 million on overtime in 2024, according to the data.

* Tribune | Chicago progressive leaders remember organizer Amisha Patel: Leaders of the city’s political left credited Patel with uniting community groups and labor unions by fostering deep personal relationships. Her work helped create the working-class movement that made Mayor Brandon Johnson’s election possible, they argued. Johnson, who is expected to eulogize Patel at her funeral Saturday, praised her work as a senior adviser to his mayoral transition committee, calling Patel a “dear friend” and her death “a profound loss.”

* Block Club | Pete Kastanes, Vanished Chicagoland Founder Who Uplifted City History, Dies At 62: For a decade and a half, Pete Kastanes highlighted Chicago’s history online through his website, Vanished Chicagoland, and associated social media accounts. He died from prostate cancer on Saturday at 62. Kastanes’s passion for Chicago’s history spanned from the North Side to the South Side, as the historian would share photos and stories of the city’s yesteryears. He launched his first of 30 Facebook pages for various closed businesses in the early 2010s. “A Tribute to Kroozin’ Music II on W 79th St Ashburn Chicago” celebrated a record store across from Bogan High School, where Kastanes attended.

* Sun-Times | Davis Martin’s hot start to a potential breakout season is built on trust with White Sox: Manager Will Venable might’ve called it a night for other arms on a young pitching staff that has produced uneven results early in the year — but not from Martin, who got two more outs en route to his fourth win of the season. It’s a sign of trust the second-year skipper has in the veteran righty, who has put himself on the map over the first month of the season with a 1.95 ERA that was tied for eighth in MLB entering play Wednesday

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* NBC Chicago | ‘Does not work’: Cook County State’s Attorney decries electronic monitoring system as broken: Burke on Tuesday lashed out at the system that she said made it possible for Alphanso Talley to disregard his monitor and allegedly continue a crime spree that ended in the shooting death of Chicago Police Officer John Barthelomew and the severe wounding of his partner. “Electronic monitoring is not an alternative to detention. It does not keep people safe,” Burke said during a late afternoon news conference in the lobby of the Leighton Criminal Courthouse.

* Daily Southtown | Blue Island residents speak out against possible data center, mayor says comments are premature: Mindeman and nine other Blue Island residents told the City Council Tuesday they still feel connected to the former hospital, even seven years after its closure, and they oppose the property owners intentions to build a data center. Although Mayor Fred Bilotto assured residents the city has not received a formal proposal for a data center, residents said it’s not too early to worry that a place that once healed them could bring harm into the heart of the city.

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg extends TIF district to Loeber Farm for controversial residential development: Three months after approving the controversial 33-acre Loeber Farm development, Schaumburg trustees approved a tax incentive extension to fund public improvements. The expansion of the tax increment financing district along Meacham Road aims to cover utilities, a bridge over Salt Creek and flooding solutions. The Loeber Farm has seen various residential proposals in the 21st century. This January, the Elmhurst-based Nitti Group’s plan for 43 single-family homes, 37 row houses, and 42 townhouses was approved. It replaced a withdrawn plan for 357 rental units, which faced strong opposition from Rolling Meadows residents.

* Pioneer Press | Chicago Stars’ Bannockburn site is only for training. So is Evanston’s Ryan Field still in play for games?: Evanston and Wilmette residents who opposed the Chicago Stars playing games at Ryan Field might not yet want to breathe a sigh of relief — even though the Stars recently announced they plan to build a new performance center in Bannockburn. A spokesperson for the club clarified that the planned Bannockburn facility will function solely as a training center and not a stadium where games will be played. The National Women’s Soccer League team has not yet announced where it will seek to play games in 2027 and beyond, and it’s not known whether they might request to use Ryan Field.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Macon Co. farmers no longer worried about drought — too much rain is now the concern: Here’s why: When rain comes down as hard and as fast as it did Monday night, it can pack the soil down, hardening it and making it difficult for the corn to poke through and grow. Eads said that they have to be careful what they wish for, because over the last several months, they were concerned about the drought conditions.

* WSIL | Jackson County clerk weighs new Carbondale ballot drop box: Frank L. Byrd, Clerk and Recorder of Jackson County, Illinois, announced Tuesday that his office is evaluating the potential placement of an additional ballot drop box in Carbondale, Illinois. The move is part of ongoing efforts to ensure voting remains secure, accessible, and efficient for residents. As the county’s Election Authority, Byrd is responsible for determining ballot drop box locations. Carbondale, the county’s largest municipality, serves a diverse and significant population, making accessibility and geographic coverage key considerations in the decision-making process.

*** National ***

* Inside Radio | Ex-FCC Officials Push Court To Break Agency Silence On News Distortion Policy.: A bipartisan coalition of former Federal Communications Commission chairs, commissioners, and senior staff filed a petition last November calling on the FCC to formally rescind its news distortion policy. It has been met with silence in the months that have followed, and now the group is asking a federal appeals court to order the Commission to act on their request. The former FCC officials, along with the Radio Television Digital News Association (RTDNA), filed a petition for a writ of mandamus Tuesday in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. The rarely-used maneuver asks the court to order the Commission to issue a final decision within 90 days. If the court agrees to intervene, it would not only compel the FCC to take a position on the future of the news distortion policy, which the bipartisan coalition believes current Chair Brendan Carr has abused to chill press freedoms.

* AP | Push for raw milk intensifies across the US, despite illness outbreaks and scientists’ warnings: More than three dozen bills supporting raw milk have been introduced in statehouses across the nation, The Associated Press found. A growing number of states are making it legal to sell. Dairy farmers say they can barely keep it in stock, even though prices can exceed $10 or $20 a gallon. Top government officials and internet influencers are helping drive this momentum. U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. downed shots of raw milk at the White House last May and previously promised to halt “aggressive suppression” of the product. On social media, posts about raw milk have surged in recent months, often touting unproven claims about its health benefits.

* Tribune | Gregory Bovino finds a new mission in retirement: Trolling DHS: In a April 15 post, the Department of Homeland Security posted the disputed claim that “each illegal immigrant costs the American taxpayer nearly $8,776 every single year” and vowed to put “the American worker FIRST.” Bovino responded: “Then restart mass deportations and quit messing around with it.”

  8 Comments      


Pritzker claims today’s US Supreme Court ruling ‘validates’ the current Illinois district maps

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The ruling is here if you need it. SCOTUSblog

The Supreme Court on Wednesday, in the case of Louisiana v. Callais, struck down a Louisiana congressional map that a group of voters who describe themselves as “non-African American” had challenged as the product of unconstitutional racial gerrymandering. By a vote of 6-3, the justices left in place a ruling by a federal court that barred the state from using the map, which had created a second majority-Black district, in future elections. Although Wednesday’s ruling did not strike down a key provision of the federal Voting Rights Act, as Louisiana and the challengers had asked the court to do, Justice Elena Kagan suggested in her dissent (which was joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson) that the majority opinion by Justice Samuel Alito had rendered the provision “all but a dead letter.”

The decision was the latest, and presumably final, chapter in a long-running dispute arising from Louisiana’s efforts to adopt a new congressional map in the wake of the 2020 census. The first map that the state adopted, in 2022, had one majority-Black district out of the six allotted to the state. A group of Black voters – who comprise roughly one-third of the state’s population – went to federal court, where they alleged that the map violated Section 2 of the VRA, which prohibits discrimination in voting. […]

In this case, Alito said, Louisiana’s goal in adopting the 2024 map “was racial”: the state enacted it in the wake of the lower court’s finding that the 2022 map likely violated Section 2, and sought to avoid having the court impose a different map that would have created a second majority-Black district but which would also “have imperiled one of the influential incumbents the legislature sought to protect.” […]

In a somber tone, Kagan read a summary of her 48-page dissent from the bench – a signal of her strong disagreement with the majority’s ruling. “The Voting Rights Act,” she wrote “is—or, now more accurately, was—‘one of the most consequential, efficacious, and amply justified exercises of federal legislative power in our Nation’s history.’” But the requirements that the court imposes on Wednesday, she contended, “will effectively insulate any practice, including any districting scheme, said by a State to have any race-neutral justification. That justification can sound in traditional districting criteria, or else can sound in politics and partisanship. As to the latter, the State need do nothing more than announce a partisan gerrymander,” she said. “Assuming the State has left behind no smoking-gun evidence of a race-based motive (an almost fanciful prospect), Section 2 will play no role.”

* Gov. JB Pritzker was asked today about the ruling’s impact on Illinois

I talked to lawyers this morning, people who are experts in this, who’ve said that everything that we have in Illinois now is constitutional, even under the new ruling. So I’m sure there will be people who try to attack it. But the reality is that if you read through the Supreme Court decision, I’m told that it validates the maps that are already in place.

* I also consulted with an election law attorney who has been involved in redistricting here…

When drawing a legislative map, the General Assembly must adhere to the U.S. Constitution and federal law, in addition to the Illinois Constitution and state law. For at least a decade it has been clear that the 14th and 15th Amendments prohibit using race as a predominant factor in drawing a map. In 2011, Illinois adopted the Illinois Voting Rights Act which urges the creation of crossover districts, coalition districts, or influence districts “in addition and subordinate to any requirements or obligations imposed by the United States Constitution, any federal law regarding redistricting Legislative Districts or Representative Districts, including but not limited to the federal Voting Rights Act, and the Illinois Constitution.” For the last 2 cycles, the General Assembly produced a document publicly explaining how and why districts were drawn, and it was clear that race was not the predominant or only critieria used to draw the maps.

The most recent explanation for how districts are drawn can be read here or here.

* The East St. Louis NAACP tried to overturn the latest remap because map-makers diluted Black voting strength in the 114th House District. A federal court rebuffed the claim

In the end, East St. Louis NAACP Plaintiffs’ evidence amounts to a claim that “the district’s shape, its splitting of towns and counties, and its high [White] voting population” together with various public statements that legislators were aware of race shows that race predominated the 2021 legislative redistricting cycle. See Cromartie II, 532 U.S. at 243. The Supreme Court’s decisions since Cromartie II tell us that this direct and circumstantial evidence is not enough to support a finding that race predominated over politics where, as here, the record is replete with political and other traditional justifications for the districts that the legislature drew. Accordingly, we reject East St. Louis NAACP Plaintiffs’ racial gerrymandering challenge to HD 114.

Interestingly enough, the incumbent Black House Democratic member went on to lose to a White Republican in 2022. The House Democrats have not yet been able to flip that seat back.

  25 Comments      


RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

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

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Feds drop felony conspiracy count against remaining ‘Broadview 6′ defendants

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times

Federal prosecutors in Chicago say they will dismiss the controversial conspiracy charge against the remaining four members of the so-called “Broadview Six,” with plans to revise the case.

Assistant U.S. Attorney William Hogan shared the news with U.S. District Judge April Perry during a status hearing in the case Wednesday. Hogan said prosecutors plan to file a new charging document, focused on the remaining misdemeanor counts against the defendants who demonstrated last fall against Operation Midway Blitz.

The revelation came during a hearing scheduled by Perry late last week. At the time, she told prosecutors to bring with them unredacted copies of transcripts showing how prosecutors had explained the law in the case to grand jurors.

