Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Crain’s…
* Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker appoints brother-in-law to U. of I. board: Gov. JB Pritzker on Friday appointed Bryan Traubert, a philanthropist and former eye doctor who is married to Penny Pritzker, the governor’s sister, to the University of Illinois board of trustees. State employees are not allowed to appoint relatives — including in-laws — to state positions, according to the nepotism section of the Illinois state employee code of personal conduct. But the governor’s office in a statement said the code “does not legally apply to a separate entity like the University of Illinois.” * PJ Star | ‘Not a simple equation’: Illinois ID laws are a challenge, homeless advocates say: “The longer people stay on the outlying parts of society, the harder it is to come back in,” [Pathway Ministries staff member Derek Gordon] said. “Everything that had you tracing you into the system as who you are is starting to expire or you’ve lost it, so you keep moving further and further and it gets harder and harder to get the things you need to get back into the system and get the care that you need.” * Crain’s | Hotel group warns of travel hit as Trump policies chill tourism: National travel and tourism analysts are lowering projections amid the uncertainty. Tourism Economics is now forecasting a 9.45% decline in international arrivals this year after previously projecting 8.8% growth, while the National Travel & Tourism Office cites an 11.6% year-over-year drop in international visitors through March. * CBS Chicago | Cinco de Mayo Parade is canceled, but other celebrations are happening in Chicago: According to organizers, the Little Village parade was canceled due to deportation concerns. While the primary concern is safety, the move will cost businesses and the community money. Organizers say canceling this year’s parade will cost the Chamber of Commerce about $1.5 million. * WTTW | CTA Bus and Train Operator Overtime Dropped in 2024 as Agency Increased Staffing Levels: Data obtained by WTTW News shows the overall number of bus and train operators who worked for the CTA last year neared its pre-pandemic peak of employees. According to an analysis of operator data since 2015, the largest group of employees in each year worked an average of 30 to 40 hours per week. But that group is still significantly smaller than 2015, when 51.6% of operators fell into that category. Only 36% of operators did last year. Overall, about 17% of operators worked an average of 40 or more hours a week in 2024, down from 19.3% in 2023. * Crain’s | $900 million Bronzeville tower and AI lab project nears key land deal: GVG unveiled plans for Metropolis Pointe earlier this year. The proposal includes a 50-story tower with more than 600 residential units that would include a mix of workforce, market-rate and luxury condominium housing, as well as an “AI Preparedness Institute,” an education and workforce training center focused on artificial intelligence and emerging technologies. The development, which has an estimated total cost of $900 million, would also include retail space and wellness-focused community amenities, according to an announcement from GVG. * Crain’s | Johnson tapping PR guru and political insider to chair Choose Chicago board: The mayor is tapping Guy Chipparoni, CEO of Res Publica, to lead the board of the city’s tourism organization, according to people familiar with the appointment. Johnson is also appointing Sterling Bay executive Keiana Barrett, who was also recently named CEO of the Business Leadership Council. The change-up on the board comes after a drawn-out process to find a new chief executive for the agency. Kristen Reynolds, former CEO at Discover Long Island, was eventually installed to run the agency. * Crain’s | Mayor names former city insider to steer O’Hare through expansion, airline tensions: Mayor Brandon Johnson has picked Mike McMurray, a veteran infrastructure and transportation executive with City Hall experience, to lead the Chicago Department of Aviation. McMurray is president for transportation and engineering at Wight and a former deputy commissioner for real estate at the Department of Aviation under former Mayor Richard M. Daley. The 62-year-old replaces Jamie Rhee, a popular aviation commissioner who retired last month after a three-decade career in city government. * Tribune | Teen curfew vote delayed, alderman praises Mayor Brandon Johnson’s listening efforts: The City Council’s Public Safety Committee had been expected to vote on the measure at its afternoon meeting, but Ald. Brian Hopkins said early in the day it would not go forward. Too many aldermen planned to attend Rep. Jan Schakowsky’s afternoon announcement, where she said she would not seek re-election, he said. But Hopkins touted listening sessions that he attended with teens and another where Mayor Brandon Johnson listened to Streeterville residents as the downtown alderman promised to push the measure forward before late May. * Borderless | ‘We Feel Like We Hit A Brick Wall’: Migrant Soup Kitchen Faces Eviction: Eviction court records show that a Windy City Process Serving agent successfully gave the 30-day notice to “Jeremy Hammond” (sic) on June 27, 2024. Additional documents submitted to the court by Mui’s attorney show a “Co-working Space Agreement” between Jason Hammond of Midwest Books to Prisoners and Thomas Gaulke of First Lutheran Church of the Trinity for the nonprofit organization to use the former church space. However, Gaulke denied signing the agreement in a conversation with a church representative, according to a notarized certification from the representative in court filings. Gaulke did not respond to Borderless’ requests for comment, and Hammond declined to go on record for this story. * WTTW | Top Cop Agrees That CPD Officers Who Stopped, Shot Dexter Reed Should Be Suspended for Violating Rights of 2 Other Drivers: Snelling made his disciplinary decisions in both probes on March 5, records show. It is unclear whether the officers have served those suspensions, since they can appeal Snelling’s determination. In all, Snelling and COPA agreed that five officers collectively committed 47 violations of departmental rules designed to protect the rights of Chicagoans during two traffic stops and should be suspended for a total of 91 days, records show. * Tribune | Appeals system raised property tax bills for Cook County homeowners, report says: Homeowners’ bills grew by a total of about 7% over that span as a result of the shift, according to the latest report from the Cook County treasurer’s office, the first to calculate how much shifting burdens have cost on property tax bills. Those increases fell more on lower-income Black and Latino taxpayers, the report found. The report does not draw conclusions about whether those appeals were correct, but does show “that the county’s assessment appeal system works far more to the advantage of business property owners than homeowners, and at the same time favors wealthier white homeowners over lower-income minority homeowners.” * Tribune | Democrats pick new Cook County Board member for NW Side seat: Rounding out a series of promotions for 35th Ward progressives, Democrats from Chicago’s Northwest Side appointed Jessica Vásquez to fill a vacancy on the Cook County Board for the next 18 months. The shuffle started when Mayor Brandon Johnson elevated Carlos Ramirez-Rosa from the Chicago City Council to become CEO of the Chicago Park District. Johnson then tapped Cook County Commissioner Anthony Quezada to replace Ramirez-Rosa on the City Council last month. Vásquez will replace Quezada representing the 8th District on the county board. Ramirez-Rosa’s former chief of staff at City Hall, Vásquez was a frontrunner for the county post from the moment Ramirez-Rosa kicked off the musical chairs by taking the Park District job. * Daily Southtown | Landmarks: Chicago Tomato Man shares love of ‘real’ produce thousands of plants at a time: Bob Zeni had a plant problem. A few years after deciding to spend late winters learning how to start his own tomato seedlings, the sprouts had taken over his home in La Grange Park. It was, as he called it, a turning point. “That was about four years ago, when I had 2,000 plants started,” he recalled. “When they were really small they weren’t a problem. But when I had to up-plant them into 4-inch pots, we had them in every room in the house, next to every window I could find. * The Daily Egyptian | Conservative watchdog group recruits SIU students to investigate ‘liberal bias’ on campus: Campus Reform, a conservative national media organization focusing on higher education, sent recruitment emails to several SIU students. Their attempts to contact students have been sporadic, with some students receiving recruitment messages as early as February. According to the recruitment email that a recipient provided to the Daily Egyptian, they are looking for students who have experienced or heard about “liberal bias” on college campuses. * BND | Union says ‘pure corporate greed’ forcing some metro-east jobs to Mexico: The layoffs include 98 members of the International Association of Sheet Metal Air Rail Transportation Workers, or SMART, Union, according to a letter Hubbell Inc. sent to state officials on April 24. Richard Harris, a regional official with the union, said in a statement Friday that Hubbell notified the union last summer that the company was considering moving operations to Juarez. Harris said the change is being made “due to pure corporate greed.” * WSIL | Marion to light up for mental health awareness at Tower Square event Marion to light up for mental health awareness at Tower Square event: The 2nd Annual Lighting of Tower Square in honor of Mental Health Awareness Month event will be held on May 7, at 6:30 p.m. on Tower Square Plaza. Community leaders will also be in attendance to spread awareness and hope. * WGN | Original Van Halen frontman David Lee Roth announced as headline performer for state fair in downstate Illinois this summer: Original Van Halen lead singer David Lee Roth returned to the concert stage for the first time in five years Saturday night. The Rock and Roll Hall of Famer is now scheduled to be on stage this summer downstate. The Du Quoin State Fair announced Monday morning that Roth will headline the fair at the Grandstand stage on Saturday, Aug. 23. Du Quoin, a town of just over 5,500, is located in Perry County in southern Illinois, due north of Carbondale up U.S. Highway 51. * WIRED | Rejoice! Carmakers Are Embracing Physical Buttons Again: A smattering of automakers are slowly admitting that some smart screens are dumb. Last month, Volkswagen design chief Andreas Mindt said that next-gen models from the German automaker would get physical buttons for volume, seat heating, fan controls, and hazard lights. This shift will apply “in every car that we make from now on,” Mindt told British car magazine Autocar. * NYT | A.I. Is Getting More Powerful, but Its Hallucinations Are Getting Worse: These systems use mathematical probabilities to guess the best response, not a strict set of rules defined by human engineers. So they make a certain number of mistakes. “Despite our best efforts, they will always hallucinate,” said Amr Awadallah, the chief executive of Vectara, a start-up that builds A.I. tools for businesses, and a former Google executive. “That will never go away.”
