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Porter McNeil (Updated and comments opened)

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

[Comments are now open.]

* Porter and I went to college together a long time ago. I’ll have more next week, but you won’t find a man like him again. From Alex Gough…

After a four year battle with cancer, Rock Island County Board Member Porter McNeil passed this afternoon. He kept swimming, attending political events, serving as a Rock Island County Board member, and being a great father to James, Jack, and Ellie and husband to Mary until the very end.

“Porter’s passing leaves an irreplaceable hole in the community he loved so fiercely,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “His infectious enthusiasm and fervent dedication to his family, his friends, and to doing the right thing for the neighbors he represented should serve as a guiding light for all public officials to follow. My thoughts are with his loved ones, his children — James, Jack, Ellie, and his beloved Mary. May his memory be a blessing to us all.”

“Porter was a dear friend whom I counted on in many campaigns,” said US Senator Dick Durbin. “He knew the Quad Cities and people respected his honesty and his values. He loved Mary and his family and couldn’t wait to call and tell me Jack’s latest political adventure. I’m going to miss him.”

“Porter McNeil had a great talent for communications and tremendous passion for politics but always as a vehicle to help improve the lives of his community and hard-working people,” said David Axelrod. “He also was an unfailingly gracious man, a loving husband, proud father and a wonderful friend. I will miss him.”

“In his time as a Member of the Rock Island County Board, Porter McNeil worked tirelessly on efforts related to economic development, legislative matters, and more recently passenger rail.” said County Board Chairman Richard “Quijas” Brunk. “He had a true passion for community, and that passion and its impact will be felt for years to come. We have lost a great member of our team, our community has lost a staunch advocate, and I have lost a friend.”

“Porter was a friend to me who helped build me up as a candidate,” said State Senator Mike Halpin. “So many of my words over the years actually belonged to him, as was true for candidates of nearly every level of public office. He was our fierce defender of Democrats in the press, but most importantly he was a good man - to his constituents, to his friends, and to the family he loved.”

Porter was a gifted communicator with a bachelor’s degree from Macalester College, St. Paul Minnesota and a Master’s Degree in Public Affairs Reporting from the University of Illinois. He served nearly a decade working on behalf of all Illinoisans in and around the Illinois Statehouse in Springfield.

As a member of the Rock Island County Board since 2021, he was active in helping to drive community economic development efforts, as well as by volunteering with numerous local community organizations.

As a campaign consultant he worked on dozens of campaigns including serving as a communications consultant to the Democratic Party of Illinois in 2024 and Illinois Communications Director for the Kerry-Edwards Presidential Campaign in 2004. He was a familiar face in the region, having appeared on WHBF-TV’s Sunday political talk show “4 the Record” 70 times since 2016.

His personal political highlights included attending the 2004 Democratic National Convention as a Kerry Delegate to experience then state Senator Barack Obama’s epic red state/blue state speech that electrified Democrats and working with David Axelrod & Associates to end the GOP’s 30-year control of the Iowa Governor’s Mansion in 1998. McNeil was also key in the introduction of State Senator Barack Obama to the Quad Cities on October 2, 2002.

RIP, buddy.

…Adding… Porter’s family is setting up a scholarship program in his honor. Please click here to contribute. Thanks!

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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A joint statement from Senate President Don Harmon and Senate Minority Leader John Curran

Our democracy was based on the idea that average people could think for themselves and decide through civil debate how we want to live. There is no other country in the world where people from all places and backgrounds have come together to build such a prosperous, innovative and compassionate society. And above all, we believe you should be able to participate in this process and engage in this debate without fear of harm or hate.

We are here to tell you the Illinois Senate is united in whole-heartedly condemning violence, from any person in any circumstance. We are committed to working together to ensure that people throughout our state know that Illinois is a safe place to take part in our democratic systems without fear. We are all neighbors.

Remember all that we have accomplished together, peacefully. We can be opponents without being enemies. Remember who we are and help us take the temperature down.

* Trombone Shorty and the New Breed Brass Band have a new album. Here’s a cut

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Right-wing internet personality Ben Bergquam on Thursday filmed outside of Gov. JB Pritzker’s home and invited his followers to “take action” after the murder of Charlie Kirk on Wednesday, sparking concerns for the Democratic governor’s safety.

“Made a stop by Governor Pritzker’s house in Chicago today,” Bergquam says in a video with Pritzker’s Gold Coast home in the background. “If you love America and the assassination of Charlie Kirk doesn’t inspire you to take action, I don’t know what will!”

Sources close to the governor told the Sun-Times that the video has prompted additional concerns over Pritzker’s safety. The Illinois State Police Executive Protection Unit currently provides 24-hour security for the governor, his family and the Governor’s Mansion in Springfield. […]

Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch said the video near Pritzker’s home “escalates tension, spreads fear and foments violence to our community.”

“Whether you consider this behavior intimidation, doxing, or an outright call for further violence, it is unacceptable,” Welch said in a statement. “We showed this week that people from across the spectrum want to bring down the temperature and step back from the edge before it’s too late; that starts when we all call out and turn away from extremism, dehumanizing rhetoric, and the politics of deliberate cruelty.”

Senate President Don Harmon’s response to Bergquam’s asking his followers to “take action”


* WMBD

More than $600,000 awarded for improvement projects in McLean County last year are no longer coming to central Illinois.

The $675,000 BUILD Raise Grant was originally awarded to McLean County in 2024, but the U.S. Department of Transportation has withdrawn the funds, according to Cline who represents District 8 on the McLean County Board. […]

She said the Transportation Department told the county that the grant no longer aligned with its priorities.

Cathy Dreyer, one of the county’s county administrators, said the funds were supposed to be used for the preliminary engineering for the final nine miles of the Route 66 bike trail. […]

“Between 2018 and 2023, six crashes involving bicyclists or pedestrians occurred within a half mile of this proposed trail corridor, including the tragic death of a bicyclist near Towanda last year,” Cline said. “These are not isolated events, and separated paths like this one are proven to save lives.

*** Statewide ***

* Center Square | DOJ arguing against Illinois’ gun ban ‘monumental,’ advocate says: Oral arguments are scheduled for Sept. 22 in the case Barnett v. Raoul, challenging the state’s gun and magazine ban. A federal district court found the law unconstitutional last year after a four-day bench trial. In the Seventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, the U.S. Department of Justice motioned to be allowed time to argue.

*** Statehouse News ***

* The Hill Op-Ed | Trump is wrong: No-cash bail reform actually means less crime, not more : We have worked in the survivor community for years, and we fought to replace cash bail in Illinois with a system based on risk that took into account victims’ voices. We want to be clear: What actually harms victims of gender-based violence is this administration’s efforts to reduce funding to organizations providing critical services to victims of domestic and sexual violence. Ending the reforms we’ve instituted related to money bail will just make things worse.

* Center Square | Reporting firearm threats to principals ‘common sense,’ IL legislator says: An Illinois lawmaker and law enforcement officer reacts to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s enacting a law requiring schools to report firearms or threats to principals, a move supporters say improves safety. State Rep. Dennis Tipsword, R-Metamore, described the bill as “just common sense kind of legislation” that ensures threats are at least reported to the proper school authorities.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Retired Ald. Walter Burnett, wife received over $260,000 in rent payments as housing voucher landlords: The Burnetts have had at least 10 contracts for properties rented to CHA voucher holders, including two ongoing contracts and five contracts that were active during Williams-Burnett’s tenure as an employee at the housing authority. […] Burnett responded to a Sun-Times phone call seeking comment with a text Thursday declining to comment, saying he is “just a private citizen.” […] Williams-Burnett disclosed her and her husband’s role in the housing voucher program to CHA at least between 2014 to 2018 when employed at the agency, according to public records. She previously worked for the housing authority as deputy chief of fleet and facilities in the general services department and violated CHA’s ethics policy in 2022, the same year she resigned, public records show.

* Block Club | Thrive Englewood, Area’s 1st Family Housing Development In Over 50 Years, Welcomes Residents: The six-story building has 62 apartments, including 27 one-bedroom units, 30 two-bedroom units and five three-bedroom units. Over 80 percent of the apartments will be affordable for families earning up to 60 percent of the area’s median income. The housing development has two live/work lofts and a 2,400-square-foot commercial retail space on the ground floor not yet occupied. Residents have access to amenities including a fitness room, resident lounge, outdoor patio and bike storage, and laundry services are available on every floor.

* SunTImes | Raymond Lee, an advocate for Chicago’s Chinatown who helped create Ping Tom Park, has died at 90: Mr. Lee was hesitant because he had a business to run but agreed and joined the park board, where he secured funding to help get the park off the ground. It fully opened in 2005 and was named Ping Tom Memorial Park after his friend, who died in 1995. After several months on the park board, Mayor Richard M. Daley tapped Mr. Lee for the Chicago Board of Education, where he helped secure money for a renovation of his alma mater, Haines Elementary School.

* Sun-Times | Revolution Brewing’s latest venture shows demand for THC-infused drinks still strong amid slowing beer sales: The company recently launched Reverb Splash, a line of hemp-derived THC and CBD-infused sparkling waters with fruit. The drinks have 5 milligrams of THC and CBD, and they’re attracting a diverse fandom, from longtime brewery patrons and the curious to cannabis enthusiasts and alcohol abstainers. That diverse customer mix also reflects who’s driving the strong demand for THC beverages across Chicago-area bars, restaurants, liquor and convenience stores and music venues, like the Salt Shed, which became one of the first concert locations in the country to green-light THC drink sales in January.

* Block Club | The Sky’s Mascot, Skye The Lioness, Has Had A Glow-Up — And Fans Love Her: It’s a welcome change for the team, whose previous mascot — Sky Guy — was so unpopular that Sky fans petitioned for him to be removed. “It was good to see [Sky] participate more and do more interesting things,” said Sky fan Daniel Rodriguez, of Lakeview. “It’s good to see her putting the work in and being more a part of the team and more a part of the city.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Pritzker calls for ‘full, factual accounting’ after ICE agents fatally shoot man in suburban traffic stop: Gov. JB Pritzker called for transparency after a federal immigration agent fatally shot a man in northwest suburban Franklin Park after the agency reported the man tried to flee a traffic stop and struck the officer with his vehicle. […] “This is a developing situation and the people of Illinois deserve a full, factual accounting of what’s happened today to ensure transparency and accountability,” Pritzker said.

* Daily Herald | Melissa Bean enters 8th Congressional race, 15 years after loss to Joe Walsh : Former Democratic Congresswoman Melissa Bean of Barrington has announced her campaign to reclaim the 8th District seat she lost to Joe Walsh in 2010, just as a second Republican candidate is poised to announce her run in next spring’s primaries. While entrepreneur, author and keynote speaker Jennifer Davis of the Huntley area is scheduled to announce her candidacy next Thursday for the Republican nomination already sought by Mark Rice of Chicago, Bean joins a crowded field of eight Democrats aiming to succeed five-term incumbent Raja Krishnamoorthi.

* Daily Southtown | Tinley Park District 146 teachers’ union authorizes strike over contract negotiation impasse: “This board of education has pushed us far enough,” District 146 Educators Council President Eileen Von Borstel said in a news release Friday. “The district has the funds to ensure we can recruit and retain high quality educators, but the board of education is refusing to use that money to invest in our students and the people who teach them. We have no choice but to move toward a strike if they refuse to bargain a fair contract.” The news release said 230 of 232 union members voted in favor of a strike “if there is no other path to an agreement at the bargaining table.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Kane County Board OKs recommendation that departments, offices reduce expenses to help close budget shortfall: In the latest attempt to solve a looming budget shortfall, the Kane County Board has OK’d a recommendation that county offices and departments reduce their expenses by roughly 8% from last year’s budget. A recommendation to reduce expenses in the budgets that have been proposed by the county’s offices and departments was presented to the board for a vote last month, but a final decision was ultimately delayed, and the proposal went back to the Kane County Board Finance Committee to be revised.

*** Downstate ***

* River Bender | Adams Co. Juvenile Detention Center requesting more officers: Cooley told board members the facility must be PREA compliant by 2027. PREA stands for the Prison Rape Elimination Act, aimed at the prevention and elimination of sexual abuse and sexual harassment. The Adams County Juvenile Detention Center proposal involved adding six positions: One PREA coordinator, one training officer, and four new officers. The cost would be $344,070.40, which would be offset with grant money from the Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts. Adams County would be responsible for $103,000 in fringe benefits, according to the briefing provided by Cooley.

* WGLT | McLean County Board hears details of proposed $144.5 million budget: A 5.2% decrease in the property tax rate, due to continued increases to equalized assessed values in McLean County, is reflected in the budget. The owner of a $210,000 home would see their tax bill decrease by $32.29. Some homeowners may end up seeing a higher tax bill due to higher property values, partly due to the housing shortage.

*** National ***

* Crain’s | Employers face yet another surge in health costs in 2026 as companies scramble for solutions: Two new reports out this month show the burden of health care insurance is only worsening for employers, with high demand and inflation putting more and more pressure on companies to keep costs of benefits under control. Aon says employer health costs nationwide will rise 9.5% in 2026. It’s the third year in a row the increase is up near double digits, and it’s the fastest rate of increase in at least 15 years. The professional services firm’s annual estimate puts the average cost per employee at more than $17,000.

* NCSL | Mid-Decade Redistricting: At least 11 states explicitly prohibit legislative mid-decade redistricting, congressional mid-decade redistricting or both in their constitutional language: Alabama, Alaska, Kansas, Missouri, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Utah.

* Politico | Why Hakeem Jeffries hasn’t been able to bend Democrats to his will on redistricting: But behind the scenes, the House minority leader is encountering the limits of his power — and the credibility of Democrats’ counterattack. Just this week, some Illinois lawmakers sent Jeffries a clear message they were not interested in pursuing a redraw that could dilute their districts with additional GOP votes.

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Bailey releases poll showing him ahead in Republican primary, but lots of undecideds

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Reveille Research press release

Illinois is deeply dissatisfied with the direction of the state, and Darren Bailey is the only Republican candidate positioned to capitalize on this frustration. He dominates the primary ballot test and commands clear leads in one-on-one matchups with both Jim Mendrick and Ted Dabrowski. While a majority of voters still undecided in the primary, Bailey is uniquely placed to consolidate support and secure the nomination.

* Let’s start with state direction


As we’ve discussed before, that’s actually not a horrible “wrong track” number. Wrong track polled in the high 60s to mid 80s starting in 2008, peaking at 84 percent under Bruce Rauner. The last time I wrote about it, in 2022, wrong track was down to 52 percent.

