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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a live performance earlier this week. The original song is here. More background is here. Tweedy will play us out

I will be gone, but not forever

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Gov. JB Pritzker says Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin’s veiled threat earlier this week to withhold customs-processing resources at O’Hare because of Chicago’s sanctuary city rules will hurt the Chicago economy.

“We ought to continue to demand Republicans fund TSA and fund things we need to keep the economy running,” Pritzker said today during an unrelated press conference. “If they take this away, they’re going to hurt the economy even more.”

Mullin suggested the federal government may be forced to “start prioritizing” which cities receive resources, framing the issue as a question of partnership with the Department of Homeland Security. “We need to focus on cities that want to work with us,” he told Fox News on Monday.

* Hmm

At least through the NBA finals, Illinois FanDuel customers will be able to place bets without the company’s $0.50 per-bet feet.

The sports betting titan announced the decision to its Illinois sports betting customers through email and its social media channels, noting its per-bet fee will be done away with until Friday, June 19.

A request for comment from FanDuel regarding the decision was not returned.

FanDuel instituted a $0.50 surcharge on every bet placed by Illinois sports betting customers as a solution to driving costs in the Prairie State. The fees began on Sept. 1, 2025, in direct response to the state’s decision to impose its own $0.25 or $0.50 fee on every bet placed with its licensed operators.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois House approves ban on junk fees, Pritzker’s abortion fund proposal: Rep. Morgan said the bill was like the one that passed a couple years ago, but ambiguous language was tightened up to make it easier for businesses to comply and the Illinois Attorney General’s office to enforce. Nine Republicans joined supermajority Democrats in supporting the amended bill. However, the changes weren’t enough to remove opposition from the state’s top business, banking and hospitality organizations.

* WAND | Gov. JB Pritzker and Illinois Arts Council announce public art projects: The Illinois Arts Council and Office of Governor JB Pritzker and Illinois Humanities awarded more than $325,000 to 22 public art projects across the state in honor of the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. The grants are part of a statewide effort led by the Illinois America 250 Commission. Governor Pritzker said, “Illinois is proud to support new public art projects in communities across the state as we celebrate our unique place in the story of America. Thanks to these IAC grants, we’re helping Illinois’ talented creatives bring vibrance to our public spaces, celebrate our local history, and energize our cultural communities.”

* Capitol News Illinois | What does Trump’s EPA reversal of landmark climate change ruling mean for Illinois?: Cate Caldwell, senior policy manager at the Illinois Environmental Council, said that while the state’s Clean and Equitable Jobs Act puts the state on a strong path to limiting pollution — the act calls for closing the plants by 2030 — it can’t provide enough incentives for clean energy without support from federal action. She said the ruling could create temporary economic incentives for the continued operation of coal-powered plants.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Advocates file lawsuit against Chicago Housing Authority over appointment of new CEO: They say the CHA board’s decision March 17 to appoint Keith Pettigrew, who was executive director of the District of Columbia Housing Authority, violated the Illinois Open Meetings Act, which requires public bodies to give advance notice of meetings and prohibits them from taking action on items not listed on the publicized agenda. The final item on the agenda was “Approval of Personnel Matters,” which did not sufficiently inform anyone about Pettigrew’s appointment, according to Loevy & Loevy, the law firm representing the plantiffs in the suit.

* Innocence Project | Exonerees and Advocates Come Together in the Nation’s Wrongful Conviction Capital: For the first time, the annual Innocence Network Conference is being hosted in Chicago — a city whose history is deeply intertwined with both the causes of wrongful conviction and the fight to end it. Each year, the conference brings together attorneys, advocates, researchers, and exonerees working to address one of the most urgent and glaring failures of the criminal legal system: wrongful conviction. The gathering serves as a space to examine and strengthen the global innocence movement.

* WTTW | CPD Brass Inconsistently Stripped Officers of Police Powers, Failed to Document Actions: Watchdog: CPD brass always relieved officers arrested on suspicion of criminal misconduct of their police powers, but did not always act when officers were being investigated for other kinds of serious misconduct, Inspector General Deborah Witzburg said. CPD should adopt a formal policy detailing when officers can be stripped of their police powers that also requires officials to document those decisions and communicate regularly with the officers involved, Witzburg recommended.

* Block Club | Black Chicagoans Weigh In At City’s 1st Reparations Town Hall: ‘This Didn’t Happen That Long Ago’: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office launched the Repair Chicago community engagement series last month, which saw its first town hall Thursday evening at Kennedy-King College, 6301 S. Halsted St., in Englewood. About 25 neighbors attended the two-hour event in the college’s auditorium to engage in a dialogue with city leaders.

* Legal Newsline | Salvation Army rehab ‘enrollees’ who work at thrift stores aren’t ‘employees’: A few days after agreeing to let them proceed with their class action against one of America’s most prominent charities under labor and wage laws, a Chicago federal judge has ruled people who work in the Salvation Army’s thrift stores while enrolled the organization’s rehabilitation programs aren’t actually employees and can’t sue for allegedly unpaid wages. On March 31, U.S. District Judge Manish S. Shah granted judgment to the Salvation Army on that question, shutting down the legal action that has continued against them for nearly four years.

* Sun-Times | Chicago man accused of threatening Trump, Secret Service agents: That prompted the visit from a Secret Service agent and two other officers. Then, on March 19, according to the U.S. attorney’s office, Kovco sent another message to the official White House website, and it included a threat against the Secret Service agent who had come to his door. “I’m going to buy a small concealable firearm and go shoot up his place of work,” the message said, according to the release.

* Tribune | Magnificent Mile lands nation’s first Candy Hall of Fame as retail district continues recovery: The Magnificent Mile got some good news Thursday when the National Confectionery Sales Association said it will open the first Candy Hall of Fame Experience next year at 830 N. Michigan Ave. The attraction will occupy 60,000 square feet on three floors just across the street from Water Tower Place. It’s one of the biggest leases signed in years at a North Michigan Avenue retail property, a sign that business is picking up in a district hit hard by the pandemic and the rise of online shopping.

* Tribune | Starbucks unveils new ‘uplifted’ store designs in Chicago with more couches, cozier coffeehouse vibes: On Thursday, Starbucks unveiled one of the first Chicago stores to be “uplifted” under its “Back to Starbucks” restructuring plan, a campaign to improve performance and the in-store experience across the chain. The stand-alone store at 4155 N. Cicero Ave. in the Old Irving Park neighborhood features leather couches, cushy chairs, throw rugs, drapes, coffee-themed art on the walls and a decidedly cozier feel than many of the 17,000 Starbucks locations across the U.S.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Dolton interim fire Chief Quentin ‘Q’ Curtis takes leave amid union concerns: “I have heard the voices and concerns of our residents, clearly and sincerely,” Mayor Jason House said in a news release Thursday announcing Curtis’ leave. “This step is intended to allow our community space to refocus, heal and move forward together.” House said Curtis will “conclude ministerial duties to ensure no administrative tasks are left outstanding” during his leave. The Dolton Professional Firefighters Association picketed Village Hall ahead of a board meeting Monday, after filing a lawsuit last month asking that Curtis be discharged for failing to meet requirements for his position.

* Daily Southtown | Homer Glen OKs agreement to put some limits on license plate reader use: Homer Glen will store data obtained from its license plate reader cameras for seven days in an effort to balance public safety with some residents’ concerns over an intrusion of privacy. The village will also only limit information collected from the cameras to be shared within Illinois, according to a memo of understanding between the Village Board and the Will County sheriff’s office.

* Tribune | Abbott Laboratories must pay at least $53 million in cases over infant formula, jury decides: Abbott Laboratories must pay $53 million in compensatory damages in four cases in which Chicago-area babies developed a dangerous intestinal disease after consuming the company’s formula for premature infants, a Cook County jury decided Thursday evening. After a monthlong trial and a little more than a day of deliberation, the jury found Abbott liable on three counts for each child. The jury found that the formula was defectively designed, that Abbott failed to adequately warn about the dangers and risks of the formula and that Abbott was negligent.

* Daily Herald | ‘Risk a lot to save a lot’: Addison firefighter to receive state’s highest honor for daring rescue: When his crew pulled up to a business engulfed in flames May 21, Addison Fire Protection District firefighter/paramedic Gino Casciola was given what he calls the “mundane” task of standing outside the burning building and feeding a hose to colleagues fighting the blaze from the inside. What happened next was anything but mundane, and Casciola’s courage in the moments that followed might have saved several of his peers from the ultimate sacrifice. “After it was over, we started hearing from the guys that were in there, ‘We almost died in there,’ ” Deputy Chief Chris Mansfield said. “ ’And if it wasn’t for Gino, we probably would have.’ ”

* Lake County News-Sun | Visit Lake County names new president from within: ‘I’m stepping into a well-oiled machine’: “The timing is right for me with the organization in a really solid place,” Riedy said. “We have more community partners than we’ve ever had and very engaged stakeholders. We have a veteran and professional staff and a very committed Board of Directors.” Maguire said he is comfortable moving into the presidency because of the work done by Riedy over the past 22 years. He plans to build on the foundation that is already in place.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Sullivan still asking residents to conserve water as emergency continues: The City of Sullivan’s well levels have not seen any improvement, despite a water emergency being enacted since February, according to Public Health Commissioner Chuck Woodworth. Woodworth also said people in town are using the same amount of water every day, and the city hasn’t seen the decrease in water being pumped it was hoping for with the restrictions.

* WCIA | Village of Kincaid warns of increased lead levels in water: Village officials, led by Mayor Tony Pezze, sent a letter to all residents this week saying that elevated lead levels were found in the water of some homes and buildings, but not all of them. They said that if a tap water test from a building indicates a lead level of 15 parts per billion or higher, people should take the following precautions:

* WICS | Hundreds run in presidential half marathon with weekend underway: Springfield is preparing for what’s promised to be a record-breaking year for tourism…as the nation celebrates Route 66’s centennial. That includes this weekend, as one decades-old tradition is underway. Runners will be winding through more than 13 miles of Springfield history this Saturday for the Lincoln Presidential Half Marathon—a decades old tradition.