|
Schakowsky finally makes it official (Updated x6)
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
* Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton…
* Rep. Dan Didech…
…Adding… Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss…
Biss is considered a likely candidate. …Adding… Sen. Laura Fine is also considered to be a likely candidate…
…Adding… Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz also takes her name out of contention…
…Adding… Chuy García…
* Democratic Party of Illinois Chair Lisa Hernandez…
…Adding… Rep. Hoan Huynh is also seen as a likely contender…
|
PPP Poll: US Sen. Dem primary ‘wide open’
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Keep in mind that the Democratic Lt. Governors Association is supporting LG Stratton…
* Remember, PPP surveyed likely Democratic primary voters…
The positive pushes were kinda weak for the Stratton rivals, but whatevs. Mentioning Pritzker and Duckworth obviously helped her. And she’ll likely have the financial resources to compete with the well-funded Krishnamoorthi. No crosstabs were dstributed by PPP, but there were five demographic questions at the end of the poll. This is the first legit public poll released in this race. A group supporting Underwood announced a poll some weeks ago, but it has never disclosed the name of the pollster nor provided the actual questions and answers, so I’ve disregarded it. Many thanks to Isabel for formatting the results to make it easier to view here.
|
More from the legal front: AG Raoul, others file lawsuits over wind energy development freeze, dismantling of HHS
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Click here for the lawsuit. Press release…
* Click here for the lawsuit. Press release…
Discuss.
|
Pass it on: REAL IDs will still be issued after May 7 (Updated)
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias just called. Apparently, people are standing in line for hours because for some reason they believe that they won’t be able to obtain a REAL ID after Wednesday. So, he asked me to pass this along. Happy to oblige…
Have you heard about this myth? …Adding… He’s gonna do a presser…
|
Make-work at the editorial board
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * The Chicago Tribune editorial board concocts a scenario that nobody is even considering, then warns against doing it…
All the stuff going on, and they’re spending time and resources concern-trolling about a fabricated “issue” without even checking with the governor’s press office (I know that because I checked with the press office). Meanwhile, how many good reporters have left that paper?
|
Treasurer Frerichs won’t run for Durbin’s seat: “I don’t need to be in Washington to make an impact”
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Treasurer Michael Frerichs…
Thoughts? * Meanwhile… Crain’s…
* The full finance committee..
|
Healing Communities: Pinckneyville Community Hospital
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] When money is tight, healthcare can become an afterthought, especially when people feel well. Yet part of maintaining good health is preventing chronic conditions such as high cholesterol and diabetes, as well as other health issues, before they take a toll. Pinckneyville Community Hospital makes it easy and affordable for individuals to monitor their overall health through bloodwork. Four times a year, the hospital offers discounted lab screenings as part of its ongoing commitment to preventive health and wellness. The screenings—held at the hospital in February, May, August and November—are for critical insights into liver and kidney function, cholesterol levels, average blood sugar, and more. “These low-cost labs are an excellent opportunity for individuals to take charge of their health, detect potential issues early and make informed decisions with their healthcare providers,” said hospitals leaders, adding that the screenings “are a great resource for those who may not have regular access to healthcare or simply want to keep a closer eye on their wellness.” Leaders, clinicians and staff at Pinckneyville Community Hospital know that individual and community health depend on hospitals addressing community needs and providing accessible care. Learn more about how Illinois hospitals are healing communities.
|
It’s just a bill
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
Sen. Mary Edly-Allen…
* Farm Week…
* Sen. Mike Simmons…
* Sen. Michael Hastings…
|
Care Can’t Wait: Illinois Seniors Demand Legislature Invest In Home Care, Raise Worker Wages
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] A growing number of seniors, families and workers are demanding the legislature address the crisis of seniors not being able to access the lifesaving care they need because home care workers aren’t paid enough to stay in the field. In response, lawmakers are increasingly showing support for investing in home care and care workers’ wages so that seniors can access quality care and age with dignity in their homes. “Many times, my home care agency fails to send replacement workers if my caregiver isn’t available, which means my daughter and granddaughter have to drop what they’re doing to step in and help…We must raise pay for our home care workers so families like mine aren’t put through these disruptions in care,” said Diana Inman, a Decatur senior who receives home care services through the Community Care Program. “I love my job, but low wages have made it difficult to remain in this industry…Families like mine are being pushed to the breaking point by the ongoing cost of living crisis,” said Jenny Smith, a Champaign home care worker. Public support for investing in home care is growing every day. Over 70 Illinois lawmakers support HB 1330/SB 120, which would increase the wage floor for home care workers serving seniors in the Community Care Program from $18/hr to $20/hr in 2026. Support HB 1330/SB 120 because Illinois seniors deserve quality care. Care can’t wait!
|
Some reasonable requests as the governor eyes 2028
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
Discuss.
|
Don’t Greenwash Discrimination: Demand Inclusive Labor Standards In Energy Storage Legislation
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] As Illinois charts its path toward a clean energy future, lawmakers must remember the promises made under CEJA—the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. CEJA was never just about clean energy; it was about equitable clean energy. That means creating good-paying union jobs for all workers, especially those from historically excluded Black and Brown communities. Yet today, a new energy storage bill threatens to undo that vision. Without strong, inclusive Project Labor Agreement (PLA) language, this legislation risks handing energy jobs to a narrow slice of the construction industry—jobs that will go disproportionately to white, politically connected workers, while locking out the very communities CEJA aimed to uplift. We can’t let Illinois’ clean energy transition be built on the backs of exclusion. Labor unity means every union has a seat at the table—not just the favored few. Ironworkers, roofers, painters, bricklayers, glaziers, boilermakers, cement masons, carpenters, millwrights and many other crafts helped build this state and deserve a shot at building its future. Lawmakers: don’t sell out working families. Reject any energy storage legislation that doesn’t include inclusive PLA language. Because when we say “green jobs,” we should mean jobs that are union, local, and equitable. This isn’t just about jobs—it’s about justice, too.
|
Open thread
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * The Boss released a new video overnight… I saw my face in the waters at the riverside What can you tell us about the goings-on in your part of the world?
|
Isabel’s morning briefing
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: $27 million fallout? Cost of tollway bid misstep piles up. Daily Herald…
- Tollway staff missed applying a 4% in-state bidder preference, which made Walsh Construction’s $327 million bid lower than Judlau’s $323.9 million offer under state law. - The agency settled a lawsuit with Judlau Construction in 2024, paying about $10 million in damages after abruptly canceling its contract to reconfigure the southbound side of the I-88/I-290 interchange. - Then in April, the board approved a $16.5 million change order for replacement contractor, Walsh Construction Co., to expedite the delayed project.