By dropping the conspiracy count, the feds avoided having to share those transcripts with the judge.

Charged in the case are former congressional candidate Kat Abughazaleh, Oak Park village trustee Brian Straw, 45th Ward Democratic committeeperson Michael Rabbitt and Andre Martin, a former member of Abughazaleh’s campaign staff. All four are involved in local Democratic politics. […]

U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros has denied that politics played any role in his office’s charging decisions.

Sure, sure.

* More

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Never let the facts get in the way of a made-for-TV news attack line

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From an Illinois House Republican press release earlier this week…

According to the Chicago Police Department, Alphanso Talley has now been charged in the heinous murder of a Chicago police officer and the attempted murder of another officer, along with a long list of additional felony charges.

At the time of this horrific attack, Talley was wanted on three warrants, was on parole in two separate cases, and had a lengthy criminal history dating back to 2017.

Yet earlier this year, Governor JB Pritzker and Speaker Chris Welch praised the SAFE-T Act as sound and effective policy. Now Illinois families are left asking how a repeat violent offender with this record was free to take a police officer’s life and leave another in critical condition.

I asked the HGOP which provision of the SAFE-T Act did he use to get out of jail.

* The Illinois House Republican response is italicized, and a rebuttal from the Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice is in bold

HGOP: The SAFE-T Act begins with the presumption that a person will be released

INPJ: This was true before the law took effect. It’s in the Illinois Constitution and case law. “As our constitution expressly protects the right of a defendant to bail unless certain circumstances exist, the prosecution must have the burden of showing sufficient evidence that a defendant should be denied that constitutional right.” People v. Purcell (201 Ill. 2d 542, 550)

Put simply, the Illinois Supreme Court has said there is a presumption of release in the Illinois constitution, which is why it struck down a previous statute shifting the burden to the accused.

HGOP: A petition for detention requires showing the defendant committed the offense and the dangerousness standard must be proven by clear and convincing evidence

    • Clear and convincing evidence is one of the highest legal burdens
    • This is a new requirement implemented by the SAFE-T Act.

INPJ: There are three burdens of proof. “Clear and convincing” is the middle. This was the standard under the old system. See (c)(2) on page 2 of the attached document with the old statute. “The facts relied upon by the court to support a finding that the defendant poses a real and present threat to the physical safety of any person or persons shall be supported by clear and convincing evidence presented by the State.”

HGOP: While EM is not newly implemented in the SAFE-T Act, it is listed in the SAFE-T Act as a condition of pre-trial release if no less restrictive condition of release or combination of less restrictive condition of release would reasonably ensure the appearance of the defendant for later hearings or protect an identifiable person or persons from imminent threat of serious physical harm

INPJ: The SAFE-T Act does not require judges to release anyone on electronic monitoring.

Long before the SAFE-T Act, electronic monitoring has been available as an alternative form of incarceration for defendants who judges believe can safely return to the community while awaiting trial with supervision. Electronic monitoring has been found to replicate many of the harms of pretrial jailing in a brick and mortar jail including the loss of employment, housing and community connections. The parameters of electronic monitoring are so serious that even prior to the SAFE-T Act, the legislature permitted the courts to give credit for time in custody for people subjected to electronic monitoring.


HGOP: Even if an offense is eligible for detention, the presumption of release and burden of proof in the hearing work in the defendant’s favor to tip the scales toward release with limited or no conditions. Arguably, based on Talley’s extensive criminal history – releasing him on pretrial release does nothing to protect the community.

INPJ: Again, the presumption of release is in the Illinois Constitution and was well established prior to the passage of the Pretrial Fairness Act.

The reality is that this is one case and one decision, which reporters have already revealed to be based on a variety of unique factors specific to this individual case. The attempts to make this one decision and case representative of the entire law is simply dishonest.

Cook County judges are not struggling to detain people they believe to be a danger to others.

    • The number of people incarcerated in Cook County Jail has increased by nearly 500 people since the Pretrial Fairness Act went into effect.
    • In the spring of 2025, the Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice organized community members to observe more than 400 detention hearings in Cook County. Of the 30.5% of the people with low risk assessment scores that signal a judge should release the person with limited conditions, 80.4% of these people were either jailed or placed on electronic monitoring.
    • All of this has occurred even while the city of Chicago has seen a dramatic decrease in robberies, shootings, and murders and numbers are similarly low across the state.

      o According to police data East Saint Louis experienced a significant decline in homicides over recent years. In 2019, the city recorded 36 murders. By 2025, that number dropped to 15 – the fewest homicides in 45 years. Nonfatal shootings likewise precipitously declined, from 127 in 2020 to 50 in 2025.
      o In 2025, Peoria experienced a 61% decrease in homicides.
      o In Elgin, crime decreased by 8% and a 63% decrease in gunfire incidents.

  18 Comments      


Roundup: Illinois Accountability Commission to urge charges over federal agent misconduct

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Illinois Accountability Commission…

The Illinois Accountability Commission, housed in the Illinois Department of Human Rights (IDHR), today held its fifth public hearing to reveal further findings from the investigations on the misconduct of federal agents during Operation Midway Blitz, including the names of various rogue Border Patrol agents the administration protected by offering preemptive immunity.

“In my 25 years as a federal judge, I have never seen the type of brutality shown by the agents involved in Midway Blitz. It has been unprecedented,” said Chair Ruben Castillo. “The brutal conduct examined in these hearings does not reflect isolated incidents. It reflects a pattern that, across locations and operational contexts, is consistent in structure and effect. But the record documented today goes further. It addresses how that pattern was enabled by directives issued from the top.”

“Today, we turn to what made Operation Midway Blitz possible—immunity,” said Vice-Chair Patricia Brown Holmes. “Federal officials did not just tolerate lawlessness. They encouraged it. They shielded it. And they made a grand bargain with the agents: deliver arrests, occupy the city through fear, and we will protect you.”

During the hearing, lead investigators presented evidence and testimony that illustrated how the Trump Administration encouraged lawlessness. They outlined how the federal government deployed hundreds of masked and heavily armed agents from Border Patrol units known for their aggressive behavior. These agents violated federal court orders by making warrantless arrests without justification, fired off chemical weapons against entire neighborhoods, and covered up their misconduct by lying in reports. Agents identified for lawless behavior include:

    East Side Investigation – Border Patrol Agents Benito Nuñez, Carlos Chavira, and Jesus Guillen chased two men in a rental car without sirens in a residential area. A section chief ordered them to stop, and a field supervisor relayed that order multiple times. The agents said “no” and kept driving and turned on their body cameras after the pursuit was underway. The Chicago Police Department (CPD) also asked the agents not to deploy tear gas. The agents had already planned the gassing, and they followed through by gassing residents, journalists, and the very CPD officers who asked them to stop.

    Brighton Park Investigation: Border Patrol Agent Charles Exum, crashed into Marimar Martinez’s vehicle, and shot her five times without justification. The commission featured an anonymous eyewitness account from a person who saw Agent Exum shoot Ms. Martinez and corroborated Ms. Martinez’s account. The anonymous witness was invited to speak today, but through her attorney, she declined. Her attorney explained that she is afraid of reprisals and retaliation for speaking out. Through their investigation, the Commission also found that:

    o Evidence was deliberately tampered with and destroyed
    o Federal agents produced materially inaccurate official reports
    o Chemical agents were deployed indiscriminately against a residential neighborhood without warning
    o DHS leadership failed to ensure accountability at every level

    Repeat Offender: Yesterday, Evanston witness Jennifer Moriarty shared how Border Patrol Agent Timothy Donahue pulled his gun on civilians, dangerously brake checked vehicles, and denied medical care to a man with serious injuries. The body-worn camera footage the Commission reviewed also showed Agent Donahue at the scene of the most violent and chaotic episodes of Operation Midway Blitz, including in Brighton Park, Broadview, Albany Park, Little Village, and other neighborhoods. […]

A comprehensive report will be issued to the Governor and the People of Illinois on Thursday, April 30, 2026. This report will contain specific findings, referrals, and recommendations.

* Sun-Times

Judge Rubén Castillo, chair of the Illinois Accountability Commission, made the call to action during his closing remarks at the commission’s final hearing Tuesday. The commission was tasked with scrutinizing the tactics used last fall during President Donald Trump’s deportation campaign.

A final report from the panel is scheduled to publish Thursday and will include specific recommendations for local and state officials, Castillo said.

“Our report is going to make very specific and detailed recommendations aimed at strengthening accountability and preventing the reoccurrence of the community devastation that has occurred in Illinois and in other communities such as Minneapolis,” Castillo said. “This report needs to be evaluated by other states and by public officials in this state who can take appropriate action, starting with the Cook County State’s Attorney, who will be referred cases for criminal prosecution.”

Castillo, a former U.S. district chief judge, is among the coalition calling for a special prosecutor to investigate federal agents.

* Tribune

[Marimar Martinez, the 31-year-old who was shot five times by a U.S. Border Patrol agent in October,] testified at the final hearing of the Illinois Accountability Commission, which examined the Trump administration’s sweeping immigration enforcement operation this past fall. Tuesday’s session focused on what commissioners and attorneys described as a lack of consequences for federal immigration agents’ misconduct.

“Federal officials did not just tolerate lawlessness. They encouraged it. They shielded it. And they made a grand bargain with the agents: deliver arrests, occupy the city through fear, and we will protect you, even if you violate the Constitution,” said commission Vice Chair Patricia Brown Holmes.

Martinez, a U.S. citizen and teaching aide at a Montessori school, was shot by Border Patrol Agent Charles Exum on Oct. 4 after a traffic crash on the 3900 block of South Kedzie Avenue.

Federal prosecutors initially charged Martinez but later dropped the accusations. Investigative material made public after the shooting revealed that Exum joked and bragged about the shooting in a text chat with colleagues, was called a “legend” by a fellow agent and received praise directly from his supervisor, Border Patrol Cmdr. Gregory Bovino.

* WTTW

Included in the evidence presented Tuesday was never-before-heard testimony from an anonymous eyewitness to Martinez’s shooting who backed up her accounting of the incident.

That witness, a woman whose testimony was heard only through snippets presented by the commission, said Exum fired at Martinez without provocation and that the federal agents on scene never appeared to be under any sort of attack. […]

After the shooting, the anonymous witness said Chicago police officers warned her and others to “be careful” because they had no idea what the agents were capable of.

“You could see the frustration … that there was this group of military personnel that came and just disrupted our Saturday,” the witness said. “It was insane.”

* Capitol News Illinois

The commission also heard testimony about the importance of free and fair elections, featuring testimony from former Illinois House Minority Leader Jim Durkin, R-Western Springs.

Durkin, a longtime Republican who described himself as pro-law enforcement, told the commission that Operation Midway Blitz was “the furthest thing” from our nation’s finest hour.

Now, he says, the Trump administration is threatening the sanctity of free and fair elections by floating the possibility that federal immigration agents could be at polling sites this November.

“This form of voter suppression isn’t new in Illinois,” Durkin said. “This trick is what has been used in Chicago for many years in elections: place menacing people in front of precincts, cause a disturbance, scare voters away. That’s a form of voter suppression.”