* WSIL | Officials Break Ground on Julia Harrison-Bruce Prairie Museum at JALC: According to the foundation, the new museum will serve as a lasting extension of Julia Harrison Bruce’s vision, bringing together historic exhibits and local art to tell the story of the region. Organizers say the space will focus not only on preserving artifacts, but also on amplifying community voices through oral storytelling. The museum is expected to provide a place where memories can be shared, recorded, and honored, while also serving as a hub for gatherings, education, and cultural events.

*** National ***

* WSJ | Insurers Take Bigger Risks Than Before 2008-09 Crisis, Report Warns: “We’re significantly worse off,” said Erik Miller, A.M. Best senior director. “The chance of not being able to pay your claims is just higher.” The study looked specifically at the reserves insurers set aside to make payments on annuities, the savings vehicles that promise guaranteed income in retirement. In its examination, A.M. Best compared the 2024 investment portfolios that backed those annuities with a snapshot of a similar universe of portfolios in 2007.

* Fortune | The US government is spending $88 billion a month in interest on national debt—equal to spending on defense and education combined: The net interest payments on public debt are also increasing at a pace. For the same period last year, the Treasury paid $497 billion to service its debt. The difference from last year to this is a $33 billion leap—or 7% more than before. The CBO report notes service payments increased “because the debt was larger than it was in the first half of fiscal year 2025 and because of higher long-term interest rates. Declines in short-term interest rates partially mitigated the overall rise in interest payments.”

* Reuters | Bessent, Powell warned bank CEOs about Anthropic model risks, sources say: A third source close to ⁠the matter reiterated Anthropic’s outreach, saying the company proactively briefed senior U.S. government officials and key industry stakeholders on Mythos’s capabilities ahead of its release. The Treasury-hosted meeting ​in Washington ​on Tuesday was aimed at ensuring ​banks are aware of the risks ‌posed by Mythos and similar models and are taking steps to defend their systems, one of the sources said.

* AP | Soaring gas prices leads to biggest monthly inflation spike in four years in March: Consumer prices rose 3.3% in March from a year earlier, the Labor Department said Friday, up sharply from just 2.4% in February and the biggest yearly increase since May 2024. On a monthly basis, prices rose 0.9% in March from February, the largest such increase in nearly four years. It’s the first read on inflation to capture the effects of the Iran war.

  2 Comments      


They’re never gonna learn

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From one of my recent newspaper columns

In DuPage County, the preliminary number of Republicans casting ballots for governor fell almost 32% compared to four years ago.

The DuPage Republican drop-off has been steady for years, coinciding with the party’s ever-shrinking success in the general election. Last week’s preliminary primary turnout in the former Republican bastion is about 49% below 2014 — the last year the state elected a Republican governor.

Democratic turnout in DuPage, on the other hand, is so far up a whopping 45% compared to four years ago. Democratic primary turnout has greatly increased in the county since 2014, which was a horrible year for Democratic turnout throughout the state. That year was President Barack Obama’s second midterm, and Gov. Pat Quinn went on to lose to Bruce Rauner in the general.

DuPage Democratic turnout in the governor’s race this year is up 586% (that’s not a typo) from 2014. And unlike some other jurisdictions, DuPage Democratic turnout was significantly higher this spring (25%) than in the primary held during Trump’s first midterm election.

Needless to say, those numbers cannot provide any comfort to the shrinking number of Republican legislators and local officials who represent part or all of that county.

* DuPage Republicans…


* To Ald. Matt Martin’s proposed ordinance

“Extremist activities” means advocating, engaging in, or supporting: (i) the overthrow of any federal, state, or local government of the United States by violence, or seeking to alter the form of these governments by violence or unconstitutional means, including, but not limited to, by means of treason, sedition, insurrection, rebellion, or related offenses; or (ii) the planning, execution, or other material support of hate crimes and hate incidents, each as defined in Section 2-120-518.

  16 Comments      


Repubs slam Pritzker on gerrymandering, affordability

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker yesterday

We believe in getting rid of gerrymandering. We Democrats.

He then went on to say that Republicans started it by gerrymandering so many congressional districts.

* Illinois House Republicans…

Governor Pritzker’s record tells the real story:

That is not reform. That is not democracy. And it is not what he promised the people of Illinois.
While Governor Pritzker continues to warn about threats to democracy in Washington, he ignores the damage his own partisan maps have done here at home by disenfranchising voters and rigging the system in favor of politicians.

And if his comments on gerrymandering were not bad enough, the Governor also tried once again to claim he is focused on lowering the cost of living. He stated, “We are very focused on lowering costs for folks.”

Illinois families know the truth. Under Governor Pritzker and House Democrats, Illinois has become number one for all the wrong reasons:

The Governor can try to spin his record, but working families are living with the consequences every day.

  40 Comments      


Roundup: Madigan’s appeal team asks court to vacate corruption convictions

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

As former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan approaches six months in a West Virginia federal prison, the high-profile legal team he hired to handle his appeal made long-awaited arguments Thursday, urging the longtime Democratic power broker’s conviction on bribery and other corruption charges be overturned.

Arguing to a 7th Circuit Court of Appeals panel, lawyer Amy Saharia said federal prosecutors’ core legal theory — that Madigan and electric utility Commonwealth Edison were engaged in a reciprocal “quid pro quo” bribery relationship for eight years beginning in 2011 — was fundamentally flawed.

“The alleged ‘quo’ … is far too vague,” Saharia told the appellate judges.

Government attorneys had told the jury repeatedly during Madigan’s four-month trial that ended last year that Madigan enjoyed a “stream of benefits” from ComEd, namely the hiring of the speaker’s political allies, in exchange for his “official action” on ComEd’s behalf in Springfield.

But Saharia drilled down on what defense lawyers argued just as often in the course of the trial: That despite hundreds of hours of wiretapped phone calls, hundreds of other pieces of evidence and testimony from dozens of witnesses, prosecutors never produced evidence of a quid pro quo agreement.

* Click here for the full audio of yesterday’s proceedings. The Tribune

The three-judge panel that held the roughly 45-minute hearing was composed of two Republican nominees, Judges Frank Easterbrook and Michael Scudder, and Judge Nancy Maldonado, who was nominated by Democratic President Joe Biden.

Scudder did the bulk of the questioning, which seemed to be evenly split between the sides and focused on language in jury instructions over the definition of “corruptly” as well as what prosecutors had to prove about Madigan’s intent.

Of the three on the panel, only Easterbrook, known for his often tough grilling of lawyers appearing before him, did not ask a question of either side.

A ruling will come at a later date.

* The Tribune’s Jason Meisner

* Sun-Times

When it was [ Assistant U.S. Attorney Julia Schwartz] turn, [Judge Michael Scudder] asked her to identify the “focused and concrete matter” in the ComEd conspiracy.

“The specific and focused matter that the conspiracy focused on in 2011,” Schwartz said, “was Madigan’s support on ComEd legislation and, specifically, legislation affecting ComEd’s rates and its bottom line.”

Scudder asked why that’s “not proceeding at too high of a level of generality.” She said “legislation, official action a speaker of a state house takes to move legislation — to get it on the calendar, to help whip up the votes to get it passed — are all kind of in the heartland of official actions.”

[Judge Nancy Maldonado] asked Schwartz about a recording of Madigan and Solis, in which they discussed Solis’ bid for a state board seat. Solis was secretly working for the FBI at the time and recorded Madigan. When Solis offered to help Madigan, Madigan told him “don’t worry about it.” […]

Schwartz told her “that recording should be viewed as a whole.” The men went on to discuss Madigan’s son Andrew, who is not accused of wrongdoing. Schwartz said that Madigan eventually told Solis there was actually something he could do — “help my son.”

* Saharia’s response



* More…

    * Bloomberg | Madigan Corruption Oral Argument Focuses on Whose Intent Matters: In considering the high-profile corruption convictions of ex-Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan (D), the Seventh Circuit on Thursday drilled down on a key question: How should jurors consider an alleged bribe-taker’s intent? Under the US Supreme Court’s 2024 decision in Snyder v. United States, it doesn’t matter whether an official actually meant to take any action after accepting a bribe, said Assistant US Attorney Julia Schwartz.

    * ABC Chicago | Ex-Speaker Mike Madigan appeal goes in front of 3-judge panel in Chicago court Thursday: The three-judge panel did not seem to give any reals hints of which way they might be leaning. And after the hearing Judge Easterbrook said they would take the case under advisement with a ruling coming at a later time. Madigan asked President Donald Trump for a pardon late last year.

  17 Comments      


Credit & Debit Cards May Not Work For Tips, Starting July 1

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The IFPA—the Credit Card Chaos law—could hurt Illinois’ tipped workers. Servers, stylists, rideshare drivers and other gig workers who rely on tips could see their income drop if customers can’t tip on cards and are limited to the cash they carry.
Why should tipped workers pay the price for Springfield’s bad policy?

Before chaos hits on July 1, lawmakers should reverse course and repeal the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act.

Learn more at: guardyourcard.com/Illinois

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It’s just a bill

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Wired

OPENAI IS THROWING its support behind an Illinois state bill that would shield AI labs from liability in cases where AI models are used to cause serious societal harms, such as death or serious injury of 100 or more people or at least $1 billion in property damage.

The effort seems to mark a shift in OpenAI’s legislative strategy. Until now, OpenAI has largely played defense, opposing bills that could have made AI labs liable for their technology’s harms. Several AI policy experts tell WIRED that SB 3444—which could set a new standard for the industry—is a more extreme measure than bills OpenAI has supported in the past.

