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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

A federal appeals court ruling could sharply reduce the damages companies face in Illinois biometric privacy lawsuits, handing businesses a major win in one of the state’s costliest areas of litigation.

The April 1 decision centers on changes Illinois lawmakers made in 2024 to rein in the state’s biometric privacy law, known as BIPA, clarifying that violations occur when companies fail to obtain consent — not each time a fingerprint, face scan or other biometric data is collected. The appeals court said those changes apply retroactively, potentially reducing damages in a wave of pending lawsuits. […]

“It’s going to have a huge impact,” says Michael McCutcheon, a partner at Baker McKenzie who does class-action legal defense work for corporate clients. “If you have a BIPA case pending right now, and there is a settlement demand to get rid of the case, (the plaintiffs’) leverage is going to be cut back significantly.”

Although the federal appellate court’s ruling technically is not binding on state courts, where most of the BIPA suits have been filed, David Saunders, a partner at McDermott Will & Schulte, expects state courts will follow the ruling unless the Illinois Supreme Court takes up the issue.

* New York Times

International students used to crowd [suburban] Lewis University’s hallways, surrounding David Livingston, the school’s president, when he would stride through.

Few places have been as shaken as Lewis, a Catholic university of about 7,000. […]

In the fall of 2024, when Trump was elected, Lewis had 1,397 international students who accounted for nearly one-fifth of the university’s total enrollment. A year later, that number was down to 870. By this fall, it may drop below 500. […]

Lewis spent much of the last decade building an apparatus for international students. It has spent much of the last year cutting it down. With fewer students in need of instruction and support services, and a sudden budget hole of about $9 million, Lewis trimmed about 10% of its workforce.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Illinoisans paying 26% more for health insurance bought on Affordable Care Act exchange: Illinois consumers who bought health insurance on the state’s Affordable Care Act exchange are paying 26% more for coverage, on average, than they did last year, and the number of people who enrolled in the plans dropped nearly 4%, according to the state. Though that 26% average increase in monthly premiums is surely tough for many, it’s a far cry from the 78% average jump that state regulators previously said could occur if the federal government didn’t renew enhanced premium tax credits and people stayed on their plans from last year.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WCIA | Danville native introduces her running for Illinois District 104 seat: People in Danville got a first look on Tuesday at what Democrat candidate for Illinois House, Mary Catherine Roberson, would bring to the 104th district if elected. “I’ve always had heart for Danville of like, how can we bring those resources in those programs here?” Roberson said. She has worked as a youth advocate in many towns across Central Illinois, but she always kept her roots in Danville. And, she is the first Black woman ever nominated for house district 104. [The seat is currently held by Republican Rep. Brandun Schweizer.]

* WBEZ | Illinois remains abortion ‘safe haven’ for out-of-state patients in 2025, report shows: The data from the Guttmacher Institute shows no other state came close to Illinois in terms of volume last year, with providers here performing the procedure at a rate nearly double the state with the next highest level of abortions on out-of-state patients, North Carolina. Despite seeing fewer abortions overall, Illinois being the go-to state for out-of-state people seeking abortions has been a relatively stable occurrence since 2023, a year after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned its longstanding Roe v. Wade decision that affirmed abortion rights.

* Block Club | Italian Beef Vs. The Horseshoe: A State Sandwich Showdown Is Heating Up: Though the horseshoe has unofficially held the title in Springfield for years, if House Bill 4669 passes, the Italian beef would become the state sandwich. State Rep. Rick Ryan, a Democrat from southwest suburban Evergreen Park, introduced the bill Jan. 28, and it has since gained seven co-sponsors with bipartisan support. The idea came about last year at a Christmas party in Springfield attended by dozens of state staffers from across Illinois, Ryan told Block Club. It’s tradition each year for attendees to come up with a bill to introduce in the legislature, he said.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson angles for CHA control amid city agency turmoil. Is it too late?: In an internal memo on Thursday, Brewer toned down an earlier attack accusing Johnson of favoring political “cronies” over the residents of CHA and told his staff to ignore the “external noise.” Brewer added in an interview on Friday that Keith Pettigrew’s appointment to CHA CEO is a done deal, “and I don’t see anything getting in the way of that.”“This is not about attacks or rivalries. It’s truly an attempt to fill a void that we’ve had for the last 18 months with a very qualified leader,” Brewer told the Tribune. “There’s a ripple effect when there’s not a good CEO in place. And when you take that from one agency, and it’s true for other agencies as well, then the problem compounds.”

* Tribune | Former CPS principal enters race for Chicago school board president: Jessica Biggs, an elected school board member representing parts of downtown and the South Side, officially announced Monday she is running for president of the Chicago Board of Education. Biggs — a director of the Southwest Organizing Project and a former Chicago Public Schools principal — is the fourth candidate to enter the race to lead the district’s first fully elected board. All 21 seats of the board will be on the ballot in November. The current hybrid board consists of 11 mayor-appointed members and 10 elected members, including Biggs, who won her seat as an independent in 2024.

* WTTW | Chicago Shootings, Homicides Increased in March as Gun Violence Creeps Ahead of Last Year’s Historically Low Rates: Forty-one people were killed in March, according to data from the Chicago Police Department, an uptick of 17% from the 35 homicides recorded during the same month in 2025. The number of shootings (124) and shooting victims (137) last month were also both up compared to March 2025. Through the first three months of 2026, Chicago has recorded 97 homicides, which matches the total from the same time period in 2025 — a year that ended with the fewest homicides Chicago had seen in 60 years.

* WTTW | CPD Officer Suspended for Third Time for Violating the Rights of Black Chicagoans Downtown: Officer Richard Rodriguez Jr., who was a member of the Near North (18th) Police District tactical team until he was stripped of his police powers in February, was suspended for 15 days for his conduct while stopping and searching a Black man near Chicago Avenue and Rush Street at 8 p.m. July 25, 2022, according to documents published March 26 by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability. In all, Rodriguez has been suspended for at least 83 days in connection with eight incidents of misconduct, records show.

* WBEZ | HIV, AIDS infections up in Chicago after years of decline as cases rise among Latinos: HIV infections are on the rise in Chicago after about two decades of decline, growing 29% between 2022 and 2024. AIDS cases are also up slightly. In 2024, there were 818 new HIV cases — and nearly half were among Latinos, the population Jiménez focuses on. That increase is particularly significant, marking the first time the racial and ethnic group accounted for most of the new diagnoses, said John Peller, CEO of the AIDS Foundation Chicago.

* Block Club | Augustana Lutheran Church Is Now Solar-Powered — But It Was ‘A Long Road’ To Get There: The church awaits its March bill to determine how much power the array provided over its first full month, but it’s expected to cover “pretty much all of our electrical needs” — and could even generate excess energy, Goede said. “It’s not clear if we’ll be able to sell excess electricity back, but our goal is to sell back into the grid,” Goede said. “We’re glad to do that, with a lot of electrical need on the horizon. But mostly, we did this project to demonstrate a commitment that I think we share with a lot of people in our area and in the U.S.: We want to see alternative energy develop.”

* Crain’s | Downtown office vacancy sets another record while top space tightens: The downtown office vacancy rate ticked up during the first quarter to an all-time high of 28.6% from 28.2% at the end of 2025, according to data from real estate services firm CBRE. The share of available workspace in Chicago’s urban core is up from 26.5% a year ago and 13.8% when the COVID-19 pandemic began, having now hit new record highs for 15 consecutive quarters. […] Yet the staggering vacancy figure also masks a market that feels more competitive for tenants than the numbers suggest. CBRE research shows that almost half of the 40 million square feet of vacant office space downtown has been available for at least three years.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | West Suburban closure exposes cracks in hospital oversight: Resilience Healthcare’s CEO says a billing glitch that no one else could diagnose starved West Suburban Medical Center of revenue for a year, forcing the temporary closure of the Oak Park hospital. But state officials paint a different picture: a company that refused millions in aid while its revenues disappeared, owed more than $50 million in back taxes and was “unable and unwilling” to do what was necessary to keep the hospital open.

* Tribune | Cook County assessor: Tax break hopes for hundreds dashed because of bad applications: About 1,700 certificates of error — one-page requests to correct property assessment mistakes — were turned in to Assessor Fritz Kaegi’s office late last month. Successful applications can result in refunds for taxpayers, but the “vast majority” of the batch are missing any evidence or valid grounds for relief, a Kaegi spokesman said, meaning the homeowners likely struggling to pay their bills would be out of luck.

* Shaw Local | Will County Courthouse initiative streamlines process for traffic court hearings: In early March, judges began hearing cases without the use of a paper file, instead relying “exclusively on the electronic record as the official record of the court, according to a statement on Thursday from Roger Holland, the county’s trial court administrator. This new initiative “streamlines the process” of how cases are heard and allow for most people to come to court, have their case disposed of and pay any applicable fines and fees in one day. “Additionally, this new initiative reduces operational costs in the circuit clerk’s office, increases staff productivity, and promotes judicial efficiency,” according to Holland’s statement.

* Yikes

* Aurora Beacon-News | Oswego Village Board OKs ordinances seen as ‘precursors’ to redevelopment of old Traughber School site: Trustees in December 2025 approved a revised concept plan with fewer units for the proposed development at the 12.34-acre property – owned by Oswego-based School District 308 – at the northeast corner of Route 71 and Washington Street close to the village’s downtown. The plan features two types of housing. Along the south side of the property adjacent to Route 71 and centrally located on the site are five three-story apartment buildings with a total of 125 units. There would also be six two-story owner-occupied townhome buildings along the north and west side of the development with a total of 36 units.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Public will soon be able to visit the bison at Kane County’s Burlington Prairie Forest Preserve: Members of the public eager to catch a glimpse of some of the Kane County Forest Preserve District’s newest bovine residents will have an opportunity to stop by and see them soon. Starting May 1, the public will be able to visit the small herd of bison that was recently introduced to Burlington after the Kane County Forest Preserve District reopens the Burlington Prairie Forest Preserve’s gates following some planned renovations meant to better accommodate additional visitors to the site.

*** Downstate ***

* IPM News | United Airlines pushes back start date for new Willard Airport flights, citing FAA restrictions: United Airlines has delayed its original plans to bring new flights to Willard Airport from April 30 to June 1. The airline cancelled customers’ previously scheduled flights for earlier dates and said it was pushing back the start date for four new daily flights to and from Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport. […] United also delayed the start of new service at Bloomington-Normal’s Central Illinois Regional Airport and at other airports in the Midwest.

* WGLT | B-N Water Reclamation District gets $5 million grant to spark west side industrial development: The funding for the Northwest Interceptor Project through the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity is part of a second $30 million package of awards in the Regional Site Readiness Program, designed to create project-ready sites prime for industrial development. “Winning large-scale, generational projects requires an economic development strategy that balances short-term adaptability and long-term growth, and that’s what Illinois is doing with the Regional Site Readiness Program,” said Christy George, president and CEO of the Illinois Economic Development Corporation.