* Republican Primary ballot test

* Bailey v. Mendrick

* Bailey v. Dabrowski

* Demographics

* Methodology

Reveille Research conducted this statewide survey of likely General Election voters in Illinois from September 4–6, 2025. The survey reached 1,008 respondents, with a margin of error of ±3.1%. Respondents were randomly selected from a comprehensive list of registered voters.

Results underwent a rigorous weighting process to align the sample with the expected demographic composition of participants in the 2025 General Election. This ensures the findings accurately reflect the electorate and corrects for potential non-response bias.

The survey began by asking voters whether they believed Illinois was headed in the right direction or wrong direction. Following this, respondents identified as Republican primary voters were asked about their preference in the gubernatorial primary, including both the full ballot and head-to-head tests between Darren Bailey and his opponents.

Bailey clearly has significant name ID. We’ll see how much money Dabrowski can raise. He’s busted the caps and pulled in over $900K this week, on top of his $250K loan.

Not sure about that “rigorous weighting process” part, but I’m told 454 self-identified Republican primary voters were polled on the GOP questions.

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Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Pritzker signs executive order to ‘protect vaccine access’

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s earlier this week

As a potential patchwork of competing vaccination guidelines takes shape in the wake of the federal dismantling of longstanding immunization expertise, solidly pro-vaccine Illinois is weighing its options.

The contentious firing of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention director and resignation of several senior staff at the agency has further shaken trust in federal vaccine guidance. The shakeup followed Health & Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy’s gutting of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), which he replaced with new members, some of whom are antagonistic toward the COVID-19 vaccines or vaccines in general. […]

Illinois health officials had already announced they may go it alone with vaccine recommendations.

Illinois Public Health Director Dr. Sameer Vohra said in a Aug. 29 statement IDPH and public health agencies around the country are awaiting formal COVID-19 recommendations from ACIP, but noted the guidance would be the result of “an unscientific vaccine recommendation process” that ousted CDC leaders believe “could harm the health of Americans.”

* Gov. Pritzker issued an executive order today. Press release

Today, Governor JB Pritzker signed Executive Order 2025-04 launching a statewide effort to protect vaccine access during the fall respiratory virus season.

This Order establishes the Statewide Vaccine Access Initiative, led by the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) in partnership with multiple state agencies to ensure Illinoisans can get the vaccines they need and can rely on science-based guidance.

It also directs IDPH Director Dr. Sameer Vohra to issue a Standing Order to allow eligible providers in pharmacy and other appropriate clinical settings to administer vaccines recommended by IDPH after consultation with its expert Immunization Advisory Committee (IAC).

The Governor’s action today ensures that Illinoisans will be able to receive the immunizations they need during the anticipated rise in seasonal respiratory illnesses later this fall. […]

The Executive Order also calls for IDPH and partner agencies to publish plain-language guidance, continue to support school-based vaccination efforts, and work with local health departments, community health centers, disability organizations, and rural providers to reach families statewide. Other measures included in the Order are designed to provide stability and support providers and the public in the context of volatile and concerning actions taken by Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

This Executive Order was necessitated by federal actions, including the abrupt dismissal of top administrators from the CDC, the unilateral shift in FDA approval for some uses of COVID-19 vaccines, and the firing of all members of the independent Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) board. These actions have led to the erosion of trust, caused confusion regarding vaccine guidelines, and threatened access to life-saving vaccines.

The elimination of vaccine recommendations for many children, adults, and pregnant patients was condemned by major medical organizations including the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), and the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP). These reputable organizations continue to recommend broad access to COVID-19 and other vaccines.

Executive Order 2025-04 is designed to ensure that no matter what direction the federal government takes, Illinoisans will have access to seasonal and routine child and adult vaccines: protecting them from a wide range of illnesses and diseases including COVID-19, flu, RSV, polio, measles, whooping cough, and hepatitis B. […]

The IAC will next convene on Monday, Sept. 22. The IAC will incorporate all data that meets scientific standards before issuing fall respiratory vaccination recommendations. Before September 26, IDPH will use the IAC’s recommendations to provide clear public guidance to help Illinois health care providers and help residents make informed decisions about vaccination and protect against fall respiratory illnesses.

* From the order

CONTINGENCY PLANNING AND INSURANCE COVERAGE

    a.Vaccines for Children (VFC) Contingency Planning. IDPH shall develop contingency plans to maintain access for VC-eligible children if federal disruptions threaten inventory or

    b. Private Insurance Patient Coverage. The Illinois Department of Insurance (DOI) shall require, through bulletin, emergency or permanent rulemaking, or other lawful means, that state-regulated health insurance issuers cover vaccines and related administration based on IDPH recommendations, without patient cost-sharing, including where such recommendations extend beyond current ACIP schedules, to the maximum extent permitted by law.

    c. Recommendations for Continued Vaccine Access. State agencies participating in the Statewide Vaccine Access Initiative shall make recommendations to the Governor within 15 days of how the State can act to ensure continued access to coverage and administration of vaccines.

* Related…

    * Politico | RFK Jr.’s vaccine crackdown sparks a rebellion among blue-state governors: JB Pritzker is exploring ways to stockpile Covid shots in Illinois. Kathy Hochul signed an executive order protecting vaccine access in New York. Maura Healey is requiring insurers in Massachusetts cover the costs of injections recommended by her health department, regardless of federal guidelines.

    * Sun-Times | COVID-19 vaccines arrive at Chicago pharmacies as pediatricians wait for doses, guidance: Doctors and medical experts say Illinois will likely issue more expansive recommendations that will support vaccinations for more people than the FDA’s limited recommendations. That could mean authorizing pharmacists to administer vaccines off-label, as they do in other states. Doctors already are authorized to give vaccines off-label.

    * WaPo | Trump officials to link covid shots to child deaths, alarming career scientists: The plan has alarmed some career scientists who say coronavirus vaccines have been extensively studied, including in children, and that dangers of the virus itself are being underplayed. CDC staff in June presented data to the same vaccine committee showing that at least 25 children died who had covid-associated hospitalizations since July 2023 and that number was likely an undercount. Of the 16 old enough for vaccination, none was up-to-date on vaccines.

    * OPB | CVS reverses course, won’t give COVID vaccines to Oregonians without prescriptions: CVS Pharmacy spokesperson Amy Thibault told the Capital Chronicle on Friday that the company was offering the vaccine in the state, while acknowledging the potential for individual appointment cancellations at its pharmacies. The company has been promoting access without a prescription in the state as recently as last week, when the democratic governors of Oregon, Washington and California announced a “West Coast Health Alliance” aimed at safeguarding access to vaccines. The state Board of Pharmacy on Friday said it would have more clarity for vaccine access rules after the federal Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices meets on Sept. 18-19. That’s the first meeting since the FDA issued more restrictive annual guidance in August which limited the vaccine to people aged 65 or older or those with an underlying health condition that would risk severe illness.

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A quick briefing on Ted Dabrowski’s running mate (Updated)

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Republican gubernatorial candidate Ted Dabrowski announced his running mate today. Her name is Carrie Mendoza, an emergency medicine physician and activist. Oddly, Mendoza didn’t speak at today’s announcement (even though Dabrowski’s mother did) and neither candidate took questions from the media. As I write this, no press release has been issued. So, we’re kinda flying blind and we decided to put together a quick look at her background.

…Adding… We just received the release. Only a brief mention of his running mate

Joining Ted Dabrowski on the ticket is Dr. Carrie Mendoza, a 25-year ER physician, mom of three, and longtime advocate for the quality of care of patients and against the political corruption of healthcare.

* Like her husband Myles Mendoza (who helped pass the state’s now-defunct tuition tax credit program when he ran Empower Illinois), Carrie Mendoza is a school vouchers advocate.

Dabrowski and Ms. Mendoza spoke at an event this past spring sponsored by the Liberty Justice Center: “Legal landscape of trans-related issues in schools and society: Liberty Justice Center talks to a full house at Mallinckrodt”

* From Wikipedia

FAIR in Medicine program is led by Carrie Mendoza, an advisor to Genspect and Detrans help. It attempts to distinguish “talk therapy” from other forms of conversion therapy and has opposed a Department of Homeland Security nondiscrimination rule covering gender identity.[32] FAIR made comments to the Department of Education opposing Title IX nondiscrimination protections for transgender students.[32]

FAIR in Medicine’s website is here.

* The Record Community News Group

A novel that has been on New Trier High School’s reading list for six years drew the aim of a subset of district parents on Monday, June 7, during the monthly board of education meeting. […]

Dr. Carrie Mendoza, a Glencoe resident and New Trier Neighbors board member, was one of four speakers who referred to one scene in the book as “soft porn” and claimed it was not appropriate for the sophomore class.

* NBC News

J.P. Leider, a University of Minnesota health policy researcher who oversaw the state’s tool to help Covid patients determine if they qualified for treatment, said that political groups may succeed in halting race-conscious policies, “but that doesn’t mean that those disparities don’t exist.”

“They’re very real, and they’re very measurable,” he said of health inequities.

Some medical professionals have pushed back on the utility of race-conscious policies in health care, saying they can interfere with the doctor-patient relationship.

“I would want to teach the trainees to look at each patient as an individual, and what their unique identity is, and the unique situation going on with them,” said Dr. Carrie Mendoza, a Chicago-based physician who leads the medicine chapter for the Foundation Against Intolerance and Racism, an advocacy group formed last year to oppose “woke ideology.” “Not lumping them into a group — that’s kind of dehumanizing.”

* More from Isabel…

    * Carrie Mendoza | ER doctor: Next COVID-19 fight is to flatten the bureaucracy: So, what needs to happen to ensure we are never caught off guard like this again? It’s simple: Flatten the bureaucracy. The term “flatten the curve” has become the new national mantra on containing the spread of coronavirus. On the health care front lines, it would make sense to flatten the bureaucracy. Modern health care has developed into a giant bureaucracy filled with nonclinical people often out of touch with clinicians and patients. Those on the front lines know the bureaucracy of medicine has gotten in the way of the sacred doctor-patient relationship. During this crisis, managers and algorithms can’t save people. Medical professionals can. Commonsense operational changes physicians have wanted for years are finally being implemented.

    * Transgender Map | Carrie D. Mendoza vs. transgender people: In an introductory video, Mendoza likened the “orthodoxy” of gender affirming care to forced sterilizations in Nazi Germany and Iran. […] Mendoza also drafted and distributed an open letter supporting Kenneth Zucker for publishing yet another ethically questionable article in the Archives of Sexual Behavior about “rapid onset gender dysphoria.” Mendoza also had study co-author J. Michael Bailey on to defend the article and Zucker. The paper was later retracted.

    * Illinois Families for Public Schools | Dark money orgs on the ground in school board races in Illinois: FAIR’s Illinois chapter coordinator Carrie Mendoza is the wife of Myles Mendoza, former president of Empower Illinois, the group that led the effort to create Illinois’ voucher program (and currently benefits from administering the program as a voucher middleman org that skims millions off the top of the voucher funds they distribute). The former Illinois lobbyist for Betsy DeVos’ American Federation for Children (see below) Nate Hoffman is a member of FAIR’s board of advisors. They have attacked Evanston D65 on issues of race and gender as well as New Trier D203. They attended Evanston High School D202 events in the fall of 2021 to disrupt affinity group activities for parents.

    * Southern Poverty Law Center | Group dynamics and division of labor within the anti-LGBTQ+ pseudoscience network: The group’s FAIR in Medicine program is led by Dr. Carrie Mendoza, who serves as an adviser to Genspect and Detrans Help – an organization that promotes therapists, doctors and detransitioners who are willing to testify before legislators and lawmakers against affirming care.[82] FAIR in Medicine also manages a “Gender Healthcare Policy Map” and attempts to distinguish “talk therapy” for transgender people from other forms of conversion therapy. Like SEGM, the group opposed a DHS nondiscrimination rule covering gender identity. FAIR, like Do No Harm, was founded to largely oppose anti-racist pedagogies in American education, and its members claim that therapists are trained to tell white patients that they are “oppressors.”[83] It has since become a key voice amplifying anti-LGBTQ+ pseudoscience.

    * NPR Nevada | As some states ban gender-affirming care, Nevadans work to protect it: Mendoza pointed out the fact that there are trans individuals who go through gender-affirming care and later decide to de-transition. “They were feeling optimistic and good through a pathway, and when they got to the end of the pathway, which was surgery for a lot of them, they reflected, ‘Well, this actually didn’t fix some of my problems,’” Mendoza said. “I’m open minded. I want all these kids to do well, but I want to make sure that we aren’t irreparably harming them; causing sterility, or causing worse mental health issues later.”

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Trump says the National Guard will deploy to Memphis though he “would have preferred going to Chicago” (Updated)

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* AP

President Donald Trump said Friday he’ll send the National Guard to Memphis to address crime concerns there with the support of the mayor and the governor.

Trump, a Republican, said on Fox News Channel “the mayor is happy” and “the governor is happy” about the pending deployment. The mayor is a Democrat, and the governor is a Republican.

He said the city is “deeply troubled” and “we’re going to fix that just like we did Washington,” where he’s sent National Guard and surged federal law enforcement.

Since sending the National Guard to Los Angeles and Washington, Trump has openly mused about sending troops to some of the nation’s most Democratic cities — including Chicago and Baltimore — claiming they are needed to crack down on crime.

* Trump’s full remarks on the Fox News Channel

Fox and Friends: The National Guard, because they say they belong in war zones. But our city, Chicago, six people shot over the weekend, killed the weekend before that 11 more…

Trump: And that’s a good weekend.

Fox and Friends: This is happening in every major city. There’s a lunatic that’s on the street, that some Soros DA, that is allowed out. What’s going to happen?

Trump: I think maybe I’ll be the first to say it right now, again, we’re going to Memphis. Memphis is deeply troubled. And the mayor is happy, he’s a Democrat mayor, the mayor is happy, and the governor, Tennessee, the governor is happy, deeply troubled. We’re going to fix that just like we did Washington.

I would have preferred going to Chicago. I had a man and a big, the head of a big, big railroad. They’re doing a merger, and he wanted to come see me and all that stuff. And I asked him, because, you know, that’s one of the largest train companies, maybe the largest, so you can figure out who it is, okay, Union Pacific. And he was in my office, and he started off 45 years ago with the railroad. Such a great — sir, sir, I’m a railroader. That’s the kind of guy that should run it, as opposed to a Wall Street guy that destroys the railroad, but he’s good financially. And he was a very impressive guy. And I said, ‘So what do you think, where should we go next as a city? Because we’re going to 1, 2, 3, and then we’ll do a few at a time, but we’re going to straighten out the crime of these cities.’ He said, ‘Sir, Memphis would be good because he’s on the board of FedEx.’ He said, ‘When I walk one block to my hotel, they won’t allow me to do it. They put me in an armored vehicle with bulletproof glass to take me one block.’ He said, ‘It’s so terrible.’ I said, let me ask you a question. So we’re going to Memphis. I’m just announcing that now, and we’ll straighten that out.