* More…

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Healthcare Workforce Shortages And Rising Costs Strain Hospitals – Pass HB 2371 SA 2

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As demand for healthcare rises with an aging population, a strong workforce and financially viable hospitals are essential to meeting today’s patient needs—and their expectations well into the future. Hospitals confronting financial pressures that strain operating budgets are also challenged by significant workforce shortages among nurses and physicians.

Over half of Illinois’ nurses are over age 55 and over a quarter of those nurses plan to retire within five years. Our state currently needs 15,000 more nurses working in healthcare, a shortage the American Nursing Association in Illinois has called a crisis. With one-third of Illinois physicians within retirement age, a shortage of 6,200 physicians is expected in the state by 2030. Just over 1,000 of those physicians are needed in primary care.

Unprecedented federal funding cuts to the Medicaid program will strip Illinois hospitals of $57 billion over 10 years. Over that same decade, hospitals must put more resources towards training and hiring needed clinicians and keeping up with the rising cost of supplies and drugs. Illinois hospitals caring for low-income and uninsured patients can’t afford to keep losing out on federal 340B drug discounts.

Support your local hospital by restoring the 340B program in Illinois. Pass House Bill 2371 SA 2 this spring. Learn more.

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It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Business groups are worried that legislation to allow striking workers to collect unemployment benefits could prolong labor disputes.

The bill now under consideration in the Illinois House of Representatives would allow workers to begin receiving unemployment benefits after two weeks on the picket line. Currently, striking workers are ineligible to receive unemployment benefits. […]

“This is top of mind at the executive level at companies,” says Mark Denzler, CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers Association. “This will incentivize further strikes and lengthen the time workers are on strike. If the law passes, companies with large unionized workforces will factor it into whether they expand here or not.”

The National Federation of Independent Business told legislators that nine out of 10 of its Illinois members said in a recent survey they opposed giving unemployment to striking workers.

The House bill passed out of committee 18-7 but has not been called for a floor vote, nor has it been taken up in the Illinois Senate.

* WAND

The Illinois Senate Criminal Law Committee unanimously passed a bill Tuesday to ensure people in the Department of Corrections are not charged unreasonable fees for sending mail. […]

“Basically, we’re just codifying into law the current practice of IDOC, which is just to charge the market rate of a stamp,” said Rep. Rita Mayfield (D-Waukegan). “So if a stamp is 25 cents on the outside, it’s 25 cents on the inside.” […]

The Department of Corrections would be banned from generating revenue from communication between families and loved ones. This plan could also require annual reporting on rates paid for mail and how the department spends the money.

House Bill 4235 now heads to the Senate floor for further consideration. The measure passed unanimously out of the House earlier this month.

* Press release…

Senate Deputy Minority Leader Sue Rezin (R-Morris) and State Senator Erica Harriss (R-Glen Carbon) recently unveiled a legislative package aimed at strengthening protections for children online by addressing social media harms, sexual exploitation, and minors’ access to adult content.

The legislative package is designed to put stronger safeguards in place for children in the digital space by restricting harmful online access, increasing accountability for tech companies, and improving social media algorithms. […]

Among the proposals included in the package is Senate Bill 4046, sponsored by Sen. Rezin, to restrict social media access for children under the age of 16 by requiring platforms to implement age assurance measures. The proposal is intended to address growing concerns about the harmful effects social media can have on children’s mental health, development, and overall well-being.

Sen. Rezin is also sponsoring legislation focused on improving how social media platforms operate. Senate Bill 3454, the Better Social Media Feeds Act, would require companies to disclose how their algorithms recommend content, including the data inputs used to shape what users see. The bill also directs platforms to prioritize long-term user well-being over engagement-driven design and gives users more control over their content preferences. The measure is intended to increase transparency and reduce exposure to harmful content.

The legislative package also includes the Age-Appropriate Design Code Act, Senate Bill 3241, which is sponsored by Sen. Rezin, requiring companies that collect children’s personal data in Illinois to prioritize the best interests of minors over commercial gain. The bill would establish stronger privacy protections by default, limit data collection, and restrict profiling and targeted advertising aimed at children. It would also require businesses to conduct data protection impact assessments and provide them to the Attorney General upon request. Violations could result in civil penalties of up to $7,500 per affected child. […]

As part of the package, Harriss is sponsoring the Adult Content Age Verification Act, Senate Bill 3945, to require websites containing adult content to verify that users are at least 18 years old through government-issued identification or other approved methods. Companies that fail to comply could face fines of up to $5,000 per day, with penalties directed to support child cybercrime investigations.

* SB3161, which would ban the use and sale of the pesticide paraquat dichloride, has a subject matter hearing scheduled for tomorrow. The Michael J. Fox Foundation…

We’re seeking a statewide ban on paraquat (SB 3161), a herbicide that multiple peer-reviewed studies link to increased Parkinson’s disease risk, particularly with repeated occupational exposure in agricultural settings (here and here). One study showed that paraquat users were 2.5 times more likely to develop Parkinson’s disease, with the association still holding after adjustment for other pesticides (here). The scientific evidence is so compelling that paraquat is routinely used to induce Parkinson’s-like pathology in laboratory animals for the express purpose of studying new drugs and therapies for this devastating disease (here).

Paraquat is already banned in 70+ countries, including the EU, China, Brazil, and Canada. It’s also a troubling dynamic that China prohibits paraquat domestically due to health concerns, yet a Chinese-owned company (Syngenta) manufactured and sold it to American farmers for years. Syngenta halted production in early 2026 amid growing lawsuits from Parkinson’s patients (here), but paraquat manufacturing continues in China for other distributors

Addressing Common Objections: Opposition to banning paraquat typically centers on four arguments: cost, effectiveness, lack of research, and claims that personal protective equipment (PPE) provides adequate safety. Each argument fails under scrutiny.

1. Cost Concerns Are Overstated. Burndown herbicide costs represent a small fraction of total production expenses. Total soybean production costs in Illinois averaged $863-$931 per acre in 2024, with herbicides comprising only a portion of total chemical expenditure (here). A comprehensive weed control program runs at least $50 per acre in product costs alone, making a few dollars difference in burndown applications unlikely to materially impact farm economics, especially when weighed against potential market access risks (see below).
Personally, I’ll also just add: if they think using alternatives will hurt their financial position, they should try having Parkinson’s. It’s no picnic physically or financially.

2. Agricultural Productivity Remains Unaffected A rigorous 2023 peer-reviewed study analyzed mean annual yields for paraquat-dependent crops across five countries, examining the six to seven years before and after their respective bans (here). The research found no negative impact on agricultural productivity for any crops studied. Brazil, which banned paraquat, actually outproduces the United States in soybeans—the very crop for which American farmers claim paraquat is essential.

3. The Research Isn’t There: This claim is so thoroughly disproven, it’s almost not worth addressing, but here we are! When opponents say ‘the research isn’t there,’ they are essentially asking for studies that show direct causation. To prove direct causation we would have to intentionally expose human beings to paraquat via randomized controlled studies. This would be wildly unethical, not to mention that research already shows a strong correlation (see above, but there are many, many more). In fact, one of the nation’s top scientists called it “overwhelming” (see ABC video above).

4. PPE Provides False Security The notion that protective equipment adequately safeguards against paraquat exposure is thoroughly debunked by scientific evidence. The UCLA-led Parkinson Environment Gene (PEG) study found that agricultural workers who reported using PPE, particularly gloves, actually faced higher rates of Parkinson’s disease (here). This suggests that standard protective equipment fails to prevent exposure to this uniquely toxic chemical. Moreover, paraquat’s propensity for drift makes PPE irrelevant for broadering communities. Multiple studies demonstrate that people living within 500 meters of paraquat application sites face significantly elevated Parkinson’s disease risk (here).

The University of Illinois Farm Policy News reported that the EU is exploring tighter restrictions on imports produced with pesticides banned in the EU, specifically citing paraquat as an example (see here). If the EU follows through, market access could matter more than modest per-acre cost differences. For background, the EU is one of the top U.S. soybean export markets (often among the top three), and Illinois is one of the country’s biggest soybean producers (see here). Further, 60 percent of the soybeans grown in Illinois are exported to international markets (see here). And, this is just soybeans! Corn is another major export to the EU, where Illinois plays an important role.

* Chalkbeat Chicago

A bill limiting cell phone use floundered last year despite winning unanimous approval in the state Senate. But an amended version this spring passed the House and appears headed for Senate backing.

The bill would ban cell phone use in elementary and middle schools throughout the school day but give districts the option of restricting high school use only during instruction time. It also aims to address concerns about overly punitive or uneven discipline for students and about the access some students — such as those with certain disabilities or medical conditions — need to their phones throughout the day. […]

The Illinois Senate will likely take up the bill later in May — and Michelle Mussman, its sponsor in the House, feels good about its odds of passage. So does the Senate sponsor, Cristina Castro, who notes that similar proposals have drawn bipartisan backing across the country.

“I feel we are in a good place to finally send this bill to the governor,” she said. […]

The Illinois Federation of Teachers has said the cell phone bill imposes another “unfunded mandate,” noting that the Peoria school district spent almost $250,000 on pouches to store cell phones during the school day. The union says that only adds to other obligations the state places on districts without providing full funding for them, such as providing transportation for students with disabilities. Leaving cell phones at home is not an option for some students, including those from immigrant families terrified of stepped-up immigration enforcement near schools, a union spokesman said.

* WAND

The Illinois Senate could pass a bill in the final month of session to help homeless students find housing.

This plan would allow school districts to provide an extended an extended motel stay for students and their parent, guardian or person who enrolled them in school. […]

“Right now, our schools can help with rent, mortgage payments and help cover some utility bills,” said Sen. Karina Villa (D-West Chicago). “But they can’t step in with short-term help like paying for motel rooms when the family is in crisis and they need a safe place to stay.”

House Bill 4137 passed out of the Senate Education Committee Tuesday on an 11-2 vote. The proposal now moves to the Senate floor for further consideration.

* Sen. Paul Faraci…

A measure backed by State Senator Paul Faraci that aims to provide ongoing, accessible railroad safety education to students in Illinois’ public schools passed the Senate Education Committee. […]

House Bill 3743 would require all K-12 public schools to include railroad safety information in their student handbooks. A school would be able to opt out of this requirement if the school board determines that railroad safety is covered in the school’s curriculum.

According to the Illinois Commerce Commission, highway-rail crash statistics for 2025 indicate that Illinois had 134 collisions between trains and motor vehicles or pedestrians at highway-rail crossings. Thirty-four people were killed and 27 seriously injured. Illinois has 7,300 miles of track with 7,482 public highway-rail crossings and 3,280 private highway-rail crossings. Nationally this puts Illinois second in both categories, with only Texas having more rail crossings than Illinois.

House Bill 3743 passed the Senate Education Committee on Tuesday.

* More…

    * WCIA | Illinois bill aims to protect homeowners from ‘storm chaser’ contractors: State Senator Michael E. Hastings (D-Frankfort) said Senate Bill 3029 would prevent contractors from offering home repair or remodeling services while severe weather or natural disasters are actively occurring, while emergency crews are responding, or between 7 p.m. and 8 a.m. Hastings also said that for at least 72 hours after a disaster proclamation is issued, contractors would not be allowed to solicit a contract with a consumer in person for home repair or remodeling services.