Illinois business leaders overwhelmingly agree: Early childhood services are a fundamental economic priority, to be preserved and strengthened. Our FY26 state budget should reflect that, investing further in affordable, high-quality child care for working parents. We desperately need to improve early childhood teachers’ compensation and shore-up Early Intervention therapies for young children with developmental challenges, whose families face lengthy service delays. At the federal level, it’s crucial that we protect Head Start’s vital, comprehensive services for kids from birth to age 5, and for their families — an important piece of our early learning system. In a recent poll of 400 Illinois employers and managers, two-thirds of respondents reported that child care insufficiencies have hurt their employees and business productivity. Four out of five noted their struggles to recruit skilled workers. And to tackle these challenges, 91.5% of business leaders said they support “greater public investments in high-quality child care and early childhood education” for their proven power to stabilize today’s workforce as well as help prepare a better-skilled workforce for tomorrow. There’s a reason 93% of surveyed business leaders believe our state’s multiyear approach to improve birth-to-5 services — based on the recommendations of a bipartisan commission — will “positively impact the workforce in Illinois.” Let’s stick with that plan; it’s good for business. * Crain’s | Pritzker shuts door on state funding for revised One Central megaproject: “With billions of dollars requested for the project, it’s critical that the state ensures any large-scale proposal is a good deal for Illinois’ taxpayers prior to moving forward. In this case, the independent study made clear that the risks far outweigh the benefits under the current proposal,” Pritzker spokesman Alex Gough said in a statement. “We are grateful to the many community leaders, officials, and organizations who participated in the study.” * Crain’s | Laura Ricketts to co-chair Stratton’s finance committee: Laura Ricketts and her wife, Brooke Skinner Ricketts, are among the co-chairs of Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton’s finance committee in her campaign for U.S. Senate. Also co-chairing the committee are Kimi Ellen and Lee “Rosy” Rosenberg. Vice chairs include Gloria Castillo, Les Coney, Betsy Dirksen Londrigan, Tamar Newberger, Andy Schapiro, Brian Rice and Smita Shah. * Sun-Times | Funeral services for former Gov. George Ryan to be held this week in Kankakee: Visitation will be held from 4 to 7 p.m. Tuesday at Schreffler Funeral Home in Kankakee, according to Ryan’s obituary. A memorial will be held at Asbury United Methodist Church on Thursday at noon. * Sun-Times | Pot business owners seek relief from strict and costly regulations on legal cannabis industry: There is currently no legislation in the works to address these demands, but Ford told the Sun-Times he intends to draft a bill that includes those issues. “We are actively working to find common ground to pass legislation that supports cannabis social equity businesses, current non-social equity businesses, and conditional license holders in the cannabis industry,” Ford said. * Capitol News Illinois | Former Gov. George Ryan dead at 91; remembered for corruption conviction, halting death penalty: In his 2020 interview with CNI, Ryan said the majority of his staff tried to dissuade him from making moves on the death penalty, which wouldn’t be officially abolished in Illinois until 2011. But Ryan said the uncertainty of decisions made under the death penalty system bothered him, especially in the wake of the exoneration of death row inmate Anthony Porter in February 1999, when Ryan was a month into his term as governor. Porter was freed after journalism students at Northwestern University uncovered evidence of his innocence. * Cook County Record | IL FOID gun owner licensing law constitutional, appeals court says; Dissent: Ruling ’stands 2A on its head’: Even though the state law effectively bars people from owning guns without first obtaining permission from the state to do so, a divided state appeals court has ruled Illinois’ gun owner licensing law doesn’t violate the right to keep and bear arms protected by the Second Amendment. A dissenting justice on the court, however, said the ruling essentially “stands the Second Amendment on its head,” by requiring people to first prove they are allowed to own a gun before the state allows them to exercise a supposed fundamental constitutional right. On April 29, a three-justice panel of the Illinois Fourth District Appellate Court in Springfield ruled 2-1 to reject a challenge to Illinois’ unique Firearms Owner Identification (FOID) law. * Tribune | With the state’s grocery tax set to end, many municipalities are adopting their own, even as food prices climb: Chicago officials have yet to decide whether to impose their own tax. The state grocery tax generates an estimated $60 million to $80 million for the city, said Ald. Pat Dowell, chair of the Committee on Finance. “It’s a not insignificant amount of money,” she said. Whether the city will impose its own grocery tax will be decided in upcoming budget hearings across the city. * Sun-Times | Here’s how Trump’s order to cut federal funding to NPR and PBS could impact Illinois: [M]any downstate outlets rely more heavily on federal money. Among them, based on her data, are WQPT TV in Moline and WEIU TV in Charleston, with federal shares of 50% or more. These stations also divvy up about $1.6 million from the state, an amount the council would like to see raised. But it’s a tough request for what analysts say is a cash-strapped budget year with other interest groups that have hands out. * Daily Herald | 416 miles in 10 days: Wheeling man runs length of Illinois, from Cairo to Wisconsin border: Bandolik ran Illinois’ entire length from south to north — 416.44 miles from Cairo, Illinois, to Beloit, Wisconsin, over 10 days from March 29 to April 7. Why? Because Bandolik, 28, hadn’t heard of anyone else doing it. “I wanted to be the first one to claim my home state before anyone else could claim it or document it,” said Bandolik, a Mount Prospect native and former Hersey High School football star. He documented the trip on TikTok, Instagram and through his YouTube channel. * Advantage | Ameren Illinois issues Mylar balloon warning: With graduation and birthday parties you will often see Mylar balloons. If the party is being held outside, Ameren Illinois asks you do everything you can to keep those balloons from floating away, as they can conduct electricity, resulting in surges that can cause power outages, start fires, and cause significant damage to the electric grid. * Sun-Times | Casino dumpsters ditched at Bally’s Chicago site as state officials blame Bally’s for allowing them: “Unlike active casinos where gambling operations are occurring, there are no agents stationed at the construction site,” a gaming board spokeswoman said, referring to the site of the Bally’s permanent casino being built in River West where the Chicago Tribune used to have a printing plant. “It is the casino’s responsibility to ensure vendors are disclosed to and approved by the IGB,” which is part of state government answerable to Gov. JB Pritzker. * Crain’s | As small business worries rise, Chicago offers a rare bright spot: A survey of small business owners by Chase showed optimism dropped to 65% in March from 79% in January. Chicago small business owners were more hopeful than average, with 80% reporting they were optimistic about the future of their business despite macroeconomic headwinds. * Crain’s | Art Institute president takes leave amid in-flight misconduct probe: Unnamed sources told WBBM that passenger was Rondeau, and the incident occurred after he drank alcohol and took prescription medication. A spokesperson for the Art Institute confirmed to WBBM that Rondeau has since returned to Chicago and that the museum is investigating the incident. * Tribune | Auburn Gresham campus that composts and creates energy aims to redefine waste management: At a once-vacant brownfield on the South Side of Chicago, a semitruck backed into an unassuming warehouse and unloaded a colorful batch of food scraps and spoiled products. The discards soon ended up in a massive tank that mimics a cow’s digestion — minus the release of gassy byproducts — where they were turned into compost and renewable energy. The anaerobic digester represents the culmination of a combined effort by the Auburn Gresham community, politicians and scientists to change Chicago’s approach to keeping food waste out of landfills, which are the third-largest source of human-related methane emissions in the country. * WBEZ | A young family risked it all to save iconic music venue Fitzgeralds. Can they make it work?: A traffic jam led Duncan to Fitzgeralds, but soon after the couple signed the papers on March 15, 2020, it felt more like a 10-car pileup. The two were not independently wealthy, and Duncan was giving up a fat check and profit-sharing from his employer, the hospitality group 16 on Center. King worked on a Chicago