Fox and Friends: National Guard?

Trump: National Guard and anybody else we need. And by the way, we’ll bring in the military too if we need it, but National Guard. But Memphis is — look, it’s a great music city. It’s, you know, home of Elvis and everything else. But I said to him, ‘Where else should we go? Where would you say?’ He said, ‘Sir, please do me a favor. St. Louis has been so badly hit. It’s very hard, very, very hard.’ He said, ‘Don’t lose Chicago. You’re going to lose Chicago, sir. It’s a great city. You’re going to lose Chicago.’ And then we have this ‘la Pritzker’ on television every day. All he does is hit Trump. I said, does he realize last weekend he had 11 people killed and 28 wounded, 28.

Fox and Friends: Doesn’t bother him. He says he’s got the situation handled.

Trump: And he keeps saying, we have no crime problem. The week before — he had a week, we had 72 people injured and like 11 died. But every — if he does five, like you just said, five — that’s a good week. Every weekend they’re losing many people. It’s out of control.

But when this guy, who’s a smart guy here, he head’s a big-the biggest railroad, he said the way he said it. He said, Sir, please don’t lose Chicago. You about we are about to lose Chicago. It’s a great city. You can save Chicago.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

* Washington Post

Memphis is the second-most populous city in Tennessee, behind Nashville. Memphis has historically experienced a high crime rate, though like other major cities, it has seen a drop in crime in recent years.

“Overall crime is at a 25-year low, with robbery, burglary, and larceny also reaching 25-year lows,” the Memphis Police Department said in a news release Tuesday.

Young, the Memphis mayor, acknowledged in a statement to local media Thursday that Trump and Lee were “considering” deploying the National Guard to Memphis.

…Adding… Mayor Johnson…

Mayor Brandon Johnson Response to Trump “would have preferred” to send National Guard to Chicago

“Because of the unified opposition from community leaders and elected officials in Chicago and throughout the state, the Trump administration backed down from its threats of sending in the National Guard to Chicago. We continue to call on the federal government to send additional resources to help us continue to drive down violent crime, but we reject any military occupation of our city. The way to reduce violence is by focusing on the strategies that work: effective policing, violence prevention, and investing in communities.”

* Related…

    CNBC | Trump says National Guard will deploy to Memphis next, sidestepping Chicago: Trump did not explain what legal framework the White House would use to justify a deployment of soldiers to another U.S. city. […] During his interview Friday, Trump criticized California Gov. Gavin Newsom and said he expects to win all the court cases related to the National Guard’s deployment. “We think we’re going to win all of them,′ Trump said. “And we have been winning all of them.”

    * Fox Chicago | Trump pivots, will send National Guard to Memphis instead of Chicago: Trump made the announcement during an interview on Fox News, saying he “would have preferred going to Chicago” but described the city as “hostile” with “professional agitators.” Both Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson opposed the idea of a deployment there.

  35 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Hundreds of hotline calls but no clear arrest numbers days into federal immigration ‘blitz’. Tribune

    - Immigration rights groups have seen a massive spike in hotline calls for legal and other help as federal Homeland Security officials this week launched a much-anticipated immigration enforcement surge in the Chicago area, the groups said Thursday.
    - The executive director at the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights said the group’s family support hotline received 500 calls on Tuesday alone. Before the start of the Trump administration, the hotline received about 100 calls per month.
    -ICIRR did not have an estimate for the number of people detained this week. But the group’s leadership said that more people are being arrested than initially reported by the Trump administration.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Oak Park Journal | State Board of Elections to rule Oct. 21 on $9.8M Harmon campaign fine : The hearing will take place in both the ISBE’s Chicago and Springfield offices and will be live streamed on You Tube. “It should be conclusive,” Matt Dietrich, ISBE spokesman, said of the board meeting, with the caveat, “Barring anything out of the ordinary.”

* Crain’s | Take a photo tour of Gotion’s $2B battery factory in Manteno: The factory floor is massive, bright and surprisingly quiet. Robots do the heavy lifting, and much of the configuring, welding and other work required to create batteries used for industrial and home power storage, electric vehicles and EV chargers. Automated vehicles, which look like industrial-size Roombas, are a constant presence on the factory floor. The assembly line is highly automated. Some workers mind the machines, others interact with them.

* Evanston Now | Service cuts unlikely for PACE in 2026: The three transit operators, PACE, CTA, and Metra still face a combined $771 million fiscal cliff deficit next year, which, if not covered by the state legislature, will mean up to a 40% reduction in bus, “L”, and commuter train operations. However, PACE, which serves Evanston, among other places, apparently has enough unspent federal COVID relief dollars to make it through 2026 without cutting bus routes or frequency.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press release…

Political outsider, former international banker, and public policy expert Ted Dabrowski will make a campaign announcement and outline his plan to offer change, deliver results, and restore Illinois as a national leader for families and businesses.

WHO: Ted Dabrowski, political outsider, former international banker, and public policy expert Ted Dabrowski.

WHAT: Formal campaign announcement with brief remarks. Streamed live on Facebook.com/TedForIllinois/

WHEN:
Friday, September 12, 2025
10:15 a.m.

* WCIA | Illinois’ veto session will have focus on energy, overcoming federal funding cuts: McCombie said her biggest red flags are coming from conversations around energy. “A really bad bill that actually scares me more than any increase in tax because at the end of Illinois, with a policy of bring your own energy,” said McCombie.

* Center Square | IL Secretary of State candidate talks issues, Giannoulias yet to announce: Although Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias has yet to announce plans for reelection in 2026, an Illinois Republican has launched her campaign. Diane Harris is a trustee for Joliet Junior College and the Joliet Public Library. Harris said her main focus is service. “My campaign is based on change and making sure that all Illinoisans have access to DMV services,” Harris told The Center Square.

*** Chicago ***

* Fox Chicago | Poll: Chicago Latinos oppose Johnson and Trump, support more police: According to the results, Latinos are overwhelmingly opposed to both Mayor Brandon Johnson and his ideological opposite, former President Donald Trump. Fourteen percent of respondents said they had a favorable opinion of Johnson, while 65% said they had an unfavorable opinion. Twenty percent said they had a favorable view of Trump, compared with 66% who said they had an unfavorable view. Gov. J.B. Pritzker fared better in the poll: 51% of respondents had a favorable view, while 33% had an unfavorable view.

* Sun-Times | Residents plan flag-waving caravans for Mexican Independence Day weekend as a form of protest: Standing on top of the vehicle was Ricky, a driver who told the Sun-Times that “there will be a few caravans, starting Thursday or Friday, especially with everything going on,” referring to the arrests by ICE and immigration authorities in recent days. “We are not afraid and we are here to speak up and defend those that can’t because of their legal status,” said Ricky, who did not share his last name. “We will represent and defend ours.” He referenced some car clubs that would be participating in an organized way: Rack Em Ent, Santisima Trucking, 660, Los Rusos and La Clika 312.

* WBEZ | How does immigration enforcement work in Chicago?: Immigration authorities primarily operate in three facilities in Chicago: one for court hearings, another for check-in appointments for those being monitored and a third that’s an administrative center. Under the Trump administration, those places have served an additional purpose: to arrest people.

* WBBM | RTA survey: CTA satisfaction lags Pace, Metra: Since 2016, the RTA - which oversees CTA, Metra and Pace has surveyed riders at regular intervals about what they like, what they don’t like, and what they want changed. In that first survey nearly ten years ago, CTA rider satisfaction was around 85%. Now, it’s 70%. During Thursday’s RTA board meeting, agency deputy executive director Maulik Vaishnav spelled out what CTA riders are most concerned about: “Cleanliness, personal security, condition of assets and accuracy of real-time information.” That’s a fancy term for “ghost buses.”

* WGN | Unique Pope Leo painting from Italy gifted to Chicago high school: His work has honored the canonization of Pope John Paul II and John XXIII. But it was another painting that put Pallotta on the map. He mounted the piece called Super Pope on a building near the Vatican. The image went viral, even Pope Francis was a fan.

* Sun-Times | Taste of Chicago will move back to July next year, top cultural official says: Clinée Hedspeth, the head of the Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, said the pause in next year’s NASCAR will allow the city to return the popular food fest to mid-summer.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Chronicle | Addison Township sues former supervisor, three others for ‘misappropriation’ of grant: The Addison Township Board voted Wednesday to sue former Supervisor Dennis Reboletti and three other former officials for allegedly misappropriating more than $78,000 in funds, and using part of it to purchase a pickup truck. According to documents, the money was given to the township for its food pantry. Beside Reboletti, the lawsuit names former township Executive Director Sandy Bays, former Human Services Administrator Darcy D’Alessandro, and former Township Accountant Mary Mattia as defendants.

* Tribune | Federal agents’ vehicles arrive in Evanston to serve warrant: The federal vehicles “received a parking citation from Parking Enforcement,” she wrote, but Deputy City Manager Carina E. Sanchez said Thursday that law enforcement officers associated with the federal vehicles identified themselves as law enforcement to an Evanston parking enforcement employee, and consequently no parking citation was given. […] Evanston police were not informed of any arrests on Wednesday, and had no further contact with the federal agents, Sophier said. EPD did not assist in any operations or investigation, he added.

* Patch | Felony Charges Tied To Elmhurst Politician’s Petition: On Aug. 21, a grand jury indicted 74-year-old Lawrence Moretti of Addison on charges of possession with intent to deliver any document known to be altered or forged, according to DuPage County court records. Last December, Patch reported on problems with the signatures that Moretti purportedly collected for then-mayoral candidate Mark Mulliner’s petition.

* Daily Herald | Federal suit alleges harassment, inappropriate practices in St. Charles Police Department: When longtime St. Charles Police Chief James Keegan resigned in March, after the previous four months on personal leave, city officials heaped praise on his nearly 11-year tenure but wouldn’t explain the reasons behind his departure. However, a lawsuit filed last Friday in U.S. District Court alleges he ran a department where discrimination, sexual harassment and questionable practices took place in the months leading up to his exit.

* Daily Herald | St. Charles city considers new regulations, taxes for short-term rentals like Airbnb: With the goal of reducing short-term rentals’ impact on their neighbors, council members advocated for adding measures that would give the city power to enforce violations, a power the city currently doesn’t hold. […] Taxing short-term rentals would also access untapped revenue for the city. Staff estimated that over $70,000 in possible tax revenue from short-term rentals went uncollected in 2024, based on a 5% tax rate.

* Daily Southtown | Dolton plans celebration for Pope Leo XIV’s 70th birthday on Sunday: House and other village trustees are also focused on efforts to highlight the home and support visitors. With Prevost’s 70th birthday on Sunday, the village will host a program and celebration outside of his childhood home from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., complete with a balloon release and a photo op with a Pope Leo XIV cardboard cutout. House said he hopes to make the party an annual event.

* Crain’s | Highland Park blocks plan to sell million-dollar shares of former Michael Jordan estate: At a Sept. 8 meeting, the city council voted to amend its zoning ordinance to prohibit timeshares in single-family homes. The vote shuts down the plan John Cooper announced in January to sell ownership shares in the gated property he bought from Jordan in December for $9.5 million. Cooper declined Crain’s request for comment this week, but in a July email he wrote that Highland Park officials began looking into whether his proposed use was allowed under zoning regulations. “They are taking the position that my proposed use is not allowed,” he wrote. “I disagree with their assessment.”

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Firefighters call for stronger protections after Champaign crews attacked on duty: Associated Firefighters of Illinois President Chuck Sullivan said what happened in Champaign is part of a broader issue.
“Every 46 hours across the United States, a firefighter or EMS worker is abused. Every nine days, a firefighter is injured severely enough to require hospitalization,” Sullivan said. “Whether it’s Chicago, Clinton, Champaign, or Carbondale, workplace safety has to be a priority.”

* WGLT | Fired CDC worker seeks to rebuild trust in public health at conference in Normal: Public health workers in Bloomington-Normal and across Illinois got a pep talk Thursday from someone who lost her job in public health. Abby Tighe was fired from her “dream” job in overdose prevention at the Centers for Disease Control in February. That’s when the Trump administration fired all probationary workers at the health agency.

* WREX | Two Rockford Hispanic celebrations canceled amid immigration enforcement fears: On Thursday afternoon, 11th Ward Alderman Jaime Salgado posted a statement to socials, saying, “This difficult decision was made due to concerns for our residents’ public safety, stemming from the current climate of immigration enforcement, rhetoric, and the targeting of our Latino residents. The public safety of our community is our main priority, and we have therefore decided on this course of action to protect our residents from any potential safety concerns.

* WQAD | Moline to deploy ‘Goosinator’ to help keep geese out of local parks: The ‘Goosinator’ is a device that designers describe as a combination of a Border Collie and a remote-control boat, meant to safely and nonlethally chase geese from public spaces “Birds can see colors very well so colors like orange, silver and yellow make a lasting impression on most migratory birds. All of the other materials are state-of-the-art and meant to last a very long time,” the Goosinator’s website reads.

*** National ***

* NYT | $10 Million in Contraceptives Have Been Destroyed on Orders From Trump Officials: Internal State Department and U.S.A.I.D. documents and correspondence obtained by The New York Times show that several international organizations, including the Gates Foundation and the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation, had offered to buy or accept a donation of the contraceptives. The government would have incurred no costs or might have even been able to recoup taxpayer funds under those scenarios.

* Korea Economic Daily | Korea’s major US investment projects halted as detained LG Energy workers set for release: The incident has thrown Korea’s flagship investment projects in the US into disarray. Sources said at least 22 other factory sites involving Korean business groups, in autos, shipbuilding, steel and electrical equipment, have been nearly halted.

* NPR | They want COVID shots to protect their health or family. They can’t get them: Jason Mitton wanted one of the new COVID-19 vaccines before leaving on a business trip. But the pharmacists at a drug store near his home in Austin, Texas, refused. “He’s like: ‘Do you have a doctor’s note?’ I said: ‘No, I don’t.’ He said: ‘Well, the FDA standards say that you don’t qualify. And our policy is that we won’t administer it unless you qualify,’” says Mitton. Mitton, who’s 55 and says he has high blood pressure and high cholesterol that’s controlled by medication, plans to keep trying to get vaccinated.

  9 Comments      


Good morning!

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I have a powerful and complicated relationship with this song. I traveled to Kosovo in 1999 to cover the immediate aftermath of the Serbian invasion and the “Great Powers” response. The writing didn’t pay much, but it was exhilarating. I had almost decided not to come back to y’all because I was thoroughly engaged in the work and was convinced I could eventually make a living off foreign reporting - a longtime ambition - but then this song came on the radio.