* NPR Illinois | CWLP wins water taste test: City Water, Light and Power was recently awarded first place at the recent Illinois Section of the American Water Works Association District 3 taste test. Winning the Central Illinois Regional Competition qualifies the utility to compete at the statewide event in April. The water samples were rated by a panel of judges based on the clarity, taste, and odor of each. “We’re pleased to be recognized for our high-quality water,” said CWLP Water Division Manager Todd LaFountain. “Our plant operators, chemist, and entire treatment and distribution staff work extremely hard to consistently and continually ensure a safe and reliable drinking water supply to Springfield—that it also tastes great is a bonus.”

* WGLT | Sister mission, same state: Illinois company that supplied Apollo powers Artemis II: OTTO Engineering is based in Carpentersville. Chairman Tom Roeser said that growing up, every kid knew the names of the Mercury astronauts, and now, on America’s 250th anniversary, he sees a new era of space exploration dawning as a source of national pride for a new generation of Americans and Illinoisians. NASA states that “more than 3,800 suppliers across 49 states” help build hardware and systems for Artemis missions. At OTTO, the launch represents the latest chapter in a decades-long relationship with the U.S. space program, even though it’s just another day at work.

* WGLT | At Normal Theater, Bob Odenkirk explains why his new movie borrowed the name ‘Normal’: “Of course, the name is the best. And of course, for movie audiences, a town called Normal just … they’re like, ‘Something’s not normal. I know something’s wrong!’ That’s a great thing walking into the theater suspecting,” Odenkirk said. “So we’re here because we borrowed your town name.” The movie was filmed in Canada. And the movie’s Normal (population of just over 1,000) is much smaller than Normal, Illinois.

*** National ***

* Reuters | The Associated Press to cut under 5% of global news staff: The changes will be concentrated largely in the U.S. news team, with a small number of positions in other U.S.-based reporting units also being affected, the memo from AP Executive Editor Julie Pace said. […] AP had laid off about 8% of its workforce in late 2024 in a similar push to modernize its operations and products. While AP’s revenue has ⁠remained stable, Pace said the organization must continue to adapt as legacy print newspapers account for a shrinking share of its customer base.

* DNYUZ | The DOJ Misled a Judge About How It’s Using Voter Roll Data: But Neff was not telling the truth: The DOJ, he later admitted, was pooling the data and already analyzing it to identify voting irregularities. In a court document filed on March 27, Neff walked back his claims. “The United States represented that each data set was stored separately,” Neff wrote. “The United States also stated that no analysis had yet been conducted on the data. To correct and clarify the record, preliminary internal data analysis of the nonpublic voter registration data has begun. In particular, the Civil Rights Division has begun the process of identifying and quantifying the number and type of duplicate and deceased registered voters in each state.”

* Chalkbeat | Why the Classic Learning Test’s influence is growing in Indiana: The Classic Learning Test’s expansion is part of a multi-pronged push in Indiana and nationwide by conservatives to counter what they see as an education system that leans too progressive by providing alternatives they believe are more rigorous and in line with Western tradition. The elevation of the CLT follows state leaders’ decision in 2024 to mandate “intellectual diversity” in Indiana higher education, a move seen by many as a boon to conservatives on campuses, as well as previous years’ efforts to change history instruction that could make students feel guilt or blame for the past. This year, lawmakers also required higher education leaders to explore alternative university accrediting options — in line with other conservative states.

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Built For Illinois. Built With Transparency.

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Public safety technology only works when communities trust it. That’s why Flock Safety built privacy and transparency into every layer of our system from the beginning of the design cycle — not as an afterthought. In Illinois, that means:

    • Your data belongs to you. 100% community-owned, never sold to third parties.
    • Only local law enforcement decides who can access data. Flock never shares without explicit permission.
    • Compliant with Illinois law. Sharing data with out of state agencies is regulated.
    • Automatic deletion. All LPR data is permanently deleted in accordance with an agency’s retention schedule.
    • No backdoors. Private customers cannot access law enforcement data.
    • No facial recognition.
    • Flock Safety is trusted by hundreds of Illinois law enforcement agencies — from Crystal Lake to Champaign — because we believe safety and privacy have to coexist. Not someday. Now.

See how we’re building trust in Illinois.

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A puzzler for the ages

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Republican US Senate nominee Don Tracy…

Two more “teen takeover” incidents rocked Chicago this weekend, one in Marquette Park and another in the South Loop. The incidents expose a dangerous pattern of Juliana Stratton and her allies’ extreme political agendas leading to uncontrollable chaos and violence.

According to CBS News, despite police responding to both scenes, no arrests were made and no reports were generated.

“This is becoming a weekly occurrence in Chicago, and it’s happening as a result of politicians like Juliana Stratton, who are more committed to the extreme agenda of their political allies than to keeping families safe,” said Tracy. “Large crowds shutting down intersections, fireworks going off, and cars spinning in the middle of city streets, and no one is arrested. This is a political choice that sends a clear message: there are no consequences. And we’re watching the results play out on the streets of Chicago.

“Everyday Illinoisans just want to feel safe in their neighborhoods. They want leadership that takes public safety seriously, enforces the law, and puts families first, not politicians who look the other way as things spiral out of control.

“I’m running because Illinois deserves a strong leader who will stand up for common sense solutions and restore accountability. We cannot continue down this path.”

Emphasis added because apparently it was no big deal to the cops. And I’m not sure why a lt. governor would have any control over how a local police force handles people having a bit too much fun.

Also, along those same “too much fun” lines, I don’t recall seeing any Don Tracy press releases about the drunken alley brawling, drunken train brawling and the mass police seizures of “black-out rage gallons” in Chicago during St. Patrick’s Day festivities.

I wonder why.

  23 Comments      


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

Monday, Apr 6, 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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Roundup: AG Raoul racks up some more wins, files more lawsuits against Trump Administration

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Starting off with some Attorney General Kwame Raoul wins. Crain’s

The U.S. Supreme Court today declined to take up a challenge to an Illinois law that prohibits the carrying of firearms on public transportation unless they are unloaded and secured.

The 2013 Firearm Concealed Carry Act was challenged by three residents of Cook, DuPage, and DeKalb counties who have concealed-carry permits and sought to have their loaded weapons for self-defense on the CTA and Metra. […]

In their appeal to the Supreme Court in Schoenthal v. Raoul, the challengers urged the justices to take up the case to better define “sensitive places” where the government may have greater rein to regulate guns. […]

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul said there is no split among federal circuit courts on the question of gun regulations on public transit, with other courts uphold similar restrictions in New York state and Maryland.

* Last week…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced a federal appeals court rejected the federal government’s request to impose harmful restrictions on grant funding that will limit access to long-term housing and other services for tens of thousands of Americans experiencing homelessness or housing insecurity. […]

In November 2025, Raoul and a coalition of 20 attorneys general sued the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) after HUD abruptly changed its Continuum of Care program, the largest resource for federal homelessness assistance funding. HUD dramatically reduced the amount of grant funds that can be spent on permanent housing and put unlawful conditions on access to the funding.

U.S. District Court Judge Mary McElroy sided with the states in December 2025, and said HUD’s actions would cause irreparable harm to the plaintiffs and issued a preliminary injunction barring HUD from implementing the unlawful restrictions.

The appeals court rejected HUD’s request to temporarily allow the restrictions to go into effect, explaining that the states had established that if HUD moved ahead with its planned restrictions to the funding, the results would be “immediately destabilizing and disastrous for their constituents.”

In 2024, 19 regional continuums of care in Illinois received more than $182 million in federal funding to support programs to address homelessness across the state, including permanent supportive housing, rapid rehousing, transitional housing and a broad range of services. Illinois leverages this critical federal funding and matches it with significant state funding. In the last two years, Illinois has increased state funding to address and prevent homelessness by 154%.

* Press release

Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced that the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) rescinded its unlawful policy capping reimbursement for state energy programs, preserving a multistate coalition’s victory in federal court and bringing the case to a close.

In August 2025, Attorney General Raoul and a coalition of states filed a lawsuit against the DOE over a new policy capping reimbursement for key administrative and staffing costs at 10% of a project’s total budget, threatening millions of dollars in funding for state energy programs and jeopardizing states’ ability to keep them running.

“The Department of Energy’s unlawful policy threatened work being done in Illinois and across the nation to improve energy efficiency, strengthen energy resiliency and increase clean energy,” Raoul said. “Improving energy efficiency by increasing clean energy is good for the environment, state economies and our workers. I am proud to have won this legal victory that protects these important efforts.”

* Moving on to some new lawsuits. The Sun-Times

Illinois has joined 23 other states in filing a lawsuit against President Donald Trump’s executive order that would restrict mail-in voting to a federal list of eligible voters.

The executive order, signed Tuesday, directs the Department of Homeland Security to work with states to compile a list of eligible voters, using citizenship records and identification data. The order mandates that the United States Postal Service only send mail-in ballots to registered voters on the DHS list, and threatens criminal prosecution and loss of federal funding to states and individuals who do not comply.

The lawsuit was filed in Massachusetts in partnership with 23 other Democrat-led states, who argue the constitution leaves the right to administer and oversee elections to states, not the federal government. Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul contended the executive order will “disenfranchise voters” and cause “chaos” in elections.

“President Trump’s executive order is a blatantly unconstitutional attempt to undermine our elections and disenfranchise voters all across the country.” Raoul and Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said in a joint statement earlier this week. “Mail-in voting has always been a secure way to vote, and for many, the only way they can vote. Make no mistake, his attempts to attack free and fair elections will fail because Democratic AGs will use every tool we have to continue to hold President Trump accountable when he violates the rule of law and attacks states’ rights.”

* WCIA

Illinois’ Attorney General is filing another lawsuit against the Trump administration, this time over the repeal of air toxins and pollutants standards.

Kwame Raoul is one of 16 Democratic state Attorneys General who filed the lawsuit, alongside the Attorney General of the District of Columbia, the City of Chicago, the City of New York and Harris County, Texas. They are challenging the repeal of the 2024 Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS) Rule, which reverted standards to “outdated ones” that the coalition claims harm the environment.

Raoul explained that the MATS Rule implements nationwide standards that limit emissions of toxic air pollutants from coal- and oil-fired power plants, including mercury, arsenic, lead and other toxic metals, in addition to acid gases, such as hydrogen chloride and formaldehyde. In 2024, following significant developments in the technologies used to control pollution, the Environmental Protection Agency updated the standards for emissions of these hazardous air pollutants from power plants.

Last month, the Trump administration rolled back the updated standards, which Raoul said allows for more of these emissions to be released into the air.

* More…

    * Press release | AG Raoul obtains injunction in lawsuit over 2025 asphalt spill impacting Chicago sanitary and ship canal: Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced an agreed preliminary injunction was entered in a lawsuit his office filed against Petroleum Fuel & Terminal Company (PFTC) after a February 2025 incident caused approximately 4,000 barrels of liquid asphalt to spill into the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal. The preliminary injunction requires the defendant to complete cleanup of the canal and area surrounding its facility, located in suburban Forest View, Illinois. PFTC – owned by St. Louis-based Apex Oil Co. – has operated an oil terminal and storage facility at 4805 S. Harlem Ave. in Forest View since at least 1993. The facility sits in an industrial area next to the canal, a 32-mile waterway that connects the Chicago River to the Des Plaines River.