public school salary. To come up with the $1.7 million purchase price, they did a cash-out refinancing on their home, sold a Ukrainian Village two-flat, secured loans totaling about $1 million from the Small Business Administration and coaxed eight investors — friends, family and colleagues — to throw in another half-million of equity. * Crain’s | Michael Miner, eloquent journalist and journalism critic, dies at 81: Michael Miner, a prolific and penetrating media critic for the Chicago Reader and before that, a shoe-leather reporter for the Sun-Times, died on May 1, according to a posted death notice. […] “He has the wit and skill of the fabled Mike Royko but is more cerebral,” author Steve Boriga wrote in the publication in 2011. “He does lack Royko’s switchblade: he’s willing to offend, but his hating instinct is underdeveloped.” * Sun-Times | Lori Healey, former McPier CEO and Daley chief of staff, dies at 65: Former Mayor Richard M. Daley called Lori Healey “a brilliant leader whose tireless spirit and deep commitment to public service set her apart.” She oversaw development of Wintrust Arena, the Marriott Marquis Chicago and most recently the Obama Presidential Center. * Sun-Times | ‘Broken system’ of property tax appeals put extra $2 billion on Cook County homeowners, treasurer says: Chicago had some of the worst disparities in the county, with businesses’ tax bills dropping nearly 20% while residential bills increased by more than 16% during the 2021 to 2023 reassessment cycle. * Sun-Times | U.S. Department of Education investigating Evanston-Skokie school district for racial discrimination: The complaint alleges the school district directs students and staff to participate in “privilege walks,” pressures educators to “acknowledge white skin privilege” and encourages students to be “activist[s] and … actively anti-racist.” * Tribune | Arlington Park’s rebirth: Finalizing the deal with the Bears in the coming months, or years, presents a challenge he believes he’s built to handle. He has run his Arlington Heights architecture firm for 34 years, steering it through the late-2000s financial crisis that decimated his staff and shut down several projects. Then came a prostate cancer diagnosis in 2016 and the quick removal of the tumor. “It just knocks you to your knees when you hear those words,” he said. He’s a survivor. These days, business is good and Tinaglia sometimes lets loose in his band Exit 147, named in honor of the family’s cottage in Wisconsin. He plays the guitar, with one of his sons on the drums and another as the vocalist. They play a lot of ’80s and ’90s hits. * BND | AmeriCorps workers in metro-east told to stay home after DOGE cuts to funding: “Our AmeriCorps Program has been ordered to stop all work until further notice by the Illinois Dept of Human Services and the (Illinois Serve Commission),” the email stated. “Do not report to your school until further notice. Your principals have been notified.” The 32-year-old program apparently is the latest casualty related to cuts by the Department of Government Efficiency, also known as DOGE. Gillham, 19, of Belleville, an AmeriCorps worker since February 2024, called the news “devastating.” Beyond tutoring, she also has helped with Mount Hope Cemetery clean-ups, Art on the Square crafts for kids, Cities in Harmony and other community projects. * WGLT | Rivian executive Julie Hoeniges named to ISU’s Board of Trustees: She leads development of trade policy, customs import compliance, export control operations, and ensures compliance with international trade regulations, according to the governor’s release. Hoeniges previously oversaw $50 billion in import and export activity at Caterpillar Inc. She is a licensed U.S. Customs Broker and longtime member of the American Association of Exporters and Importers, where she serves on the board of governors. She also served two terms on the Illinois District Export Council. * WAND | DeShawn Williams sworn in as new Urbana mayor: DeShawn Williams was officially sworn in as the mayor of Urbana on Saturday. He is the first black mayor in the city’s history. […] Williams beat out candidate Annie Adams during the elections in February. He started his career as a bank teller, and worked up to becoming the Chief Deputy Treasurer of Champaign County. * WGLT | Child care in McLean County can cost more than rent or mortgage payments: A look at federal and state data and an EDC survey suggested the average cost of child care in the Twin Cities is $1,600 a month. Economic Development Council President and CEO Patrick Hoban said that’s behind only suburban Chicago. Home providers charge around $800 monthly. “70% of the cost of child care is in the wages. So, you combine that with the requirements for education and licensing that they have to keep up and it has pushed the price above $2,000 a month in some instances,” said Hoban. * WCIA | Six Illinois women honored with 2025 Order of Lincoln: Champaign-born Bonnie Blair was the first American woman to win five gold medals at the Olympic Winter Games. Her first Olympic appearance was at the 1984 Sarajevo Games. Four years later in Calgary, Blair earned her first gold medal in the 500 meter speed skating event. In the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville Blair added two more gold medals, and in 1994, Blair stood atop the podium and received another two gold medals at the Olympic Games in Lillehammer. * PJ Star | Successes, tragedy, politics: Gary Manier reflects on 24 years as Washington mayor: Holding the record for longest-running mayor of Washington, Manier will officially retire from his role May 5, passing the torch to mayor-elect and former Ward 1 Alderperson Lilija Stevens. In more than two decades, Manier said, he missed only four meetings of the Washington City Council. When he was first elected, he traveled 100 days out of the year to do business with Caterpillar, where he worked even after becoming the city’s mayor in 2001. He retired from the manufacturing company in 2015 to focus on his mayoral duties. * WGLT | Illinois State’s cilantro will soon be grown on campus, inside new Vertical Farm: The farm, which officially launched Thursday, will operate out of a converted shipping container outside ISU’s Office of Sustainability on School Street. The 320-square-foot unit is equipped with a hydroponic system and LED lighting to grow the equivalent of 1-2 acres of traditional field production with a fraction of the water required to cultivate up to 4,600 plants. * The Atlantic | ‘The Worst Internet-Research Ethics Violation I Have Ever Seen’: [W]hen members of a popular subreddit learned that their community had been infiltrated by undercover researchers posting AI-written comments and passing them off as human thoughts, the Redditors were predictably incensed. They called the experiment “violating,” “shameful,” “infuriating,” and “very disturbing.” As the backlash intensified, the researchers went silent, refusing to reveal their identity or answer questions about their methodology. The university that employs them has announced that it’s investigating. Meanwhile, Reddit’s chief legal officer, Ben Lee, wrote that the company intends to “ensure that the researchers are held accountable for their misdeeds.” * The Guardian | World may be ‘post-herd immunity’ to measles, top US scientist says: The US is enduring the largest measles outbreak in a quarter-century. Centered in west Texas, the measles outbreak has killed two unvaccinated children and one adult and spread to neighboring states including New Mexico and Oklahoma. “We’re living in a post-herd-immunity world. I think the measles outbreak proves that,” said Dr Paul Offit, an expert on infectious disease and immunology and director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. * WaPo | Justice Department lawyers face skeptical judges upset by ‘shoddy work’: In recent hearings and rulings, judges appointed by presidents of both parties have criticized the statements and behavior of administration officials, accusing them of defying court orders, submitting flimsy evidence, providing inadequate answers to questions and even acting like toddlers. The cases involve lawsuits challenging everything from President Donald Trump’s push to increase deportations to his efforts to punish law firms. Most are in the early stages of litigation. But the judicial pushback suggests a break from the goodwill courts have traditionally shown toward assertions by government lawyers. * WIRED | DOGE Put a College Student in Charge of Using AI to Rewrite Regulations: Sweet—who two sources have been told is the lead on the AI deregulation project for the entire administration—has produced an Excel spreadsheet with around a thousand rows containing areas of policy where the AI tool has flagged that HUD may have “overreached” and suggesting replacement language. Staffers from PIH are, specifically, asked to review the AI’s recommendations and justify their objections to those they don’t agree with. “It all sounds crazy—having AI recommend revisions to regulations,” one HUD source says. “But I appreciated how much they’re using real people to confirm and make changes.”