The bill would shield frontier AI developers from liability for “critical harms” caused by their frontier models as long as they did not intentionally or recklessly cause such an incident, and have published safety, security, and transparency reports on their website. It defines a frontier model as any AI model trained using more than $100 million in computational costs, which likely could apply to America’s largest AI labs, like OpenAI, Google, xAI, Anthropic, and Meta. […]

Scott Wisor, policy director for the Secure AI project, tells WIRED he believes this bill has a slim chance of passing, given Illinois’ reputation for aggressively regulating technology. “We polled people in Illinois, asking whether they think AI companies should be exempt from liability, and 90 percent of people oppose it. There’s no reason existing AI companies should be facing reduced liability,” Wisor says.

The Transparency Coalition

SB 3444, the Artificial Intelligence Safety Act, provides that a developer of a frontier AI model shall not be held liable for critical harms caused by the model if the developer did not intentionally or recklessly cause the critical harms and the developer publishes a safety and security protocol and transparency report on its website. (Sen. Cunningham)

* WMBD

Illinois lawmakers are looking to regulate AI, including holding tech companies liable for any physical or monetary damages caused by their chatbots. […]

“You need to have guardrails to protect minors,” said state Sen. Sue Rezin. She said she filed her bill after the federal government didn’t pass its own regulations.

That proposal, discussed at a committee hearing on Thursday, would also require parental consent for children to use AI chatbots. […]

“As AI becomes the new front door for everything from banking to mental health support, we cannot allow Illinois families to be the guinea pig for unregulated technology, especially when it comes to exposure and algorithms that hurt and harm our minors,” the Morris Republican said.

* Rep. Bob Morgan…

In a continued effort to combat rising costs, strengthen consumer protections, and promote transparency for shoppers across Illinois, House Bill 228, also known as the ‘Junk Fee Ban Act’, has successfully passed the Illinois House of Representatives with the full support of Governor J.B. Pritzker and Speaker Chris “Emmanuel” Welch, who serves as a Chief Co-Sponsor of the bill. […]

First introduced in the 103rd General Assembly, the legislation requires businesses to clearly advertise the full price of goods and services upfront, eliminating hidden “junk fees” that are often only disclosed at checkout. These charges, commonly labeled as service, processing, or convenience fees, mislead consumers, distort the marketplace, and place transparent businesses at a competitive disadvantage.

Junk fees have become a widespread and costly burden on Illinois families. Nationally, the average household pays an estimated $3,000 more per year due to hidden or misleading charges, with some studies showing consumers pay up to 20% more than the advertised price once fees are included. These practices not only erode consumer trust but also make it harder for families to budget and make informed purchasing decisions, especially at a time of persistent inflation.

Beyond their financial impact, junk fees disproportionately affect lower-income households, non-English proficient consumers, and communities of color, further compounding inequities in access to clear and fair pricing.

The legislation also aims to level the playing field for small and honest businesses. By requiring upfront pricing transparency, HB 228 ensures that companies competing fairly are no longer undercut by deceptive pricing practices, helping to strengthen local economies and support Main Street businesses across Illinois. […]

House Bill 228 now advances to the Illinois Senate, where it will be carried by State Senator Omar Aquino.

* WAND

Illinois House Democrats passed legislation Thursday to help uninsured and underinsured people receive reproductive healthcare.

The plan could create an abortion access fund for the Illinois Department of Public Health.

Funds for the grants would come from a requirement in the Affordable Care Act that insurance companies covering abortions beyond circumstances allowed by the federal government collect at least $1 from enrollees each month.

“The bill requires that insurance companies report how much money they have sitting in this segregated account,” said Rep. Anna Moeller (D-Elgin). “Then, at the end of the plan year, once they have paid for all claims, transfer 90% of what is left in that fund to the Department of Insurance.”

* The Illinois Environmental Council…

At 10 a.m. on Monday, April 13, State Senator Ram Villivalam will join advocates with the Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition to unveil statewide poll results on data centers and the POWER Act (SB4016/HB5513). The POWER Act establishes nation-leading guardrails to protect our water, energy, and ratepayers from the significant threats posed by data centers.

WHEN: Monday, April 13, 2026 at 10 a.m. CT

WHERE: Illinois Environmental Council, 70 E Lake Street Suite 1100 (11th floor), Chicago, IL 60601 and live-streamed via facebook.com/ILCleanJobs/live_videos.

* More…

    * WAND | IL House unanimously passes bill banning unnecessary fees for IDOC mail: State representatives passed a bill Thursday to ensure people in the Department of Corrections are not charged unreasonable fees for sending mail. The legislation also requires more transparency surrounding the IDOC mail scanning process. Rep. Rita Mayfield (D-Waukegan) said it is important that families can stay connected with their loved ones, and the state should not make that process harder.

    * WAND | House Democrats pass bill providing naloxone to people leaving jail, prison: Sponsors said overdose cases are dropping overall, but there are still high numbers for college students, Native Americans and people reentering society. Experts say there’s a higher chance of overdosing in the first 72 hours after someone leaves prison or jail. “As the Narcan provider is a primary vendor with the state, they have a direct partnership to handle all shipping and storage, removing the burden from local organizations,” said Rep. Justin Slaughter (D-Chicago).

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

  10 Comments      


Pay For Electricity Or Pay For A Prescription? 340B Is A Lifesaver – Support HB 2371 SA 2

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

340B was a lifesaver for Correy Bell. With chronic asthma and bronchitis, Bell relies on an inhaler. One time, she found herself in a frightening scenario: out of town for work with no inhaler. Bell, a comedian, owns her own business and is uninsured.

“I went to the pharmacy. I was confident that I had figured it out and then they told me the price,” she said. “The cost was so high that I actually had to stop and make a decision that no one should have to make: Do I pay a bill, or do I keep the lights on, or do it get my medicine?… That’s when I was able to find out about 340B.”

A long-time patient at Family Christian Health Center, Bell said the 340B drug discount program helped her access needed medication at a price she could afford—“no confusing hoops, no shame, no judgment, just real savings when I needed it the most,” she said at a rally last month for House Bill 2371 SA 2, the Patient Access to Pharmacy Protection Act.

State Rep. Anna Moeller, lead House sponsor of HB 2371 SA 2, said at the rally that the bill is “a vital step in protecting access to affordable medications for patients who rely on this program. And it doesn’t cost Illinois one dime.”

Stand with patients like Correy Bell. VOTE YES on HB 2371 SA 2 this session. Learn more.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Gov. JB Pritzker warns Trump will send ICE agents to polling places as he calls on voters to push them aside. Tribune

    - Gov. JB Pritzker told a conference of Black activists in New York City on Thursday that “all of us need to be civil rights advocates” and protect voting rights, saying he thinks President Donald Trump plans to call out federal immigration agents to polling places for the November midterms.
    - Asked directly by Rev. Al Sharpton whether he was a 2028 presidential candidate, Pritzker said, “since I was an adult and able to vote, I’ve been involved in some fashion or another” in presidential politics, “and I’m going to be more involved than ever before in 2028 because we can’t lose.”
    - Pritzker said Democrats campaigning for the midterm elections and for the presidency in 2028 should focus on “livability,” repackaging the oft-used term “affordability” to speak to people about the need to raise the federal minimum wage and bring down the costs of housing and health care.

* Related stories…

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


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

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

* At noon, Gov. JB Pritzker “will highlight his commitment to supporting a strong, free press at the Illinois Local News Summit.” Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | House Republicans outline what it will take for them to vote on Bears bill: Property tax increase referendums should only be permissible during November general elections, when turnout is highest compared to primaries or local elections, they argued. They also want to prohibit local governments from rolling over bond payments to other projects once the project voters approved them for is complete. Those are “minimum” requirements to earn Republican support, Ugaste wrote.

* WJOL | Constituents Wonder: Where’s Our Rep?: Naperville resident and Benton constituent Tami Weir told WJOL: As one of Harry Benton’s constituents I have become increasingly frustrated that I have not been able to reach him about a concern I have. I’ve called and left a message, sent a letter, emailed more than once and also filled out the contact form on his website. I have received no response. It is acceptable to choose to represent a district and then disappear with no explanation. There are important decisions being made in Springfield right now and we have zero representation. If he can’t do his job he needs to resign and allow someone who can to come in. We deserve better and should demand it. (Note from Isabel: Rep. Benton was back in Springfield this week. He did not accept a request for an interview.)

* Sun-Times | Madigan’s landmark conviction now in hands of appeals court focused on ’specific’ corruption: But Thursday, when a new legal team took their appeal of Madigan’s corruption conviction to the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, it was longtime Judge Frank Easterbrook who sat quietly and mysteriously, asking no questions and giving no hint as to how he might lean. Judges Michael Scudder and Nancy Maldonado did the talking instead, questioning Madigan attorney Amy Saharia and Assistant U.S. Attorney Julia Schwartz. When the argument ended, it was hard to say how the three-judge panel might rule, though Scudder and Maldonado seemed skeptical of Madigan’s position.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Crain’s | Pritzker urges power grid operator to force data centers to pay up:JB Pritzker and seven other governors are pushing PJM Interconnection, which operates the power grid that serves Illinois and a dozen other states, to shield consumers from costs driven by new data centers. […] They’re also seeking protections for consumers against so-called stranded costs if PJM secures more power-generation capacity than data centers end up using. The governors also want data centers to bring their own sources of power to the grid or pay the costs required for the additional capacity needed to serve them, or agree to receive less power during shortages.