    * Press release | AG Raoul leads coalition supporting law firms targeted for retribution by Trump Administration: Attorney General Kwame Raoul co-led a coalition of 21 attorneys general today in filing an amicus brief supporting law firms challenging unconstitutional executive orders that imposed severe sanctions on the firms in retaliation for doing work disfavored by the Trump administration. “Attacking attorneys based on who they represent, who they hire, or because their client may take a position that is not favored by the government threatens our First Amendment rights, right to counsel and the independence of law firms,” Raoul said. “I join my fellow attorneys general in asking the court to uphold the rulings blocking these orders. As our states’ top legal officers, we stand with all our colleagues in the legal community who stay true to the ideals and values of our profession.”

    * WICS | Ex-Iroquois County health admin faces charges for $100k fake timesheet claims: Attorney General Kwame Raoul charged a former Iroquois County public health administrator with allegedly submitting fraudulent time sheets to the Iroquois County Public Health Board claiming to have worked hours she did not actually work, valued in excess of $100,000. Raoul’s office charged Dee Ann Schippert, 57, of Watseka, with two counts of theft of government property, Class X felonies punishable by up to 30 years in prison; six additional Class 1 felony counts of theft of government property, each punishable by up to 15 years in prison; eight counts of forgery, Class 3 felonies punishable by up to five years in prison; and 17 counts of official misconduct, Class 3 felonies each punishable by up to five years in prison.

    * ABC Chicago | Illinois Attorney General warns privacy may be at risk due to loopholes with private data brokers: According to the Illinois Attorney General and digital privacy experts, the ability of the federal government to monitor intimate details of your private life has never been more powerful with the buying and selling of personal data now being analyzed with artificial intelligence. The AG, along with others, is now urging Congress to close loopholes they claim violate your personal privacy and the Fourth Amendment. […] It’s why Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul said he and 16 other attorneys general are asking Congress to close loopholes allowing the federal government to buy bulk data on Americans without a judicial warrant. He said federal agencies have already purchased billions of records enabling them to track an individual’s movements, routines, and daily lives.

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Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Two walks down memory lane

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

Redfield says this session’s resistance is a sign of both changing political dynamics — the withering of Chicago’s political machine has given mayors since Richard M. Daley less political control over the City Council and state legislators — and Johnson’s failure to “bring people on board” in a time of tight city and state budgets.

“If you don’t understand and you don’t respect the guardrails and the mechanics of the process, then you’re putting yourself in a bad situation,” Redfield said. “You’ve got to operate from positions of strength and all I see from Springfield is the mayor taking an awful lot of heat and pushback on doing some pretty basic things within the City Council that, you know, mayors named Daley didn’t have those problems.”

Yeah, they had other problems instead.

* Ralph Martire writing in the Sun-Times

See, although the pension fund is underfunded today, that wasn’t always the case. As recently as 2001, the pension was fully funded. However, then-Mayor Richard M. Daley, who had an aversion to increasing property taxes for political reasons and who also controlled the management of CPS, had CPS zero-fund its pensions for a decade. Ten years, no contribution. So that naturally engendered a huge unfunded liability.

During that 10-year hiatus, revenue that should’ve covered CPS pensions was instead diverted to fund educational expenses. That irresponsible fiscal maneuver benefited city taxpayers because CPS received a higher level of funding for education than what they were paying for in taxes. Folks living in other parts of Illinois didn’t benefit one whit from this mayoral largess.

You really should read all of Ralph’s op-ed, by the way. We’ll revisit it later this week.

  19 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rep. Kam Buckner…

Rep. Kam Buckner, Anjanette Young, attorneys, advocates, and community leaders will present at the House Judiciary - Criminal committee hearing on HB 1611, legislation to prohibit no-knock warrants in Illinois.

HB 1611 is named in honor of Anjanette Young, whose case brought national attention to the danger, trauma, and constitutional harm caused by no-knock raids. Speakers will discuss the need to end the use of no-knock warrants and to ensure stronger protections for Illinois residents. […]

“House Bill 1611 remains a top priority for me—not only because of the trauma I continue to carry, but because of the countless families I’ve stood beside in their fight for justice,” said Anjanette Young. “I’ve sat through court proceedings and witnessed firsthand testimony that reflects a troubling lack of care and accountability in how officers engage with children and families. This bill is about ensuring accountability, protecting our communities, and affirming that justice is a fundamental right.”

“What happened to Anjanette Young was terrifying, humiliating, and wrong. No-knock warrants create chaos, put lives at risk, and too often leave innocent people to bear the trauma of government failure,” said Rep. Kam Buckner (D-Chicago). “HB 1611 is about making sure Illinois says clearly that this practice has no place in a system that claims to value safety, dignity, and constitutional rights.”

* WIFR

State Representative Maurice West (D-Rockford) leads HB4949, or the Family Justice Centers Act, in the Illinois General Assembly.

“I‘m honored to be the sponsor of this bill to ensure that the programs and the resources and the impact that we’re seeing in the Rockford area could be the programs and the resources and the impact we see throughout the state.”

West says he’s developing the bill “in lockstep” with the City of Rockford. If passed, the legislation sets guidelines and requirements for Illinois’ future family justice centers: survivor consent, confidentiality policies, privacy protections, law enforcement and community provider collaboration, operating agreements, training standards and more. […]

As of March 31, HB4949 awaits a second reading in the restorative justice and public safety committee. West says he’ll use this time to “iron out some details” with advocacy groups to prepare for an amendment and later vote.

* KHQA

Community integrated living arrangements (CILAs) are group homes where adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities live together with staffers on-site to help out.

Some cities across Illinois have zoning laws that can bar CILAs, by restricting homes to certain number of residents, or limiting how many CILAs can be in one area.

House bill 1843 would ban local zoning boards from creating such restrictions. Supporters say it’ll end discriminatory practices and allow these adults to be treated like anyone else trying to live in their own home, even if it’s through a care agency. […]

Senator Jil Tracy is actually backing this bill as co-sponsor — citing her brother who has a developmental disability as her inspiration — said it’s important that towns aren’t afraid to have group homes next door because the need is there.

HB 1843 passed in the Illinois House, now it’s off to the state senate.

* E&E News

Illinois lawmakers failed this year to advance a bill that would have forced fossil fuel companies to pay for climate resilience after a coalition of business and labor groups lined up against it.

The setback means Illinois won’t soon follow in the footsteps of Vermont and New York, who in recent years have passed similar measures into law. The bill didn’t even get a hearing in the Democratic-controlled Statehouse, despite being sponsored by state House Majority Leader Robyn Gabel (D).

“Big bills like this usually take more than one year,” Gabel said in an interview. “We kind of felt like, let’s put it out there this year and see who files in opposition? How involved is labor wanting to get? We just want to let people know and start thinking about it, and think about how much it could help us.”

The so-called Climate Change Superfund bill would have required major fossil fuel producers and oil refiners to pay into a state fund for climate adaptation. The money would have been used to fund projects such as flood protection infrastructure or the installation of air conditioners in schools.

* IPM Newsroom

State Sen. Paul Faraci (D-Champaign) is sponsoring Senate Bill 3008, which would require the state to provide information about financial independence resources for people receiving disability services.

The bill focuses on the Senator Scott Bennett ABLE Program. Named after the late state senator from Champaign who championed the original legislation, ABLE accounts allow people with disabilities to save and invest up to $100,000 for qualified expenses — such as transportation, education and assistive technology — without losing eligibility for state benefits. […]

Faraci said his bill aims to follow in the “footsteps” of Bennett’s advocacy by ensuring financial empowerment starts at the moment of enrollment rather than forcing residents to find resources on their own. […]

Senate Bill 3008 has cleared two readings and is currently on the order of its third and final reading in the Illinois Senate. If passed, it will move to the House for further consideration.

* SB1938 has not advanced out of committee. WTVO

Illinois lawmakers are considering charging drivers a per-mile driven tax rather than a tax on gasoline.

The legislation, an amendment to Senate Bill 1938, would create the Illinois Road Usage Charge Act, launching a statewide pilot program that charges drivers based on how many miles they travel rather than how much gasoline they buy.

Under the proposal, the Illinois Department of Transportation would launch a voluntary road usage charge pilot program by January 1, 2026. At least 1,000 vehicles statewide would participate, including passenger vehicles, commercial vehicles and electric vehicles. […]

Within 18 months of launching the pilot, the state would submit a report to the General Assembly evaluating whether a permanent mileage‑based fee could replace the gas tax.

* WTVO

Illinois lawmakers are considering new safeguards for artificial intelligence programs designed to simulate human relationships, under a bill that would require those systems to detect signs of self-harm and repeatedly remind users they are not interacting with a real person.

Senate Bill 3384, sponsored by Sen. Laura Ellman, would create the Artificial Intelligence Companion Model Safety Act, setting statewide rules for AI “companions,” programs designed to build ongoing, personalized relationships with users through conversation and emotional engagement.

Under the proposal, companies would be prohibited from operating or offering an AI companion in Illinois unless it includes a protocol to make “reasonable efforts” to detect suicidal thoughts or expressions of self-harm. If such language is detected, the AI must refer users to crisis resources such as the 9-8-8 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, crisis text lines, or other appropriate services. […]

The bill specifically excludes traditional customer service chatbots, internal workplace tools, and AI systems primarily used for research, efficiency, or technical assistance.

* WAND

A bill moving in the Illinois House could ensure people in the Department of Corrections are not charged unreasonable fees for sending mail. The plan 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 the process harder. Her plan would ensure committed people and their correspondents are not charged any fee, surcharge, or cost for mail or scanning services that exceed the standard postage rate. […]

The House Judiciary Criminal Committee appreciates the intent of the bill, but some Democrats are concerned about the mail scanning process.

“Everywhere that they’ve done this, contraband is still coming into these facilities,” said Rep. Kelly Cassidy (D-Chicago). “This is not the answer. This is some company making money on the backs of the people that we are incarcerating, and it is not okay.” […]

This plan passed unanimously out of the House Judiciary Criminal Committee last week. House Bill 4235 could receive a vote on the House floor as soon as Tuesday. The deadline to pass House bills out of the chamber is April 17.

* Center Square

A proposed Illinois bill aimed at addressing firefighter shortages by lowering the minimum hiring age has stalled in the legislature after failing to be called before a key deadline.

State Rep. Jed Davis, R-Yorkville, is behind House Bill 1098, which would amend the state’s municipal code and Fire Protection District Act to allow individuals as young as 18 to serve as full-time firefighters. […]

Davis argues that 18-year-olds are already entrusted with high-responsibility roles, including military service, making the current restriction inconsistent. […]

“Last session it was in the Police and Fire Committee, and I had the chairman’s word saying, ‘Hey, we’ll call your bill if you get agreement with the union,’” Davis said. “I got agreement with the union, we filed an amendment, and he said, ‘Good job, we’re calling your bill tomorrow.’ Then about eight hours before, I got notice they pulled it.”