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and more
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Selected press releases (Live updates)
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
|
Live coverage
Monday, May 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
|
Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Hot Tuna… Let us do our living
|
COGFA increases revenue forecasts, but FY26 prediction is still below Pritzker’s estimate
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability’s latest report…
* Table… ![]() * On to the coming fiscal year…
* Table… ![]()
|
Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Capitol News Illinois | Plan to overhaul higher education funding meets U of I opposition: Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford, D-Westchester, the lead sponsor of Senate Bill 13, said it is designed to bring equity and stability to the state’s higher education system. “This bill does not just aim to increase funding,” she told a Senate committee Wednesday. “It tells us for the first time in our state’s history what students and universities need to succeed and how to adequately fund universities over time to actually meet that need. It defines what universities require to educate, support and graduate students successfully, and then it directs resources to do just that.” * Press Release | IDPH Issues Updated Sport Fish Consumption Advisories: IDPH maintains an interactive Fish Advisory Map that includes consumption advisories for more than 100 publicly accessible bodies of water across the state. The advisories detail how frequently certain types of fish from various waterways can be eaten without posing a health risk. While there is no known immediate health hazard from eating contaminated fish from any Illinois water body, there are concerns about effects of long-term exposure to polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB), per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), and methylmercury in fish. * NPR Illinois | Loving Lincoln author sheds light on the Great Emancipator’s work, relationships with women:” And I remembered an acquisition editor at SIU press had told me years ago to call her first when I was ready to write my book about Lincoln. And I did. I called her and the book that was written, it kind of just magically happened. Maureen, honestly, I sat down to write a collective biography of all these women, these stories of women’s mothers and sisters and friends of Mary Lincoln, of the women who Lincoln helped in his law practice … and the women who came to see Lincoln when he was president, asking him to help them with their sorrows, to get a loved one back from a battlefield, or to help them find a job in the government.” * Tribune | Group opposing Mayor Brandon Johnson and allies raises $10 million, progressives decry ‘sucker politics’: The Common Ground Collective has raised $10 million, according to its executive director, Chuck Swirsky. It’s a sum that’s sure to grow but that is already similar to the combined amount Johnson received in his 2023 campaign from his top funders, the Chicago Teachers Union, Service Employees International Union and related unions. The group, a nonprofit, is not required to publicly disclose its donor list, and Swirsky declined to do so. But he said the money came from around 90 donors, none of whom have contributed more than 5% of its total. And Swirsky said among the contributors is GCM Grosvenor CEO Michael Sacks, a Democratic donor and close friend of former Mayor Rahm Emanuel. Sacks declined to comment when contacted by the Tribune. * Crain’s | Microsoft drops law firm that cut Trump deal — and turns to Chicago’s Jenner & Block: The move, first reported by The New York Times, gives Jenner a notable vote of confidence from one of the world’s largest companies at a time when the legal world is navigating intense political crosscurrents. The case involves Microsoft’s $69 billion acquisition of video game maker Activision Blizzard. According to court filings, Simpson Thacher lawyers told the Delaware Court of Chancery on April 22 it would no longer represent Microsoft. That same day, Jenner attorneys filed their appearance in the case, taking over legal duties in a shareholder lawsuit challenging the merger, the Times reports. * Crain’s | Amid Trump attacks on higher ed, UChicago faculty want to see more from leadership: UChicago faculty have circulated a petition, which has now been signed by more than 260 members, that calls on Alivisatos to join other school leaders in publicly defending academic freedoms and opposing any effort by the government to undermine them. They implore Alivisatos to sign on to the American Association of Colleges & Universities’ letter, signed by almost 600 university leaders, including those at Northwestern and seven Ivy League universities, which opposes “undue government intrusion” by the Trump administration and its “coercive use of public research funding,” which has been used as a cudgel to force colleges to comply with its demands. * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools’ second-in-command leaving in June: Bogdana Chkoumbova, the Chicago Public Schools chief education officer and outgoing CEO Pedro Martinez’s second-in-command, is leaving the district at the end of the school year. Chkoumbova’s departure could herald more high-profile defections from the district as Martinez prepares to leave CPS in June. In late December 2024, the school board fired him without cause, which gave him another six months on the job under his contract. * Sun-Times | Solution for Chicago’s empty office buildings could be microapartments, study says: Converting vacant office buildings into residential co-living units — akin to dorm-style housing — would help solve a trio of real estate problems bogging down Chicago, as the city tries to revitalize its downtown corridor. That’s according to a study by architecture firm Gensler and the Pew Charitable Trusts. The report, released Monday, looks at the feasibility of flexible co-living spaces in Chicago’s Central Business District. * Daily Herald | Man sentenced to 53 years in prison in hate-crime attack on Palestinian-American boy, mother: A former Plainfield Township landlord who murdered a 6-year-old Muslim boy and severely injured the boy’s mother in a vicious hate-crime attack days after the war in Gaza began was sentenced Friday to 53 years in prison. Joseph Czuba, 73, was found guilty in February of murder, attempted murder and hate-crime charges in the death of Wadee Alfayoumi and the wounding of his mother, Hanan Shaheen. * Daily Herald | ‘You have to get through Rolling Meadows’: Mayor stresses city’s place in Arlington Park redevelopment: The 326-acre Arlington Park property that could one day host a Chicago Bears stadium is within the village of Arlington Heights, but Rolling Meadows Mayor Lara Sanoica is quick to remind people her town will be a key player in redevelopment discussions, too. “Anything that comes here is going to require cooperation with us, because no matter what happens, you have to get through Rolling Meadows to get there,” Sanoica said Thursday during the annual state of the city address. * Tribune | 20 years of conversations beat money, big names in historic Skokie mayor race: In the historic election for mayor of Skokie, candidate David “Azi” Lifsics spent big dollar amounts and garnered big-name endorsements. When Election Night was over, though, he had lost to candidate Ann Tennes, who spent only a fraction of what he had shelled out. Her winning formula in the April 1 race? Twenty years’ worth of community involvement, volunteer service and face-to-face connections in the suburb of about 67,000. She worked as Skokie’s director of marketing and communications for two decades, had been elected to Oakton (Community) College’s Board, and had volunteered for Skokie civic and arts organizations. * Evergreen Park | Evergreen Park teen turns trash into heat for homeless as nonprofit effort grows: Billy Duffner was just trying to warm up his family’s fireplace with some handmade paper bricks when the idea struck. What if these could help someone who didn’t have a home? That moment became the foundation for Heat4Homeless, a grassroots nonprofit that repurposes recycled paper and sawdust into fire bricks. Each one is a portable source of warmth for people living on the streets during Chicago’s coldest months. * Daily Herald | ‘Groundhog Day’ inn gets another role, this time in upcoming Christmas movie shot in Woodstock: The