* Click here for some background. Gov. JB Pritzker


* Capitol News Illinois | State education officials present $10.9B budget request to fund public schools: State education officials presented their case this week for a $10.9 billion budget to fund preK-12 public schools for the next fiscal year, saying the Evidence-Based Funding formula that has been in place for nearly a decade is now paying dividends. “Graduation rates are at a 15-year high,” Steven Isoye, chair of the Illinois State Board of Education, told a House budget committee Tuesday. “Achievement gaps are narrowing. Student growth exceeds pre-pandemic levels and Illinois eighth graders now outperform national averages in reading and math.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Will CPS cancel school for CTU ‘Day of Action’ May 1? CEO said no, but decision in limbo: Chicago Public Schools CEO Macquline King rejected a request from the teachers union to cancel classes on May 1, but, facing pressure from City Hall and its allies in the district, said the board could ultimately overrule her decision. In a statement late Thursday, she reiterated her opposition to the Chicago Teachers Union’s “Civic Day of Action,” but noted the board can take formal vote on the issue. She previously argued that canceling classes would significantly disrupt the district.

* Tribune | Chicago cultural affairs nominee advances amid praise, concerns about department: Black Caucus aldermen overwhelmingly supported Merritt as the City Council’s Special Events Committee sent her appointment to the full council in a 12-4 vote. But others argued the employee mistreatment complaints from Hedspeth’s tenure linger under Merritt’s leadership. The aldermen opposing her cited a whistleblower lawsuit filed last month by former DCASE first deputy Rosalyn Kimberly Grigsby, who alleged she was iced out of work and fired after making formal complaints against Merritt.

* Sun-Times | Flooding in Chicago is getting worse: Potential ways to help prevent flooding are expensive. They include fixes that would contain flood water through traditional pipes and structures as well as natural sources, like green spaces with plants and trees that can help absorb the overflow when sewers are full. “One of the problems with flood management in the U.S. today is: A flood happens. It’s an emergency. The government drops a whole lot of money. They build the exact same thing that they had before,” says Howard Neukrug, a University of Pennsylvania professor and former city of Philadelphia official who led stormwater management strategy.

* Illinois Answers Project | Chicago cops did little to probe gun stolen from police station and used in three shootings, new records show: Instead, investigators closed the case without figuring out who stole the gun, which had been turned in to the police and was supposed to have been destroyed. After reporters asked how a gun could have been stolen from a police station full of cops, the department said it was reopening its investigation. But, even then, investigators didn’t interview a single additional officer who was there when the weapon was swiped from the Gresham District station in December 2023.

* WTTW | Pay $9.5M to Man Who Spent 19 Years in Prison After Being Wrongfully Convicted, City Lawyers Recommend: No physical evidence linked Reed to Van Vo’s murder, including hair and blood found at the scene. In addition, Reed had no injuries to his hands, even though Van Vo was stabbed repeatedly with a knife that did not have a handle, records show. Prosecutors sought the death penalty for Reed. After four years in jail, Reed pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in return for a promise he would not be sent to death row or sentenced to life in prison, records show.

* Unraveled | Chicago cop who killed Anthony Alvarez in 2021 engaged in fatal unreported police chase last year, new lawsuit alleges: “It was the duty of Defendant Solano to refrain from acting with an utter indifference or conscious disregard for the safety of others,” alleges the complaint. Attorneys claim Solano disregarded traffic signals and violated several department policies during the chase. According to the lawsuit, Solano chased Millian-Morales’ vehicle for “over one mile” on westbound Irving Park Road. After turning north on Oak Park Avenue, Millian-Morales lost control and crashed into a light pole near Taft Freshman Academy.

* WBEZ | Nearly 70 Chicago groups receive micro-grants after SNAP cuts, deportation campaign: “I have to admit, I do know that sometimes government — we can move a little slow,” Johnson said at Malcolm X College Thursday. “So the $4,500 grants that are issued, we are not just investing in services that you provide, but the leadership that you provide and the trust that you have built with residents. You embody the spirit of our collective responsibility.”

* Sun-Times | Michelada Fest announces full lineup with an added free day after last year’s cancellations: Now taking place in Union Park, the festival is back after a year-long hiatus sparked by concerns over the “rapidly changing political climate” and artist visa issues. Latin Mafia, Jhayco, Jessie Reyez and Sean Paul are headlining the three-day event.

* Block Club | Look Inside Former Signature Room Atop John Hancock Building As It Gets Makeover: More than 200 windowpanes — each weighing about 350 pounds — are being installed as the former restaurant and bar space, now gutted, becomes part of an expanded observation deck and 14,000-square-foot private event space. The attraction will be the city’s only multistory observation deck and will include a three-story atrium when it opens in mid-2027. There will also be a new bar, joining the Cloud Bar which is already open on the 94th floor, and an immersive experience, officials with 360 Chicago, which runs the current observation deck, said Wednesday.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Cook County launches effort to keep residents on Medicaid as thousands face losing coverage: Get Medicaid Facts is a website and communications toolkit targeted at keeping enrollees, community groups, employers and health care providers up to date on how the new rules affect Medicaid eligibility. […] It’s still not clear how the Medicaid regulations will work, as federal guidance on exemptions and verification processes for work requirements aren’t expected until June. Questions about what documentation enrollees will need, what constitutes proof of work, what counts as volunteering and more still need to be answered, officials say.

* Daily Southtown | Will County Board to revisit rejected solar farm proposals following court order: Will County Board members will re-vote next Thursday on six solar farm projects they denied over the last two years following a judge’s ruling this week ordering them to issue the special use permits for the projects. Will County Judge Bennett Braun, a Frankfort Republican, ruled Wednesday on the six cases and set a status date for April 16. Members of the county board’s Executive Committee Thursday discussed the judge’s ruling during a lengthy closed session but did not take any action. However, board Speaker Joe VanDuyne confirmed the six cases will be on the county board agenda next week.

* Crain’s | Suburban office inventory is shrinking. But vacancy is hitting new highs: The share of available workspace in the suburbs rose during the first quarter to an all-time high of 33.4% from 32.9% at the end of 2025, according to data from real estate services firm Jones Lang LaSalle. The vacancy rate is up from 32.2% a year ago and 22.1% when the COVID-19 pandemic began, having now hit new record highs for 21 consecutive quarters.

* Fox Chicago | Family sues Evanston over police encounter that left woman in coma: Williams’ family says she has schizophrenia and bipolar disorder and was likely experiencing a manic episode. […] Officials say she continued to resist, and they used force to subdue her. While paramedics were placing her on a gurney, Williams became unresponsive, police say. First responders attempted to resuscitate her before she was rushed to the hospital. “Her oxygen was blocked off, the doctor told me, for 22.1 minutes. So her brain is damaged 75 percent. She’s on a feeding tube, she was on a ventilator, now I have to put her on a trach,” said Jacqueline Hoffman, Williams’ mother. “She was around 90 pounds, she’s about 75 pounds now.”

*** Downstate ***

* WICS | Former Springfield police chief at center of heated council meeting: Springfield activist, Teresa Haley, was at Tuesday’s City Council meeting. She said she was horrified when she heard former Springfield police chief Michael Walton using racial slurs. “He called Shawn Gregory the N-word and I was like no he didn’t just go there,” Haley said. “That set Shawn off.” […] NewsChannel 20 and Fox Illinois reached out to Walton about last night’s exchange. He said, “No racial slurs were uttered by me, as I do not use those horrible words. If someone said I did, they are a liar.”

* WAND | Oakwood considers new tax to save ambulance service: Multiple residents filled the Oakwood Village Hall Thursday night, wanting answers about the future of the local ambulance service. Emergency response leaders want to reform the coverage area into a special service district, so a tax levy can be implemented. “If I [were] to call 911 right now, would I get a paramedic?” one resident asked. “There is no guarantee that you’re going to get a paramedic at any point in time with our current staffing,” said Zach Weddle, director of Oakwood Emergency Services.

* WCIA | Buckley looking to fill gap in funding for sewer system project: WCIA 3’s partners at the Ford County Chronicle reported that while the village is continuing to move forward with the project, it will cost $2 million more than what the village has available. The lowest bids for the project, which were unsealed at the Village Hall on Tuesday, were for $18.6 million. The village only has $16.7 million available, leaving leaders to examine their options.

* WGLT | 2026 Illinois Shakespeare Festival drops ‘Romeo and Juliet,’ ‘The Two Gentlemen of Verona’ and ‘Our Town’:
The story of two star-crossed lovers, Romeo and Juliet, will be directed by Illinois State University alumna and Milwaukee Repertory Theater producer María Amenábar Farias. Previews are slated for 7:30 p.m. on June 25. As for the comedy The Two Gentlemen of Verona, Texas State University theater professor Danielle Roos will direct the Italian-set classic. Previews begin at 7:30 p.m. June 24.

*** National ***

* Business Insider | Anthropic says its latest AI model is too powerful for public release and that it broke containment during testing: “Claude Mythos Preview’s large increase in capabilities has led us to decide not to make it generally available,” Anthropic wrote in the preview’s system card. “Instead, we are using it as part of a defensive cybersecurity program with a limited set of partners.” The announcement is a major step for Anthropic, which in February weakened a safety pledge about how it would develop AI models. Claude Opus 4.6, which the company called its most powerful model to date, was publicly released on February 5.

* Post-Tribune | Local 150 claims Blue Chip Casino took anti-data center signs: An Indiana Department of Transportation employee allegedly arrived later with the casino worker and confiscated the sign, saying that the union couldn’t be on a public right of way. The INDOT employee returned the sign, and Local 150 put it back up. “INDOT is aware of the situation at the casino,” a department statement said. “As there are no concerns related to traffic safety, there is not a reason to ask that any signs or banners be removed at this time.” The same casino employee returned with an Indiana State Police officer, Fagan said, who confiscated the banner again. Fagan said the union got the banner back and planned to return to the same location at noon Thursday.

* AP | Postal Service to suspend employer payments to workers’ pensions over cash crunch: The step taken by the Postal Board of Governors is meant to preserve cash and liquidity due to the Postal Service’s ”ongoing, severe financial crisis,” Postal Service Chief Financial Officer Luke Grossmann said in an internal message to USPS employees. Officials have warned the USPS is on course to run out of cash by around February 2027. Despite the suspension of employer contributions, effective Friday, current and future retirees will not be immediately impacted, Grossman said.