* More…

    * WAND | Illinois bill could bring new hotel to Downtown Springfield: State Senator Doris Turner has several bills that would help revitalize Downtown Springfield. Senate Bill 3499 is one of them and would establish the Capital Area Tourism Authority. “It’s a political division and unit of local government, allowing the authority to exercise certain economic development powers,” Turner said. “The legislation aims to promote business, industry, commerce and tourism throughout Springfield.” The authority would include five members appointed by the Sangamon County Board, the Springfield City Council and the Springfield Metropolitan Exposition and Auditorium Authority.

    * WGN | Proposed law would require gun makers to make firearms switch-proof: The bill would require gun manufacturers to redesign their weapons so they can’t be modified to accommodate “switches.” Pistol automatic fire conversion switches, also known as “Glock switches,” are devices that can convert standard semi-automatic handguns into fully automatic firearms. […] The legislation is still making its way through committees in both chambers at the state house.

    * QC News | Illinois child torture bill advances: A bill in Illinois would provide new criminal penalties for people convicted of torturing children. Child abuse is a crime in every state, but 14 states, including Illinois, have no laws specifying child torture. House Bill 5562 defines torture as degrading or abusive treatment for extended periods of time. Supporters say offenders can traumatize children in ways that don’t leave physical injuries without any consequences unless the provision is adopted. Child torture would become a Class X felony if adopted. A conviction would carry a mandatory sentence of 6-30 years in prison.

    * Fox Illinois | Proposed Illinois bill could ban wild animals in circuses: The Traveling Animal Acts bill would ban circuses traveling through Illinois from featuring specific wild animals, including big cats like lions and tigers, bears, and primates. Lawmakers say the effort is focused on animal welfare. “We do recognize that these are species that have very particular needs that should be handled in a way that respects their biological needs for safety,” said State Representative Kelly Cassidy.

    * Daily Herald | Why Elgin is giving state a chance to pass legislation before addressing e-bike, scooter laws: Elgin officials are waiting until the state’s spring legislation session is over to see if any proposed regulations regarding e-bikes and other micromobility devices pass before suggesting their own citywide ordinance. […] If the state fails to pass regulations, the city could model its ordinance on statutes recently passed in Rolling Meadows, St. Charles and Lombard. Jungo added that if state legislation is approved, the city could still add more restrictions.

  5 Comments      


Bears back away from Illinois deadline (Updated)

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I went over all this and more with subscribers this morning. From ABC7 last week

One Illinois lawmaker says he still thinks the Arlington Heights proposal has the upper hand over Indiana, and new comments from Chicago Bears leadership suggest the team is being patient with Springfield.

Appearing on NBC’s “Pro Football Talk,” Bears President Kevin Warren dispelled the notion that time is running out for an Arlington Heights Bears stadium deal.

“We don’t have a set deadline, but I am confident that sometime this spring slash summer, we’ll know,” Warren said. […]

“What the Bears said today is important. They did not come in with an artificial deadline. They came in with seriousness,” said Illinois state Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago.

* ChicagoBears.com

Bears chairman George H. McCaskey and President/CEO Kevin Warren provided a stadium update this week at the NFL owners meetings.

Speaking to Chicago reporters at the Arizona Biltmore, Warren revealed that the organization expects to decide whether to build its new fixed-roof stadium at one of two sites in Arlington Heights, Ill., or Hammond, Ind., by late spring or early summer.

“We have been working on our stadium and feel very strongly that we are making progress,” Warren said. “We are in an excellent position. The target is to make sure that we have a decision made by … late spring, early summer.” […]

“I believe they continue to work on the PILOT legislation,” Warren said. “I believe they are scheduled to come back at some time in the middle of April. PILOT is not specifically for the Chicago Bears. I think the perception and the focus from a legislation standpoint is that it is good for business in Illinois to be able to allow businesses to at least have a manageable amount of taxes that they will be required to pay. This is something the Illinois legislature has been working on for many years.” […]

“The fact of the matter is we don’t have a deal to consider right now,” McCaskey said. “In Indiana, we have a great site. There’s some due diligence that needs to be completed before we can fully evaluate the site, and we have a legislative framework in place. In Arlington Heights, we have a site that’s shovel-ready, but we don’t yet have a legislative framework. There are prudent and wise and responsible public servants in Indiana working on it, and there are prudent and wise and responsible public servants in Illinois working on it.

“If I could offer one football analogy, just as the course of a game, things ebb and flow. They go back and forth. Sometimes there is great momentum on one side; sometimes the momentum shifts suddenly to another side. I’ve said to our family, ‘We need to be patient and let the deal come to us.’ We think a deal will materialize somewhere. We’re comfortable with either site. We have people at the Bears working with public servants in both Indiana and Illinois trying to get this done.”

* Heavy.com

When asked about the Bears’ stadium situation during a press conference at the owners meetings, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell put a little pressure on the franchise. He said, “It’s really important that they come to a resolution on this relatively soon… This is an important time to get this resolved.”

* Indiana Capital Chronicle

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said at the owners meeting that the Bears need to move forward with a replacement for their current home of Soldier Field along Chicago’s Lake Michigan shore.

“It’s important,” he said. “I’ve spoken to officials in Illinois. This is an important time to get this resolved sooner rather than later.”

…Adding… Here we go again. This guy is close to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell…


  20 Comments      


Some surprising housing poll results

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My latest syndicated newspaper column

A YouGov poll conducted last month shows registered voters in Illinois overwhelmingly believe that the cost of renting and buying a home is a problem, think that there aren’t enough affordable homes for average folks and want the state Legislature to take action.

The poll of 806 Illinois registered voters was taken March 1-9 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.8 percentage points. The survey was conducted on behalf of YIMBY Illinois, a nonprofit which “advocates for abundant housing and sustainable, inclusive cities throughout Illinois.”

But the questions look legit, and the poll even tests some opposing arguments, although no questions about our high property taxes were asked.

The poll was released as Gov. JB Pritzker and others are pushing a plan to build “missing middle” residences, including multifamily developments and “granny flats” throughout the state. But proponents must overcome strong opposition from many municipal governments, which do not want to give up their control of local zoning.

Eighty-four percent of those polled said the cost of renting or buying a home was a “major problem” (47%) or “somewhat a problem” (37%). That majority held up in every state region and demographic. Even 76% of those who approve of President Donald Trump’s job performance said it’s a problem (39% major, 37% somewhat, with 17% saying it’s a minor or not really a problem). Just a reminder that subsets have a higher margin of error than the overall survey.

Another 67% of respondents said Illinois does not have “enough homes that are affordable for average people to buy or rent,” while 18% said there were enough, and 16% weren’t sure or didn’t know. Again, every region and demographic agreed with the position, including 54% of Trump approvers.

A sizable 82% said state legislators should “take action” to address the housing shortage and costs of housing in the state (49% strongly agreed and 33% somewhat agreed). Even 68% of Trump supporters either strongly (35%) or somewhat (33%) agreed, while just 20% disagreed (8% strongly).

Voters were somewhat split when asked to rate their city or town’s efforts to keep housing affordable, with 47% rating it positively, including 3% “very good,” 11% “good” and 33% “acceptable.” Another 40% rated it negatively, with 10% saying it’s “very poor” and 30% calling it “poor.” Those results were roughly similar throughout regions and all other demographics.

Perhaps the most surprising result was when voters were asked, “even if it isn’t exactly right,” which of the following came closer to their opinions: 61% said it was “more important to build more homes in my neighborhood so that people who work in my community can afford to live here, than it is to protect the neighborhood from change,” while 27% said it’s “more important to protect my neighborhood from change than it is to build more homes that working people can afford.” Even a plurality of 47% of Trump supporters agreed with building more homes in their communities so people could afford to live where they work, while 40% said protecting their neighborhood from change was more important.

Sixty-five percent said they agreed that “Building more affordable housing is more important for Illinois,” and 27% said “Protecting the character of neighborhoods from change is more important for Illinois” was closer to their opinion.

And despite a plurality narrowly approving of their local government’s ability to keep housing affordable, 65% (including 57% of Trump supporters) said “Illinois state legislators should prioritize building more homes and bringing down housing costs,” while just 18% said “Illinois state legislators should prioritize preserving the power city governments have over what types of homes can be built and where.” Another 17% were unsure.

The poll also tested various ways of building more affordable housing, and all had majority support, although all had more “somewhat” support than “strong” support.

Sixty-three percent supported allowing construction of “granny flats” or other accessory dwelling units. Sixty-nine percent supported building townhouses and small apartment buildings “on all-residential lots.” Sixty-six percent said they supported allowing homes to be built on lots that are just 1,500 square feet. Seventy-four percent said faith groups should be allowed to build low-income housing.

While the numbers don’t show voters want to give the state carte blanche, these results are much more positive than many statehouse types probably expected.

* Related…


* Press release: Philippe Largent, AARP Illinois State Director: “No matter where they live, Illinoisans are asking for relief from rising housing and property tax costs, and older adults—especially those on fixed incomes—need more attainable options. Accessory dwelling units and missing middle housing allow people to downsize, stay near family caregivers, and age in place. Taking these commonsense steps to increase housing choice in communities throughout Illinois would go far towards making Illinois more livable, age-friendly and affordable.”

  30 Comments      


SB 1486 Raises Premiums And Reduces Consumer Choice

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois is home to one of the most competitive insurance markets in the nation. Hundreds of insurers fight for consumers, leaving families better protected than those in other states.

SB 1486, described by the Daily Herald as “controversial legislation,” could eliminate that system and, in its place, leave Illinois with the most extreme regulatory framework in the nation.

This legislation could:

    • Increase premiums by 20% on average
    • Cause insurers to scale back coverage
    • Result in companies leaving the marketplace entirely

These policies have been tried in other states, leading to skyrocketing costs for consumers and limited options for coverage. Don’t bring California style overregulation to Illinois.

Protect consumer choice and affordability.
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Another suburban GOP wipeout?

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My syndicated newspaper column from the start of spring break

The trend in special elections around the country for the past several months has shown spiking Democratic voter turnout and tanking Republican turnout. And some preliminary primary election results from earlier this month show the same trend here.

What follows is a quick look at governor’s race turnout in the state’s five most populous counties. Not all votes were counted when I wrote this, so the numbers are accurate as of early Friday. But the final count will be very close to what I have here.

Also, I’m not saying that these results are necessarily predictive of the November election. Things change in politics, and sometimes folks cross over to cast votes in competitive local elections and go back to where they were in the general. But the primary turnout numbers have been a broad sign of things to come for quite a while, particularly in the suburbs, where we are looking today. The Republican Party has moved far to the other side of social issues important to suburban voters, and President Donald Trump’s unpopularity has been further driving that point home.

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 surge in DuPage

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.

The same goes for Lake County, where Republican primary gubernatorial turnout has collapsed by more than 48% compared to four years ago, while Democratic turnout has risen by more than 27%. Lake is another suburban county with a disappearing general election GOP.