film is “about an ambitious hotel manager who returns to her family’s B&B for Christmas to find all three of her high school exes staying there,” producer Chris Charles said. The movie has parallels with the three ghosts of Christmas past, present and future, said Eliza Toser, who co-wrote the film with her husband, Jake Jarvi. * WGLT | Heartland Head Start ’shocked’ by proposed funding elimination but still hopeful: Heartland Head Start interim executive director Chuck Hartseil said it’s not clear what options they would have to sustain programming if Congress were to approve wiping out funding. “We are almost solely funded through the federal government,” Hartseil said in an interview on WGLT’s Sound Ideas. […] The early childhood program that serves more than 200 low-income families in McLean and Livingston counties gets about $4.4 million annually from the federal government. * KSDK | Hubbell-Wiegmann plant announces closure by 2026; 110 workers to be laid off: — More than 100 people in one Metro East community will soon be out of a job after their employer announced plans to close next year. Since 1958, the Hubbell-Wiegmann plant has been a staple in Freeburg. “They manufacture electrical boxes like disconnects for your air conditioner,” Freeburg Mayor Seth Speiser said. […] According to the WARN notice, those jobs will be split up between Hubbell’s Aurora, Illinois factory and a location in Juarez, Mexico. “If they can go to Mexico for $3 an hour versus Freeburg at $20 an hour it’s just business,” Speiser said. * Edgar County Watchdogs | Nason, IL. Board Meeting Descends into Chaos: Resignations, Applause, and an Arrest –: The turmoil did not end with the adjournment. As citizens exited the building, a physical altercation reportedly broke out between incoming Alderman Alan Colle and current Alderman David Page. Sources indicate that Mr. Page allegedly assaulted Mr. Colle for filming the public meeting after it had concluded – an act constitutionally protected under the First Amendment. Sheriff’s deputies were called to the scene by Mr. Colle. According to witnesses, Mr. Page initially found the situation amusing until law enforcement arrived with a transport vehicle. Alderman David Page was subsequently arrested and taken into custody on unknown charges. * WGLT | Brady sworn in as Bloomington mayor, with housing and infrastructure top of mind: Brady said housing and infrastructure are his day one priorities. He plans to pick up where the previous mayor — Mboka Mwilambwe — left off, advancing plans for a tiny home village for unhoused community members and the downtown streetscape project. “And then I think the next area you talk about, and you look at, is what we’re doing with the quality of life within Bloomington,” Brady told WGLT. “Meaning our water, our potholes, infrastructure — those type of things.” * WCIA | ‘Significantly crossed the boundaries’: report details misconduct of former GCMS teacher: Through a FOIA request, WCIA received a redacted version of the statement detailing the charges against former Gibson City Middle School math teacher Robbie Dinkins Thursday evening. The report explains how Dinkins would send emotional text messages to confide in students about stressors in his personal life, including the deaths of people close to him. He also admitted to investigators he would sometimes be intoxicated when texting students. * Crain’s | Rivian begins its first big marketing push — here’s a look behind the campaign: Rivian is tapping into this passion as part of its first full-fledged marketing campaign, called “Real Rivian Adventures,” which turns stories from real owners into ads. The Irvine, California-based automaker has a community engagement and content team dedicated to connecting with the owner groups. The team played an instrumental role in sourcing user stories for the campaign, which was handled by Mojo Supermarket. The agency won the assignment last year after a competitive review.
|
Moody’s cuts Illinois GDP growth forecast by half, but its national jobs prediction is, so far, off the mark
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Crain’s…
* So far, though, jobs are holding up…
As I’ve noted before, jobs are the real issue here. If jobs crater, we’re in for a world of hurt. And the same applies if Congress approves huge cuts to Medicaid and other programs that the state relies on.
|
George Ryan (Updated x2)
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * NBC Chicago…
People have and will say many bad things about him, but he got a lot of stuff done in four years. …Adding… More coverage…
* Sun-Times: Former Illinois Gov. George Ryan dead at 91 * CBS2: Former Illinois Governor George Ryan dies at age 91, sources confirm; served prison time for corruption * ABC7: Former IL Gov. George Ryan dead * Fox32: Former Illinois Gov. George Ryan dies at 91 …Adding… Brad Cole…
* Curran…
|
The last acceptable prejudice
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * From CNN’s “Inside JB Pritzker’s public and private efforts to counter Trump and challenge fellow Democrats”…
* Therefore…
The governor has obliquely referenced his size many times, but never like that Kimmel appearance. Click here to watch it. * I found the interview uncomfortable to watch. But the online vitriol about the man’s weight has got to be addressed. I mean, it’s extreme stuff. Go read the comments on any of his posts. Vile. But, as the headline says, it’s the last acceptable prejudice. Lots of people, even those who are open-minded types, often believe overweight people are “weak” and that it’s OK to make fun of them. * Anyway, more from the Tribune…
Getting out while the getting is good has its advantages, but running away from trouble is not a very presidential look, IMHO. Also, most “top Democratic strategists” in 2017 insisted that an overweight Jewish billionaire had no chance in an Illinois Democratic primary against Robert F. Kennedy’s son. That Pritzker team has never paid much attention to “top Democratic strategists.”
|
Group rebuts, fact checks Comptroller Mendoza’s SAFE-T Act remarks
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * The Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice…
Discuss.
|
US DOJ: Illinois’ workplace privacy law impedes federal immigration authority
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
This isn’t the first time the DOJ has challenged Illinois’ immigration policies. In February, the Trump administration sued Illinois, the city of Chicago and Cook County over their sanctuary city laws. * From the complaint…
* The Lever in August…
* SB508’s sponsor Sen. Javier Cervantes is working to expand the law to give more protections to immigrant employees. Press release…
Sen. Cervantes’ bill is awaiting House action.
|
What the heck?
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * This doesn’t make any sense to me. “Damaged goods”? How is that in any way an effective argument against US Rep. Lauren Underwood? How was she ever “damaged”? So why would the Pritzker people allegedly use that line against her if it cannot possibly be explained or proved? This is just a weird and puzzling development…
Pritzker was asked by the same reporter Monday whether he was telling any candidates that “it’s not their turn.” He said it was a “ridiculous” claim…
Now we’ve moved on to “damaged goods.” Also, the alleged “damaged goods” claim is never explained. Perhaps because it can’t be explained. This whole thing is odd. * And that poll? C’mon. The organization backing Underwood has yet to disclose who conducted its alleged poll despite repeated requests for disclosure, which never, ever happens…
Fishy as all getout. I refuse to believe anything out of that operation until I see the actual poll, if it really exists. Could that possible survey concoction be why Underwood is labeled as “damaged”? Seems like a stretch. She didn’t run the “poll.” And if it is the case, then why were the “poll” results prominently mentioned in the story? * Underwood’s consultant made a very good argument that the alleged attack is nonsensical and wouldn’t work… ![]() That post was deleted, by the way. * Hey, maybe it’s all true. The Pritzker folks do have super-sharp elbows, after all. And three Black women (Robin Kelly, Lauren Underwood and Juliana Stratton) are interested in the job, so something may have to give. But if Team JB did say this, then they’re really stupid. They ain’t usually stupid. And I’ve not heard a peep about any Underwood oppo. Something just doesn’t smell right here. Gonna be a wild year, campers. Your thoughts?