The coalition headed by the US military had taken control of all the Kosovar radio stations from ethnic Serbians and Albanians to avoid sparking conflicts. The lone station used an automated system, so it had no disc jockeys. I assumed that was done to avoid somebody saying something stupid on-air and causing who knows what sort of retribution and violence. The station played only American music.

* During the war, thousands of ethnic Serbs had forced out ethnic Albanians and seized their homes. I visited several houses after the Serbs were eventually pushed out and saw vicious anti-Albanian, anti-Muslim graffiti painted on the walls, put there by the now-departed Serbs.

The stories I was told and the clear evidence I saw about the Serbian occupation of Kosovo were horrific. But I also had my first up-close look at how false war atrocity rumors could spread by word of mouth for miles around in almost an instant. I canvassed an entire city block after hearing from numerous people in Pristina (including the grandmother of a friend, who said she had seen it with her own eyes) about a Kosovar being shot by allied troops in a town about 20 miles away. Everyone I talked to in that town insisted it didn’t happen. It’s a lesson I will never forget. Never automatically believe war rumors, even if a friend’s lovely grandma tells you one.

* A friend I made while driving through southeastern Europe was killed by bandits during a diamond smuggling run in neighboring Albania (yes, I know it sounds crazy, but I wasn’t involved, because if I was I wouldn’t be telling you this story today /s). Another friend I’d met on the trip (the one with the grandma) had been an ethnic Albanian fighter in Kosovo before the war. He was badly injured in that same diamond run attack and was hospitalized in a rural Albanian hospital with a 24/7 police guard, charged with my other friend’s murder. The cops justified the charge because, they concluded, he’d been driving the car when it was chased off a cliff by AK-toting bandits. He was eventually freed after arranging payment to the proper authorities.

Albania was wild back then, man. In Kosovo, military coalition members were literally everywhere. If there was a problem, you could easily find help. Albania was basically in a civil war and you couldn’t ask anyone for help. The cops were iffy at best, the militias were in league with various bandit groups and the foreign military had moved on to Kosovo. We were on our own.

* After I don’t know how many hours of driving with an ethnic Kosovar who lived in Germany and who’d offered to be my translator even though he spoke no English, I eventually found the hospital my friend had been transferred to (no ashtrays, just throw your cigarettes on the floor) with pigs grazing in the courtyard (it was a Christian hospital in an Islamic region) and very near the police station on the little town square.

Unbeknownst to me, the police station was attacked every night by armed rebels. I had parked my German rental car in front of the station, mistakenly thinking it would be a safe spot. A hospital doctor immediately grabbed my key and moved my rental car to an out of the way location after he found out what I’d done. He looked at me like I was crazy.

The doctor also insisted I stay at the hospital instead of the local hotel, which was overrun by the rebels every night. It was a certain death sentence, he warned. I complied.

* My hospital room gave me a clear view of the nightly rebels vs. police firefight, both outside my window and then inside the emergency room, which was a few feet from my room. Tracers were flying and the screaming wounded from both sides piled up in the hallway.

It sounds silly to say, but I felt relieved during the firefight that the doctor had moved my car. I had asked my mom, who was with the US Department of Defense in Germany at the time and was doing some Kosovo logistics, to vouch for me with a German rental car company. Without her word, nobody would rent me a car to drive into a war zone. She would’ve been put in a mighty sticky wicket if I had brought it back riddled with bullet holes. Never do that to your mom.

* Anyway, before I ventured into Albania, I was driving aimlessly through the Kosovo countryside grieving my murdered friend and my missing friend and my not great life back home when this tune came on the radio. I immediately pulled the car over and listened. The song convinced me to give my Illinois life one more shot and I eventually went home

And I dreamed your dream for you and now your dream is real

I was also arrested in Serbia during that trip for illegal entry and suspicion of being an American spy. I was put on trial and expelled from the country. The story I wrote about that ordeal is not online (and probably never was), but I’ll see if I can find it in my own archives someday.

* Sorry, this post kinda got away from me. What’s up with you?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Sep 12, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Sep 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Yesterday, during an unrelated news conference, Gov. JB Pritzker said executive action may be an option to regulate hemp

Pritzker: I’m deeply concerned, I think some of you know, about intoxicating hemp in this state. And we are going to have to do something, either legislatively or from the executive branch, to stop the sale of intoxicating hemp at without any regulation whatsoever in this state. It literally is making our children sick, and it is a shame on legislators and on this state that we are not already doing something about it. We need help from the legislature to make it happen, or if not, we may need to impose executive authority to try to shut those sales of intoxicating hemp down.

Crain’s

A bill that passed the Illinois Senate last year would have allowed intoxicating hemp, also known as delta-8, to be sold only by licensed dispensaries, as well as requiring testing and labeling.

Some opponents viewed it as a giveaway to the cannabis industry. The hemp industry is hardly monolithic and includes shops selling CBD products and retailers who sell products with THC levels rivaling recreational marijuana, as well as THC beverage makers. Some favor regulation but others do not. The battle over how or whether to regulate the industry resulted in an intense lobbying campaign in the Capitol. […]

Exactly what Pritzker could do by executive order is unclear. The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation and the Department of Agriculture regulate the sale and production of marijuana, but cannabis industry regulations were created by statute. […]

“We very much want regulation: 21 and over, labeling, testing — all the things the governor is interested in,” [Craig Katz, a board member of the trade group Illinois Healthy Alternatives Association,] said. “It’s a question of reaching the right method of achieving that goal. (The previous bill) would have killed the hemp businesses in the state.”

When asked what specific executive authority the governor has to regulate hemp, Pritzker spokesperson Matt Hill told me yesterday: “The Governor has a wide range of executive authority to protect public health and consumer interests.” He did not elaborate.

* Illinois Answers Project

For decades, county treasurers in Illinois have collected unpaid property tax bills by selling the debt to private investors. If homeowners behind on their taxes fail to repay the debt plus interest, those investors can get the deed to their homes. In those cases, the homeowners lose the entire value of their residences, even though they often owe only a fraction of that amount.

In 2023, the Supreme Court ruled that such actions are unconstitutional. A Minnesota homeowner argued that Hennepin County violated her Fifth Amendment rights by taking her home and pocketing more than the $15,000 she owed in back taxes. Following the ruling, states rushed to reform their laws to avoid legal fallout.

All except Illinois, where serious efforts continue to flounder in the statehouse as competing special interests clash over the best route to reform. […]

Last fall, a federal judge allowed to move forward a lawsuit by suburban homeowners against officials in eight Illinois counties, citing a loss of millions of dollars in home equity in tax sale seizures.

This spring, many of those same officials sued the state of Illinois which, they say, left them vulnerable to litigation because they haven’t reformed the law. […]

“This is a crisis, and something needs to be done,” said Rep. Will Guzzardi, who sponsored a reform bill. “We weren’t able to come to consensus by the end of session on what that something should be.”

At the last minute, legislators did manage to pass a bill delaying the county’s fall tax sale until next March. In a statement, [Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas] said she advocated for the delay to give lawmakers more time to craft a solution. But attorneys argue that the delay won’t stop the lawsuits already in motion.

* Daily Herald

Developers of a $500 million data center looking to build in Batavia have promised an efficient cooling system to cut down on water usage, which the city has capped at 1,000 gallons per day. […]

As part of a contract the city council approved on Sept. 2, the data center will be limited to 1,000 gallons of water per day on average. […]

Mayor Jeff Shielke said the proposal still has a long way to go before final approval. He was not concerned with water usage but said many questions remain unanswered. […]

“The negotiations for the data center have missed, and continue to miss, many opportunities,” said Batavia resident Susan Russo, who is not against the proposal.

But the city failed to define its source of electricity, educate the public and engage energy experts in the process, she said.

*** Statewide ***

* WMBD | IDNR opens bids for farm leases to aid conservation efforts: The Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) is accepting sealed bids this fall for about 20 agricultural lease contracts for crop years 2026-2030. […] The total number of acres up for leasing is unclear; the lease sites are on different schedules. The 20 or so locations up for lease renewal are in the pool of 125 lease sites located throughout more than half of the state’s 102 counties. A check of the website shows the chief use of the acres up for lease includes grain, hay, sunflowers, pasture, and cover crops.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Politico | RFK Jr.’s vaccine crackdown sparks a rebellion among blue-state governors: JB Pritzker is exploring ways to stockpile Covid shots in Illinois. Kathy Hochul signed an executive order protecting vaccine access in New York. Maura Healey is requiring insurers in Massachusetts cover the costs of injections recommended by her health department, regardless of federal guidelines As Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s health department curtails access to the Covid-19 vaccine and mulls restricting the availability of others, Democratic governors are forming a bulwark against him as they take on an issue that has strong public support ahead of the pivotal 2026 midterms.

* Insurance Business Mag | Legislative action on Illinois homeowners’ insurance may backfire, Triple-I warns: “While calls for rate regulation may appear politically appealing, it is critically important to appreciate that recent increasing insurance rates are a reflection of the risk, rather than the cause,” said Sean Kevelighan, CEO of Triple-I. He added that premium increases are driven by genuine and rising costs, including natural disasters, inflationary pressures, and misuse of the legal system. He also noted that Illinois residents pay less than the national average for insurance, which points to a relatively stable market with strong competition.

* Press Release | Attorney General Raoul Files Brief To Defend Workers From Unjust Discrimination By Employers: ttorney General Kwame Raoul, as part of a coalition of 20 attorneys general, today filed an amicus brief in support of Ellenor Zinski, a former employee of Liberty University. The brief, filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit in Zinski v. Liberty University, urges the court to affirm Zinski’s right to sue her former employer for sex-based discrimination after Liberty fired her upon learning of her identity as a transgender woman.

* Illinois Times | New law increases mental health access for college students: As part of efforts to increase mental health care across the state, Gov. JB Pritzker signed a law last month requiring public colleges and universities to have a certain number of mental health professionals available to students. University of Illinois Springfield, one of the state’s smaller public universities, is in line with the new mandated ratio of one counselor for every 1,250 students enrolled. Bethany Bilyeu, a counselor and executive director of student support services at UIS, said the university is uniquely positioned to offer counseling services without session limits or a waitlist.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson seeks $90 million in settlement of suits tied to corrupt cop: The first-of-its-kind deal, first uncovered by the Tribune in federal court records, would settle all outstanding wrongful conviction cases involving Sgt. Ronald Watts, according to Corporation Counsel Mary Richardson-Lowry. The top Johnson attorney said the massive payout is “the responsible thing to do,” arguing it could save the city as much as $400 million compared to the cost of settling the cases individually or taking them to court. “We spent a lot of years kicking cans down the road,” Richardson-Lowry said. “We cannot carry that burden further. We have to solve for these cases… We have to close that chapter.”

* WTTW | Will Chicago Cops Be Allowed to Turn Off Body-Worn Cameras While Being Questioned After Shootings? Judge to Decide: A federal judge is set to decide whether Chicago police officers can turn off their body-worn cameras while being questioned by their supervisor immediately after they shoot a member of the public, court records show. Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office urged U.S. District Court Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer to order CPD officers to keep their cameras on “in the immediate aftermath of an officer-involved shooting or death” over the objections of CPD leaders and city lawyers.

* Block Club | Downtown Streets Could Close During Mexican Independence Day Celebrations, City Warns: For years, car caravans of revelers have flooded Downtown during Mexican Independence Day weekend, causing traffic snarls and congested streets. Last year, the city temporarily closed off the Central Business District to most traffic to stem the flow of caravans and limit public partying. The city’s emergency management department is ready to do the same thing this weekend and into next week, if necessary, according to a Thursday news release. Mexican Independence Day is Tuesday.

* Sun-Times | Officials demand answers from Noem, Hegseth on Naval Station Great Lakes’ use for immigration arrests: The letter said the Defense Department’s reliance on “verbal agreements” for base support was “easily susceptible to mission creep, difficult to communicate widely to all parties involved and not transparent or accountable to the taxpayers and their elected representatives.” It requests confirmation that no more base resources will be diverted to the operation, that it won’t house “DHS-managed lethal munitions” or anyone detained by the agencies, that troops stationed there will not be asked to assist in immigration enforcement and that federal officials will wear “clear labels” identifying themselves while in Illinois.

* The Bond Buyer | Chicago GO bonds cheapen: Chicago’s general obligation bonds have cheapened in recent weeks despite a broader municipal market rally as the city’s junk-rated school district comes to market and investors watch to see how leaders manage a substantial budget deficit, rising pension costs and chronic negative headlines from the Trump administration.

* Block Club | SW Side In ‘Trouble’ If Warehouse Park Doesn’t Replace Ford City Mall, Ald. Says As Some Neighbors Oppose Plan: Ald. Curtis, whose ward includes Ford City Mall, called the development a “good project” that will fulfill the community’s need for economic development and provide up to 1,000 jobs. Namdar Realty Group, a private real estate firm based in New York, purchased Ford City Mall in 2019 and have become “slumlords,” Curtis said. […] Despite its years-long decline, Curtis hasn’t contacted any other companies to repurpose Ford City Mall because it’s such a large development, he said. Bridge Industrial is the only company that has approached him to purchase and redevelop it, Curtis said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WJOL | Hollywood Casino Joliet Has Generated 11.2 Million Dollars In Its First Weeks Of Operation: According to the Chicago Tribune, Hollywood Casino rose to fifth among the state’s 17 in adjusted gross receipts and had more than 101,000 visitors. Rivers Casino captured the top spot by generating nearly $42 million. Other strong August performers included Wind Creek at $17.1 million, Grand Victoria Casino at $12.6 million, Bally’s Chicago at $11.3 million, Hollywood Casino Joliet at $11.2 million, Harrah’s Joliet at $11 million, and Full House Resorts Illinois at $11 million.

* Evanston Roundtable | Officials grapple with whether library should get a cut of tax fund: The issue came up in a discussion during the city’s Finance & Budget Committee meeting Tuesday on a proposal to establish an escrow fund to deposit funds from the tax — which climbed to close to $6 million in annual revenues at one point — dedicating that money to meet the city’s stiff public pension contributions.

* Shaw Local | Joliet District 86 Superintendent Rouse to step down in 2027: “The Board is grateful to Dr. Rouse for the direction and initiatives that she has provided for the district to date, including increasing student achievement, providing leadership for the construction of two new junior high schools, and fostering a climate of inclusion,” the district said in a statement released Thursday. The board also expressed appreciation for the advanced notice, so the process of finding a successor for the 2027-2028 school year can begin.