Republican primary turnout in Lake has dropped every four years since 2010, and the preliminary numbers show that 59% fewer Republicans cast ballots for governor last week than in ’10.

Lake County Democratic primary turnout so far is slightly above the previous record number recorded in 2018. And it’s up 501% compared to the party’s very bad year in 2014.

Will County’s Republican primary vote for governor has so far dropped more than 33% compared to four years ago, while Democratic turnout has increased by about 33%.

This year’s Democratic primary turnout in Will County is slightly down from Trump’s first midterm in 2018, but it’s up 282% from Obama’s miserable second midterm. Will’s Republican turnout, as measured here by votes for governor, is down 31% from 2014.

Kane County has been trending Democratic ever since Trump’s first midterm in 2018. And even though about 4,000 more people voted for Republican gubernatorial candidates in 2022 than those who voted Democratic, Gov. JB Pritzker went on to win that county in November by 10 points. It’s a good reason to note again why this measurement isn’t always an accurate predictor. Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin was running for governor as a Republican that year, which likely explains the anomaly.

This year, preliminary numbers show that more than twice as many Democrats voted for an unopposed governor versus those who voted in the contested Republican gubernatorial race (46K to not quite 23K). Kane Republican votes fell by 26% versus 2022. Democratic votes rose by a gigantic 71%.

Suburban Cook County long ago slipped away from significant Republican influence. Republican primary votes for governor are so far 33% below 2022, while Democratic turnout is up 41%.

The suburban Cook Republican primary gubernatorial vote is down 48% from its most recent high-water mark in 2014.

Again, this is not a prediction. But legislative Republicans are right to be afraid of another suburban wipeout.

  9 Comments      


RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Sprinkle & Spoon in Galesburg serves up delicious, allergy-friendly frozen treats that never compromise on flavor. Co-owner Lora Barajas, one of the estimated 16.5 million Americans with a milk allergy, opened the shop with her siblings in 2021. Made from scratch and free of dairy, nuts, gluten, and eggs, every scoop delivers rich flavor. Whether you have allergies or simply love a great dessert, Sprinkle & Spoon is the perfect place to indulge.

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

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

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Trump administration sues Illinois over state’s attempts to regulate prediction markets. Illinois Answers Project

    - The lawsuit cites cease-and-desist letters that the Illinois Gaming Board had sent over the past year to prediction markets such as Crypto.com, Kalshi, Polymarket and Robinhood, claiming that they offered “illegal gambling” and violated state law.
    - “The Trump Administration is carrying water for companies driving well-documented and lucrative insider-trading schemes,” a Pritzker spokesperson said in a statement.
    - The Commodities Futures Trading Commission argues in its lawsuit that the prediction markets are not offering gambling but rather commodities similar to grain futures. As such they are “designated contract markets” that fall under the authority of the CFTC.

* Related stories…

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*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s agenda under fire in Springfield: “What you find from lawmakers in Illinois is not being anti-Mayor Brandon Johnson’s agenda as much as we want to incentivize businesses to do business in Illinois,” said that critic, state Rep. Curtis Tarver, an assistant majority leader in the House and a Democrat from Chicago’s South Side. “Some of these policies have very strong unintended consequences.” Attempts to prevent future head taxes and phase out subminimum wages for tipped workers are both backed by business groups. Kennedy Bartley, Johnson’s chief of external affairs, didn’t speculate on what was driving the opposition, but denied any suggestion city lobbyists aren’t communicating with lawmakers. Her team is in “regular and deep” conversations with leadership in Springfield to ensure the city isn’t “cut off at the knees” in its attempts to raise progressive revenue and improve conditions for working people, Bartley said.

* Legal Newsline | IL biometrics privacy reforms apply to past cases, too: Appeals court: On April 1, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals sided with railroad Union Pacific and other businesses on the hotly debated question, with potentially hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars collectively at stake. In the ruling, the Seventh Circuit judges said they believed the reforms were “procedural” in nature, and not “substantive.” Therefore, under prior, consistent rulings from the Illinois Supreme Court, the appeals court said, the reforms must also be considered “remedial” in nature, and therefore, retroactive, even if lawmakers didn’t include language specifically saying so.

* Sun-Times | Illinois conversion therapy ban intact after Supreme Court ruling, though advocates wary of future challenges: Last week the Supreme Court ruled against a law banning “conversion therapy” for LGBTQ+ kids in Colorado, one of 23 states — including Illinois — that ban the discredited practice. Illinois’ ban remains intact, but could be open to future challenges in the wake of the decision.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | 7 years after legalization, final cannabis licensing lawsuit goes to court: Well-Being argues that the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, which operated the lotteries, improperly allowed roughly 450 ineligible entries into a lottery of 901 applicants for dispensary licenses in the Chicago region. That, Well-Being argues, nearly doubled the size of the pool and reduced others’ chances of winning. Well-Being alleges the entries should have been flagged as ineligible because corporate dispensaries that already had a footprint in Illinois’ medical cannabis market had their fingerprints on applications for social equity dispensary licenses.

* WCIA | Pritzker pushes Congress for year-round E15 gasoline: On Thursday, he sent a letter to Congress asking for the measure; he addressed the letter to four members of the Committee on Environment & Public Works. In the letter, the governor stated Illinois and Midwest farmers are under increasing pressure from global instability. “From the devastating effects of tariffs to the manufactured war with Iran, Illinois farmers are being forced to shoulder rising costs while losing export markets to foreign competitors,” Pritzker wrote.

* Sun-Times | Madigan, ex-ComEd defendants assembled a high-powered legal team for appeals court arguments this month: Amy Mason Saharia will argue on Madigan’s behalf. Her past clients include ex-Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes and former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Former Illinois Solicitor General Joel Bertocchi will argue for McClain. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Julia Schwartz and Irene Hickey Sullivan will ask the appeals court to reject arguments from the three former powerbrokers, who were convicted in two separate trials. Madigan is serving a 7 ½ year prison sentence, and McClain and Pramaggiore are each serving two-year sentences. Madigan and Pramaggiore sought to avoid prison while their appeals play out. The law required them to show they’d raised a substantial question of law or fact likely to result in reversal or a new trial; a sentence of no prison time; or so little prison time it could be served before the appeal is done.

* Sun-Times | Illinois Accountability Commission requests testimony from Trump officials responsible for Midway Blitz: The letters, sent Friday by the commission’s chair, Judge Rubén Castillo, were to: Stephen Miller, White House deputy chief of staff for policy; White House “Border Czar” Tom Homan; former Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem; Gregory Bovino, former “commander at large” of the U.S. Border Patrol, and others, according to Gov. JB Pritzker’s office. […] “The people of Illinois deserve to know how this operation was planned, authorized, and carried out — and to identify who was responsible for the decisions that led to its implementation in our state,” Castillo said. “The commission’s work seeks to determine who authorized these actions, what safeguards were in place to protect Illinois residents, and what accountability mechanisms exist when federal operations harm communities.”

* Center Square | Universities warn state funding delays are wasting millions in taxpayer investment: “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. The backlog of maintenance requests at state universities and community colleges has grown to a projected $10.8 billion this year, according to the Illinois Board of Higher Education’s 2027 budget recommendation.

* 25News Now | Progress reported in reducing statewide teacher vacancies: ISBE data showed that statewide teacher vacancies fell by 24%, from 2.76% last year to 2.1% this year. As of Oct. 1, 2025, there were 2,943 unfilled positions, a decrease from 3,864 unfilled spots in 2024. Leaders said this is due in part to a $120 million investment into the Teacher Vacancy Grant. The grant has gone to 170 Illinois school districts in need for the last three years, supporting locally driven strategies to recruit and retain educators.

*** Chicago ***

* Unraveled | “Urgency was left in the dust long ago”—few answers from Chicago police superintendent on department collaboration with ICE: Snelling also addressed an unconfirmed ICE arrest that reportedly occurred at the Cook County Domestic Violence Courthouse on Thursday. The Illinois Court Access, Safety and Participation Act, which Governor JB Pritzker signed last October, bars civil arrests (e.g. immigration arrests without a judicial warrant) against people attending state court proceedings. When a reporter for Univision asked if Chicago police should respond to ICE agents apparently violating this state law to conduct an arrest at the domestic violence courthouse, Snelling incorrectly said such a law didn’t exist. “There’s no law like that,” Snelling wrongly stated. “There’s no law that says that immigration enforcement can’t happen around particular locations. That’s not a law.” The Department of Justice has sued Chicago and Illinois over the new law, but the law remains in effect. Both Snelling and other reporters in the press scrum seemed to confuse the new law with the Illinois TRUST Act, which Snelling correctly noted does not compel Illinois law enforcement to interfere with immigration arrests.

* Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson’s administration ‘reflexively hostile to oversight,’ outgoing Chicago inspector general says: “This administration has shown itself to be reflexively hostile to oversight. This has come largely through the Law Department … interfering with OIG’s access to city premises, withholding records from OIG, declining to provide records even though they were, in fact, publicly available, declining to implement recommendations from OIG,” Witzburg told the Chicago Sun-Times. “Reasonable minds can differ on facts, and even on the law. But we are entitled to, and we ought to see, this course of conduct out of City Hall for what it is — a pattern of things,” she said.

* Sun-Times | Top Johnson aide says there will be ‘consequences’ for CHA power struggle over new CEO: Cristina Pacione-Zayas, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s Chief of Staff, says the CHA board will have to answer for hiring a new CEO after what the administration claims was an illegal process that violated the Illinois Open Meetings Act.

* Fox Chicago | CHA Board Chair speaks out against attempted firing: ‘I remain operating chair’: Mayor Brandon Johnson says Matthew Brewer is no longer the operating chairman of the $1.4 billion Chicago Housing Authority. Instead, the mayor says he has installed an ally, Commissioner Jawanza Malone. But Brewer spoke out Thursday, saying, “not so fast.” “I remain the Operating Chair of the board with the authority to lead this organization day to day,” Brewer said in a sit-down interview with FOX Chicago.

* Tribune | Chicago Public Schools second-in-command departs, as officials call for more Latino leadership: On Wednesday, a coalition of school board members, elected officials and community groups urged King in a letter to name “qualified Latino leaders” to her executive team. “This is not a question of talent, but a reflection of a system that has consistently overlooked highly qualified Latino educators and leaders,” said the group’s letter, dated Wednesday. “The result is a clear and persistent lack of Latino leadership at every level.” The letter was signed by eight of 10 elected board members. It was not signed by members appointed by Mayor Brandon Johnson, or elected members Jitu Brown and Ebony DeBerry, who are closely aligned with the mayor.

* Tribune | Coach houses now legal in much of Chicago as Mayor Brandon Johnson touts housing efforts: After a bitter City Council fight last year, 34 aldermen opted to allow additional dwelling unit construction in parts of their ward zoned for single-family homes. Another 16 aldermen did not. The piecemeal approval means homeowners in many parts of the city — particularly the Far Northwest Side, Southwest Side and South Side — still cannot legally build the units. Aldermen opposed to the change argued the added units would mean too much density and take away their say in what construction gets approved. They fiercely fought a plan backed by Mayor Brandon Johnson to legalize the units across the entire city, forcing Johnson to compromise by allowing individual wards to be cut out of the legalization.