|
Healing Communities: UChicago Medicine AdventHealth Provides Free Physicals For Special Olympics
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] To participate in Special Olympics, aspiring athletes must first get a physical. Yet some children who want to compete don’t have insurance, a primary care doctor or transportation to get an appointment. That’s where UChicago Medicine AdventHealth comes in. For the past three years, at Special Olympics Screening Events held in Bedford Park, UChicago Medicine AdventHealth residents have provided the needed physicals for free. “One of the things that drew me to medicine is to be able to give back,” said Dr. Sravani Sagireddy. “It’s really nice to be able to step into the community and help people who really need it.” At the screening events, the residents perform vision, hearing and motor ability tests. They carefully assess each child for medical conditions that might make it unsafe for that child to participate in athletics. Special Olympics President and CEO Peter Beale-DelVecchio said UChicago Medicine AdventHealth “has been an incredible partner for us” and that the four-hospital health system is “helping us do more and more all the time.” Beyond the 24/7 care provided within their facilities, hospitals and health systems across Illinois are having a positive impact on communities by addressing community needs and providing accessible care. Learn more about how Illinois hospitals are healing communities.
|
Today’s must-read
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * From Steve Metsch at the Tribune…
|
Working Together To Support The Health Of Our Families, Communities, And State
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department ‘You showed up in my life at the perfect time’ On any given day, nearly 26,000 Illinois residents experience homelessness. Last summer, “Trinity,” a 33-year-old mom from central Illinois, was one of them. Trinity and her children had moved into an emergency shelter, which partners with a Medicaid health plan to host mobile clinic events at their facility. When Trinity showed up at an event, the scope of her family’s medical needs became clear. The family had visited emergency rooms twice in the past week. All of her children were overdue for well-child exams. And Trinity was 16 weeks pregnant—without any prenatal care. Practitioners acted swiftly, checking up on the kids and performing prenatal assessments on Trinity. She was prescribed medication for extremely high blood pressure and monitored at three subsequent clinic events. In November, Trinity delivered a healthy baby boy. And she brought him home to long-term housing she secured near the shelter—with assistance from her health plan. “You showed up in my life at the perfect time,” Trinity says. “You have helped me so much, and I don’t feel alone.” Paid for by the Illinois Association of Medicaid Health Plans
|
Open thread
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Punk poetry… When there’s no future, how can there be sin? “Guitar work and progression is like mine,” Chuck Berry said of the song. “Good backbeat,” As much as they claimed to be a filthy rotten break from the past, the Sex Pistols built on that past to create their sound. The drum syncopation in the repeated lines “No future, no future, no future for you” just blew me away when I first heard it - and it still does today. * Anyway, tell us what’s happening in your local world.
|
Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Bally’s halts Chicago casino construction over questions about waste hauler dogged by mob allegations. Sun-Times…
- Two decades ago, the company’s involvement in the construction of a proposed casino in Rosemont helped torpedo the project over concerns by regulators of organized crime influence. - The state government agency, which ultimately answers to Gov. JB Pritzker, released a written statement Thursday saying: “The Illinois Gaming Board (IGB) issued an order to cease construction work on the Bally’s Chicago permanent casino in connection with a pending IGB investigation into the use of undisclosed and unapproved vendors at the construction site. * Related stories…
∙ Sun-Times: Bally’s drops minority investor requirement from Chicago casino IPO * BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here. * Illinois Answers Project | Gun Stolen From a Room Full of Chicago Cops Ended Up Being Used in a Series of Shootings: Last month, the Illinois Answers Project and the Chicago Sun-Times reported on the stolen gun and how — 16 months later — the police appeared to have made little progress in finding out who stole it or how a type of gun notoriously used in street violence wound up in the hands of a teenage boy. Now, newly obtained police records show, it turns out that the gun is known to have been used in three violent crimes after it was stolen from the police station. * Capitol News Illinois | ‘Never asked to be a part of this somber club’: Illinois honors fallen police officers: Treasurer Mike Frerichs also gave an emotional speech honoring his cousin, a California police officer who recently died. Frerichs’ office provides a college scholarship fund for children of first responders who died on the job. Former ISP Trooper Kim Cessna, who leads a nonprofit for family members of fallen police officers, gave a personal remembrance of her colleague Thompsen, who was killed in a crash last October. “We take these memories with us, allowing them to guide us, reminding us the beauty they brought into our lives,” Cessna said. “We carry their love in our hearts, and we let that love become a source of strength.” * WAND | Illinois House GOP strongly oppose potential tax hikes in FY26 budget: House GOP budgeteers told reporters in Springfield Thursday that they have ongoing discussions with Gov. JB Pritzker’s Office of Management and Budget. Although, the minority party has only participated in a few budget meetings with House Democrats. Republicans said some progressive Democrats are calling for a graduated income tax. The Illinois Revenue Alliance is also calling for multiple revenue enhancements which could raise taxes by $6 billion. * Sun-Times | Gov. JB Pritzker creates nicknames for Trump to call him, including ‘JBeefy,’ in Jimmy Kimmel appearance: Pritzker called Trump an authoritarian who is “tearing apart the things that really matter to working families across the United States.” And he urged Americans to show their displeasure in Republican-led districts. “We’ve got to be out there, loud, proud, stand up, speak out,” Pritzker said. Kimmel told Pritzker, “when you go to New Hampshire, it’s because you’re planning to run for president.” “Or you’re going skiing. There are other reasons to go to New Hampshire,” Pritzker said. * Sun-Times | Illinois’ most endangered buildings list includes Bernie Mac’s high school, a Frank Lloyd Wright home: Landmarks Illinois on Thursday included Chicago Vocational, at 2100 E. 87th St., on its yearly list of the state’s 10 most endangered buildings. The preservation group cited the school’s shrunken enrollment and its vacated and fenced-off Anthony Avenue wing, “which formerly housed the heavy industry vocational programs,” as reason for the listing. Designed by the school system’s chief architect, John C. Christensen, Chicago Vocational is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. * Crain’s | Restaurant group bets big on the Loop with new spots anchored to hotels: “Our bread and butter is the Loop,” said Chief Operating Officer Brad Alaoui. “We believe 100% in the neighborhood. It’s coming back. We’ve gone through the trenches of it, but I feel like there’s a bright future.” It’s not just optimism driving the restaurant group. As it expands, Roanoke is building a new kind of business model indicative of the post-pandemic reality for downtown restaurants. No longer able to rely solely on heavy five-days-a-week daytime traffic, restaurants must pursue other options. For some, that means relying more on catering or to-go orders than walk-in business, or shifting hours of operations. * ABC Chicago | Woman accused of squatting in South Side home arrested, charged with burglary, forgery: The couple said when they arrived with police, the woman inside claimed she was the new owner and had so-called mortgage documents to prove her purchase. The couple said police wouldn’t arrest the woman because it was a civil matter. But after doing some digging, the couple said they got a call from a CPD detective informing them they’d be taking a closer look at the case. “I knew the ID was fake,” Marcia Lee said. I knew the documentation was fake. I’m just super excited that they finally got her out.” * Sun-Times | Loss of longtime Uptown day care center leaves families devastated: Her troubles with the landlord began in 2015, when Parker began renovations and discovered leaks in the ceilings of some of the storefronts. Parker