* AP | Justice Department is investigating the NFL for potential anticompetitive practices, AP source says: The NFL has not received a notification that the league is being investigated, according to two other people with knowledge of the situation. Those people spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak on possible legal matters. The investigation comes amid increasing federal scrutiny of the amount of money fans are paying to watch sports on television. The Federal Communications Commission, for example, is seeking public comments on the ongoing shift of live sports from broadcast channels to streaming services.

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Good morning!

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I was at this Thalia Hall show, and I gotta tell you, these folks are in the top tier of Dead cover bands

Test me, test me, test me, test me, test me
Why don’t you arrest me?
Throw me into the jailhouse
Lord, until the sun goes down, until it go down

What’s happening in your neck of the woods?

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

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Apr 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

On Thursday, attorneys for imprisoned former House Speaker Michael Madigan are expected to ask the appeals court for a reversal of his February 2025 conviction and 7 1/2-year sentence, arguing the prosecution flouted Supreme Court rulings reining in the use of the bribery and fraud statutes and instead stretched the laws “past their breaking points.”

Then, next week, separate legal teams representing Madigan’s former confidant, Michael McClain, and and ex-ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore are expected to make a similar argument to the same court in their consolidated appeal of their 2023 convictions for an alleged conspiracy to bribe Madigan.

They say the convictions stemming from the “ComEd Four” case should be “doomed” by high court decisions saying “gratuities” given to politicians without a direct connection to official action cannot be considered a bribe.

The arguments in Madigan’s case are set for 2 p.m. Thursday at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse. Arguments in the consolidated appeal for McClain and Pramaggiore will take place Tuesday. The immediate stakes are high, as Madigan, McClain, and Pramaggiore are all currently in federal prison. But the long-term impact on Illinois politics could be even greater.

Click here for live updates. And click here to listen to the arguments.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois lawmakers begin days of deep dives on data centers: Illinois lawmakers are digging deep on data centers, with a House committee hearing from mayors, labor groups, and agriculture representatives about the facilities’ local impacts in the first of three planned meetings. Rep. Ann Williams, D-Chicago, the chair of the House Executive Committee, said she wanted to hear about the benefits and challenges of data centers as the General Assembly considers regulations like the POWER Act. “Whatever we do here, we have to put people first,” she said. “We have to put communities first. Data’s important, business is important, revenues are important, but people must come first.”

*** Chicago ***

* WGN | Pressure builds to cancel CPS classes for ‘day of protest’: The president of the Chicago Board of Education is pressuring the new Chicago Public Schools CEO to cave to union demands to cancel classes on May 1 for a day of protests, according to a memo reviewed by WGN “This message affirms the Board’s support of you executing on next steps necessary to operationalize a day of civic action on May 1, 2026;” the memo from Board president Sean Harden to CEO Macquline King reads. “Your continued efforts… to make this civic day of action successful for CPS students, staff and families are appreciated and encouraged.”

* Tribune | Aldermen bristle over Mayor Brandon Johnson move on pension costs for aides: Hadden’s alarm stemmed from an aldermanic briefing from the Office of Budget Management and other city departments at the end of March that noted that for part-time City Council aides’ who work at least 700 hours in a calendar year, “employer contribution costs will be encumbered in Ward Expense Accounts,” according to the slide deck. About 28 ward offices and one City Council committee contain at least one employee who is impacted, per her analysis of budget data. Johnson’s spokesperson retorted Wednesday that aldermen were crying foul over a practice that’s been required for over two years.

* Tribune | After years of declines, Chicago shootings tick up in 2026: The city recorded 105 murders through the first week of April, up slightly from the 98 killings seen in the same time period in 2025, according to city violence data. Another 266 people have suffered nonfatal gunshot injuries since the start of the year. The first three months of the year saw disparate trends in violence within CPD’s five patrol areas, records show, with a mixed bag of increases and further drops. The citywide uptick is largely due to an increase in both murders and nonfatal shootings in CPD’s Area 1, which covers the city’s South Side north of 79th Street. The area saw 114 shootings and 32 murders through April 5 — 25% and 52% increases, respectively — according to police data.

* Tribune | Two cops stripped of police powers in domestic violence cases: Rivera’s notification of duty restrictions sheet, also obtained in a Freedom of Information request, shows that he was relieved of his police powers the day he was arrested, listing the reason for the strip as a domestic incident involving physical abuse. Public records show that Rivera was most recently assigned to the Deering (9th) District and had been with CPD for about eight years. Rivera is not on active duty, the police department said. Internal police department investigations into both officers are in progress.

* Sun-Times | Rainbow PUSH names new leader after death of founder Rev. Jesse Jackson: The organization’s board of directors unanimously approved Yusef Jackson to take the reins, fulfilling his father’s wishes to designate his successor before his death. For the last two years, Yusef Jackson has served as the organization’s chief operating officer. “I am deeply grateful to my father for his trust, his guidance, and the example he set for all of us,” Yusef Jackson said in a statement.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Homer Glen OKs agreement to put some limits on license plate reader use: Homer Glen will store data obtained from its license plate reader cameras for seven days in an effort to balance public safety with some residents’ concerns over an intrusion of privacy. The village will also only limit information collected from the cameras to be shared within Illinois, according to a memo of understanding between the Village Board and the Will County sheriff’s office. The board voted 5-1 Wednesday to approve the policy with the sheriff’s office, which provides the village’s police services.

* Daily Southtown | Wauconda starts annexation process to block solar energy facility in residential area: The village’s zoning code does not permit solar utility systems in residential districts. However, they are allowed in limited industrial zoning districts with a conditional use. Annexing the property was discussed at a non-voting meeting March 31 after the village learned OneEnergy Renewables was considering building a 5-megawatt solar utility system on the site, according to village documents. “The village’s intervention in this case is to reduce the possibility that it will develop in a manner inconsistent with our comprehensive plan, should the use ever change from its current agricultural use,” Matson said.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Utility rate hikes coming to St. Charles starting in June: St. Charles residents are likely to see higher utility bills starting in June, after City Council members on Monday approved rate hikes they say are needed to pay for lead water service line replacements and infrastructure improvements. Residents can expect to see a roughly 17% increase in their overall utility charges beginning in June, with subsequent increases expected annually through 2029.

*** Downstate ***

* Rockford Register Star | How much money can a data center bring? Here’s what happened in DeKalb: As Rockford area officials contemplate the pros and cons of a potential data center, the property taxes it could pay to local taxing bodies might tip the scale. A Meta DeKalb Data Center is generating tens of millions a year in property taxes and is being credited with helping drive down property tax rates. San Diego-based Monarch Energy wants to bring a data center to about 1,100 acres south of the Chicago Rockford International Airport. DeKalb’s experience with Meta’s 900,000-square-foot data center could offer a glimpse of what the Rockford area could expect if one were built here. Rockford area residents have said they worry a data center would increase electricity costs and drain water resources. They also worry about the impact on agricultural land, water ways and the potential for pollution.

* PJ Star | ‘Deeply disappointed’: Residents remain opposed to Peoria land sale: Emily Cahill, the park district’s executive director, said that they are solely focused on trying to negotiate an updated easement to protect it after O’Brien purchases the property “While the Peoria Park District appreciates resident concerns related to the sale of portions of the Detweiller Marina, our primary function and the only thing that we have legal standing to do at the present is to work to negotiate the terms of an updated permanent easement to protect the portion of the Rock Island Greenway that goes through the marina,” Cahill said in a statement on Tuesday.

* WGLT | Central Illinois union painter shares the value of apprenticeships in a statewide professional development program: Now, Harms is telling her story through the Apprentice Ambassador Program, a workforce development initiative hosted by the Illinois Workforce Innovation Board’s Work-Based Learning and Apprenticeship Committee. The program trains a cohort of people to speak on the apprenticeship model as a college alternative and career development tool.

* WTVO | Historic Briggs Mansion in Rockford to be demolished: Alderman Mark Bonne is sad to see the mansion go; however, he explained he is not surprised. “I expected the demolition because they weren’t sure of the plans. At least not with individual aldermen or with the Historic Preservation Commission,” shared Bonne. UW Health Swedish American Hospital bought the building last month and has now received a demolition permit. Workers were already at the home removing architectural pieces and boarding the door.

*** National ***

* Futurism | Analysis Finds That Google’s AI Overviews Are Providing Misinformation at a Scale Possibly Unprecedented in the History of Human Civilization: Google’s AI Overviews are peddling misinformation on a scale that may be virtually unprecedented in human history. A recent analysis conducted by the AI startup Oumi at the behest of The New York Times found that the AI-generated summaries, which appear above Google search results, are accurate around 91 percent of the time. In a sense, that may sound like an impressive figure. But here’s an even more impressive one: five trillion. That’s roughly the number of search queries that Google processes every year, translating to tens of millions of wrong answers that the AI Overviews are providing every hour — and hundreds of thousands every minute, the analysis calculated.

* Pew | Austin’s Surge of New Housing Construction Drove Down Rents: The efforts worked. From 2015 to 2024, Austin added 120,000 units to its housing stock—an increase of 30%, more than three times the overall rate of growth in the United States (9%). Rents fell. In December 2021, Austin’s median rent was $1,546, near its highest level ever and 15% higher than the U.S. median ($1,346). By January 2026, Austin’s median rent had fallen to $1,296, 4% lower than that of the U.S. overall ($1,353). This decline occurred even though the city population grew by 18,000 residents from 2022 to 2024. In apartment buildings with 50 or more units, rents fell 7% from 2023 to 2024 alone—the steepest decline recorded in any large metropolitan area. Rents declined about 11% in older non-luxury buildings that cater to lower-income renters, known as Class C buildings.