* Sun-Times | City owed millions from its own employees, who aren’t being forced to pay up: Hampton was in prison when all 34 citations were issued in his name, likely for his namesake son, who was fatally stabbed three years ago. That’s difficult to confirm since the city redacted the birth dates and addresses from those tickets. “No, that is not me,” Hampton said. “That must be somebody else. I didn’t get out until ‘23, so that’s not me. I don’t know how they got that confused with me. All you got to do is just check with the Federal Bureau of Prisons. I went in 2003 and didn’t get out until 2023. I don’t need no problems with my job with the city, or none of that, because they got some wrong information.”

* Fox Chicago | Crews digging in Streeterville uncover artifacts tied to Chicago’s origins:
“It’s just this old piece of wood,” Roberts said. “Except for the fact that it’s curved. You wouldn’t think it was anything but lumber, but the curve tells you it’s a boat at the bottom of a boat.” They also found vintage construction nails, medicine bottles, and stylish boots — artifacts from the 1800s — all buried beneath the street.

* Block Club | Skyway Lanes, Chicago’s Last Black-Owned Bowling Alley, Closing After ‘Surge’ Of Support Fades: Brunetta Hill-Corley sounded the alarm that her late father’s bowling alley was in trouble in March 2025, leading to an outpouring of community support and over $25,000 in donations for overdue repairs. But Skyway Lanes, a Far South Side staple since the 1950s that was the city’s last Black-owned bowling alley, will now close for good April 26. By then, the historic alley at 9915 S. Torrence Ave. will have hung on for over a year after the last-ditch campaign to save it — long enough for neighbors to have thrown one more birthday party.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WBEZ | Property taxes, driven by TIF districts and school funds, outpace inflation and wages: county treasurer study: The county’s property tax levy has increased from $6.8 billion in 1995 to $19.2 billion in 2024, or twice the rate of inflation, according to Pappas. If it had remained on track with inflation, per Treasurer’s office calculations, it would be closer to $10.1 billion. Pappas blames loopholes in the state Property Tax Extension Limitation Law, or PTELL, which was designed to limit tax increases to the rate of inflation or 5%, whichever is less. But “local officials took advantage of that law’s loopholes to enact tax increases that substantially exceeded that limit,” and 94 of the county’s 135 municipalities aren’t bound by the law, the report says.

* Aurora Beacon-News | In wake of new Aurora rules, Sugar Grove eyes changes to its regulations on data center developments: At a meeting of the Sugar Grove Village Board on Tuesday, Village President Sue Stillwell, who brought the topic of modifying Sugar Grove’s rules on data centers forward, expressed concerns about the village’s existing regulations and indicated an interest in putting a moratorium on data center development projects for the time being, similar to what Aurora recently did. In Sugar Grove, a possible data center is under contract and could be built in the next three to four years. It would be part of the controversial mixed-use development that’s planned for 760 acres at Interstate 88 and Route 47, a portion of land that was annexed into the village in 2024.

* Tribune | Committee divided on advancing Will County solar farm following contentious hearings: The board’s committee deadlocked 3-3 on a vote ​Thursday to recommend approval of a special-use permit for Earthrise Energy’s proposed development, dubbed Pride of the Prairie. Republicans Judy Ogalla, whose district covers the proposed project area, and Raquel Mitchell were joined by Democrat Dawn Bullock in voting against the project that would cover 6,100 acres of farmland in Wilton, Green Garden and Manhattan townships. Democrats Sherry Newquist, whose district also covers a portion of the project, Herb Brooks​ and Destinee Ortiz voted in support. Meanwhile, the same committee voted 4-2, with Ogalla and Mitchell voting no, to recommend approval of Earthrise’s 2,400-acre Plum Valley solar farm project in Crete Township.

* Block Club | West Suburban Hospital Owner Offers No Clear Plan For Reopening: But Prasad didn’t provide any new ideas for how he might reopen the hospital, instead repeating his previous statements that it would send out a new round of bills to try to collect on unpaid debts and raise enough money to restart full operations. By the end of the event, state Rep. La Shawn K. Ford indicated he wasn’t confident Prasad would be able to reopen West Suburban. He said Prasad needs to gain the trust of the people the hospital is supposed to serve.

* ABC Chicago | Illinois denies request for Harvey to be declared ‘financially distressed’ city: Harvey city attorney Keri-Lyn Krafthefer confirmed the denial to ABC7 Friday, saying it was not a surprise to the city and state law should be changed to make it easier for cities to request help from the state. Municipalities can’t declare bankruptcy in Illinois. As of October 2025, Harvey has a 52% property tax collection rate, bringing in less money than it spends, even though it has the third highest property tax rates in Cook County. Also, 35% of state revenue & restricted funds gets diverted by the State Comptroller to fund the fire pension.

* WGN | PTO treasurer for suburban elementary school accused of stealing over $13,000: “Through her alleged actions, Ms. Piasecki abused the trust placed in her by the Goodrich Elementary School PTO for her own personal gain,” DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin said. “This money, approximately $13,000, was intended to be used for the benefit of the children of the school, not for Ms. Piasecki’s personal use, as is alleged in this case. If the allegations in this case are proven true, Ms. Piasecki treated the PTO as her own personal fundraiser and in doing so, lined her own pockets while depriving the Goodrich Elementary School PTO of much-needed funding.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora Mayor John Laesch to host State of the City Address on April 16: The event is set to be held from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at Aurora University’s Crimi Auditorium. Official details about Laesch’s planned speech are sparse, with the city’s webpage simply noting that it will be “spotlighting how Aurora is growing, together!” However, the webpage also said that Aurora is “moving beyond traditional governance and exemplifying a people-centered strategic model.” Laesch isn’t focused on maintaining the status quo, city officials wrote on the webpage, but is instead focused on making the city “fiscally resilient, environmentally conscious, and deeply rooted in community voice, supported by an economy which serves its people.”

* Daily Southtown | Funding dwindles for home-delivered meals in Palos, Orland, Lemont and Worth, advocates say: Becker said government funding for the home-delivered meals program was reduced by 7% in 2026, and Pathlights staff anticipate additional decreases next year. The program is funded through a combination of 67% state funding and 18% federal funding, according to Becker. That state funding comes from a line item titled “home-delivered meals” in the Illinois Department of Aging budget. Gov. JB Pritzker proposed in February to maintain that funding at $63 million for this coming budget year, but advocates are pushing for more, Becker said.

*** Downstate ***

* Tribune | As Trump administration rolls back LGBTQ+ protections, some flock to Peoria for a reprieve: Over the past six years, Peoria real estate agents Mike Van Cleve and Jacob Rendel have seen an influx of transplants to Peoria, they said. They credited much of the early interest in relocating to Angelica Ostaszewski, a Peoria transplant who, in 2020, started posting videos to her TikTok channel encouraging people to move to the city. Her posts garnered her thousands of followers, widespread media coverage — and relocations. When Ostaszewski spoke to the Tribune in 2022, she listed Peoria’s job availability, affordability and welcoming environment as primary draws.

* Tribune | ‘We were just special’: Eclectic group of Illinois players says emotional goodbye after memorable season ends: The emotions were evident in the locker room afterward. Coach Brad Underwood, a onetime community college coach who just carried his “dream job” program to college basketball’s biggest stage, was in tears. He was far from the only one. Asked about this season, Humrichous — a senior who grew up 50 miles from Lucas Oil Stadium — was puffy-eyed as he described this team. “It was a joy,” Humrichous said, seemingly at a loss for words. “It was a joy.”

* WGLT | Rivian union organizers frustrated with UAW’s slow play at Normal plant: The workers say that work has now stalled at Rivian. That’s made organizing difficult for the dwindling members of the voluntary organizing committee [VOC] at Rivian, said Renee Leonard, a VOC member who works in a manufacturing role at Rivian. “When I start to lose my faith in the UAW, what am I supposed to tell my peers?” said Leonard. “As one of the leaders, when I have no answers, people stop trusting me.” The UAW did not respond to multiple requests for comments for this story. The Normal plant used to be a UAW shop, back when Mitsubishi built vehicles here.

* WGLT | March rains lift Bloomington’s water supply out of drought conditions: The combined lake deficit was 6.4 feet on Thursday morning. That’s a big improvement from the 10-foot deficit that triggered City Manager Jeff Jurgens to issue a water conservation proclamation in February urging residents and businesses to cut back on use. The region had been experiencing moderate and severe drought conditions throughout the fall and winter. The city revoked the proclamation on March 20 and said additional recent rain “allows us to move out of the Moderate Drought phase.

* WCIA | University of Illinois-Springfield faculty go on strike: On Friday, marching their way down the picket line and chanting through campus, were dozens of University of Illinois-Springfield faculty, fed up with their administration. “We wanted to be in our classrooms. We wanted to be in our offices with our students, working with them on research, doing service for this institution to keep it running. But we’re out here,” said Dathan Powell, President of the UISUF.

* WIFR | Historic Ogle County cemetery provides new life for Illinois’ prairies: “This is a relic of the original tall grass prairie,” Branhagen says of the land. Once a slice of Illinois’ 22 million acres of prairie, this 4-acre plot marks one of the final resting places for the state’s amber waves. Between 1820 and today, the “Prairie State” transformed 99% of its namesake into farmland or urban development. The Conservation Fund reports about less than 2,600 acres of “high-quality remnants remain.”

* WSIL | 51st Annual Cardboard Boat Regatta Ready to Make Waves at SIU: The 51st Annual Great Cardboard Boat Regatta is set to dock once again on Saturday, April 18 at Campus Lake, bringing waves of excitement to Southern Illinois University Carbondale. […] Registration begins at 10 a.m., with races officially launching at 1 p.m. Teams will paddle their handmade vessels in hopes of staying afloat long enough to claim victory, or at least avoid a soggy surrender. For more than five decades, the regatta has remained a cornerstone campus tradition, drawing students, families, and spectators eager to see which boats will sail smoothly and which will… well… go down with the ship.

*** National ***

* The Guardian | US health department investigates 13 states that require insurance plans to cover abortion: While HHS did not list the states, the Associated Press reported that the 13 states with the coverage requirements are California, Colorado, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Vermont and Washington. Mikie Sherrill, New Jersey’s governor, criticized the investigations in a statement on Thursday, calling the investigation “nothing but a fishing expedition wasting taxpayers’ money”.

* Post-Tribune | Experts: Trump’s mail-in ballot executive order unconstitutional: On Tuesday, Trump signed an executive order to create a nationwide list of verified eligible voters and to restrict mail-in voting, a move that swiftly drew legal threats from state Democratic officials ahead of this year’s midterm elections. The order, which voting law experts say violates the Constitution by attempting to seize states’ power to run elections, is the latest salvo from Trump to interfere with the way Americans vote based on his false allegations of voter fraud. The president has repeatedly lied about the outcome of the 2020 presidential campaign and the integrity of state-run elections, asserting that he won “three times” — even though Joe Bident was certified as the 2020 election winner — and launching accusations of voter fraud that numerous audits, investigations and courts have debunked.