    * Press release | Glowiak Hilton prioritizes railroad safety for students: “Student safety has to be at the forefront of our priorities,” said Glowiak Hilton (D-Western Springs). “Our residents have expressed concern about schools near railroads and ensuring students understand the protocols in place to keep them safe.” House Bill 3743 would require all K-12 public schools to include railroad safety information in its student handbook. A school may opt out of this requirement if the school board determines that railroad safety is covered in the school’s curriculum.

    * WGLT | Statewide housing legislation could have a big effect in Bloomington-Normal: It’s worse than that in Bloomington-Normal, close to 80%, according to realtors. There’s a cost to that too. Brandon Shaffer, deputy managing director of Berkshire Hathaway Home Services in Bloomington, said he understands the concerns of people who do not want multifamily housing in their backyard but noted they do want income for the community. “Economically, the community has lost as a whole concerning this. …Bloomington, in the last five years, has lost $66 million in real estate development with the inability to do it,” said Shaffer.

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Built For Illinois. Built With Transparency.

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. ICYMI: Illinois Senate slows down rush to pass Bears stadium bill. WGN

    - The Illinois Senate’s lead sponsor of the Bears megaproject legislation said Tuesday the upper chamber is in no rush to pass the bill that cleared the House last week. “We’re going to take our time with this,” said Sen. Bill Cunningham.
    - Yesterday, Gov. Pritzker again called for a quick resolution on the bill saying the state has to be “competitive. We want to make sure that the Bears see Illinois as the best alternative for them and that they have something that they can make a decision about that’s in front of them.”
    - Sen. Cunningham said he’s hopeful the Senate can act before the end of the May 31 spring session.

* Related stories…

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Sponsored by The Association of Safety-Net Community Hospitals

No Cuts. No Closures. Fund Safety-Net Hospitals.

For decades, Illinois has underfunded safety-net hospitals, the lifelines for Black and Brown communities. Now, the “Safety-Net Moonshot” and the Medicaid-defunding legislation it has spawned, threatens deeper cuts to these critical health providers. Any reduction inspired by the “Moonshot” would be a killshot to the care our most vulnerable residents rely on.

Weakening safety-net hospitals won’t improve care. It will slash essential services, eliminate jobs, and push entire communities into healthcare deserts and economic instability.

The state cannot balance its budget on the backs of Black and Brown community hospitals. These institutions are not line items to cut, they are the foundation of care for families who have nowhere else to turn. Disinvestment will deepen inequities and worsen outcomes.

When safety-net hospitals are funded, communities are healthier, workforces are stronger, and economies are more resilient.

Illinois must fully fund safety-net hospitals. For the communities they serve, it is life or death.

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* At 10:30 am, Gov. JB Pritzker will announce a new business deal and innovative workforce development initiative during National Apprenticeship week. Click here to watch.

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker pushes Illinois watchdog to speed up investigation into Rep. Harry Benton: At an unrelated event on Tuesday, Pritzker said he “would like the LIG to work faster” in the Benton case. “This thing has been going on for months now. We should already have had some kind of report to the leadership, and there should already have been some action,” the governor said. “That should happen truly soon … so that we know how, I think the voters want to know how to proceed. I think that the legislature wants to know how to proceed. And obviously, you know, someone who’s been accused, you know, deserves due process, but I think this is taking longer than anybody expected.”

* Sun-Times | Cuts to SNAP food assistance starting this week worry grocers, local vendors: “When we talk about what has happened because of the decrease in SNAP benefits, we also understand that there’s a ripple effect that will happen, not just to the big [stores] but to the little guy,” Winston said on Monday. “The little guy is the one who’s fighting for community. The little guy is the one who stays here no matter what the margins are.” Illinois officials have estimated that about 150,000 individuals will lose benefits starting in May, unless they successfully apply for an exemption or show proof of volunteering or working 80 hours per month. The expanded work rules, which now include 55- to 64-year-olds along with parents whose youngest child is 14 years or older, went into effect in February and stem from President Donald Trump’s sweeping tax bill that passed last year.

* Tribune | Illinois farmers hope Supreme Court protects state safeguards in Roundup cancer case: In Illinois — the nation’s leading soybean producer and a top corn producer — glyphosate is heavily used to boost crop yields. But critics say widespread reliance comes with health and environmental risks, as long-term exposure has been linked to cancer and other chronic diseases. “All of the stuff I sprayed, a lot of it’s carcinogenic, and I probably breathed some of that in,” Wilken said. “It was a risk I took. But as an organic farmer now, I wish that I would have gotten wise to this earlier.” […] Illinois joined 18 states defending consumers’ ability to file lawsuits in state courts against pesticide manufacturers for not including warning labels on products. Fifteen other states, including Iowa and Missouri, filed a brief emphasizing the importance of preserving access to affordable glyphosate.

*** Statehouse News ***

* NBC | Video: Comey indictment shows Trump is ‘weaponizing’ DOJ against his ‘political enemies’: Gov. Pritzker: Governor JB Pritzker (D-Ill.) joins Meet the Press NOW to react to the indictment of former FBI Director James Comey. Pritzker also discusses the recently formed commission in Illinois to investigate last year’s federal immigration crackdown in Chicago.

* WTTW | Illinois Lawmakers Discuss Budget, Policy Before End of Spring Session: State Reps. Tony McCombie (R-Savanna) and Kam Buckner (D-Chicago) joined “Chicago Tonight” to discuss ongoing budget and policy negotiations. […] McCombie: “To be a ‘maintenance budget’ it would be a flat budget, and this had $728 million in proposed increases. … You can’t keep doing this every year as you’re the governor and not expect increased spending.” Buckner: “I’ve heard many of my colleagues say this is a ballooning budget, but the truth is a balloon floats away when it has no anchor. … (This budget is) anchored in schools, anchored in healthcare, anchored in pensions, public safety, human services.”

* TIME | JB Pritzker May Be Running for More Than Governor: As she prepared to march in the St. Patrick’s Day parade, MK Pritzker, the governor’s wife, considered what she thought of her husband’s running for a third term. Her shoulders sank. “‘Oh jeez.’ That was my response,” she says. “If the national landscape was a little bit different, maybe he wouldn’t have run, but he’s in a strong position to continue the fight.” Those close to Pritzker say his decision on whether to run for President will hinge on conversations with his wife and two college-age children. The governor insists he is undecided. There’s “not some plan of what’s going to happen in the future,” he says.

*** Chicago ***

* ABC Chicago | Chicago Mayor Johnson answers wide range of questions as part of ABC7 town hall: The mayor expressed disappointment that the Illinois House declined to take up the so-called millionaires tax that Johnson had supported. “I’m going to continue to work with the speaker of the House. I’m glad that I have his support and many members of the General Assembly to ensure that whether it’s a millionaires tax, whether it’s, you know, a digital ad tax, whether it’s a progressive income tax, we cannot continue to balance budgets off the backs of working people,” Johnson said.

* WGN | What court transcript shows about hearing that released alleged cop killer in previous case: The judge noted prosecutors’ objections to releasing Talley on electronic monitoring and their concern that the community’s safety couldn’t be guaranteed if he was released. A prosecutor told the judge the charges Talley was facing in that case were detainable under the Pre-Trial Fairness Act. “The mere fact that he has four pending cases is egregious in and of itself, and it may in certain instances shock the conscious,” Lyke said during the hearing, while also noting Talley has been in trouble with the law since he was roughly 12 years old.

* Sun-Times | White Sox loving Munetaka Murakami’s home-run bonanza, but they’re striving for balance on offense: But to stay close in the bunched-up American League Central, the Sox likely will need to diversify an offense that has generated more than half its runs via the long ball early in the season, according to Baseball Prospectus. The Sox have 38 homers (tied for seventh in the majors) and 126 runs scored (19th). Manager Will Venable said the Sox are proving that when they’re executing, they can score however they need to. In modern baseball, that includes a healthy dose of dingers.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | BEDS Plus withdraws proposal for apartments for chronically homeless people in Alsip: Opposition for the proposal expressed during a public hearing last month at the Alsip-Merrionette Park Library led the southwest suburban nonprofit focused on housing and supporting chronically homeless people to reconsider its plans to purchase and construct two 3-story apartment buildings at 12147 S. Cicero Ave, BEDS Plus Executive Director Tina Rounds said. “What’s the point of a public process if you don’t listen to people?” Rounds said Tuesday. While Rounds said she thinks the organization adequately addressed concerns raised about how the supportive housing facility would operate, she said she wanted to incorporate residents’ feedback on parking and housing density. She said zoning plans included fewer than two parking spaces per unit, as chronically homeless people often don’t own their own vehicles.

* Sun-Times | Ex-Park City police officer charged with assaulting woman during traffic stops: The department was notified of the allegations in late January that he “had acted unprofessionally and possibly engaged in criminal conduct while on duty on more than one occasion” over several weeks with a woman during traffic stops, according to the statement. The Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board waived him from training to be reactivated as an officer in September.

* Daily Herald | Judson University faces backlash over ‘Democracy Award’ to sanctioned Bosnian leader: On Thursday, the private Baptist university in Elgin plans to give Milorad Dodik its first “Leadership and Standing Up for Democracy Award” during a World Leaders Forum event. But Jedna BiH Coalition, a Washington, D.C.-based organization of expatriates dedicated to preserving the unity of Bosnia and Herzegovina, is asking Judson to rescind the award and cancel the event. The group says Dodik was charged with violating a law that prohibits denying the July 1995 Srebrenica genocide, in which about 8,000 Bosniak Muslim men and boys were killed when a United Nations-designated safe zone was overtaken by Bosnian Serbs during a civil war.

* Daily Herald | ‘Still loyal to you, Elgin High:’ Chicago mayor named to school’s Hall of Fame: “The last time a principal talked so long about me, I was about to get suspended,” he joked after EHS Principal Avelira Rodriguez-Gonzalez introduced him. Rodriguez-Gonzalez said it was important for today’s students, especially those of color, to know that one of them grew up to become a significant leader. It will inspire them, she said. “His journey from student to public servant and leader of one of the nation’s great cities is a testament to perseverance, purpose, and the power of public education. It shows that the path from Elgin High School can lead anywhere, even to the highest levels of leadership,” she said.

* Daily Herald | Story of resilience continues with annual return of piping plover to Waukegan: Last year, Pepper and his mate, Blaze, who winters about 750 miles away near Wilmington, North Carolina, arrived separately May 6 within a few feet of their 2025 nesting spot. Semel, Carolyn Lueck, president of the Lake County Audubon Society, and volunteers with Sharing Our Shore — Waukegan are on alert with fingers crossed waiting for Blaze. They’re also on the lookout for two male and two female piping plovers nurtured in captivity and released last summer.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville robotics teams compete this week at FIRST World Championship: “The last three to four years have been a real turning point for the team,” said Brian Bellot, coach for the Roaring Robotics, noting that the team has worked on developing a “can-do attitude.” Twenty-seven students from 14 different school districts make up the team. Founded in 1989, FIRST is an international organization that aims to inspire students to develop an interest in technology and engineering and prepare them for a career in those fields. FIRST runs a number of engineering competition leagues, including the FIRST Robotics Competition, which is the program in which both the Huskie Robotics and the Roaring Robotics compete. The FIRST Robotics Competition is one of the largest youth contests of its kind, with the championship bringing together about 600 teams from around the world.