* WaPo | Supreme Court remade by Trump ushers in historic defeats for civil rights: The analysis shows that in addition to civil rights, the court powered by Trump’s picks — Justices Neil M. Gorsuch, Brett M. Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett — has pushed to the right of any modern court on religious rights and voting issues. The court has also entered a new era of extreme partisanship. None over the past seven decades has been as starkly polarized.

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In rare move, Sims goes off on state procurement officers for ineptitude

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Elgie Sims is one of the most powerful members of the Illinois Senate. And he didn’t achieve that by blustering his way into news stories. This sort of public grilling usually only comes when somebody is frustrated after years of behind the scenes work

Lawmakers say Illinois-based businesses are getting work in other states but struggling to get business in their home state.

The state’s chief procurement officers appeared before the Illinois Senate Appropriations Committee on Wednesday.

State Sen. Elgie Sims Jr, D-Chicago, said Illinois-based companies get work in Indiana, Iowa, Wisconsin, Texas, Florida and Georgia.

“We are hearing it across the board, ‘I can get business elsewhere and I can’t get business from my own home state.’ That’s a problem,” Sims said.

Sims said he is not hearing an effective procurement plan from any of the CPOs to help Illinois businesses succeed.

State Sen. Celina Villanueva, D-Chicago, said she would not be as gentle as Sims.

“I’m very frustrated. Actually, I’m just going to say it. I’m very furious. I see no fire under any of you all to try to address this situation,” Villanueva said.

Villanueva asked the CPOs to provide a timeline for solutions.

Capital Development Board CPO Kenneth Morris said he would present a timeline within a week, but the other three CPOs did not provide specific dates.

* Speaking of CBD

Long‑delayed university repair funding is leaving campuses across the state with holes in their roofs, and in project budgets. […]

Funding for deferred university maintenance was a focus in a Senate committee hearing early this week. University officials told lawmakers that aging buildings have deteriorated so badly that some spaces can no longer be used.

Northern Illinois University President Lisa Freeman was among university officials to speak up about the degradation of multi-million dollar buildings as a result of ongoing delays in funding.

“NIU has not received $34 million of its allocated $52.9 million of capital renewal funds from fiscal year ’20, and this has caused the university to assume prolonged risks associated with aging infrastructure,” said Freeman. […]

Freeman said the 2024 plan to level an unusable dorm and build a Health Technology Center – backed by a record $40 million donation – has been stalled for two years, awaiting action from the state’s Capital Development Board, giving no reason why.

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Feds: Illinois economy grew to $1.2 trillion in 2025

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The US Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis has released new GDP numbers for the nation and the states. Some regional numbers are here. National numbers are here. From Frank Manzo IV at the Illinois Economic Policy Institute…

Nationally

• U.S. economy only grew by 0.5% last quarter. Just a few bad events or policies could soon turn the economy negative (See: Iran war and oil shock, rising inflation, job cuts announced by tech companies). 2026Q1 is not currently expected to be negative, but it would not be shocking if it is and we’ve entered into a recession. […]

Illinois

• Illinois had a $1.20 trillion economy in 2025. Since 2019, we’ve added $306 billion to our economy. That’s more than Iowa produces in a year ($277B) and about the size of Kentucky’s entire economy ($307B).

    o This is average output over the year. For 2025Q4, annualized GDP was $1.23 trillion. There’s a small chance we end up with a $1.3T economy by the end of 2026, but not if we go into recession.

• Last quarter, personal income grew 3.9% in Illinois, faster than every neighboring state (this ranged from -1.5% in IA to +3.2% in MO).
• Last quarter, Illinois grew 1.1%, faster than the US economy (0.5%) and WI (0.1%), IN (0.0%), KY (-1.0%), and MO (0.8%). IA was up 1.8%.

    o Over the full 2025 year, however, Illinois real GDP was only up 1.6%. It was 2.1% in the US, 2.5% in IN, 1.2% in IA, 1.0% in KY, 1.3% in MO, and 1.5% in WI. So we lagged the nation and Indiana, but grew faster than every other neighboring state.

* Yeah, we have more robust economies than our immediate neighbors, but I dunno if that’s something I’d crow too much about. Here’s 2019 to 2025 GDP growth in similar states

    Illinois 34.2
    Michigan 35.1
    Minnesota 38.1
    Ohio 37.5
    Pennsylvania 31.7
    Great Lakes 36.5 percent

Discuss.

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It’s Time To Bring Safer Rides To Illinois

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

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

Ready to ride? Help bring Waymo to Illinois.

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Pritzker, Dem 2028 hopefuls head to New York to woo Sharpton

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* AP

The Democratic Party’s most ambitious politicians are courting African American activists in New York this week as the party’s unofficial 2028 presidential nomination contest takes shape at an annual conference led by Rev. Al Sharpton. […]

“Everybody’s talking about who may run for president,” said Sharpton, the National Action Network’s founder and president. “I want to first know what their vision is now, and what they’re doing now. So I’ve invited all of the people that could run.”

In addition to Shapiro, the speaking program features Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, Rep. Ro Khanna of California, and Arizona Sens. Mark Kelly and Ruben Gallego.

Former Vice President Kamala Harris, the last Democratic presidential nominee, is also scheduled to speak. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, another likely contender, won’t be in attendance because of a previously scheduled family commitment, his team said, noting that he met with Sharpton earlier in the year.

* Bloomberg

The conference is a key step in Sharpton’s endorsement process, he said. He wants to hear from the attendees about what they’ve done to combat President Donald Trump’s efforts to limit voting access and diversity, equity and inclusion programs, and what they would do if elected.

Sharpton, who ran his own unsuccessful campaign for president in 2004, also wants to observe how well the potential candidates mesh with conference attendees.

“I will be looking at their chemistry with our community,” Sharpton said.

Gov. Pritzker is scheduled for a fireside chat with Rev. Al Sharpton at 11:30 central time. Click here to watch.

Thoughts?

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Illinois Credit Unions: Building Stronger Financial Futures

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

April is Financial Literacy Month, a reminder of how valuable financial knowledge is for individuals and families across Illinois. Credit unions statewide embrace this mission year‑round by helping members understand their credit, strengthen their financial habits, and plan for long‑term success.

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Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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It’s just a bill

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WBEZ

When West Suburban Medical Center abruptly closed its doors temporarily last month, saying it had run out of cash to pay staff, there was little warning for thousands of patients and hundreds of employees.

Illinois regulators tasked with overseeing hospitals had little power to stop it. They also might not be able to keep open some of the dozens of other safety net hospitals around the state that mostly treat low-income and immigrant communities amid federal changes next year that could drastically reduce how much money medical centers get paid.

But two Democratic state lawmakers are proposing legislation to help the state better prepare. Bills from state Sen. Laura Fine and state Rep. Robyn Gabel would require all hospitals to file plans with the state in case they close or scale back services to make sure patients don’t fall through the cracks. For-profit hospitals owned by investors, like West Suburban, also would have to give the state a deeper look into their finances. Now, that’s largely shielded from the public. […]

The plans would include everything from who owns the hospital, to how to safely transfer patients to other hospitals if their owners temporarily suspend services or close. Hospitals would need to identify potential gaps in services they would create, and what would happen to their employees and medical trainees. Hospitals that don’t comply would be fined no more than $500 a week, or just over $25,000 a year.

* Sun-Times

The Illinois House passed a bill Wednesday restricting future immigration detention centers from being built near community buildings.

The bill would bar the placement of immigration detention centers within 1,500 feet of schools, churches, day care centers, cemeteries, public parks, forest preserves, private residences and public housing. Existing detention facilities like the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement processing center in Broadview would not be affected by the legislation.

After passing out of the House along partisan lines with support from Democrats and opposition from Republicans, the bill now goes to the Illinois Senate. […]

Republican House Floor Leader Patrick Windhorst, a lawmaker from Metropolis, raised concerns over the legislation’s legality and compared it to a California law, struck down in a federal court, that would have phased out private, for-profit prisons and detention centers.

[House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch] argued his bill would not meet the same fate, saying the California law was a ban, while this is only a restriction.

* Capitol News Illinois

Illinois drivers who have their license suspended for speeding or reckless driving violations could have an alternative under legislation being considered in the Statehouse.

Rep. Marti Deuter, D-Elmhurst, is pushing a bill that would allow drivers to have a speed control device installed in their car rather than having their license suspended.

“Speeding is a chronic problem on our streets and is a threat to public safety,” Deuter told a House committee last month. “Speeding is a factor in nearly half of all deadly crashes. Risk of fatality increases as speed increases.”

Under House Bill 4948, drivers who have their license suspended following two infractions within 12 months for either reckless driving or speeding 26 mph or more over the speed limit would qualify to apply for a permit with the secretary of state’s office to join the program. If approved, they’d have to pay a $30 monthly fee to have the device installed in their car. Drivers would be required to use the device for one year after their first suspension, two years after their second suspension and three years after three or more suspensions. […]

The bill was approved unanimously by the committee but is still being negotiated before getting a full vote in the chamber. […]

Participants would still be subject to some prohibitions, however, such as driving a commercial vehicle or school bus. […]

Rep. Will Guzzardi, D-Chicago, was among the lawmakers who participated in LifeSafer’s demonstration of the technology outside the Statehouse on Wednesday.

“It feels very natural and it also feels really safe,” Guzzardi told Capitol News Illinois. “You as a driver, you don’t notice it after a couple of minutes. You’re driving normally.”

* HB5011 passed the House unanimously yesterday. WTVO

A proposed Illinois law would prevent police departments from evaluating officers based on traffic stops, tickets or citations.

House Bill 5011 would expand existing limits on police citation quotas by barring law enforcement from using the number of tickets or citations an officer issues when evaluating job performance.

Under current Illinois law, cities are prohibited from requiring officers to issue a specific number of citations within a set time period.