* Gateway Journalism | How Data Journalism Is Creating A Public Record Of Trump’s Immigration Crackdown: Last year, ProPublica documented cases of U.S. citizens wrongfully arrested or detained by ICE through court filings and public records. The Guardian tracked everyone who died in ICE detention in 2025. The Minneapolis Star Tribune used crowdsourced data about the frequency and locations where ICE agents remain even after federal authorities announced the end of “Operation Metro Surge” in mid-February. Then, in late March, the Chicago Tribune published an analysis of arrests and deportations from “Operation Midway Blitz” that found of the roughly 3,800 people detained and 2,500 deported, most had no criminal record. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security did not respond to a request for comment, the newspaper reported.

* Politico | ‘Proactively fall in line’: Holocaust Memorial Museum quietly changed content after Trump returned to office: Leaders at the museum also renamed a one-day civic education workshop designed for college students from “Fragility of Democracy and the Rise of the Nazis” to “Before the Holocaust: German Society and the Nazi Rise to Power.” In an email, obtained by POLITICO, between a senior staff member at the museum’s Levine Institute for Holocaust Education and a staffer planning the workshop, the senior staff member said the change was necessary due to “concerns regarding how the term fragility may be perceived or interpreted in the current climate.”

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Good morning!

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Nick Drake

I saw it written and I saw it say
Pink moon is on its way
And none of you stand so tall
Pink moon gonna get you all

Wellness check: How are you?

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

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Apr 6, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Apr 6, 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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Reader comments closed for spring break

Friday, Mar 27, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* In honor of all the dead bills that may not be dead yet



You ain’t gotta die to be dead to me

See you on April 6!

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Mar 27, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WBEZ

Illinois home insurance premiums are going up, and climate change-powered severe weather is in part to blame.

Average U.S. home insurance rates climbed 12% last year and are projected to surge another 4% in 2026, according to new nationwide data from the insurance price tracker Insurify. Illinois is expected to top the national average with a 5% increase, leaving policyholders statewide paying an average $3,559 premium per year.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s higher than that at the end of this year,” said Abe Scarr of the consumer-protection nonprofit Illinois Public Interest Research Group, relying on trends he says his group has seen in recent years.

Between 2021 and 2024, home insurance costs increased by about 50% in Illinois, costing homeowners close to an additional $1,000 per year, according to a Consumer Federation of America report. In the same time period, only Utah experienced a higher rate jump.

* MediaIte

The Republican-led House of Representatives has rejected the Senate-approved Homeland Security funding bill, extending the partial government shutdown even further, The Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

The news came after the Senate unanimously approved a funding package just after 2 a.m. on Friday to reopen the Department of Homeland Security after the 40-day shutdown that has spawned long lines and chaos at airports across the country.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Illinois farmers brace for another bruising season as Iran war spikes fertilizer prices: Roughly 20% of Illinois’ nitrogen fertilizer is imported from countries such as Russia and Saudi Arabia and passes through the strait, said Illinois Farm Bureau President Philip Nelson. “The more we can do domestically I think is in the best interest of everybody, from the consumer to the farmer,” he said. “So when you come into a conflict like this, you’re not as dramatically impacted.”

* ABC Chicago | $59B wagered on sports in Illinois since legalization, raising concerns for youth: What used to be a trip to the casino can now happen from your couch, on your phone. The I-Team and ABC News found that in Illinois alone, almost $60 billion have been wagered since legalized sports betting began six years ago. The numbers are raising concerns about young people getting hooked.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Convicted cocaine cash launderer is a key figure in legal Illinois cannabis empire: David Berger, who was convicted of laundering more than $300,000 for a reputed Mexican cocaine-trafficker, is closely associated with Ivy Hall, a chain of social equity marijuana dispensaries. Berger, who grew up in Northbrook, “can still benefit from the industry. I think that’s wrong,” state Rep. La Shawn Ford says.

* CBS Chicago | Property tax bill to help Chicago Bears build Arlington Heights stadium won’t get vote for at least 2 weeks: The Chicago Bears will have to wait until at least April for action on a property tax bill that would boost their efforts to build a new stadium in Arlington Heights, as the Illinois House is set to adjourn Friday. Top House Democratic negotiator State Rep. Kam Buckner confirmed to CBS News Chicago that the bill won’t move before the House adjourns Friday for two weeks. They are set to return to session on April 7.

* McHenry County Blog | Looking Like Max Solomon Will Get 5,000 Write-In Votes, Putting Him on the Republican Ballot for State Treasurer: Again, assuming 50% of the write-ins for State Treasurer went of Solomon in Will County, he may well have gotten the 5,000 required write-ins there, because there were 10,062 write-ins cast in the State Treasurer’s race.

* K-12 Drive | 21 states sue USDA over funding conditions they say would threaten school meal programs: The Democrat-led plaintiff states said they stand to collectively lose at least $11.6 billion in Child Nutrition Program funds under these requirements — and “the consequences would be grave.” Millions of children could lose access to nutritious meals, hindering their ability to learn and harming their health, the lawsuit said.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson’s veto over freezing tipped minimum wage divides restaurant industry: Some restaurant owners and servers say Chicago’s hotly debated law to increase the tipped minimum wage harms workers and the industry, following Mayor Brandon Johnson’s veto of the City Council’s vote to freeze tipped workers’ hourly pay. Supporters of the ordinance want better pay and conditions for workers. Chicago’s law went into effect in 2024 to increase the tipped minimum wage to parity with the city’s standard minimum wage over five years.

* Crain’s | Ariel names new president as Hobson, Rogers relinquish parts of their portfolios: Ariel Investments promoted chief administrative officer Emma Rodriguez-Ayala to president as part of a management shakeup that saw longtime firm leaders Mellody Hobson and John Rogers hand over some of their responsibilities. The move reflects the Chicago-based firm’s patient investment strategy, a slow-and-steady, low-turnover approach to stock picking despite increasing market volatility that has resulted in some choppy returns for the firm in recent years.

* WBEZ | ‘Korean National Treasures’ exhibit at the Art Institute spans 2,000 years of art: The collection consisted of more than 23,000 works of Korean antiquities, ceramics, furniture, sculpture, paintings, books and myriad other objects — from 6th-century Buddhist figurines to contemporary art. The historic gift came a year after the death of Samsung chairman Lee Kun-hee. The family, facing an inheritance tax of $11 billion, effectively reduced the value of the estate with the record-setting donation.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | West Suburban blames billing system failure as officials air frustration over closure: West Suburban’s owner, CEO Manoj Prasad of Resilience Health, announced yesterday morning the hospital’s emergency department would shut down that afternoon, and patients would be transferred out of inpatient rooms to other hospitals by the end of the week. The Illinois Department of Public Health said in a statement: “We are disappointed by the lack of advance notice and clear communication from hospital leadership. Transparency and advance notice are essential in order to safely transition and protect patients, staff and the communities it serves.”

* Daily Southtown | Former Tinley Park political operative Timothy Pawula found not guilty of sending obscene text messages: A former Tinley Park political operative was found not guilty Friday of electronic harassment and transmitting obscene text messages after a trial that included testimony from state Rep. Robert “Bob” Rita, D-Blue Island, and Sen. Michael Hastings, D-Frankfort. Timothy Pawula, a former political ally of Tinley Park Mayor Michael Glotz, was charged in October 2024 with the misdemeanor charges that carry a maximum sentence of 180 days in jail and an up to $1,500 fine. But Cook County Associate Judge Mohammad Abedelal Ahmad said Friday she had doubts about the state’s investigation into Pawula’s conduct, remaining unsure whether a phone seized and searched by Illinois State Police was Pawula’s personal phone or belonged to the political consulting firm he worked for at the time, Big Tent Coalition.

* Quality Magazine | QT9 Software Announces New Global Headquarters in Historic Downtown Batavia: QT9 Software announced plans to relocate its global headquarters from Aurora to a newly redeveloped campus in downtown Batavia, Illinois. The former Pamarco factory, a 100-year-old industrial building along the Fox River, will be transformed into a modern, approximately 40,000-square-foot office environment that preserves the site’s historic character while creating a new hub for technology, innovation, and collaboration. The headquarters project is part of a $12 million adaptive reuse initiative led by Manhattan Real Estate Ventures, LLC, under a Redevelopment Agreement authorized by the Batavia City Council. The investment will rehabilitate a long-neglected riverfront property into a state-of-the-art workspace designed to support QT9 Software’s continued global growth, while aligning with the City of Batavia’s Downtown Plan for sustainable revitalization and historic preservation.

* Crain’s | North Shore’s luxury condo market grows as Lake Bluff racks up $2M sales: In Lake Bluff, the top end of the condo market has long been in the $200,000s, but it has quickly jumped into the $2 million range with a recent flurry of sales in a new-construction building, making it the latest North Shore suburb with a high-end condo market. Since March 18, four units at a building under construction on Scranton Avenue have sold for prices from just below $1.7 million to $2.1 million — and those prices are for unfinished space.

*** Downstate ***

* Capitol News Illinois | MidAmerican Energy proposes rate hike for 85K customers in northwest Illinois: MidAmerican Energy Company is seeking to raise electricity and gas rates for roughly 85,000 customers in northwest Illinois by almost $300 a year by 2028. The Iowa-based gas and electric utility company serves the Quad Cities and Rock Island, Henry, Mercer, and Whiteside counties. The March 20 rate request filing is under review by the Illinois Commerce Commission and, if approved, the price increase wouldn’t start to take effect until 2027.

* WGLT | 11th Judicial Circuit Chief Judge Casey Costigan plans to retire: Costigan heard major felony cases in McLean County for nearly a decade, including high-profile cases such as a 2018 triple homicide and a 2021 murder trial held without the defendant. Costigan has served on numerous statewide committees, including acting as a judicial liaison implementing the Pretrial Fairness Act and the Illinois FAIR Act, two big-swing pieces of legislation transforming bail and public defense in Illinois.

* Muddy River News | Water rate increase expected on Quincy City Council Agenda Monday, March 30: Alderman Greg Fletcher (R-Ward 1) offered the following impact in terms of numbers to Muddy River News Thursday. “It’s supposed to just approximate at $2.00 a month and another $2.00 next year and so forth for 9 years,” Fletcher said. “Keep in mind, we have a federal mandate to replace all of the lead water lines. As of now, we have only 9% done.

* Rockford Register Star | Ticks in Winnebago County test positive for rare Powassan virus: Ticks in Winnebago County have tested positive for the Powassan virus for the first time, according to a community announcement. The virus can lead to serious health complications affecting the heart, skeletal, and nervous systems. There is no vaccine for Powassan virus, making prevention of tick bites crucial.