*** Downstate ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Striking Illinois State University staff frustrated over lack of negotiations: A group of striking workers traveled to the Capitol in Springfield Tuesday to call attention to their strike, which has become an issue in the governor’s race. “Without us, I know they’re not getting the quality of cleaning they deserve,” building service worker Sue Perry told reporters at a news conference in Springfield. Little progress has been made in negotiations since January, according to Renee Nestler, AFSCME’s staff representative. That’s when the university put forward its latest offer, which it also says is its final offer.

* WICS | Douglas County to lose only behavioral health provider: “For lots of years we’ve navigated raising operational costs, workforce shortage, its been really difficult to fund our services, fund our staff and hire staff who want to work in rural communities. Reimbursement rates haven’t kept up with the true cost of care,” said Lauren Christina, RISE Behavioral Health Executive Director. […] RISE serves about 350 clients, seeing roughly 35 people a day, ranging from young children to seniors. As the closure approaches, staff are working one-on-one with each client to ensure continuity of care and prevent anyone from falling through the cracks.

* IPM | Springfield FBI starts sweep in Danville, says it is not immigration-related: The arrival of federal agents in Champaign this weekend fueled fears of a major immigration crackdown. The Springfield FBI clarified Monday that there are agents in town, along with federal drug and law enforcement agencies, and that they are not doing immigration enforcement.

* NPR Illinois | Ribbon cutting for SCHEELS Sports Park in Springfield: Spanning over 70 acres with eight outdoor fields and the largest air-supported sports dome in the world, the facility on Springfield’s south side, at Legacy Pointe near Interstate 72, can play host to both local teams and travel clubs. “Over the past six months, we’ve had over 55 different events, hosting over 40,000 athletes from 38 states and two separate countries,” said Brandon Doherty, the general manager of the site. Local colleges, Special Olympics, local recreational clubs and others have also played at the park. Participants have competed in baseball, softball, soccer, gymnastics, archery and more.

* KHQA | Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois’ Quincy office closes it’s doors, moving all of their employees fully remote: The company tells us they’re quote “consolidating their physical footprint” after continuously evaluating their workforce and business operations, and ensuring they’re effective and productive as they meet the challenges of an evolving health care industry.

* WGLT | Illinois State Athletics discontinues men’s tennis, effective immediately: The announcement came after the team’s season ended April 24 at the Summit League Championships. The team finished the 2026 season with a 9-14 record and exited in the semifinals for the third consecutive year. Because the program will end in the spring semester, current student-athletes will have an opportunity to consider the transfer portal, which opens May 4. Five of the eight roster members are seniors.

*** National ***

* Crain’s | Rivian is challenging franchise laws. Here’s what it means for EV direct sales: Electric vehicle makers are escalating their fight to sell directly to U.S. consumers, using ballot threats and new legal strategies to challenge dealer franchise laws. Rivian, saying it believes the public is on its side, won a dealer license in Washington state in March after its threat to fund a ballot initiative sparked a legislative compromise with dealers. It’s also pursuing direct sales in other states’ courts.

* NPR | Supreme Court weighs Trump’s effort to end temporary protected status for Haitians, Syrians: President Trump could move forward with mass deportations of people who have been living legally in the U.S., many of them for more than a decade, if he prevails in two cases before the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday. At issue is the temporary protected status program, which permits eligible individuals to live and work in the United States if they cannot return to their home countries because of natural disasters, armed conflicts and other “extraordinary or temporary conditions.” Congress enacted the TPS program in 1990 to establish criteria for selecting, processing and registering people fleeing such turmoil.

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Good morning!

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I am in dire need of a warm-weather music festival

Wellness check! How are you?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Apr 29, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Apr 28, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW

An Illinois commission created to document alleged abuses committed by federal immigration agents has determined a Border Patrol agent had no justification when he shot Marimar Martinez in Brighton Park last year.

During its final public hearing, the Illinois Accountability Commission on Tuesday heard extensively from Martinez and her attorney, recounting her shooting and the lies federal agents allegedly told after the fact to defend their shooting of the 31-year-old Montessori school teacher in the Brighton Park neighborhood of Chicago last October.

After conducting its own investigation, the commission determined there is reasonable cause to believe the agent who shot Martinez did so without justification, that evidence was deliberately tampered with, that federal agents deployed chemical weapons against Chicagoans indiscriminately and that the Department of Homeland Security failed to ensure any accountability for those actions.

“This is an extraordinary and profoundly alarming pattern of events,” Jimmy Arce, an attorney and member of the commission, said Tuesday, “not procedural lapses or technical errors, but consistent intention violations of the law and deliberate institutional cover-up.”

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Illinois is paying the price for 340B medicine markups.

Through the federal 340B program, nonprofit hospitals can buy medicines for pennies, then charge huge markups – even on life-saving medicines. Those markups have become big business for large hospital systems, driving higher costs for Illinois patients, employers and taxpayers.

And the problem is getting worse. The program’s lack of oversight has allowed 340B to become a revenue stream for hospitals, PBMs, private equity firms and big chain pharmacies — with no requirement that the money be used to help patients afford medicines. It’s time for Washington to hold hospitals accountable and fix 340B. Read more.

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* WBEZ

Meanwhile, a quarterly financial report shows the district is projecting it will again end the current fiscal year on June 30 in a hole, albeit a smaller one, of $45 million. CPS says it is making up some ground by spending less grant money.

CPS officials say this year’s projected deficit might shrink as the school year closes. But CPS is also $118 million over budget on staff, which it attributes to increased spending on workers who serve students with disabilities. […]

CPS officials also continue to want the state to pick up more of the district’s teacher pension costs, as it does for other districts statewide.

“Achieving pension parity and reaching 100% funding adequacy are not just fiscal goals — they are essential requirements for long-term equity and stability,” CPS said. “Without these structural corrections from the state, the district will continue to face tight margins that do not reflect the true cost of educating the district’s 315,000 students.”

King and board members have gone to Springfield seeking more money, but so far none of the bills that would funnel more funding toward education have passed the Illinois General Assembly.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Chicago home prices rising at 5 times the speed of the nation’s: March was the second month when Chicago quintupled the nation’s price growth. It was also a time when the median price of homes sold in the city hit a new all-time high. This news may discourage aspiring homebuyers who see affordability galloping away from them, but as a measure of the vitality of the local housing market and its ability to fatten existing owners’ equity, it’s quite good.

* Crain’s | Paris Schutz exits local Fox affiliate to join NBC 5: The station said Paris Schutz, a longtime reporter and anchor at WTTW and more recently Fox 32 Chicago, will join its newsroom May 4 as a general assignment reporter with a focus on investigative and political coverage. Schutz, a two-time Emmy winner, spent 15 years at WTTW’s “Chicago Tonight,” where he rose from intern to co-anchor and chief correspondent, breaking stories on state and local politics. He joined Fox 32 in 2024 as a political anchor and host of “The Chicago Report.”

* Block Club | A Day In The ‘Life’ Of A Food Delivery Robot: Lots Of Waiting And A Few Collisions: Most orders were delivered to addresses within a few blocks, although one was taken to a house more than a mile west — a trip that took a little over 20 minutes. In between there was plenty of down time, including an almost two-hour stretch where the robot sat dormant on Barry Street near a bagel shop, as well as a 45-minute sojourn outside an IDOF falafel restaurant on Belmont Avenue. The robot also had a few minor collisions with curbs and building walls, although it did not cause any apparent damage.

* Tribune | Never-before-heard tapes by late Jazz Showcase founder hit shelves — just in time for his 100th birthday: Around 10,000 more, in fact. Unbeknownst to most, Segal, who died in 2020, had fastidiously captured years of Jazz Showcase performances from the venue’s soundboard, with musicians’ consent. Three trips to Chicago, countless crates and about a year-and-a-half of nonstop listening later, Feldman has curated four double- and triple-LP sets gleaned from live Showcase performances in the 1970s. The records document long-past performances by saxophonist Joe Henderson and his quartet; pianist Ahmad Jamal with bassist John Heard and drummer Frank Gant; multi-instrumentalist Yusef Lateef with pianist Kenny Barron, drummer Albert “Tootie” Heath and bassist Bob Cunningham; and pianist Mal Waldron with saxophonist Sonny Stitt, bassist Steve Rodby and drummer Wilbur Campbell.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Former West Suburban Medical Center staff detail poor conditions leading up to its closure: The climate control at West Suburban didn’t work at times and some rooms registered temperatures of up to 100º during the summer and rooms were chilly during the winter, said Sylvia Williams, the former nurse director at West Suburban. This lasted from August to December 2025, she said, only in January did the heating partially work. The Illinois Department of Public Health visited West Suburban last summer while the air conditioning was not working, Williams said. Her 34 bed medical-surgical unit was reduced to about 17 patients because of the HVAC system not working, she said. The other patients were spread throughout the hospital, she said.

* Daily Southtown | Oak Lawn Trustee Timothy Desmond resigns to develop housing with village: “I want to make sure that the public is aware that the reason for the resignation is a very good one,” Village Manager Thomas Phelan said at Tuesday morning’s meeting. Desmond was not present, having submitted his letter of resignation April 20. Phelan said the village became interested in acquiring empty lots or properties with foreclosed or abandoned homes, to tear them down and build new ones, but struggled to find a building company willing to agree to its terms. Desmond’s company, Leeside Builders, has been the second largest home builder in Oak Lawn for the past 20 years, Phelan said. Desmond said the company has constructed about 20 houses within the village.

* Daily Southtown | Harvey City Council approves feasibility study for community solar project: Marquis Matilla of Evolved Living, who presented the proposal to the council’s Legislative Committee, emphasized it would not cost the residents or city of Harvey anything. […] The council approved a feasibility study, which Matilla estimated would take between 60 and 90 days, to determine whether the land was suitable for the project.

*** Downstate ***

* 25 News Now | Peoria Mexican restaurant cancels outdoor Cinco de Mayo festivities after ‘disgusting and racist’ insults: “Last year, we were the unexpected host of a dangerous parking lot party after we were forced to close early due to capacity issues and continued fights despite our very best efforts to provide adequate security and crowd control for the event. The DISGUSTING and racist insults we were subject to as we tried to clean up the parking lot after closing are inexcusable. We were forced to pull our staff into the building for safety and had to wait for the crowd to disperse.”

* WCIA | WEIU ends broadcasting on-air after decades: Last July, PBS funding was cut nationally, and 80% of WEIU TV’s money was lost. That left station leaders scrambling. “I love WEIU so much, and it really has been a home to me for at this point,” said EIU student Olivia Bennett. The home she’s talking about is the WEIU newsroom at Eastern Illinois university.

* WAND | USDA invests in water infrastructure for 7 counties in rural Illinois: The U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development Illinois State Director Jesus Ortega announced EJ Water Cooperative, Inc. got $5,537,000 for construction of a reservoir west of Holland, Illinois. The reservoir is one of the water upgrades the cooperative is making to provide access to reliable water for more than 16,000 rural residents across seven counties in rural Illinois.