The new proposal goes further, preventing police departments from comparing one officer’s citation totals to another when conducting performance reviews.

* Center Square

A longtime disability advocate in the statehouse, Rep. Charlie Meier, R-Okawville, gathered with advocates and parents Tuesday to speak about his proposed legislation that would address their perceived failings of the state’s Department of Human Services.

House Bill 5129 would prevent families or guardians of children with developmental disabilities from having to give up custody of their child in order to access more state services. […]

Meier spoke about additional legislation he’s proposed this session, calling on lawmakers to bring reform to the department.

Among them is House Bill 1122, which he said would make clarifications to current statutes requiring the department to review all emergency 911 calls stemming from community integrated living arrangements and other group living settings.

* WGLT

GOP state lawmakers want to lower gas prices in Illinois as the price of gas has risen above $4 a gallon because of the war in Iran.

Republican state Rep. Ryan Spain, representing an area north of Peoria to the Iowa border, introduced the bill. He said Illinois puts more of a burden on its drivers by having two taxes on fuel.

“We imposed a motor fuel tax across the state that was adjusted 6 years ago, 7 years ago now, in 2019, but then we impose a sales tax on top of that motor fuel tax, a tax on a tax,” Spain said.

Spain said by pausing this tax it would give quicker relief to Illinois families. He added the bill would only pause the sales tax and not the motor fuel tax. […]

The bill has not been called for a vote, but Spain said the bill could fit into this year’s budget.

* Tribune

Unlike the rest of Illinois, where a single statewide program governs school-based dental visits, Chicago runs its own parallel program jointly administered by CPS and CDPH. Across the rest of the state, providers mail permission forms asking parents to supply their child’s insurance information and may follow up if anything is missing. In Chicago, providers say they are barred from contacting parents to finalize incomplete forms. If a student’s insurance cannot be verified, the provider must treat the child free of charge — a policy that, compounded by low Medicaid reimbursement rates, can quickly render participation financially untenable. […]

The push in Springfield to fold Chicago’s program into the state version run by the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services comes as the number of contracted dental groups in Chicago’s program has fallen to 10 from 17 in 2016, according to CDPH data. With fewer dental groups, the percentage of CPS students served by the dental program also fell to 16% in the 2024 school year from 28% in the 2016 school year. […]

CPS and CDPH said in a joint statement that the Springfield legislation would unnecessarily eliminate Chicago’s independence while removing important safety checks the city provides. […]

State Sen. Julie Morrison, D-Lake Forest, the bill’s chief Senate sponsor, said providers deserve more support than the city is offering.

“When you’ve got dentists who do not want to serve, who are not being given the information that helps them bill, and they’re expected just to do it for free or find out the Medicaid information themselves, that’s not supporting the dentists who are coming in to underserved neighborhoods,” Morrison said.

* Tribune

The Illinois House on Wednesday passed a measure meant to encourage public high schools across the state to connect their students to organizations that will help them register to vote when they turn 18. […]

The bill, which passed by a 77-24 vote and now goes to the Senate for consideration, was inspired by Jackson, the civil rights leader who died Feb. 17 at 84. On the House floor, the legislation’s main sponsor uttered a variation of a famous Jackson line about young people and voting: “Senior high school graduation must be seen as a passage rite into adulthood. On that graduation day or night, we must put a diploma in one hand, symbolizing knowledge and wisdom, and put a voter registration card in that other hand, symbolizing power and responsibility,” state Democratic Rep. Kimberly Du Buclet said.

Meanwhile, some Republicans who opposed the bill raised concerns, including that there wouldn’t be parental involvement in guiding their high schooler’s decision to register to vote and that the decision could be influenced by “radical, activist teachers.” […]

However, state Rep. Will Davis, a Democrat from Homewood who voted for the bill, criticized Republican lawmakers who didn’t support a measure that would allow “younger people to get more engaged” in the democratic process.

  15 Comments      


Restrictions To 340B Make Life Harder For Low-Income Residents – Pass HB 2371 SA 2

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Restrictions To 340B Make Life Harder For Low-Income Residents – Pass HB 2371 SA 2
Why must House Bill 2371 SA 2 pass this session? Here are three key reasons:

    1. No one should have to decide between paying for groceries or needed medications. Drugmaker restrictions to 340B are making life harder for low-income Illinoisans by limiting the number of pharmacies offering discounted drugs.

    2. HB 2371 SA 2 does NOT require state or taxpayer funding. 340B drugmakers are required to provide discounted drugs to hospitals and health centers caring for high numbers of low-income patients.

    3. With federal Medicaid cuts looming, up to 500,000 Illinoisans could lose health coverage. Illinois hospitals face closure or service line cuts, as one-third operate on negative margins every year.

HB 2371 SA 2 unanimously passed the Senate last spring. At a 340B rally last month, State Sen. Mattie Hunter said, “Across Illinois, families rely on a network of hospitals and community health centers that are there in their hardest moments. “I voted in favor of this bill because it protects access to care… Access to affordable care and medications is now more important than ever for working families, seniors and children. At a time when our state faces very tough financial pressures, this is a solution that strengthens care for patients without costing the state a single dollar.”

Patients and the providers caring for them urge House members to vote YES on HB 2371 SA 2. Learn more.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Refugee families are the latest group to face SNAP food benefit cutoff. Sun-Times

    - As many as 16,000 people could lose SNAP benefits because of the change in eligibility for immigrants, according to the Illinois Department of Human Services.
    - Trump’s policy changes put refugees in a Catch-22, resettlement agencies say. They can only receive SNAP benefits once they become legal permanent residents. But the federal government isn’t processing their green card applications.
    - RefugeeOne anticipates 175 families, or 850 individuals they serve will lose SNAP benefits at some point this year, the majority of them children, Schulze said. World Relief Chicagoland expects more than 300 of their families will lose benefits.

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


Sponsored by The Association of Safety-Net Community Hospitals

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

* Gov. Pritzker is in New York for a fireside chat with Rev. Al Sharpton at the 2026 National Action Network Convention at 11:30 CT.

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Chicago school board approves resolution against federal tax-credit scholarship program: Pritzker has yet to decide whether to opt into the program, which has stirred fierce opposition from public school advocates and the Chicago Teachers Union. “Public dollars are for public schools. Point blank, period,” said appointed board member Karen Zaccor, who represents District 4A on the North Side. “We are the stewards of those public dollars. Money pays for what we give our students — so this is about the students.”

* Center Square | Madigan corruption appeal to begin Thursday; Attorney General asks lawmakers for additional $15 million: Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul says his office is requesting an additional $15 million for fiscal year 2027. Raoul told the Illinois Senate Appropriations Committee on Wednesday that his office generated $21.45 in revenue for every taxpayer dollar the office received for operations over the last seven years. State Sen. Don DeWitte, R-St. Charles, asked Raoul if it was a good investment of taxpayer dollars when most of his cases against the Trump administration were thrown out at the federal level.

* Capitol City Now | Another lawmaker rallies with striking UIS faculty: On what was said to be another day of bargaining between administrators and the UIS United Faculty union, State Rep. Carol Ammons joined the rank and file, while in Springfield for the legislative session. She’s lead sponsor of the Adequate and Equitable Public University Funding Act — a measure the University of Illinois, a school she represents in Champaign-Urbana — has opposed. One of the complaints of striking faculty here is that UIUC is getting most of the system’s funding, and UIS gets relatively little “Thank you for supporting the equitable funding model,” Ammons (D-Urbana) told the faculty. “We are one of, maybe, eight states, eight, that do not have a funding formula. Because of that, you all have seen not only the students’ inability to keep up with the cost to attend, but your inability to keep up with the cost to work here.”

*** Statewide ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois farmers ease critical labor shortages through this agricultural visa program: Jeff Flamm, farmowner at Flamm Orchards in Cobden, struggled to find enough workers to harvest his crops — and the problem kept getting worse each year. “It got down to the point where I left a pretty significant amount of my crop in the field. One year I just couldn’t get it fixed. We just did not have enough help to get the job done,” he said. To resolve this labor shortage issue, Flamm turned to foreign workers. For the past 20 years, he has been employing a majority (approximately 80) of his farmworkers from abroad, through an agricultural nonimmigrant visa, the H-2A. As farm labor shortages deepen across the country, the H-2A visa program has become a lifeline for growers who can no longer find enough domestic workers to keep their operations running.

* WTVO | Illinois ranks 5th in nation for cyber crime complaints, loses $535M in 2025: FBI report: The state logged 32,977 complaints, resulting in reported losses of $535 million, an increase from $479 million in 2024, the report shows. Nationwide, cyber-enabled crimes cost Americans nearly $21 billion last year, up from $16.6 billion in 2024. Carrie Crot, a supervisory special agent in the FBI’s Chicago office, said Illinois’ high ranking stems in part from its large population and varying levels of cybersecurity practices across businesses, government agencies and individuals.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol City Now | State superintendent all-in on evidence-based funding: “Evidence-based funding,” enacted in 2017, “remains the principal funding source for Illinois schools,” said Illinois State Board of Education superintendent Tony Sanders (pictured). “In FY 2027, ISBE recommends an increase of $350 million, which includes $300 million in tier funding to school districts, and up to $50 million for the property tax relief grant, as required by statute.” Speaking to a House committee Tuesday, Sanders maintained he’s a fan. “EBF has transformed districts for the better and is most likely the reason why our pandemic recovery has been faster and stronger than other states.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Chicago Zoning Committee to skip another month and leave developments in limbo but alderman has plan for deal: Among other aldermen frustrated with the mounting delays, Ald. Nick Sposato, 38th, said he previously opposed Lawson’s appointment because he “didn’t think freshmen deserve anything.” But his tone has changed now. “At this point, we have got to do something, we just got to do something. This is an embarrassment,” he said, adding he would vote for Lawson.