* Daily Southtown | Tinley Park officials recognize the 24th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks: About 30 Tinley Park firefighters and officials stood next to a steel beam from the World Trade Center towers Thursday for a Patriot Day Ceremony recognizing the 24th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks against the United States. […] The steel beam, which Tinley officials and residents gathered around, was recovered from the twin towers and brought to Tinley Park in 2011. It rests outside Station 46, and the annual observance is usually held near the beam.

*** Downstate ***

* NPR Illinois | UIS enrollment drops due to fewer international students: Total enrollment at UIS after the first 10 days of classes is 4,364, down from 4,628 last fall. Officials point to fewer international students which was the bulk of the drop. UIS enrolled 638 international graduate students this fall, compared to 875 in 2024. Undergraduate international enrollment also fell slightly, with 77 students enrolled this year, down from 82.

* BND | SWIC spending $62M on capital projects, but withholds key details: The plans include construction of a multiuse building for the SWIC Police Academy, which is housed at the former Main Street campus of Belleville West High School and Lindenwood University. Tebbe said the project also includes a special needs school and vocational school at the Red Bud campus, and meeting records show the project will also include systemwide renovations to existing buildings and other unspecified capital improvements. […] Board documents and Tebbe’s statement provided a broad overview of the project, but omitted key details such as construction timelines and specific funding allocations. Key aspects — including how the $62 million figure was determined and the bond repayment timeline — remain unclear.

* WCIA | Champaign’s Black Dog eyes Saturday to reopen: “Truthfully, the most important thing is just being open each and every day for the staff,” Mike Cochran said. “The biggest thing for us is making sure that all our people are able to work and make money. You know, the game days are nice. They are a little bit more for everybody, but you know, our every day is enough.”

*** National ***

* AP | Supreme Court to quickly consider if President Donald Trump has power to impose sweeping tariffs: The court agreed to take up an appeal from the Trump administration after lower courts found most of his tariffs illegal. The small businesses and states that challenged them also agreed to the accelerated timetable. They say Trump’s import taxes on goods from almost every country in the world have nearly driven their businesses to bankruptcy. “Congress, not the President alone, has the power to impose tariffs,” attorney Jeffrey Schwab with the Liberty Justice Center said.

* NYT | Yes, Your Morning Coffee Has Gotten More Expensive: Coffee prices rose 20.9 percent from the same time last year, the largest jump since the 1990s, according to the Consumer Price Index, released on Thursday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In August alone, the price of coffee rose 3.6 percent.

* Harvest Public Media | When will beef prices drop? We asked a rancher, a butcher and an economist: From his corner booth at the Barton Creek Farmers Market, Jim Richardson sells beef, pork, chicken, eggs, milk and cheese. His beef products include stew meat, steak and ground beef. And lately they’ve become pricier. “I went up roughly a dollar a pound,” Richardson said. “My processor went up that much or more. So without kind of keeping up, it erodes your profitability.” Richardson Farms isn’t the only purveyor that’s had to raise beef prices recently, either. The average retail price of beef, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, is now $9.69 per pound – the highest ever.

* New Republic | Trump’s Own Tweet Backfires on Him as Judge Delivers Harsh Loss on Fed: Yet buried in the ruling is an amusing tidbit worth highlighting: Judge Jia Cobb cited one of Trump’s own tweets to buttress the case that he’d acted unlawfully. The judge wrote that the timing of Trump’s initial tweet calling for Cook to resign suggested she’d been denied due process. Which opens a window into a bigger story: The lower courts are doing important work in creating concrete fact sets around Trump’s illegal actions that illustrate the deep rot of bad faith eating away at their core—thus exposing an essential element of his ongoing lawlessness.

* CNBC | Consumer prices rose at annual rate of 2.9% in August, as weekly jobless claims jump: For the vital core reading that excludes food and energy, the August gain was 0.3%, putting the 12-month figure at 3.1%, both as forecast. Fed officials consider core to be a better gauge of long-run trends. The central bank’s inflation target is 2%.

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Pritzker says Bears must agree to pay off stadium debt before property tax relief

Thursday, Sep 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Gov. JB Pritzker’s press conference yesterday

Q: Bears CEO says they’re focused on Arlington Heights. They’re going to build a stadium without state help. They need legislators to give them property tax relief. What have you said? What conversations have you had with the Bears about that? And have you seen a property tax proposal that you’re willing to support?

Pritzker: So first, the state of Illinois, I think, as you know, believes that, you know, private businesses should be partners with the state wherever we can help them. That includes the Chicago Bears. It includes lots of other businesses. We provided lots of incentives and worked with them to provide infrastructure, etc.

Second, I have said directly to the Bears in the past, I want them to stay in the city of Chicago. That doesn’t mean they’re going to, they’re a private business. They can go wherever they would like to go. But I would like them to stay in the city of Chicago, partly because I’m a Bears fan, and I would like them to be somewhere nearby for Chicago fans who live in Chicago.

And lastly, I, you know, I’m going to, I have not talked to the Bears recently, so this is not from anything that’s happened in the last, I don’t know, several weeks. Actually haven’t had any conversation with them. They’ve not come to talk to me about it. But look, first, we need the Bears to pay off what’s owed on the existing stadium. So that’s going to be a really important feature of whatever happens going forward. And if they want a PILOT [payment in lieu of taxes] bill or some other help, we’re going to make that a prerequisite for something like that happening.

* Crain’s

The Bears have been seeking legislation in Springfield that would allow payment in lieu of taxes, or PILOT, a tool that would allow companies to freeze their property tax breaks and negotiate an annual payment in lieu of their regular rate.

Such legislation would help all so-called megaprojects, or those totaling $500 million or more, not just the Bears. But it would be central to the Bears’ plan to build a stadium in Arlington Heights, which the team is indicating is more likely than staying in the city of Chicago. […]

The Illinois Sports Facilities Authority still owes $534.4 million in combined principal and interest debt tied to Solder Field renovations that were made in 2003. The authority has another $48.3 million tied to what is now Rate Field, the home of the Chicago White Sox. […]

State Rep. Kam Buckner told Crain’s the governor’s comments are “aligned with what many of us have been saying for a long time, including in some overtures from (Pritzker), and that is that the Bears have some unfinished business here in the city, to at least have a public conversation” about them getting Springfield help to move to Arlington Heights.

* Tribune

The Bears also want to get a piece of the expanded sales tax revenue their stadium would generate over the racecourse.

Discuss.

  51 Comments      


Charlie Kirk

Thursday, Sep 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* There is not enough time in the day to moderate comments on an issue like this…


There are a kabillion other places to point fingers and tear each other apart over this murder. I decided last night that we’d just post stories.

* So, here’s a news roundup compiled by Isabel…

    * Politico | Friends worried about Charlie Kirk’s safety: “Those of us who love and care about Charlie have been worried about his safety,” Illinois businessman Gary Rabine said in a text statement. Rabine was an early backer of Turning Point USA, which Kirk cofounded in 2012 to bring conservative ideas to college campuses. “I have watched him over the past 13 years become the greatest leader behind positive change in our college universities and our country,” said Rabine, who ran for governor in 2022. “Terrible tragedy,” said former Gov. Bruce Rauner, another early donor to Turning Point noting Kirk was part of his 2014 rise to Springfield. Rauner described the young activist as “bright, talented and charismatic.”

    * Shaw Local | Illinois politicians mourn Charlie Kirk, who was from Chicago suburbs, after shooting death: Illinois Democratic County Chairs Association President Mark Guethle, who also chairs the Kane County Democratic Party, said in part in a statement: “We are shocked and horrified by what seems to have been a politically motivated murder, and we extend our deepest sympathy to Charlie’s wife and family, as well as the students and community members who had to endure this tragic event.” State Rep. Jeff Keicher, whose district includes parts of DeKalb, Kane and McHenry counties, said in part on Facebook: “This young man, an Illinoisan by birth, empowered open, peaceful dialogue on complex issues across our nation’s college campuses, which has been long overdue. Violence is never the answer to political differences. We must get back to being able to disagree without espousing hate toward one another.”

    * SJ-R | Pritzker: ‘Attack on Charlie Kirk is horrifying’; Illinois officials react to Kirk’s death: “The attack on Charlie Kirk is horrifying,” Gov. JB Prtizker posted on Facebook. “Political violence has no place in this country and should never become the norm. I’m sending my sympathies to his family and friends at this time.”U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin expressed similar sentiment. “Political violence is wrong—no matter the ideology it stems from,” he posted on Facebook. It has zero place in our country. My thoughts are with Charlie Kirk and his family.” Conservative activist and Turning Point USA cofounder Charlie Kirk addresses a Utah Valley University event in Orem on Sept. 10, 2025, when he was fatally shot. Livestream video of the event showed crowds of people running from the university’s courtyard where Kirk, 31, was speaking when the shooting occurred.

    * Center Square | Pritzker says political violence ‘has got to stop’ in reaction to Kirk shooting: “First, I want to express my sympathy to Charlie Kirk’s family and to Charlie Kirk, who obviously, has, you know, become a target for somebody,” Pritzker said. “I don’t know whether it’s political violence because I don’t know who did it. I know they seem to have somebody in custody, but I will say that political violence, unfortunately, has been ratcheting up in this country.” Pritzker said political violence is not acceptable. “We saw the shootings. The killings in Minnesota. We’ve seen other political violence, occur in other states. And I would just say, it’s got to stop,” Pritzker said. “And I think there are people who are fomenting it in this country.”

    * ILGOP…

    On Wednesday, immediately following the assassination of Charlie Kirk, Governor Pritzker doubled down on the violent political rhetoric the left is known for, and blamed President Trump for the despicable, violent act that occurred in Utah. Speaking to reporters, Pritzker said that, “there are people who are fomenting it in this country. I think the president’s rhetoric often foments it.”

    ILGOP Chair Kathy Salvi released the following statement:

    “JB Pritzker is a despicable human being for using this tragedy to take political shots and launch his campaign for president. Not only are these comments dangerous and unacceptable, but Pritzker seemingly ignores the fact that left-wing shooters attempted to assassinate President Trump during the 2024 campaign. Political violence has no place in this country and the ILGOP continues to pray for Charlie Kirk’s family.”

    Don’t Forget: in April, Pritzker stoked a New Hampshire crowd in calling for political violence against Republicans, saying that “Republicans cannot know a moment of peace.”

    * Fox Chicago | Illinois leaders call Charlie Kirk shooting ‘horrifying,’ condemn political violence: Illinois House Minority Leader Tony McCombie also issued a statement: “My heart is broken, and I am angry. Charlie Kirk was assassinated in a senseless act of violence. My prayers are with his family, friends, and all who loved him. “It is deeply disturbing that hatred has escalated to the point where lives are being stolen. That this happened while he was speaking on political violence at a university, a place that should be dedicated to free speech and the open exchange of ideas, makes it even more tragic. If ideas cannot be debated on campus without fear of violence, we have truly lost our way.”

    * WCIA | Illinois politicians react to deadly shooting of Charlie Kirk: “I’m absolutely, heartbroken for as for his family, his wife and his two young babies.” said State Rep. Blaine Wilhour. Kathy Salvi, the Chair of the Illinois Republican Party, released the following statement in a news release: Our hearts are broken over the tragic death of Charlie Kirk. Charlie’s work for Republicans in Illinois and across the country was invaluable. Charlie gave an important and unique voice to young people across the country and engaged in thoughtful, open, and honest dialogue that our country desperately needs. Political violence has no place in this country and we continue to pray for Charlie’s family.

    * WCBU | Illinois elected leaders decry killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk: In a social media post, 16th District U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood, R-Ill., asked followers to join him in praying for Kirk and his family. “The rise in political violence across our country is abhorrent. This vile attack on [Kirk] must be condemned in the strongest possible terms and justice must be served,” LaHood wrote on X.com. LaHood later followed his post with a media statement saying political violence has become too common in the U.S.

    * WGLT | McLean County, Illinois political leaders decry killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk: “We lost a great man to senseless violence,” the McLean County Republican Party said in a statement on social media. “His death is a blow against free speech and freedom of thought. We must continue to pursue free speech and truth and not allow the violence stop that mission.” The McLean County Democratic Party called the shooting “horrific and wrong.”

    * PJ Star | Charlie Kirk, Illinois native and conservative influencer, dies after Utah shooting: Before the announcement of Kirk’s death, Durbin’s colleague, Tammy Duckworth, said that the attack was “horrifying” and shouldn’t happen in the U.S. “It does not matter which side you are on. There is simply no place for political violence in this country,” Duckworth said. “This is horrifying and should not happen in America.”

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Competition Works: Lower Bills. Reliable Power. Say NO To Right Of First Refusal

Thursday, Sep 11, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois families are sweating through heat and higher electricity bills this summer. Across the Midwest, some relief from energy inflation is in the forecast. Thanks to competitive bidding, dramatically lower costs have resulted compared to no-bid Right of First Refusal (ROFR) proposals.

Here’s the proof:

    $87 Million Saved
    Fairport to Denny Transmission Line (MISO – Missouri)

      • Competitive bidding cut MISO’s initial estimate from $161 million to just $74 million – saving Missouri Customers millions!
    $6 Million Saved
    Reid EHV to IN/KY Border Transmission Project (MISO)

      • Open competition saved customers $6 million upfront
      • Delivered long-term cost savings
    $14 Million Saved
    Matheson–Redbud Transmission Line (SPP – Oklahoma)

      • Competition delivered $14 million in savings
      • Provided a superior engineering solution compared to other proposals

In many cases, incumbent utilities won these bids, proving that when they compete with other qualified builders, consumers win. It saves money and drives better results.

Competition Works.

Legislators should choose competition and protect Illinois families.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news

Thursday, Sep 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Sep 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Gov. Pritzker ‘glad’ Trump shifting focus from sending National Guard to Chicago: ‘We don’t need them’. Sun-Times

    - Trump on Tuesday night told reporters that he would focus on sending the guard to another city and said he is working with a governor “who would love us to be there.” The president has yet to announce which city he was referencing.
    - “I’m not convinced that we’re not going to see military troops on the ground,” Pritzker said at a Chicago press briefing on Wednesday. “We don’t know. I mean, I wish the president would again recognize that military troops in American cities are something that just doesn’t belong. And he should not be ordering them into American cities.”
    - But the governor emphasized that a president-led military presence in the city is still a possibility, and more U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raid activity is likely on the way.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Timothy Evans out as Cook County chief judge after 24 years: Beach, the newly elected Cook County’s Circuit Court chief judge, received 144 votes to Evans’ 109, or about 57% of the votes cast by circuit judges; one ballot was “spoiled,” the spokesperson said. Beach will serve a three-year term starting Dec. 1.