* WSIL | SIU researchers develop microbe that could help reduce plastic waste: The microbe — known as Erwinia strain LJJL01 — was identified during earlier research into breaking down plant-based waste. Scientists later engineered it to process both natural and synthetic materials. In lab testing, the microbe has been used to convert waste products — including plastics, agricultural byproducts, and even coffee and tea waste — into materials that could be used for biodegradable plastics, fuel alternatives, and pharmaceutical compounds.

*** National ***

* ProPublica | The Trump Administration Aims to Penalize Disabled Adults Who Live With Their Families: The administration is working on a rule change that would deduct the value of a disabled adult’s bedroom from their SSI allotment, even if the family members they live with are poor enough to qualify for food stamps. This would mean slashing the benefits of some of the most low-income SSI recipients by up to a third — about $330 a month in Burton’s case — or ending their support altogether.

* Pew | State Tax Revenue Volatility Remains High as Long-Term Trends Moderate: The gap between recent and long-term tax revenue volatility has continued to widen. Revenue fluctuations were greater in every state from fiscal year 2020 to fiscal 2024 than they were over the 15 years ending in fiscal 2024, underscoring how the COVID-19 pandemic-driven economic shock affected virtually all tax systems. The states with the largest increases in short-term volatility compared with long-term trends tended to be those that rely most on historically volatile tax sources, but even states with traditionally stable revenue structures faced greater-than-usual swings.

* LA Times | California to share data on immigrant drivers nationally: California is preparing to share with an outside organization detailed information about driver’s license holders, including immigrants who do not have legal authorization to live in the United States. That breaks a promise the state made a decade ago when it began issuing licenses to unauthorized immigrants, advocates say, and it means more than 1 million people may face higher risk of deportation. But if state officials don’t turn over the data, the Department of Homeland Security may refuse to accept California licenses and IDs at airports, the advocates believe, following a briefing with the California Department of Motor Vehicles and the office of Gov. Gavin Newsom earlier this month. State authorities confirmed they plan to share the data to comply with the Real ID Act of 2005, which set requirements for accepting state identification at federal facilities such as airports.

  7 Comments      


After third try, Isabel finally gets an answer from Prizker on ISU hiring strike breakers

Tuesday, Apr 28, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here and here if you need it. From Gov. JB Pritzker’s press conference today

Isabel: Why haven’t you been more public about ISU hiring strike breakers?

Pritzker: Oh gosh. Well, let me start with the fact that I really believe that they need to, all of them need to get back to the bargaining table. It seems like there is a deal to be made. We want to make sure that that happens in an expedited fashion. I do not like the idea that we have people who are not working and believe me, I stand as you know, I’ve spent the last seven and a half years increasing the amount of funding that our universities get, making sure that we have more money for MAP grants, for aim high grants, making sure that we’re lifting up our university systems across the state and so that makes it easier for them, of course, to pay people a decent wage, to be able to come to an agreement. So those are all things that I believe in. I think I’ve been very clear about that.

Notice he didn’t answer the question.

* But then the governor quickly moved on to his Republican opponent before Isabel asked him a second time about the strike breakers

Pritzker: I will add that Darren Bailey, who likes to say that somehow he’s standing with the workers, has never stood with workers in the state. He voted against the raising the minimum wage in our state. He voted against the workers rights amendment. He voted against every provision that we put forward that’s good for workers in the state of Illinois, and now he shows up one time in something he clearly does not believe and advocates for the workers there. And I can tell you, I stand with workers every single day and always have.

Isabel: Specifically on the strike breakers, though, have you reached out to the administration?

Pritzker: I have said that they need to get back to the bargaining table. That is the work that needs to get done. A decent wage needs to be paid. They’ve got to bargain for that and make sure that it happens again. I’ve advocated that all across the state. I believe it’s why I advocated for the workers rights amendment. Once again, Republicans all voted against. It was very important to me to make sure that we have a fair bargain at the table, and you have to give some power to workers to have that bargaining capability with the companies or the organizations that they work for.

Again, he didn’t answer the question.

* So, later on, Isabel asked him a third time

Isabel: I appreciate you answering my questions earlier, but can I get you specifically on strike breakers and ISU? ISU hiring strike breakers?

Pritzker: Yeah, I don’t believe in strike breakers. I know that that’s being litigated right now. This question, you know, they, there’s, this should not occur. There should be that the folks who want to bargain with the enterprise, with ISU and ISU’s management, leadership should be at the bargaining table. That’s what should happen. It needs to happen ASAP. We shouldn’t have people taking other people’s jobs.

Discuss.

  16 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Apr 28, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Senate has a habit of using commemorative bills which passed the House as vehicles for the Budget Implementation Act. For instance, in 2023, a House bill declaring the soybean as the official state bean was gutted and replaced. Last year, a House-approved Diwali Day bill was substituted with BIMP language in the Senate.

So, I thought I’d have a little fun today.

* The Question: Which of these two bills do you support using as this year’s BIMP?…

    HB4438: Designates the Black-and-Gold Bumblebee (Bombus auricomus) as the official State bee of the State of Illinois.

    HB4669: Provides that the Italian beef sandwich is designated as the official State sandwich of the State of Illinois. And provides that the horseshoe sandwich is designated as the official State open-faced sandwich of the State of Illinois.

* Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please. Snark, of course, is heavily encouraged.


  22 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Apr 28, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WBEZ

Leaders of Ravinia, Joffrey Ballet, Lyric Opera and other prominent Chicago arts groups joined together Monday to voice support for state legislation that would bar deceptive ticketing practices that they warn are on the rise.

Speculative ticketing, or ghost ticketing, is when a third-party seller lists tickets that they do not have. Audience members may think they have bought a legitimate ticket, only to arrive at the show with a fake. The problem has been rampant in the stadium concert industry, but the group Monday underscored that the fraudulent ticket problem now is impacting their local venues, not just national headliners like Taylor Swift. […]

The legislation passed the Illinois House unanimously on April 15 and now awaits action in the Senate. It would ban resellers from posting tickets they do not possess at the time of the listing. It would also strengthen consumer recourse by adding the ability to file complaints and prompt investigations by the attorney general’s office. […]

In addition to listings on third-party sites like StubHub, speculative tickets are often found on believable look-alike sites with convincing names that use real company logos and artist photos. They often advertise that tickets are nearly sold out — creating artificial scarcity and inflating prices for shows, sometimes before real tickets have even gone on sale.

* Sen. Sue Rezin and Sen. Erica Harriss…

Advisory: Protecting Kids in the Digital Age

WHO: State Senator Sue Rezin (R-Morris), State Senator Erica Harriss (R-Glen Carbon)

WHAT: Senators Rezin and Harriss will discuss legislation designed to protect children online.

WHEN: Tuesday, April 28 at 11:30 a.m.

WHERE: Capitol Blueroom in Springfield

* Press release…

As billionaires and giant corporations dodge $7 billion per year in Illinois taxes and starve community hospitals of the funding they need, Illinois hospital workers with SEIU Healthcare Illinois (HCII), Teamsters, State Senator Lakesia Collins, and State Senator Christopher Belt will rally at the State Capitol Wednesday to demand legislators fund healthcare in the state budget and pass legislation to save community hospitals and protect Illinois hospital patients.

Ralliers will demand lawmakers prioritize funding healthcare in the state budget by making billionaires and corporations pay what they owe in Illinois taxes and back two bills that support essential healthcare workers across the state: The Hospital Worker Staffing and Safety Bill (SB 0021/HB 3512) and the Hospital Health Equity and Access Leadership (HEAL) Bill (SB 3318/HB 5188). These measures will strengthen staffing standards in community hospitals, improve workplace safety, and stabilize funding for community hospitals that serve vulnerable Illinoisans, particularly in low-income communities and communities of color.

“Patients and families shouldn’t be left without access to care in their community while the wealthiest individuals and most profitable corporations aren’t paying what they owe,” said Tamara Phillips-Cathey, a hospital worker and HCII member. “I’ve seen patients delay care because they can’t afford it, or do not have access to care in their community, only to end up in crisis—working people shouldn’t have to decide between getting that MRI they need or paying rent while billionaires get richer. This is about priorities: do we protect corporate profits, or do we protect people’s lives?”

None of the bills mentioned in the above press release have received a committee vote.

* The Real Deal

Illinois lawmakers are testing a statewide anti-gentrification proposal mirroring Chicago policies that are drawing the ire of the city’s commercial real estate professionals.

Two bills, SB 3674 and SB 3762, currently proposed in the state Senate lay out a process for tenants to gain the right of first refusal when a landlord decides to sell their apartment building. […]

Members of an Illinois legislative subcommittee last week held a hearing on those and other housing proposals and heard opposition from industry insiders. […]

If passed, SB 3674 would require landlords to give tenants about 60 days to match the terms of a third-party offer when selling a multi-unit building. If the landlord accepts a third party offer that is more than 20 percent lower than their original asking price, tenants receive an additional 10 days to match the offer. […]

All of the bills discussed last week are in early stages of development and will need additional review before passage.

* Journal Courier

A bill that would change the Illinois School Code law and institute new rules when it comes to expelling students between kindergarten and second grade is awaiting its fate in the state House — even though the bill has passed both chambers.

Illinois House Bill 3772 aims to make it harder for schools to kick very young kids out of class or out of school. Childhood programs that get state money would have to restrict suspensions and expulsions to the superintendent, program director or another designated top school official for approval.

Additionally, the Democratic-backed bill would allow suspensions only for the time needed to develop a behavior or safety plan, among other stipulations. One amendment says a student in kindergarten through second grade could be expelled only under the federal Gun-Free Schools Act.

* Daily Herald

The black and gold bumblebee may soon find its place on a list of Illinois state symbols that includes the violet, sweet corn and pumpkin pie, thanks to a group of eighth graders from Naperville.

After hearing some buzz in the community that Illinois should have a state bee, Barb Bell, an eighth-grade science teacher at Lincoln Junior High School in Naperville, contacted state Rep. Janet Yang Rohr about the idea.

From there, Bell and her fellow science teacher Emily Barlog put their 280 students to work. The students were separated into groups of three to study one of the 10 native bees in Illinois. […]

A bill tnaming the black and gold bumblebee as the state bee passed the House earlier this month and is awaiting Senate approval before advancing to Gov. JB Pritzker for his signature.

* More…

    * ABC Chicago | Illinois leaders discuss bill to ban listing tickets for sale before they’re publicly released: Snoop Dog is coming to Ravinia Festival this summer. Before his scheduled September appearance was announced, tickets were already seen sold for thousands of dollars. “We hadn’t even built anything into our system, you know. There wasn’t even a way to buy a ticket from Ravinia at that point, but they’re already selling front row tickets to a concert that hasn’t even been announced,” said Duncan Moss, Ravinia Festival director of ticket operations.

    * WAND | BUILD plan: IL lawmakers could pass housing development bills before session ends: “Senate Bill 4064 puts people over parking lots,” said Sen. Javier Cervantes (D-Chicago). “It puts homes over empty spaces and fundamentally lets the market decide how many parking spots are needed and where.” A massive portion of the plan could allow homeowners to boost their income and help others by adding accessory dwelling units to their property. This could include granny flats, above garage apartments and basement units.