* Fox Chicago | Mayor Johnson appointments face scrutiny amid harassment allegations: On Tuesday night, the mayor’s office denied Andrade’s account, saying the accusations have no basis and directly contradict prior communications between all the parties involved. Waguespack says the city council will have to take another look before simply confirming the mayor’s new appointees — like his pick for CDOT Commissioner William Cheaks — in light of the recent turmoil at the top.

* WGN | Chicago Teachers Union President joins The Point: The CTU is also arguably the most powerful force in Chicago politics. Current Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson came out of CTU leadership, and should he run for re-election, Davis Gates says he will have to make his case to the Union’s political action committee. She also argues the Chicago Teachers Union isn’t a “political party.”

* Tribune | ‘Mixed Marriage Project’ charts decades of Black-white marital unions in Chicago: In Dorothy Roberts’ latest book, “The Mixed Marriage Project: A Memoir of Love, Race and Family,” readers glimpse nostalgic moments from the sociologist and law professor’s family, with her parents at the center. An academic at the University of Pennsylvania who directs the Penn Program on Race, Science and Society, Roberts takes us through her childhood growing up in Kenwood as a biracial child of a white father, the son of Welsh and German immigrants, and a Jamaican-born mother turned Liberia citizen and student at Roosevelt University working toward her Ph.D.

* WGN | Legacy on the Line: Pilsen museum removes Cesar Chavez memorabilia: Chief curator Cesareo Moreno has spent the last few weeks, removing the pieces of art that include the labor and Civil Rights icon. Moreno says, “he (Chavez) certainly seemed almost too perfect,” he said. “His fight for social justice, his fight for the poor, the farmworkers.” Alejandra Sossa hopes the revelations don’t darken the farmworkers movement Sossa says, “The farmworker movement can’t just be associated with one person, because it belongs to a group of people.”

* Sun-Times | White Sox will give away pope-themed hats to honor loyal fan Pope Leo XIV: The White Sox will pay tribute to one of their most famous fans by offering pope-themed hats to some who purchase tickets for their game against the Cincinnati Reds on Aug. 11. A limited number of hats shaped like the Pope’s miter, with the team’s sock logo in the middle, will be distributed. They will be available to fans in certain sections the White Sox referred to as “pews.” Tickets must be purchased from the team and not a third party in order to receive the hats.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Legal Newsline | IL Supreme Court says it can remove Cook Co. judge for pro-Trump column: On April 3, attorneys from the office of Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul filed a motion in Chicago federal court, seeking to toss a lawsuit filed against Illinois’ state Supreme Court justices by former Cook County Judge James R. Brown. In a brief filed in support of that motion, the Illinois Supreme Court justices argue their interests in ensuring Illinois state courts remain free of even the “appearance of impropriety” and bias override the ability of retired judges to exercise First Amendment rights, at least if they expect to be able to land temporary judicial assignments in the future.

* Legal Newsline | Jewish students can’t sue Northwestern over antisemitic protest response: According to Blakey, the complaint documented several incidents of stridently antisemitic depictions, statements and actions. But those allegations alone don’t establish a violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, specifically the existence of a hostile educational environment, because of pleading requirements regarding what school officials knew and when, the judge said. “They allege a Title VI violation based upon ‘many other incidents on campus’ which contributed to the hostility they endured,” Blakey wrote. “But plaintiffs do not plead any facts about what these ‘other incidents’ involve; nor do they allege how these ‘other incidents’ were reported to Northwestern officials, or that those officials otherwise had actual knowledge of such incidents. For example, John Doe 2 alleges that he was the subject of a ‘derogatory and harassing online post.’ Yet plaintiffs do not allege anyone reported this post to Northwestern officials, or that Northwestern officials had actual knowledge of the post.”

* Fox Chicago | Cook County jury awards $51 million in missed glucose test case: Attorneys for Reinke argue a simple blood sugar test could have identified the condition and prevented the outcome. “I hope that screening for diabetes becomes a mantra in emergency rooms across the country so that outcomes like this can be avoided,” said attorney Jason Williams. They also say the verdict could help improve his quality of life, including access to a communication device he can operate with his eyes.

* Daily Southtown | Dolton firefighters raise concerns about interim chief, broken equipment after picket of Village Hall: Dolton firefighters are asking the Village Board to replace the interim fire chief it hired, claiming he is unqualified and has failed to meet certification requirements. The Dolton Professional Firefighters Association picketed Village Hall ahead of a board meeting Monday and raised concerns about broken equipment and poor leadership by Quention “Q” Curtis, who was appointed interim fire chief in September. The union filed a lawsuit last month asking that Curtis be discharged for failing to meet requirements for his position.

* Daily Southtown | Lawsuit seeks to stop Earthrise solar farm vote at Will County Board: “I want the record to reflect that I have been denied the opportunity to conduct cross-examination and to introduce evidence on behalf of my clients,” Becker, who is representing 16 residents in the lawsuit, said at the meeting. Earthrise’s proposal has sparked an outcry from neighboring residents about the impact row upon row of solar panels will have on the environment and the largely agricultural landscape in Green Garden, Manhattan and Wilton townships. In the lawsuit, Becker points to state and county law that requires residents be given a chance to present evidence and cross-examine witnesses at a public hearing for a special use permit, such as the one requested by Earthrise.

* Daily Southtown | District 130 board approves outside contract despite custodian protest: The District 130 school board is set to spend up to $150,000 on an outside custodian contract that its own custodians claim the district does not need. The District 130 board said the funds would be use to provide immediate additional custodian services to ensure cleanliness during an emergency situation where district facilities are unsanitary, according to the resolution. But the custodial union, Service Employees International Union Local 73, claimed at the meeting they have photographic evidence of clean facilities and emails from the district administration applauding the custodians work in keeping facilities clean.

*** Downstate ***

* Illinois Times | Phoenix Center facing closure: The new executive director told Illinois Times that the cutoff of funds, which also has spawned an ongoing criminal investigation by the Illinois State Police focusing on Cooley’s conduct, will jeopardize the nonprofit’s existence in the next 12 months if the agency’s financial quandary isn’t resolved. Cooley hasn’t been charged with any crimes related to the recent investigations.

* WICS | Former Springfield police chief at center of heated council meeting: Springfield activist, Teresa Haley, was at Tuesday’s City Council meeting. She said she was horrified when she heard former Springfield police chief Michael Walton using racial slurs. “He called Shawn Gregory the N-word and I was like no he didn’t just go there,” Haley said. “That set Shawn off.” […] “They should have turned off his mic, they should have said ‘thank you,’” she said. “… But they let him go on and on for the entire five minutes.”

* WREX | Freeport superintendent shares insight behind vote to layoff over 50 staff members: “We look to people to be able to make that change and make a difference in the lives of our kids so when we knew, when the board knew that there was no other way but to engage in a RIF process, which is reducing our workforce, we all knew it was going to be a very hard process,” Anna Alvarado said. The layoffs leave 22 Extra Support Personne and 32 Certified Staff Members either out of a job or give some the option to shift to another open position. Alvarado added this did not come out of nowhere, with them officially performing an audit in February.

* IPM News | University of Illinois students, unions launch campaign to ‘De-ICE’ campus contracts: The U of I protest is part of a national campaign by the Service Employees International Union. The local version launched at Willard Airport on Saturday, with a focus on Global Crossing Airlines, Hilton Hotels, Enterprise Rent-A-Car and Flock Safety. “All of these corporations are profiting from this inhumanity. This university should not be doing business with them,” said SEIU Local 73 Field Organizer Ricky Baldwin.

* WCIA | Sangamon Co. seeking applicants for Mental Health Board: The Sangamon County Mental Health Board will be made up of nine people who will be responsible for evaluating community needs, establishing funding priorities and overseeing the distribution of resources to local service providers. The board members will be nominated by the County Board Chairman and approved by the County Board.

*** National ***

* WaPo | This GOP candidate seized a half-million ballots and says he may do it again: The logs that track ballots are preliminary and constitute only “partial data,” said David Becker, who assists election officials around the country as the executive director of the nonprofit Center for Election Innovation and Research. Election officials reconcile the number of ballots they receive with the number of voters they have to ensure their results are accurate, he said. The sheriff is basing his investigation “on information he either doesn’t understand or is willfully misrepresenting,” Becker said.

* NPR | ICE acknowledges it is using powerful spyware: Immigration and Customs Enforcement is using spyware tools that can intercept encrypted messages as part of the agency’s efforts to disrupt fentanyl traffickers, according to a letter sent last week by the agency’s acting director, Todd Lyons. Lyons’ letter, which was reviewed by NPR, said ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) is using various tools as part of its mission to disrupt and dismantle foreign terrorist organizations, “particularly those involved in the trafficking of fentanyl.”

* AP | Trump administration terminates agreements to protect transgender students in several schools: The decision means the department will no longer play a role in enforcing those agreements, which called for schools to take steps to comply with federal civil rights law. The districts affected are Cape Henlopen School District in Delaware, Fife School District in Washington, Delaware Valley School District in Pennsylvania, and La Mesa-Spring Valley School District, Sacramento City Unified and Taft College in California. Under the Biden and Obama administrations, the department interpreted Title IX, which prohibits sex discrimination in education, to include protections for transgender and gay students.

* The Newberg Graphic | Billions in unpaid taxes could help states fill budget holes, report says: The so-called tax gap — the difference between the taxes legally owed to the government and the amount paid — receives scant state attention, researchers from The Pew Charitable Trusts said in a report released Tuesday. That gap includes taxpayers who should file but do not, those who underreport their income, and those who do not pay on time. As many states confront budget shortfalls and deficits, Pew researchers said reducing these tax gaps could provide revenue needed to avoid tax increases or cuts to state services.

  9 Comments      


Good morning!

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Chicago Transit Authority

I always play to win

What up by you?

  4 Comments      


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

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Thursday, Apr 9, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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