* Capitol News Illinois | Under emergency rule, Illinois prisons begin withholding physical mail: Under the rule that went into effect Aug. 14, IDOC will electronically scan mail and provide a digital copy or paper copy to an incarcerated person. The rule also specifies that books, magazines and other publications can only come through the prison’s mailroom from the publisher. After a series of incidents last fall that left dozens of correctional personnel hospitalized after exposure to substances or overdoses in the prison population, IDOC introduced the rule under pressure from Republicans and the prison workers’ union.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | ‘We represent the entire state:’ Del Mar joins Bailey on GOP governor’s ticket: Conservative farmer Bailey from downstate Xenia, who contested Gov. JB Pritzker in 2022, will head the ticket. Del Mar will take another shot at lieutenant governor, the Palatine resident confirmed Wednesday. “I bring a deep understanding of what matters most to voters in Chicago and the suburbs, while Darren brings the perspective and values of southern and central Illinois,” said Del Mar, the Cook County GOP Chair and Palatine Township’s highway commissioner. “Together, we represent the entire state.”

* NPR | Why Gov. Pritzker says Trump’s threats to Chicago make him worry about 2026 elections: The Court, without explanation, overturned a lower court ruling that found immigration agents engaged in racial profiling on the streets of Los Angeles. One of the justices in the Court’s conservative majority, Brett Kavanaugh, argued that it was reasonable to question people who worked at construction sites or spoke English poorly. “You think they’re questioning them? Because that’s not what any of us are seeing in any of the bystander videos that have been made. People are being grabbed,” Pritzker said. “You shouldn’t have to walk around with papers the way that they did in the early days of Nazi Germany to prove that you belong and that you’re not one of them. And that is essentially the kind of country that we’re becoming.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Plea deal ends career of Chicago police officer who struck 14-year-old student: Craig Lancaster, 56, was placed on 18 months’ supervision and ordered to undergo eight hours of anger management as part of a plea deal in which prosecutors reduced the original felony charge of aggravated battery to misdemeanor disorderly conduct. Lancaster also agreed to voluntarily decertify as a police officer, ending his nearly 30 years of service to the Chicago Police Department. He was indicted in late 2023 after the Tribune published a video that showed Lancaster striking 14-year-old JaQuwaun Williams near his throat as the boy walked into Gresham Elementary School that May.

* Block Club | South Siders Demand Jobs Under South Works Quantum Campus Community Benefits Agreement: Coalition members announced the latest community benefits agreement proposal, which features employment, environmental and anti-displacement measures, during a town hall Tuesday at the Salud Center, 3039 E. 91st St. in South Chicago. The proposal aims to “make sure that our voices are heard, our concerns are addressed and our requirements are met,” Renee Nowlin, a member of the KECS Block Club Association in the 7th Ward, said during Tuesday’s town hall.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools wants to tighten up employees’ use of paid time off: The Chicago Board of Education is considering tightening up paid time off policies for CPS employees, including requiring more notice for taking off for religious holidays and adding explicit language that says CPS can fire employees who misuse sick days. The district also proposed changes to bring its sick leave policies for non-union employees into alignment with new City of Chicago policies. CPS is proposing the changes for approval at its board meeting on Sept. 25.

* Sun-Times | Chicago pedestrian ways violate ADA requirements, lawsuit alleges: The lawsuit claims the city is riddled with “deteriorated, cracked, crumbling, sunken, uplifted, uneven,” sidewalks, crosswalks, curb ramps and other pedestrian passages. It specifically alleges that the city is in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act, a landmark law enacted in 1990 that requires cities to ensure people living with mobility disabilities have equal access to public ways and buildings. It also alleges the city is violating Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which prohibits discrimination based on disability.

* Sun-Times | Lot full of apparently legally parked cars towed during Bears game: ‘I couldn’t believe it’: On Wednesday, Matty received a message from SpotHero apologizing for their “egregious mistake.” The message said they were “happy to add $250 credit” to her SpotHero account. Additionally, they said they would refund the cost of her SpotHero reservation, and be reimbursed for the tow costs. Fans who parked in the lot booked their placement through parking app SpotHero and had no issues when it came to arriving at the lot, several of the affected drivers told the Chicago Sun-Times. Many had their spots reserved until 11:15 p.m. and arrived before the expiration time to find the lot empty.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Feds seize vape products from Bensenville warehouse: U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi, standing by a display of some of the items, said the materials were produced in China and “smuggled” into the United States, evading federal regulations regarding disclosing what chemicals are in the products. The seizure at Midwest Goods, also known as Midwest Distribution, was part of a national campaign carried out Wednesday in five states at distributors and stores. She said the sellers of vaping products target children, young adults and U.S. military personnel.

* Daily Herald | Cook Co. invests more than $1.5 million in suburban biking infrastructure: Cook County boosted biking to the tune of over $1.5 million when Board President Toni Preckwinkle and Cook County Department of Transportation and Highways recently announced Invest In Cook grants for five suburbs and the Forest Preserve District. Oak Forest, Oak Lawn, Oak Park and Streamwood earned project construction funds while design funds were awarded to Niles and the forest preserve’s Des Plaines/Salt Creek Trail system. Nearly $8.3 million was granted for 32 transportation-related projects this year.

* Daily Southtown | Oak Lawn regulates use of e-scooters and e-bikes as popularity grows: The village voted 6-0 on Tuesday in favor of updating traffic code to define e-bikes and e-scooters and restrict riders’ ages, motor wattage and riding locations. “We’ve all experienced some type of incident involving the scooters throughout the village of Oak Lawn,” Mayor Terry Vorderer said Wednesday. He said his own recent experience included a close call with a child on a scooter riding alongside his vehicle in the dark. “Thank God I caught him out of the corner of my eye, because he had no wherewithal of what he was doing and I slammed on the brakes,” Vorderer said.

* Aurora Beacon-News | New hire in Aurora’s legal department sparks debate at City Council meeting: Aurora Mayor John Laesch has said the city is facing a nearly $30 million shortfall in the 2026 budget, which is currently being developed. One of the ways Laesch is working to bridge that gap is by putting in place what he has called a “hiring slushie,” as opposed to a full hiring freeze. That means the city is not hiring any new employees, even for currently-open positions or positions that become empty when an employee leaves, unless first approved by the mayor’s office, Laesch has said. Aurora’s Corporation Council Yordana Wysocki said at Tuesday’s meeting that she’s looking to bring in a new lawyer to deal with labor and employment matters, which the city currently contracts out at a cost of over $300,000 each year. The new part-time employee would instead cost the city around $164,000 each year, which includes both salary and benefits, according to numbers city staff shared at the meeting.

* Daily Herald | 9/11 remembered with fields of flags; World Trade Center survivor to speak in Naperville: Laura Murphy worked in the North Tower of the World Trade Center and descended 59 floors to escape. She is scheduled to speak Thursday evening during a ceremony at the Cmdr. Dan Shanower Sept. 11 Memorial along the Naperville Riverwalk. Shanower, a Naperville native and Naval intelligence officer, died at his post in the Pentagon. The memorial’s theme was inspired by an article written by Shanower.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora area events to mark anniversary of Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks: In Aurora, a remembrance ceremony open to the public will be held beginning at 7:30 a.m. Thursday at Aurora Central Fire Station at 75 N. Broadway in downtown Aurora. Aurora Fire Chief Dave McCabe will speak, followed by the presentation of colors and the Pipes and Drums of the Aurora Police Department, city officials said. Aurora Mayor John Laesch will speak at the event, as will Aurora Police Chief Matt Thomas.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Peppers sought from local gardeners for community hot sauce to benefit Batavia food pantry: The local producer of well over 400 flavors of hot sauce launched the first collaborative effort back in 2023 with a sauce dubbed Fire on the Fox, which sold all of the roughly 250 bottles that were made and raised nearly $1,300 for the food pantry, Gindo’s officials said. Company officials said the name of last year’s sauce called Fire on the Fox Vol 2 Hot 2 Handle proved to be prophetic in some respects as some consumers did, in fact, find it a bit too fiery.

*** Downstate ***

* Crain’s | Northern Illinois University sees enrollment jump, cuts deficit: Northern Illinois University announced a bump in its fall enrollment, a good sign for a school working to eliminate a $31.8 million deficit it reported in fiscal year 2024. The school welcomed 2,435 new freshmen this fall, a 22% jump over last year and the second-largest freshman class since 2014. Overall enrollment is up to 16,078 students, a 4% increase compared to the previous year.

* WCIA | So far, so good: Danville High School’s new phone policy in its third week: The pouches — made by Yondr — are the same ones used at some concerts where artists don’t want the crowd videotaping or photographing their performance. They are locked by pushing a green pin at the top of the pouch and unlocked with a special magnet as students leave the building at the end of the day. […] “There’s been a market increase in student discussions, assignment turn in rates have already gone up,” Bretz said. “You will see a lot of students playing cards, uno, far more students are reading books in the cafeteria.”

* WGLT | Mayor Brady soothes zoning worries and calls for talks on shared sales tax: Brady said during a WGLT interview on Sound Ideas the text amendments are limited in scope and the report is not one size fits all. “This report is not aimed at or will be allowed to go into subdivisions and make significant changes that would hamper not only that subdivision, but would reduce property value and make something dangerous on the side of parking,” said Brady. “I also don’t see the report taking any foothold anywhere without additional council action.”

* WGLT | Green infrastructure could help reduce flooding and water pollution in Bloomington-Normal: In an effort to modernize wastewater and storm water treatment, the Bloomington-Normal Water Reclamation District [BNWRD] and Illinois State University’s Center for a Sustainable Water Future are forming a partnership to bring green infrastructure directly to Twin City residents. “Storm water management comes from rainfall, where since we are in an urban environment, we have a lot of impervious surfaces where large amounts of rainfall can actually cause water to flow over the ground picking up contaminants, picking up just unwanted material,” said Tim Ervin, BNWRD’s executive director. […] Green infrastructure treats the water at its source, rather than traditional methods like gutters, pipes or tunnels. Common examples include rain gardens, bio swells, and different natural grasses and trees than what might be found in a yard already.

* WCIA | Champaign Co. United Way has a new CEO, but goals remain the same: The new CEO, Beverley Baker, said that she’s honored, humbled, and nervous, but overall really excited. Baker said that working in the non-profit sector has allowed her to fulfill her goals as a person, professional, and a mom, and she’s ready for this new role at United Way. Baker has worked there for eighteen years. She was previously serving as the Director of Community Impact and as a Chief Impact Officer. Her background is in early childhood education.

* WSIL | Sesser to host city-wide garage sale: The event will take place on both Friday and Saturday, with dozens of homes and locations participating throughout the city. Organizers are actively updating the list of locations to assist residents and visitors in finding all the places to shop. For additional information and a complete list of locations, visit here.

*** National ***

* NYT | Rise in U.S. Inflation Likely to Keep Fed Cautious on Pace of Rate Cuts: “Core” inflation, which the central bank tracks as a gauge of underlying inflation since it strips out volatile items like energy and food prices, steadied at 3.1 percent. The overall measure of inflation rose 0.4 percent for the month, slightly higher than economists had expected. The core measure rose 0.3 percent. The inflation data has been pivotal to the Fed’s debate about not only when it should lower interest rates again after a long pause but also the speed at which the central bank moves once that process kicks off.

* AP | Income inequality dipped and fewer people moved, according to largest survey of US life: These year-to-year changes, big and small, from 2023 to 2024 were captured in the bureau’s data from the American Community Survey, the largest annual audit of American life. The survey of 3.5 million households asks about more than 40 topics, including income, housing costs, veterans status, computer use, commuting, and education.

  11 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Sep 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…

  10 Comments      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Sep 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Thursday, Sep 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  Comment      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Sep 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* CNN

US Steel is shuttering production at a mill in November, but its hundreds of workers will keep their jobs – for now – thanks to an agreement the company reached with the Trump administration.

US Steel will stop producing steel at its Granite City, Illinois, mill at the end of October, but the 800 workers at the plant will stay on the job, maintaining equipment, until at least 2027. That’s due to the structure of the deal the company reached with President Donald Trump to allow its purchase by Japanese steelmaker Nippon Steel. The agreement included various job protections and production guarantees.

“US Steel will optimize its footprint by focusing on producing and processing steel slabs at the Mon Valley (Pennsylvania) Works and Gary (Indiana) Works, and reducing slab consumption at Granite City Works,” the company said in a statement to CNN Monday. “As a result of this decision, US Steel will not lay off any Granite City Works employees nor adjust their pay rate.”

* WGLT

The McLean County Sheriff’s department is fessing up to an error that allowed federal immigration agencies to search its database of Flock Safety license plate reading cameras for more than four months this year. […]

Flock Safety let the sheriff’s department know an audit showed other agencies were using its camera images for immigration purposes. That is against Illinois law.

“Within a few hours, we had everyone shut off outside the state of Illinois,” said [Sheriff Matt Lane].

He said the original department policy was to have a relatively open door on the data, but agencies had to attest that they were following Illinois law in not using the data for immigration purposes.

So, the agencies were signing off on that requirement electronically, and then going ahead and using it on immigration?

“Yes,” said Lane. “When we did this policy, it was before January. We didn’t have an immigration push. It wasn’t on the forefront. And now it is.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press release…

State Representatives who touch Congressman Danny Davis’ 7th Congressional District are strengthening the call for Welch to represent them and their constituents, shaping and building the state party.

House Representative and Committeewoman Theresa Mah, State Representative Michael Crawford, State Representative Lisa Davis, and State Representative Yolonda Morris all endorse Speaker Welch. […]

Welch has opened the political committee Team Welch for 7th District State Central Commiteeperson; and has already collected and verified the required signatures for filing.

* Windy City Times | Sara Feigenholtz seeks reelection, citing LGBTQ+ record and decades of service: While Uniejewski is making the case for new leadership, Feigenholtz points to her long record of championing LGBTQ+ rights, health care access and neighborhood priorities as reasons voters should keep her in office. “I love this neighborhood, I love this community, and I think that no matter how long I serve, I still jump out of bed every day very, very excited to puzzle through some of the problems that we have here,” Feigenholtz told Windy City Times. “I’ve always had a very close connection to the community, and it’s only gotten deeper over time.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | President Donald Trump seems to pump brakes on deploying National Guard troops to Chicago: “We’re going to be announcing another city that we’re going to very shortly, working it out with the governor of a certain state who would love us to be there, and the mayor of a certain city in the same state that would love us to be there,” Trump told reporters Tuesday night in touting the results of his federalization of law enforcement and National Guard assets in Washington, D.C., by dining out at a restaurant.