paused the remodel and contacted the landlord, but she said the problems weren’t fixed. By 2019 the conditions worsened. Water “rained” down walls from a plumbing problem in one of the apartments above the day care, damaging books and other supplies. A substance that appeared to be mold developed. * ABC Chicago | Chicago doctors frustrated as measles cases spread into Cook County: ‘This is an effective vaccine’: “We’ve had 11 people hospitalized, three deaths, more than 800 cases throughout the U.S., a clear difference from years prior,” said Dr. Max Brito, an infectious diseases professor at University of Illinois Chicago. […] “The other thing that makes measles different is people can have long-term consequences; so, years later, they can get encephalitis,” Davis said. Infectious disease experts say over 90% of people who get measles are not vaccinated. * Daily Southtown | Harvey Ald. Colby Chapman removed, arrested at council meeting, city says: A Harvey alderwoman has been charged with misdemeanor offenses after being forcibly removed by police during Monday’s City Council meeting, according to the city. It was the latest skirmish involving 2nd Ward Ald. Colby Chapman, charged last year after a dispute with the city’s administrator, although the matter appears not to have advanced in court. Chapman did not respond to messages seeking comment on the latest arrest. She has previously said her vocal criticism of city affairs under Mayor Christopher Clark had resulted in retailiation by the mayor. * CBS Chicago | Sentencing Friday for Illinois landlord convicted in hate crime murder of Palestinian boy: Joseph Czuba was convicted of one count of first-degree murder, one count of attempted murder, two counts of aggravated battery, and two counts of hate crime in the attack that killed Wadee Alfayoumi and seriously injured his mother, Hanan Shaheen, in 2023. […] Czuba could face a maximum sentence of life in prison. Sentencing is expected to start at 9:30 a.m. at the Will County Courthouse in Joliet. * Daily Herald | ‘We need to voice our concerns’: Suburbs join in on global May Day rallies: As the work day concluded Thursday afternoon, hundreds of people lined both sides of Northwest Highway in Palatine to protest President Donald Trump’s policies as part of May Day, or International Worker’s Day, rallies held around the globe. With Talking Heads’ “Life During Wartime” playing in the background, protesters carried signs, urged observers to “rise up/fight back,” waved flags and cheered drivers who honked their horns in solidarity. * Naperville Sun | Water main replacement at Ogden and Washington in Naperville going to be ‘disruptive’: Work began last week and is expected to continue until about October, he said. It will be completed in stages. The existing water main along Ogden and Washington dates back to the 1930s, according to Parrish. It’s also undersized for what the city needs it to do, he said. Typically, water mains have a 100-year lifespan, Parrish said. Replacing them as they near the end of their useful life is important because it helps the city avoid leaks from aging infrastructure, he said. * Daily Herald | Mount Prospect relaunches downtown alfresco dining on Prospect Avenue: Once again, six on-street parking spaces will be converted into a protected outdoor dining area in front of the Lady Dahlia Tequila Bar, 127 W Prospect Ave., and the Patina Wine Bar, 133 W Prospect Ave. Outdoor diners will be sheltered within concrete barriers — village officials said Lady Dahlia and the Patina Wine Bar collaborate with the village on such beautification elements as planter boxes, umbrellas and decorative lighting. * WCIA | Solar farm, energy storage facility proposed in Iroquois Co.: The project, estimated to cost $100 million, is expected to produce enough renewable energy to power approximately 8,000 homes each year while creating more than 100 local jobs. It is also supposed to generate economic benefits including an estimated $8-9 million in new local property tax revenue over the project’s life span to the Paxton-Buckley-Loda school district, Buckley Fire Protection District, Parkland Community College, Iroquois County and Artesia Township. * WCIA | Carle doctors testing out ‘digital intelligence technology’ in certain appointments: Some doctors now use Nabla, digital intelligence technology that transcribes the symptoms patients are telling doctors about. Dr. Ryan Porter, an ear surgeon, has been using it with most patients for about six months. He feels it helps him better connect with the person in front of him. Plus, it’s faster. “It takes the history of the patient at the same time I’m hearing it, so we essentially have two ears hearing the same story,” he explained. “When I get back to my office, I open that same encounter in Epic, which is all privately transferred, and I review that information.” * KWQC | Lawmakers want answers from Army about future of Rock Island Arsenal: “They have a significant portion of our GDP in the region from the manufacturing they do there,” he said of the base. “And so, that’s always been a critical operation of the Quad-Cities, for the health of the economy, for keeping our residents employed.” The Arsenal is the Quad-Cities’ largest employer, with 7,500 workers. First Army’s headquarters is on the Island, as well as the Army’s only active foundry. * KWQC | Illinois Lt. Governor, senate hopeful Juliana Stratton slams proposed job cuts at the Rock Island Arsenal: Stratton joins a bipartisan group of lawmakers from Illinois and Iowa who have tried to convince federal leaders to back off of cuts to the Arsenal. Senators Dick Durbin (D) and Chuck Grassley (R) along with Representatives Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R) and Eric Sorensen (D). * KFVS | Southern Illinois strawberry season now underway after historic rainfall: Co-owner Austin Flamm said strawberries do better in a drier environment, and the only effects to this year’s crop was a later start by about three weeks. “We were able to open on Saturday. We’re a few weeks later opening later this year. That’s due to the cool and wet weather we had early in the spring. We finally got some sunshine and warm days that really pushed the berries along. Typically when we open we are worried about the supply because we aren’t in full production yet. But it seems how late before we got started, production does not seem to be an issue right now,” Flamm said. * USDA | United States and Mexico Reach Agreement to Resume Eradication Efforts on New World Screwworm: U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins announced today that Mexico has committed to eliminate restrictions on USDA aircraft, and waive customs duties on eradication equipment aiding in the response to the spread of New World Screwworm (NWS). Due to this agreement the ports will remain open to livestock imports, however if at any time these terms are not upheld, port closure will be revisited. This agreement follows Secretary Rollins’ letter to Mexico Secretary of Agriculture Julio Antonio Berdegue Sacristan on Saturday pushing for a resolution of the restrictions. * ARS Technica | RFK Jr. rejects cornerstone of health science: Germ theory: It’s important to note here that our understanding of Kennedy’s disbelief in germ theory isn’t based on speculation or deduction; it’s based on Kennedy’s own words. He wrote an entire section on it in his 2021 book vilifying Fauci, titled The Real Anthony Fauci. The section is titled “Miasma vs. Germ Theory,” in the chapter “The White Man’s Burden.”But, we did reach out to Health and Human Services to ask how Kennedy’s disbelief in germ theory influences his policy decisions. HHS did not respond. * Politico | Trump to rename Veterans Day as ‘Victory Day for World War I’: In a late-night Truth Social post, Trump wrote that the move was needed to honor the unique U.S. sacrifices in both World Wars. Trump also announced he would rename Victory in Europe Day, which is commemorated on May 8, to “Victory in World War II Day” to recognize that “we did more than any other Country, by far, in producing a victorious result on World War II.” * Sun-Times | Trump signs executive order directing federal funding cuts to PBS and NPR: The broadcasters get roughly half a billion dollars in public money through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and have been preparing for the possibility of stiff cuts since Trump’s election, as Republicans have long complained about them. Paula Kerger, PBS’ CEO and president, said in a statement last month that the Trump administration’s effort to rescind funding for public media would “disrupt the essential service PBS and local member stations provide to the American people.”
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
|
Live coverage
Friday, May 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
|
« NEWER POSTS | PREVIOUS POSTS » |