    * Press release | Jones Passes Bill Strengthening Auto Theft Protections for Drivers: Jones’ House Bill 3755 tightens the rules auto insurers must follow when they deny a theft claim based on suspicion of fraud. Jones’ bill stipulates that a lack of broken glass or other signs of forced entry, an unopened door, or the presence of a key fob cannot be used as evidence of fraud or grounds for claim denial. The bill will ensure that more drivers are fairly compensated when their vehicle is stolen.

    * Press release | Mason Passes Big Wins for Property Tax Relief and Reform, Economic Growth, Voting Rights: House Bill 910, backed by Mason, delivers property tax relief to more communities by allowing local governments to negotiate Payments in Lieu of Taxation (PILOT) agreements for economic developments exceeding $100 million. In exchange for an agreed-upon assessment freeze, large developers would pay into the Illinois Property Tax Relief Fund, in which 60-percent of payments aid local homeowners, with the remaining 40-percent earmarked for homeowners statewide. Data centers are ineligible for these incentives. Mason also backed House Bill 799, which fixes a broken element in the property tax system by aligning the state with the U.S. Supreme Court Tyler v. Hennepin County ruling, barring “home equity theft,” and ensuring no Illinois resident loses the equity in their home due to old taxes. This measure guarantees that any excess profits generated from a home sale for delinquent taxes—beyond the original tax debt—will rightfully be returned to the previous, indebted owner.

  2 Comments      


It’s Time To Bring Safer Rides To Illinois

Tuesday, Apr 28, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

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

Ready to ride? Help bring Waymo to Illinois.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - News update

Tuesday, Apr 28, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Credit Unions: Advancing Financial Literacy Through Responsible Credit

Tuesday, Apr 28, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

April is National Financial Literacy Month, highlighting the importance of understanding financial options and making informed decisions.

Access to fair, transparent credit is a key component of financial education. Credit unions advance financial literacy by taking a relationship‑based approach to lending by looking beyond credit scores to understand a member’s full story.

Financial Plus Credit Union’s Trent Threadgill shares, “My favorite part of that application process is when I push the monitor out of the way, and I just have a conversation with the person face to face… You’re not looking at the person as a score. You’re looking at them as a person.”

This approach helps members learn their options, understand the impact of their choices, and take meaningful steps toward financial stability.

A person wearing glasses and a red sweater

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

Learn more at www.betterforillinois.org

Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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A ‘callous capitalization on someone else’s suffering’

Tuesday, Apr 28, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Without a doubt, the local news media in Illinois has misrepresented the SAFE-T Act more than any other state law since I’ve been doing this. And I’ve been doing this for 36 years.

This NBC 5 story is just the latest case in point. It’s disrespectful not only to the facts and the viewers, but, in my opinion, to the killed and wounded police officers

As more details emerge on the fatal shooting of a Chicago police officer at a hospital, questions over the SAFE-T Act are coming again to the forefront. […]

There was an active warrant for Talley’s arrest after he missed a March court date according to the NBC 5 Investigates team, and he had been on electronic monitoring on charges of armed robbery and vehicular hijacking, according to Cook County officials.

His release from custody during that time is being questioned by numerous officials after he allegedly fatally shot 38-year-old CPD Officer John Bartholomew and critically wounded another officer in a shooting at Endeavor Swedish Hospital on Saturday.

Those critical of the release include Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza, who is weighing whether to run for mayor of Chicago.

“Officer Bartholomew would be alive today if this massively repeat offender of violent crime after violent crime were behind bars where he belonged,” she said. “No reasonable person breathing should think it’s okay to put an armed robber, carjacker on an electronic monitor and send them on their merry way.” […]

Chicago Ald. Anthony Napolitano called the SAFE-T Act “a failed system” in remarks on the shooting Monday.

“It’s a failed system. It’s an absolutely failed system,” he said.

Not a single person with actual knowledge of what is in the SAFE-T Act was quoted in that story. You’d think reporters would have learned by now that some rando alderman isn’t an expert on state law.

* Thankfully, WGN TV’s Ben Bradley debunked part of the misinformation that’s being spread

I can tell you that the most recent carjacking, it involved a gun. The guy had a record. It was eligible for detention. He was originally detained, but then for a reason we don’t know, a Cook County judge ordered him released on electronic monitoring.

The statute tells us what crimes are eligible for detention. Here are just a few of them

the defendant is charged with a forcible felony, which as used in this Section, means treason, first degree murder, second degree murder, predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual assault, armed robbery, aggravated robbery, robbery, burglary where there is use of force against another person, residential burglary, home invasion, vehicular invasion, aggravated arson, arson, aggravated kidnaping, kidnaping, aggravated battery resulting in great bodily harm or permanent disability or disfigurement, or any other felony which involves the threat of or infliction of great bodily harm or permanent disability or disfigurement

Vehicular invasion

A person commits vehicular invasion when he or she knowingly, by force and without lawful justification, enters or reaches into the interior of a motor vehicle while the motor vehicle is occupied by another person or persons, with the intent to commit therein a theft or felony.

The accused was also charged in the past with armed robbery (three times), aggravated robbery and aggravated kidnaping. Those are all detainable offenses.

* Even CWBChicago gets it

When accused cop killer Alphonso Talley vanished from Cook County’s electronic monitoring system for more than 17 hours last month, then disappeared entirely after letting his ankle bracelet battery run dead, a series of safeguards were supposed to kick in.

A judge was supposed to be notified within 24 hours. A warrant, once issued, was supposed to be fast-tracked for service. A seven-time convicted felon already on pretrial release for armed carjacking and armed robbery was on the loose, and authorities were supposed to round him up.

That didn’t happen.

Those safeguards were the centerpiece of a high-profile push by Chief Judge Charles Beach, who made overhauling the county’s troubled electronic monitoring programs the very first move he announced publicly after taking office on December 1.

Electronic monitoring is not part of the SAFE-T Act. That’s a local thing.

* Partial excerpt from an Illinois Network For Pretrial Justice statement

The Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice sends our sincere condolences to the family and friends of Chicago Police Officer John Bartholomew. We continue to keep the injured police officer in our thoughts and hope for his recovery. No family should experience the pain caused by these senseless acts of violence, and our hearts go out to everyone impacted here.

Unfortunately, as we have seen time and time again since the passage of the Pretrial Fairness Act, cynical individuals are once again attempting to turn the pain of others into their own political gain. What is clear from publicly-available information is that there was absolutely nothing in the law that prohibited the detention of Alphanso Talley while he was awaiting trial. Any statement to the contrary is manifestly false.

No pretrial system can prevent every single tragedy, but it’s clear that Illinois has the tools in place to respond to concerns about public safety. The reality is that the new system—which gives judges more time and information to make release and detention decisions—is far better than the one that allowed the size of someone’s bank account to be the primary factor deciding who was released and who was jailed while awaiting trial. […]

The insistence by some to blame every act of violence on the Pretrial Fairness Act is not only a callous capitalization on someone else’s suffering, it is also a distraction from honest efforts to improve community safety. Decades of research documented the injustice of the money bond system and the ways in which it failed to keep our communities safe and increased the likelihood that people would be arrested again in the future.

* With that in mind…

House Republicans Demand Accountability Following Tragic Murder of Police Officer

Springfield, IL – According to the Chicago Police Department, Alphanso Talley has now been charged in the heinous murder of a Chicago police officer and the attempted murder of another officer, along with a long list of additional felony charges.

At the time of this horrific attack, Talley was wanted on three warrants, was on parole in two separate cases, and had a lengthy criminal history dating back to 2017.

Yet earlier this year, Governor JB Pritzker and Speaker Chris Welch praised the SAFE-T Act as sound and effective policy. Now Illinois families are left asking how a repeat violent offender with this record was free to take a police officer’s life and leave another in critical condition.

Talley’s reported criminal history includes:

    • Charges dating back to 2017 include carjacking, kidnapping, and armed robbery
    • A 2021 arrest for being a felon on parole in possession of a weapon
    • 2023 charges for several crimes including unlawful possession of a stolen motor vehicle and aggravated fleeing
    • A 2024 charge for battering correctional officers while in custody at Cook County Jail
    • A 2025 arrest connected to a violent carjacking in Bronzeville

Governor Pritzker, Speaker Welch, and House Democrats owe the people of Illinois answers and accountability for how a repeat offender like this was free to be on our streets and allegedly commit such a heinous and tragic crime.

House Republicans have introduced more than 40 bills to fix flaws in the SAFE-T Act, strengthen accountability, and restore balance to Illinois’ criminal justice system. Those reforms have been repeatedly ignored.

How can Democrats continue to stand by a policy that keeps failing after tragedies like this? A Chicago police officer is dead and another remains in critical condition. What more will it take for Democrats to get serious about fixing the SAFE-T Act?

House Republicans continue to mourn the fallen officer, pray for the recovery of the wounded officer, and stand with their families and the men and women of the Chicago Police Department. Our brave law enforcement officers deserve policies that protect them.

Also, that 2025 carjacking arrest happened during Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke’s tenure.

  62 Comments      


Federal Medicaid Cuts Will Hurt Patients And Hospitals: HB 2371 SA 2 Can Prevent More Harm

Tuesday, Apr 28, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Many Illinoisians already struggling to make ends meet will face even more pain through H.R. 1’s massive reductions to Medicaid funding, strict work requirements and mandated cost-sharing. The federal law represents the largest reduction in Medicaid spending—$1 trillion over 10 years—in the program’s 60-year history. It’s estimated as many as 300,000 Illinoisans will lose healthcare coverage and Illinois will lose over $50 billion in federal Medicaid funding, reversing over a decade in coverage gains for patients in Illinois and across the country.

Our state’s most vulnerable residents cannot afford to lose access to needed healthcare services and affordable prescription drugs. Faced with rising expenses, hospitals are struggling too. Over half of Illinois’ hospitals have operated on slim to negative margins over the past decade.

The restrictions pharmaceutical companies have imposed on hospitals participating in the federal 340B drug discount program are adding onto the financial challenges of these hospitals—the very hospitals that serve low-income and uninsured patients. Over 100 Illinois hospitals rely on 340B to reduce drug costs for patients and to help expand healthcare services.

Support low-income patients and the hospitals caring for them. Vote YES on House Bill 2371 SA 2 to protect 340B and prevent further harm to Illinois healthcare. Learn more.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Apr 28, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: 7th Circuit upholds ex-Speaker Madigan’s conviction of bribery, other corruption. Capitol News Illinois

    - A federal appeals court upheld the 10 guilty verdicts that sent former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan to prison, finding no errors in the way the jury was instructed or the evidence the government used to prosecute the influential Democrat during his lengthy bribery trial.
    - “Madigan insists that this was run-of-the-mill politics,” Judge Michael Scudder, an appointee of President Donald Trump wrote for the panel. “But a jury of twelve Illinois residents saw the evidence differently. So do we.”
    - The quick decision, which comes just 16 days after the court heard arguments in the case, means Madigan will have to serve out his 7½-year prison sentence barring a successful petition to the U.S. Supreme Court or a pardon or commutation from the White House.