* Facilities Dive | University of Illinois-Chicago tackles deferred maintenance at no upfront cost: The $30 million energy conservation project at UIC, the second public university in the University of Illinois system and the largest university in the Chicago area, includes the installation of 24 energy efficient air handling units and implementation of heating and cooling smart controls in an administrative building and a science building. The initiative is expected to generate approximately $1 million in yearly energy and operational savings and reduce campus greenhouse gas emissions by 2,100 metric tons of carbon dioxide annually.

* Crain’s | Potbelly to be acquired by convenience store chain in $566M deal: Potbelly, the Chicago-based sandwich chain, is set to be acquired by convenience store operator RaceTrac in a deal valued around $566 million. Under the agreement, announced yesterday, RaceTrac will pay $17.12 a share in cash for Potbelly, according to a news release. The transaction will be carried out through a tender offer for all outstanding shares.

* Block Club | Lincoln Park’s Alfred Caldwell Lily Pool Reopens After Years Of Renovation: Designed by Alfred Caldwell, the famed architect behind Promontory Point and Riis Park, the Lily Pool was part of a Victorian garden built in 1889 that was home to tropical lilies and other aquatic plants. When that garden fell into disrepair, Caldwell, who was appointed as the Park District’s principal designer in the 1930s, designed what was formerly known as the Lincoln Park Rookery.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Wauconda cancels Mexican Independence Day festival as other suburbs plan to stay the course: In a Sept. 5 Wauconda police Facebook post, police, church and village officials said the determination was made based on the “recent climate and concerns in our area related to immigration.” “We know how meaningful this event is for our community and the choice was not made lightly by the committee,” the post reads. “Our goal is always to ensure that everyone feels safe, respected and welcome in Wauconda.”

* Daily Herald | Batavia’s new energy policy ‘a work in progress’ say mayor: The Municipal Electric Utility Energy Policy, which will be reviewed on a schedule yet to be determined, sets sustainability goals and guides future infrastructure upgrades, energy procurement and other electric facility-related investments. Addressing doubts posed by council members during recent discussions over the attainability of some of the goals, Mayor Jeff Shielke admitted the approved policy is not “real strong,” but said it points the council in the right direction.

* NBC Chicago | Suburban business among several targeted in multistate vaping raids by ATF, FDA: Attorney General Pam Bondi and Department of Health & Human Services Secretary Robert Kennedy Jr. traveled to Illinois Wednesday to announce the results of the raids, highlighting a company in northwest suburban Bensenville, which saw more than 600,000 units of allegedly illegal products seized in what was considered to be the largest of the reported raids. The so-called “seizure operation,” a joint effort from the ATF and FDA, targeted five distributors and nine retailers across six states.

*** Downstate ***

* IPM | International student enrollment increases at University of Illinois despite Trump policies: The System announced Wednesday that international student enrollment increased 5.9% across the Springfield, Urbana-Champaign and Chicago universities. That bucks the trend seen elsewhere across the country. U of I System President Tim Killeen said in an interview with The 21st Show that the most significant issue affecting international students at the three locations is visa delays.

* SJ-R | UIS sees freshman enrollment jump, but international numbers dip: The University of Illinois Springfield has seen a 19.1% increase in first-year student enrollment this fall, with 312 freshmen compared to last year’s 262. “We are pleased to see more first-year students choosing UIS to begin their college journey,” Janet L. Gooch, UIS chancellor, said in the announcement. “Through new scholarships like the Prairie Promise Program, innovative academic programs and hands-on experiences such as internships, UIS is opening doors and preparing students for successful careers.”

* WGLT | Illinois Wesleyan reports biggest incoming class in 15 years: Nearly 600 new students have begun classes at Illinois Wesleyan University in Bloomington. The small liberal arts college says it’s the biggest incoming class since 2010, with 544 freshmen and 51 new transfer students enrolled. The large new class also tips total enrollment above 1,600 for the first time since 2021.

* BND | Private water providers expand, raise prices in metro-east. Some are pushing back: As some towns like Madison debate the advantages and disadvantages of keeping water systems locally owned or selling to the publicly traded subsidiary of American Water, there are others that are taking a different approach. A consortium of smaller water districts in Madison and Jersey counties are pooling their resources to take advantage of the available groundwater — and eventually separate their system completely from Illinois American Water in the hopes of maintaining local control.

* BND | 20 days into school year, Cahokia teachers are still without a contract: A crowd of members from the Cahokia Federation of Teachers Local 1272, wearing blue union shirts and holding signs, gathered at Monday evening’s school board meeting to draw attention to the delay. Many chanted outside the Board of Education building after security denied them entry because the boardroom neared capacity. Superintendent Curtis McCall Jr. said much of the delay comes from sifting through policies and procedures that, for more than 50 years, had not seen significant changes in terms of what’s in the best interest of students. When asked, he said he was unable to provide a specific problematic policy as an example.

* WCIA | Illini fans react to U of I stadium’s new name after multi-million-dollar donation: A multi-million-dollar donation is bringing change to one historic University of Illinois landmark over the course of several years. Larry Gies — a U of I alumnus — is donating $100 million to the athletic department, and now the football stadium has a new name: Gies Memorial Stadium. Larry Gies said it’s in honor of his father Larry Gies senior, who is a U.S. army veteran. Gies and the athletic department said that adding the name still keeps its purpose of honoring those who served, but fans are split on whether or not they agree.

*** National ***

* WaPo | National Guard documents show public ‘fear,’ veterans’ ‘shame’ over D.C. presence: Friday’s assessment highlights “Mentions of Fatigue, confusion, and demoralization — ‘just gardening,’ unclear mission, wedge between citizens and the military.”

* NYT | Nick Fuentes: A White Nationalist Problem for the Right: “Fuentes represents the cutting edge of a right-wing racism that has surged over the past decade during the rise of Trump,” said Matt Dallek, a political historian and expert on right-wing movements at George Washington University. “And it’s clear that he’s becoming more prominent because these bigger influencers are now fighting with him.”

  5 Comments      


Speaker Welch predicts data center regulation will be in energy bill, which he says will pass during veto session

Wednesday, Sep 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* House Speaker Welch talked about data center regulation last night

At a Tuesday forum hosted by state Rep. Amy “Murri” Briel, Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, a Cook County Democrat, said lawmakers will tackle this very issue during the upcoming fall veto session. […]

Welch said the Illinois General Assembly is “very likely” to address the regulation of data centers as part of an energy bill. Lawmakers, he said, want to seize the potentially lucrative jobs but also want the companies to be good stewards of the earth.

“We certainly want Illinois to be front and center and take advantage of this boom from a jobs perspective,” Welch said, “but we want to make sure we don’t hurt our environment.”

“We think we’re close,” he said. “We think we’re going to be able to get something done.”

The rest of the quote

We want to be able to take advantage of this from a jobs perspective, but we also want to be responsible about it. And want to make sure we don’t hurt our environment.

And that’s why all of these groups are at the table. That’s why we didn’t pass something in May, similar in ‘21. We’ve been working on this all summer.

My team’s telling me we think we’re going to be able to get something done in the upcoming veto session, that all the parties agree on labor, environmentalists.

There was a time in Springfield where, you know, environmentalists weren’t even at the table, right? They just weren’t even heard. Under my leadership style, all of these folks are at the table. Might take us a little longer to get things done, but I would rather take our time and get it right. Make sure the policy is right for rural Illinois, rather than rushing it wrong. These jobs are going to go somewhere. If they’re not in Illinois, they’re going to go to Iowa, they’re going to go to Indiana. So let’s make sure we work with the business communities. Get their input. Let’s work with the utility companies. Let’s get environment on this, labor, work with everyone.

The problem with these big bills is that can get too big and then fall over, like an over-decorated Christmas tree. So, we’ll see.

  8 Comments      


Campaign stuff: Del Mar called Bailey “a horrible politician” last month; Reilly announces for county board prez; JYR, DeVore running for state central committee

Wednesday, Sep 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Lake Forest Podcast almost exactly a month ago

Joe Weis: I’ve met Darren a number of times, as I’m sure you have. He’s a nice guy, but he should stick to, he couldn’t even win in Southern Illinois down there for Congressman.

Aaron Del Mar: He’s a horrible politician!

Del Mar is now Bailey’s running mate. Bailey, by the way, endorsed one of Del Mar’s opponents for Cook County Republican Party Chair back in April.

* Ald. Brendan Reilly has announced a bid for Cook County Board President. Video

* Politico

State Rep. Janet Yang Rohr is running for the Democratic State Central Committeewoman seat in the 11th District. Current committeewoman Kristina Zahorik isn’t seeking reelection — and is endorsing Yang Rohr, who is out with a list of other endorsements, too.

— Tom DeVore is running for the Republican state central committee, and Congresswoman Mary Miller has endorsed him.

— FAIR GAME: The League of Women Voters of Illinois is endorsing the Fair Maps group headed by political stalwarts Bill Daley and Ray LaHood. Their Fair Maps group is working to get a ballot on the measure aimed at ending partisan map-drawing.

In a statement to its supporters, the Illinois League said it “acknowledges that the proposed amendment falls short of our larger objectives, including map-drawing that is fully independent of the Illinois state legislature. … But given the history of Illinois Supreme Court rulings that limit what citizens may do via referendum, the League is choosing to focus on what voters could gain from the current proposal.”

Subscribers know more about that Janet Yang Rohr campaign. Whew, things are heating up.

  13 Comments      


And now for something completely different

Wednesday, Sep 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rarely will you see opinion columns like this one published by the Irish Echo

Prometheus stole fire from Zeus and gave it to humanity, who in turn transformed fire into a force for good and not evil.

Zeus is the Democratic Party of Illinois and Prometheus is young buck Kevin D. Ryan, a United States Marine Corp veteran, teacher, Oxford and Georgetown graduate, who is running in the Democratic primary for the Illinois Senate.

His story and his youth are aflame as Kevin travels across the State campaigning and gathering petitions in an old school bus he bought for 19 grand as he launched his Promethean campaign.

Like many great men, Kevin grew up on the far Southside of Chicago, mostly in Orland Park, went to Marist HS, where his dad and all his brothers went: legacy grads.

He showed me his bus, tricked out for the campaign with slogan “runwithkev.com” and intends to hit every county in the State of Illinois, taking his message to the working-class folks. He’s got bigger cojones than the entire Illinois General Assembly and he says he wants to get money out of politics.

It’s daunting, but something tells me Kevin Ryan is on to something. I ask how old he is, and he chuckles, “I’m 33 years old, the same age as Jesus!”

Check out the highlighted cutline

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

Wednesday, Sep 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Trump appears to back off Chicago, teases Guard deployment with supportive governor

Wednesday, Sep 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Bloomberg

President Donald Trump said he plans to deploy federal troops to another US city, as he made a surprise visit to a Washington, DC, restaurant in a bid to argue his federal takeover of the city’s law enforcement is working.

“We’ll announce it probably tomorrow, and it’s going to be something where we will do like we did here,” Trump told reporters Tuesday outside Joe’s Seafood, Prime Steak and Stone Crab, an upscale surf and turf restaurant near the White House.

The president said he was working with a governor “who would love us to be there,” though didn’t name the city, state nor politician he was in contact with. Trump earlier this month suggested he might deploy the National Guard to New Orleans, which is in a state that has a Republican governor, before his long-threatened operation in Chicago, where Democratic Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson have opposed such a move.

* The Hill last week

President Trump announced Friday that he will soon be sending the National Guard to New Orleans after previously teasing that he would be targeting the city in his next federal crime crackdown.

“We’re going to come into New Orleans, and we’re going to make that place so safe,” Trump said during a Friday night event held in the White House’s newly renovated Rose Garden. “It’s got a little problem right now, a couple of headaches, like murders, a lot of little murders going on, and we’re not going to stand for it. And we’re going to come in, we’re going to clean it up.”

Trump’s confirmation that he’s planning to federalize New Orleans’ law enforcement comes days after he floated the idea. Trump on Wednesday said he was debating between sending Guardsmen into New Orleans, targeting a Republican-controlled state, or to Chicago.

“We’re making a determination now — do we go to Chicago, or do we go to a place like New Orleans where we have a great governor, Jeff Landry, who wants us to come in and straighten out a very nice section of this country that’s become quite tough, quite bad,” Trump said Wednesday.

* Related…

    * WaPo | National Guard documents show public ‘fear,’ troops’ ‘shame’ over D.C. presence: The National Guard, in measuring public sentiment about President Donald Trump’s federal takeover of Washington, D.C., has assessed that its mission is perceived as “leveraging fear,” driving a “wedge between citizens and the military,” and promoting a sense of “shame” among some troops and veterans, according to internal documents reviewed by The Washington Post. The assessments, which have not been previously reported, underscore how domestic mobilizations that are rooted in politics risk damaging Americans’ confidence in the men and women who serve their communities in times of crisis. The documents reveal, too, with a rare candor in some cases, that military officials have been kept apprised that their mission is viewed by a segment of society as wasteful, counterproductive and a threat to long-standing precedent stipulating that U.S. soldiers — with rare exception — are to be kept out of domestic law enforcement matters.

    * NYT | One of Trump’s Powers Over D.C. Reaches a Time Limit. May Remain: At the stroke of midnight on Wednesday, that particular intervention will end. The 30-day window that temporarily grants presidents great powers in the city’s affairs will come to a close, a moment that city officials and many residents have been looking to as a sort of deliverance after four surreal weeks. But it is unclear how much, if anything, will immediately change.

    * AP | Judge pauses California’s request to bar Trump administration’s ongoing use of National Guard troops: A federal judge who ruled last week that the Trump administration broke federal law by sending National Guard troops to the Los Angeles area said Tuesday he will not immediately consider a request to bar the ongoing use of 300 Guard troops. In a court order, Senior District Judge Charles Breyer in San Francisco said he was not sure he had the authority to consider California’s motion for a preliminary injunction blocking the administration’s further deployment of state National Guard troops. That’s because the case is on appeal before the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the judge said. Breyer indefinitely paused all proceedings related to the state’s motion, though he suggested California officials could file the request with the 9th Circuit.

Thoughts?

  43 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Wednesday, Sep 10, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Findings of a recent economic study are clear: the retail sector is a cornerstone of the state’s economy and crucial to our everyday lives. Retail in Illinois directly contributes more than $112 billion in economic investment annually – more than 10 percent of the state’s total Gross Domestic Product.

Retailers like Alejandro Urzagaste in Wilmette enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Sep 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: For every person in an Illinois prison college class, another waits their turn. Sun-Times

    - Roughly 2,000 people in Illinois prisons are participating in higher education programs, according to a report released at the beginning of September.
    - At the same time, though, another 2,000 are stuck on waiting lists to get into classes because there’s not enough programming available.
    -“Some of the things that hold programs back from sustainable growth include access to classroom space inside prisons and funding,” Rebecca Ginsburg, director of the Education Justice Project at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign said.