* Related stories…

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


Sponsored by The Association of Safety-Net Community Hospitals

No Cuts. No Closures. Fund Safety-Net Hospitals.

For decades, Illinois has underfunded safety-net hospitals, the lifelines for Black and Brown communities. Now, the “Safety-Net Moonshot” and the Medicaid-defunding legislation it has spawned, threatens deeper cuts to these critical health providers. Any reduction inspired by the “Moonshot” would be a killshot to the care our most vulnerable residents rely on.

Weakening safety-net hospitals won’t improve care. It will slash essential services, eliminate jobs, and push entire communities into healthcare deserts and economic instability.

The state cannot balance its budget on the backs of Black and Brown community hospitals. These institutions are not line items to cut, they are the foundation of care for families who have nowhere else to turn. Disinvestment will deepen inequities and worsen outcomes.

When safety-net hospitals are funded, communities are healthier, workforces are stronger, and economies are more resilient.

Illinois must fully fund safety-net hospitals. For the communities they serve, it is life or death.

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

* At 1 pm, Governor Pritzker will deliver remarks at the SCHEELS Sports Park Ribbon Cutting Ceremony. Click here to watch.

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Pritzker’s accountability panel unveils ‘reckoning’ of feds’ actions during Operation Midway Blitz: The commission — which doesn’t have subpoena or prosecutorial power — has spent months gathering testimony and reviewing body camera footage, bystander videos, law enforcement records, news reports and court filings, said the commission’s vice chair, Patricia Brown Holmes. “We built a record of evidence that you, the public, can now judge for yourselves,” said Holmes, who called the commission’s work a “reckoning.”

* WGLT | Illinois State University sticking to final offer in AFSCME strike negotiations: “We really want to have a settlement and get people back to work for the benefit of our students, our faculty and those workers themselves, and so we’re hopeful that parties can get back to the table,” said ISU vice president of finance and planning Glen Nelson in an interview on WGLT’s Sound Ideas. Nelson acknowledged there has been no movement between the university and striking workers since the last bargaining session on April 15. In the meeting nearly two weeks ago, the university had not altered its final deal.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | ‘It’s not for her’: DHS dedicated Midway Blitz in her name. Her mother says she would have hated it: “Katie would have hated it, and she would have hated having her name continuing to be used by politicians, publicly and on social media,” Lorence told commissioners. “The Trump administration preyed on her name and used it in a vile way.” Abraham’s father, Joe Abraham, has been supportive of President Trump’s immigration enforcement campaign, appearing beside the president as he promoted his domestic agenda in the White House last June.

* WGLT | Illinois Supreme Court expands temporary licenses to ease legal deserts: The change to Supreme Court Rule 711 allows graduates to retain conditional licenses if they don’t pass the bar on the first try. A temporary 711 license can be issued to law students who have completed at least half the required credits and law grads signed up for the bar exam, enabling them to practice under the supervision of a licensed attorney working in a legal aid organization, clinic or government office.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Aldermen press Johnson administration over new budget consulting contract, revenue projections: City revenues are “tracking very closely to budget” so far this year, Budget Director Annette Guzmán told aldermen. But the news of an as-expected performance did little to win over aldermen still doubtful that the administration will fully implement the policies they passed to balance the city’s budget. And aldermen took particular issue Monday with the revelation that Guzmán’s Office of Budget and Management had entered last month into a two-year, $6.7 million contract with consulting firm Ernst & Young. “I think that there are a lot of unanswered questions,” Ald. Samantha Nugent, 39th, said after the meeting.

* Tribune | ‘May 1 is happening.’ What to know about the CPS and teachers union May Day debate: May 1 is a national day of action, a day for workers to mobilize and gather to advocate for workers’ rights. In the past, rallies and events have been held across Chicago to commemorate the day. This year, a “no work, no school and no shopping” action is being encouraged as a protest to the administration of President Donald Trump while advocating for immigrant and labor rights. Chicago Public Schools and the Chicago Teachers Union have sparred in recent weeks over whether the district will cancel classes on May 1 to participate in the “no work, no school and no shopping” action. Mayor Brandon Johnson, a former CTU organizer, also weighed in, saying “May 1 is happening.” After CEO Macquline King rejected an initial request from the teachers union, an agreement was later reached that allows staff and students to attend rallies.

* Tribune | Here’s how officials want to spend new transit funding this year: The largest single expenditure in the budget amendment is $20 million for Chicago Police Department staffing on the CTA. An additional $10 million is going to canine security guard staffing, for which the CTA contracts privately. Metra, which has its own police department, is getting more police as well, to the tune of $3.8 million.

* CBS Chicago | CTA derailment and disruptions raise infrastructure funding concerns: “There are these significant infrastructure-related issues that come back to not only affect these types of incidents, but also day-to-day travel,” said P.S. Sriraj, director of the Urban Transportation Center at the University of Illinois Chicago. Sriraj said those infrastructure issues need to be addressed. “When you have an asset category that has not been maintained for a number of years, it is going to start falling into disrepair,” he said.

* Sun-Times | White Sox rally past Angels with 7-run 7th, highlighted by Murakami Munetaka’s MLB-leading 12th homer: An announced crowd of 10,193 — and 821 dogs on Dog Day — whittled down to perhaps several hundred after the game, scheduled for 6:40 p.m., was delayed by an inbound storm. But those who stuck around were treated to the Sox’ highest-scoring inning since July 30, when they also scored seven against the Phillies. Trailing 5-1, the Sox sent 10 batters to the plate, two of whom homered back-to-back — Munetaka Murakami, whose towering three-run homer to right field put the Sox up 7-5, and Miguel Vargas. It was the second time this season the Sox hit consecutive homers.

* Block Club | Holiday Club Is Closing May 17 After 25 Years In Uptown: The impending closure prompted dozens of people dressed in black to gather on the corner of Irving Park and Sheridan roads on April 18, where they set up a memorial of sorts with a framed picture of Holiday Club, candles, flowers and beer cans.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Nature | Academics demand apology for scientist investigated for China ties but never charged: After the investigation was closed, Northwestern allegedly “cut her salary for lack of funding of her research during the NIH investigation, raised new requirements she had to meet to restore her funded status, gave her only a limited chance to meet them, and refused to assign back to her a prior grant that had been taken away from her but was still active”. The university informed Wu in May 2024 that it would close her laboratory for good that summer, making it impossible for Wu to apply for future funding. The lawsuit goes on to allege that Northwestern “sent its University Police and City of Chicago Police to evict Dr. Wu from her office by force and placed her in handcuffs”, then took her, “against her will”, to be admitted to Northwestern Memorial Hospital’s Norman and Ida Stone Institute of Psychiatry in Chicago, less than two months before she ended her life.

* Oak Park Journal | Oak Park police union votes no confidence in police chief: In an interview last week with Wednesday Journal, Oak Park Village President Vicki Scaman acknowledged having received the results of a no confidence vote along with a patrol officer membership survey. “It’s not for the village board to be discussing personnel beyond the leadership of our village manager,” she said. “But to speak for myself, service, community safety, those basic services that you depend on from government, always remains of top concern and attention. That’s our job fundamentally as a municipal government, to make sure that we’re serving our community and keeping all residents equally safe and respected. So that in and of itself, just means we support our staff in having a healthy working environment.”

* Evanston Now | Guaranteed income plan expanded: The Evanston City Council voted Monday night to extend the city’s guaranteed income program to offer $500 per month to 102 families over the next six months to spend down the remaining cash in the program. The program is funded by the American Rescue Plan Act through COVID-era federal recovery funds, which must be spent by the end of this year.

*** Downstate ***

* Patch | Workers’ Memorial Day Observed Across Illinois with Ceremonies Honoring Fallen Workers: In Springfield, the Illinois AFL-CIO, alongside the Springfield & Central Illinois Trades & Labor Council, will host a morning ceremony at its headquarters to honor fallen workers. Families will gather as flowers are placed in remembrance, and three names will be formally added: Decatur electrician Samuel Ward, Hillsboro coal miner Jessie Edward Smith, and Springfield golf course superintendent Daniel Crumrine.

* WCIA | Coroner IDs Springfield man killed by State Police squad car: A pedestrian has died after an Illinois State Police trooper struck him while driving in Springfield overnight. Around 2:30 a.m. on Saturday, an ISP trooper was driving south in the middle lane on South 6th Street, approaching a green light at the intersection with Linton Street, ISP said in a news release. A pedestrian — identified as a 45-year-old Springfield man — was reportedly bent down in the roadway when the trooper hit him.

* WGLT | School psychologists ‘drowning’ as school sales tax hasn’t yet filled a District 87 mental health gap: Schools have received funding distributed by the Regional Office of Education since midway through the fall semester, three months after the tax went into effect across the county in July. Annual revenue for District 87, the Bloomington-based school district, was projected to be in the $6 million range when the district began educating the public on the details of the sales tax before it was voted on in April 2025. “It’s actually right on par with what we were hoping at the high end,” said superintendent David Mouser in an interview for WGLT’s Sound Ideas.

* WQAD | Rock Island alderman’s family business withdraws bid for city catering contract amid conflict concerns: A family business connected to Rock Island Alderman Bill Healy withdrew its bid for a city catering contract just hours before the scheduled city council vote on Monday, April 27 after public questions were raised about possible conflicts of interest. The contract would have provided food service at the Rock Island Fitness and Activity Center, commonly known as RIFAC, including meals tied to the city-run preschool program. […] “My parents own the business. I do not,” Healy said. “I have 0% ownership. My wife has 0% ownership.”

* WICS | Springfield Police Department’s armored vehicle to be replaced: The specialized police vehicle will cost over $400,000, and the request came soon after the city budget had been approved. SPD says they tried to get grant funding for the project but were unsuccessful. Jarod Maddox, commander of criminal investigations, says grants are run by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA) handles the applications and disbursement. The Illinois Law Enforcement Alarm System (ILEAS) would receive the money and make the purchase. Maddox tells me this was how they got their current Lenco BearCat, which is over 20 years ago.

* WGLT | Bloomington council approves $60,000 drone show for July 4 weekend: The City of Bloomington also approved a contract with Gateway Pyrotechnic Solutions for fireworks displays. The $125,000 contract covers Miller Park 4th of July Celebrations from 2026-28. The 2026 display reflects a $5,000 higher price tag than the following two years to extend the show in both time and shell count because of America’s 250th anniversary celebration.

* WCIA | Damage reported in Central Illinois following severe weather: In a post on Facebook, DeLand-Weldon CUSD #57 said the school will be closed on Tuesday due to storm damage. Superintendent Michael Tresnak said the elementary school lost one third of its roof. In Mahomet, a downed power line closed US-150 at County Road 200E (Turkey Farm Road), according to the Illinois State Police.

*** National ***

* Mother Jones | We Are Bombarding America’s Forests With Roundup: This is because, unbeknownst to most people, logging companies and the US Forest Service have been spraying massive amounts of herbicide in clear-cut and fire-ravaged forests of California—and throughout the nation. And not just any herbicide, but glyphosate, a potent and problematic weed killer best known by the brand name Roundup.

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