* Governor Pritzker will be at McCormick Place for the FABTECH Expo at 1:30 pm, with a press availability at 2:15 pm after his tour. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WGN | Here’s how ICE agents operate at courthouses, inside jails: Outside of Chicago’s largest criminal courthouse Tuesday, there was an unmissable ICE presence. Agents drove off when the WGN News photographer took notice. “It really creates this atmosphere of fear and uncertainty and incentivizes people not to show up for court,” Cook County public defender Sharone Mitchell Jr. said. Mitchell said the presence of immigration agents at local courthouses has a chilling effect on the judicial system for victims, witnesses and the accused.

* CNI | Sources: Darren Bailey to run for governor again in Illinois: The former state senator and farmer from Clay County would become the highest-profile Republican to enter the race, having lost the 2022 campaign against Gov. JB Pritzker and a close primary race in 2024 against U.S. Rep. Mike Bost for a downstate congressional seat. […] Bailey plans to enlist Cook County Republican Party Chair Aaron Del Mar as his running mate, a source said. Del Mar ran for lieutenant governor in 2022 alongside Gary Rabine, receiving 6.5% of the vote.

* WAND | IL Supreme Court hears arguments over whether good conduct credits should reduce pretrial jail sanctions: Geoffrey Seymore has asked the Illinois Supreme Court whether good conduct credit can be used to cut down on jail time he received after violating pretrial release conditions. Seymore is facing several drug charges related to meth, but a circuit court judge released him on electronic home monitoring last year. Court records show Seymore violated the conditions of his release the very next day by leaving his home and visiting three unauthorized locations, leading the state to ask for pretrial jail sanctions.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Rep. Margaret Croke for Comptroller…

Today, State Representative Margaret Croke announced the endorsement of Illinois House Speaker Emanuel ‘Chris’ Welch and a diverse group of 31 additional Illinois House Democrats representing communities from across the state.

These endorsements include: House Speaker Emanuel ‘Chris’ Welch (D-07), Speaker Pro Tempore Kam Buckner (D-26th), Majority Leader Robyn Gabel (D‑18th), Deputy Majority Leader Bob Rita (D‑28th), Assistant Majority Leaders Eva-Dina Delgado (D-03rd), Marcus Evans (D-33rd), Jehan Gordon‑Booth (D‑92nd), Jay Hoffman (D‑113th), Camille Lilly (D-78th), Katie Stuart (D‑112th), Curtis Tarver (D‑25th), Ann Williams (D‑11th), Majority Officer and Sergeant at Arms Nick Smith (D‑34th), and Representatives Jaime Andrade (D-40th), Michael Crawford (D-31st), Lisa Davis (D-32nd), Marti Deuter (D-45th), Kimberly Du Buclet (D-05th), Mary Gill (D-35th) Jennifer Gong‑Gershowitz (D‑17th), Nicolle Grasse (D‑53rd), Gregg Johnson (D‑72nd), Mike Kelly (D‑15th), Natalie Manley (D‑98th), Yolonda Morris (D‑09th), Marty Moylan (D‑55th), Suzanne Ness (D‑66th), Rick Ryan (D‑36th), Justin Slaughter (D‑27th), Dave Vella (D‑68th), Larry Walsh (D‑86th), Jawaharial Williams (D‑10th).

* Evanston Now | Gabel plans run for Evanston Dems top job: Illinois House Majority Leader Robyn Gabel is preparing to circulate petitions for the spring primary ballot as a candidate for Evanston Democratic Committeeperson, according to a source with knowledge of the plan. A win would give the 72-year-old state representative from Evanston substantial local political power. The current committeeperson, Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, is engaged in a hotly contested campaign for Congress next year.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Immigration enforcement subdued Tuesday as local officials brace for Trump’s ‘Operation Midway Blitz’: A day after President Donald Trump’s Department of Homeland Security launched “Operation Midway Blitz,” its latest immigration crackdown, area politicians and immigrant rights groups said it was relatively subdued on the ground Tuesday with minimal arrests. But they’re preparing for more. Speaking before more than a dozen cameras on a quiet street in Pilsen, Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday said the federal immigration enforcement agency has plans to send in more than 200 agents and 100 vehicles in its Chicago immigration “blitz.”

* Tribune | Aldermen press Mayor Brandon Johnson’s team for report on potential savings: Downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly, a frequent Johnson antagonist, was one of a handful of council members who asked Budget Director Annette Guzman whether the council would be given access to the firm’s full conclusions. Guzman told him that any report would “go through many iterations,” including fact-checking and “filtering.” The administration will then release “the final options that we believe are — after talking to our own departments who have to do this work — practical for the city of Chicago,” Guzman said.

* Crain’s | Fire South Loop soccer stadium wins alderman’s blessing — if Sox stay away: Speaking during a virtual town hall meeting last night on the proposal from developer Related Midwest and the Major League Soccer team, 3rd Ward Ald. Pat Dowell said she supports the plan for a 22,000-seat stadium to anchor the 62-acre development along the Chicago River south of Roosevelt Road. Dowell’s blessing puts the development on track for consideration by the city’s Plan Commission on Sept. 18 and possibly the full City Council the following week. But Dowell’s support comes with a catch: Related’s 62-acre site can have only one stadium, not a second. That would seem to shut the door on the Chicago White Sox, which teamed with Related last year to publicly pitch plans for a ballpark at the site. The Sox suggested in June that it’s still an option to build a stadium alongside the Fire.

* WBEZ | What local colleges are telling students to do during increased federal immigration enforcement: Several of the campuses, including UIC, Northwestern University and the University of Chicago, have their own police forces. Under a state law implemented in 2017 known as the Trust Act, state and local law enforcement, including campus police at both public and private universities, cannot cooperate with federal immigration enforcement. However, none of the universities disclosed how administrators at their campuses interact with federal immigration authorities. DePaul University officials referred WBEZ to a campus communication sent last week, noting that leaders at the private university are monitoring the situation and staying in touch with local and state authorities.

* Block Club | As North Park Homeless Encampment Cleared, Residents Say They Have Nowhere To Go: Ronaldo Gonzalez, 54, said city workers came to the encampment about 7 a.m. Tuesday and told residents they had two hours to gather their things. He put all of his valuables into a cart and left his home, which he had been living in for a little over a year. […] In a statement, a Department of Family and Support Services spokesperson said outreach workers will be at the park all week helping connect residents with shelter and other resources. Only five encampment residents have accepted shelter placement since early August, the spokesperson said. Gonzalez said he declined shelter placement because he has spent time in shelters before and had to deal with bed bugs and people stealing from him.

* WTTW | Prairie in a Pot: Chicago Plant Scientist Tackles Challenge of Native Gardening on an Urban Balcony: Over the past 15 years, Fant, who has a Ph.D. in plant genetics, estimates he’s tested some 200 prairie species in containers on his balcony. “Which is crazy, I’m not recommending it,” he said. “But, as a nerd, I enjoy it. I’ve learned a lot about what succeeds and doesn’t.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Organizers hope new political group Elevate Oak Park will offer alternative to progressives in power: About 35 people gathered Sept. 4 in a small room on the second floor at One Lake Brewing in Oak Park for the first meeting of Elevate Oak Park. The crowd was mostly a mix of middle aged and older people and included only two Black people. “If I’m honest, that’s something I’m very worried about,” Saam said. “There’s a lot of groups of, kind of, the old guard liberals that skew a little bit older in this community and we don’t want to get branded as that. If we do this right, the next time we have a gathering I would hope that it would be a much more diverse crowd and I would hope that it would skew a little bit younger. I’m 50, I want to be a bit above the median age of the group, not below. To be successful we need a much larger cross section of Oak Park.”

* Daily Herald | Mayor: Public meetings to review Bears’ Arlington Heights stadium plans coming soon: Tinaglia and village officials have been meeting weekly with Bears brass since the team returned its stadium development focus to the 326-acre former racetrack site in May. The mayor said he’s happy with the way the project is advancing, and those efforts will continue to move forward through a multitiered approval process that engages the community.

* Daily Herald | ‘We need $500,000 and we need it now’: PADS of Elgin facing dire budget crisis as winter approaches: The budget shortfall stems from an end to federal American Rescue Plan Act funding that the organization had come to rely on during and after the pandemic. While PADS of Elgin leaders knew that COVID relief funding would expire, other federal dollars they were expecting have been frozen. As a result, the organization is short nearly half the annual $1.7 million operating budget projected for the next fiscal year.

* Daily Southtown | Will County Board member Jacqueline Traynere pledges vigorous defense to computer tampering charge: Will County Board member Jacqueline Traynere pleaded not guilty Tuesday to charges of computer tampering in Will County Court. Traynere, a Bolingbrook Democrat and the past Democratic Leader, was charged last month with three counts of computer tampering, a class B misdemeanor, for allegedly accessing the email of fellow board member Judy Ogalla, a Monee Republican and the former board chair, in March 2024. […] The case was continued to Oct. 21.

* Crain’s | After Schill’s exit, pressure mounts on Northwestern board to get it right: “The pressure really couldn’t be higher to get the next appointment right,” said Ron Culp, a veteran public relations consultant who teaches at DePaul University. “They’ll be under a microscope.” Schill came under fire for missteps in navigating multiple crises, and, at each turn, managed to anger and frustrate different Northwestern constituencies. “For three years I guarded the integrity of Northwestern as it faced crisis after crisis — ranging from the hazing scandal I inherited, to the campus activism following Oct. 7, and now the federal funding freeze,” Schill said in a written statement to Crain’s. “I realized in recent months that, for a variety of reasons, it was time for a new leader to take over who was unencumbered by the past.”

* Crain’s | After decade of reinvention, an icon of the plastics world cashes in the suburban family business: Patricia Miller, one of the plastics industry’s most high-profile and unconventional leaders, has sold M4 Factory, the family-owned injection molding business she transformed into a design-driven, sustainability-focused manufacturer. The factory building in Woodstock is now home to AFA Dispensing Group BV, a Netherlands-based packaging firm known for sustainable dispensing systems. The sale, which closed in late June, included the building, equipment and an opportunity for existing employees to stay on under new ownership.

* Daily Southtown | Orland Park District 135 approves $133 million 2026 budget, discusses hiring 2 more assistant principals: The approved budget projects about $120 million in revenue and $133 million in expenses from July 1 through June 30, 2026. District 135 Finance Director Scott Beranek said about $13 million of expenses went toward construction projects completed over the summer, which were covered by selling bonds. “If you were to remove the construction projects from the budget, it’s almost a balanced budget,” Beranek said.

*** Downstate ***

* Shaw Local | NIU freshman enrollment up, second-largest incoming class since 2014, officials say: This year’s freshman class at Northern Illinois University is the second largest since 2014 and made up of a majority of first-generation college students, marking a break in a two-year incoming class slump and what officials said Tuesday shows NIU’s commitment to making higher education accessible to all.

* WGEM | School vaccine deadline draws near: The Adams County Health Department (ACHD) is reminding parents about the Oct. 15 deadline to get their students their required school vaccines. ACHD Director of Nursing Emily Hendrickson said if students don’t have their required vaccines by the deadline they will have to leave school. “So, exclusion day, if you have not vaccinated then you cannot go to school anymore, so after Oct. 15, that’s that deadline for all the schools within the state of Illinois, you have to have it or you can’t go back to school,” Hendrickson said.

* WGEM | Parents accuse Macomb School District of not being transparent following alleged threat: The Macomb School District released a post over the weekend explaining they had been alerted to a social media post by a student that involved what they said was bullying and harm material. “In the video, he’s really only speaking to two or three other students about his desire to have cyberbullying stopped,” said Macomb School District Superintendent Patrick Twomey. Twomey explained several parents who had been alerted to the student’s post had reported it to the district and the Macomb Police Department.

* Week 25 | Peoria moves forward on Riverfront amphitheater, $11 million donation a ‘wonderful gift’: The council unanimously signed off on a letter of intent in which the Hengst Foundation agrees to pay for the venue, but the city would pay for infrastructure upgrades, and the city would have to maintain the property. The foundation is the same organization that withdrew a letter of intent to build the amphitheater in Washington. Its former mayor, Gary Manier, attended Tuesday night’s council meeting representing his friend and foundation founder Jim Hengst, who intends to name the amphitheater after his late wife, Dee.

* 25News Now | Opinions mixed on proposals to boost Bloomington’s housing stock: “I think we’ve gotten to a point where this community realizes that we’re in the midst of a housing crisis. We heard it [Monday night]. This is beyond just needing a few units; we need to do something and do it now,” said Deputy City Manager Billy Tyus. The first item amended the zoning code classification of accessory dwelling units city wide. ADUs are permitted in all Bloomington neighborhoods, but city staff said current zoning rules make them hard to build. The ordinance removes the unnecessary barriers and allows more flexibility.

* WPSD | Cairo’s iconic overpass to remain as landmark after Sunday removal project: The city confirmed Tuesday that, while Cairo’s iconic red overpass is also on Highway 51, that overpass will not be removed — the “CAIRO” overpass is more than 100 years old and serves as a landmark for travelers into the city. The removal project is set to begin at 9 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 14, during which time U.S. 51 will close. The project is expected to last until 5 a.m. Monday.

*** National ***

* Bloomberg | Trump announces crackdown on drug ads, a sign of trouble for big-spending AbbVie: President Donald Trump signed a presidential memorandum on Tuesday that calls on federal health agencies to require pharmaceutical companies to disclose more side effects in their ads and enforce existing rules about misleading ads. The administration is pitching the moves as a way to increase transparency for patients. The US is the only place, besides New Zealand, where pharma companies can directly advertise to consumers. Limiting pharmaceutical advertisements has been a longtime priority for Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., though the new regulations would stop short of banning the ads entirely.

* AP | Should you carry your passport amid ICE concerns? Experts weigh in after SCOTUS ruling: Attorney Layla Suleiman González said those who might be concerned should consider carrying their passport. “I think yes, it’s better to carry your passport, that’s the best. But everyone needs to have this very, very clear: you don’t have to answer their questions, you don’t have to say where you’re from, you don’t have to say whether you are a citizen or not,” she told Telemundo Chicago. “You don’t have to talk to them or give them any information. They are the ones who have to prove who you are. The truth is they have taken so many people who are citizens. And even when they say, ‘I’m a citizen, I’m a citizen,’ they still get taken anyway.”

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Good morning!

Wednesday, Sep 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mr. Peter Freaking Frampton

Woke up this morning with a wine glass in my hand

And by you?

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Wednesday, Sep 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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