* WGEM | Macomb city officials break down proposed sports complex, residents voice concerns: Macomb residents voiced numerous concerns about a potential sports complex on the far east side of town. The conference room at the Spoon River College Outreach Center was filled with about 100 residents Thursday night as the City hosted its first Q&A styled community meeting. The meeting also featured a presentation by Mayor Michael Inman and municipal financial consultant John Hansen. “If we don’t have a developer, it’s not going to work,” Inman said.

*** National ***

* Reuters | Constellation exec says grid operator told company Three Mile Island can’t connect until 2031: U.S. grid operator PJM has told Constellation Energy (CEG.O) that the former Three Mile ‌Island nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania likely will not be able to connect to the grid until 2031, four years later than planned, the company said at the CERAWeek energy conference in Houston on Thursday. Constellation is working to resume operations at the nuclear power plant, ⁠which is being renamed the Crane Clean Energy Center, to supply electricity to Microsoft (MSFT.O) data centers.

* Chalkbeat | Trump pressured states to limit undocumented high school students’ access to career education programs: In Virginia, nearly every school district quietly agreed to exclude undocumented students from participating in certain federally funded career-and-technical education programs, according to records obtained by Chalkbeat. It is not clear how many undocumented students actually lost access to programming. But at least one school district in Virginia was denied $150,000 in federal funding because it didn’t agree to exclude those students.

* Tribune | In the wake of US social media verdicts, a look at what limits other countries have imposed for kids: In 2024, Australia became the first country to kick kids under 16 off social media. The law makes platforms — including TikTok, Facebook, Snapchat, Reddit, X and Instagram — liable for fines of up to 50 million Australian dollars ($34 million) if they fail to prevent children younger than 16 from holding accounts. While many parents have cheered the move, some experts have questioned the efficacy of their age estimation methods (the platforms are not required to ask users for government-issued IDs) and their effects on young people’s free speech, social connections and privacy. Critics also fear that the ban will impact the privacy of all users who must prove they are older than 16.

* The Atlantic | The Very Powerful Men Who Think Introspection Is Dumb: That thesis received further confirmation earlier this month when the venture capitalist Marc Andreessen said that he engages in “zero” introspection—or at least “as little as possible.” Andreessen, a billionaire AI evangelist, was speaking to the podcaster David Senra, who enthusiastically approved. Senra explained that he had learned introspection was useless by reading 410 biographies of entrepreneurs. “Sam Walton didn’t wake up thinking about his internal self,” Senra said, referring to the Walmart magnate. “He just woke up like, I like building Walmart; I’m gonna keep building more Walmarts, and just kept doing it over and over again.”

* The Intercept | How Does TrackAIPAC Actually Track AIPAC?: Tali deGroot, J Street’s vice president of political and digital strategy, was frustrated by her group’s conflation with AIPAC, calling TrackAIPAC “intellectually dishonest” for the distance between its name and its methodology. TrackAIPAC does label the specific sources of pro-Israel funding that make up its sums on its website, along with a list of organizations it tracks in addition to AIPAC, but they seldom appear on the red cards that circulate on social media. Some critics have labeled this blurring of lines sloppy or confusing, while others on the left and right have accused the group of antisemitism over its generalized “pro-Israel” language. “I think the candidates and members should be held to account for taking AIPAC support,” deGroot said, “but the way that [TrackAIPAC] is going about it is doing so much harm.”

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, Mar 27, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Friday, Mar 27, 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, Mar 27, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Center Square

The Illinois House Executive Committee has passed an amended version of nonprofit investment legislation that Gov. J.B. Pritzker vetoed last summer.

House Bill 5045 allows the state treasurer to set up an investment pool and electronic payment system for nonprofit organizations. […]

“I think we had the votes to override a veto, but we decided to work with the governor to pass legislation. It was a long process, but we’ve got something with this amendment that I think should pass muster,” Frerichs said.

When state Rep. Ryan Spain, R-Peoria, asked for specifics, Frerichs said the amended measure restricts the organizations eligible to participate.

* Subscribers know more. Capitol News Illinois

The Chicago Bears will have to wait until at least April for action on a property tax measure that would boost their efforts to build a domed stadium in Arlington Heights. State Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, the top House Democratic negotiator, confirmed to Capitol News Illinois that the bill won’t move before the House adjourns Friday. […]

“I’d say there’s a few obstacles,” state Sen. Bill Cunningham, D-Chicago, told Capitol News Illinois on Thursday. “I think they’re all scalable, but work needs to be done.” He said things had been “somewhat stagnant” since the PILOT bill passed out of a House committee last month. […]

Buckner said the caucus meeting last week was “impactful” and “helped us kind of work through what needed to be addressed.” And despite “a lot of talk around here about these artificial deadlines” calling for action by the end of March, Buckner said the team hasn’t conveyed a hard deadline. […]

Buckner said his top priority is getting the legislation right. His second? Getting it done as quickly as possible, and he thinks it can happen next month.

* Capitol News Illinois

A bill that would overhaul the way Illinois funds its public universities advanced out of a House committee Thursday and could face a vote by the full House soon, despite continued opposition from the University of Illinois System, the state’s flagship institution.

House Bill 1581, titled the “Adequate and Equitable Public University Funding Act,” would establish a needs-based formula for distributing new funding for universities similar to the Evidence-Based Funding mechanism that has been sued for K-12 school funding since 2018. […]

The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign campus, currently at 89% of its adequacy target, is considered the most adequately funded school under the proposed model and would therefore be last in line for new funding.

Nicholas Jones, executive vice president for the U of I System — which also includes campuses in Chicago and Springfield — said that would be unfair to an institution that serves 53% of all public university students in Illinois.

* Tribune

On Thursday, [Rep. Laura Faver Dias] joined state legislators and clean energy advocates in Springfield to announce the Plug-In Illinois Act, or SB 3104, a bill that would expand access to plug-in solar to all households, including renters. […]

Plug-in, or “balcony,” solar involves small, portable units, typically less than 390 watts, that can be connected directly to a standard wall outlet – without altering the building.

“People can install on their balcony, on a patio, in the yard, wherever that they’re able to in order to just shave a little bit off of their monthly electricity bills,” said Kavi Chintam, Illinois campaign manager of Vote Solar, a nonprofit group advocating for nationwide solar accessibility. […]

The bill, which passed the state Senate’s energy and public utilities commission earlier this month, is poised to go to the Senate floor for a full vote next.

* WGLT

Democratic state Rep. Sharon Chung, who represents parts of Bloomington-Normal and Peoria plus rural areas along Interstate 74, has introduced a bill that would change the definition of corporation powers in the law by stating corporations cannot engage in activities related to primaries or elections. […]

Chung said she is confident her bill will be heard, but it has not made it to committee.

“It might have to mean that we have to deal with some hard truths and look at the mirror and look at ourselves a little bit. Personally, I’m okay with that,” Chung said. […]

Alisa Kaplan, executive director of Reform for Illinois, a nonpartisan good government group, said any law trying to limit corporate influence in elections would meet legal challenges because of Citizens United.

* Capitol News Illinois

House Bill 4844, which would require employers to pay employees their regular rate of pay when they are selected for jury duty, passed 13-7 out of a judiciary committee.

Bill sponsor Rep. Jay Hoffman, D-Swansea, said jurors can face financial challenges if they’re selected for a case that lasts several weeks, adding he hopes the legislation would make it more affordable for people to serve on a jury.

But Republicans voiced concerns the bill would be burden for businesses because they have to pay an employee who isn’t showing up to work.

* More…

    * Injustice Watch | Steps Illinois lawmakers could take to reform the state’s tax sale laws: Under the most sweeping of the three bills, SB3940, sponsored by state Sen. Celina Villanueva, D-Chicago, private investors would no longer be able to purchase tax debts in Cook County; instead, the county would be required to sell tax-delinquent properties at auction to collect taxes and return any proceeds that remain to homeowners. Other counties would also be allowed — though not required — to hold similar auctions. Villanueva’s bill, which is awaiting a committee hearing, was introduced in February, two months after a U.S. District Court judge ruled that the tax sale system in Cook County violated the rights of homeowners by allowing private investors to seize more than what the owners owed.

    * WAND | IL Senate passes bill allowing not-for-profit fire departments to receive state grants: This plan allows the State Fire Marshal to create and award grants for not-for-profit fire departments and protection districts across the state. “My expenses are the same as everybody else. I have to pay the electric bill. I still have to pay Renew Apparatus,” said Signal Hill Fire Chief Tom Elliff. “I pay for the maintenance of the building. It’s the same throughout every other fire department in the state of Illinois.”

    * WAND | IL Senate passes bill increasing awareness of ag education programs: Senate Bill 3326 now moves to the House for further consideration. The House companion bill passed unanimously out of the House Education Policy Committee last week and awaits action on the House floor.

    * WGN | Illinois lawmaker proposes renaming portion of I-57 to Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. Expressway: Buckner issued the following statement on his Instagram page regarding HJR 58. […] “We’re naming the Cook County portion of I-57 the Reverend Jesse L. Jackson Sr. Expressway. Not a memorial. Not a marker. A full name – joining Dan Ryan, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, and Bishop Louis Henry Ford on the green signs that define how we move. And that matters, because I-57 doesn’t just cut through land – it connects communities. The South Side. The South suburbs. Places where Rev. Jackson didn’t just visit, he organized. He marched. He preached. He built coalition. He fought for dignity, for jobs, for access, for people who too often felt like the system was designed to move past them instead of with them.”

  13 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Friday, Mar 27, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Hello Tokyo in Niles brings the fun and charm of Japanese dollar stores to Chicagoland. Owner Jin Park, inspired by his love of family and Japanese culture, modeled the store after popular 100-yen shops. With over 10,000 products starting at $1.99, shoppers can explore snacks, toys, kitchenware, stationery, beauty items, and a wide variety of unique Japanese-themed goods.

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

Policies that support small businesses help communities thrive as retailers like Jin in Niles are better equipped to meet local needs. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Mar 27, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Ex-federal prosecutors in Chicago taking on Trump’s ‘troubling’ DOJ: ‘We feel compelled to speak and act.’ Sun-Times

    - An email from 14 former prosecutors seeks the support of hundreds of fellow alums following more than a year of Justice Department controversies, including claims that President Donald Trump has used the agency to retaliate against political foes. The signatories include three former Chicago U.S. attorneys: Dan Webb, Scott Lassar and Patrick Fitzgerald.
    - “As lawyers who cherish the role DOJ should play in our criminal justice system, we feel compelled to speak and act against the troubling events underway at the Department,” the email states, “and we invite you to participate in those efforts.”
    - Their efforts could involve litigation aimed at protecting the “integrity of elections” and a push to ensure federal prosecutors can still be held accountable for misconduct, according to the email.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Shaw Local | ‘Nobody wants to live in data center row’ - Residents speak out after Yorkville approves 540-acre data center: Hour after hour, Yorkville residents spoke before the City Council on March 24 asking members to put a moratorium on approving data centers, all the while saying they knew the city would not go along with their wishes. Few of the residents in attendance said they were surprised when a four-hour meeting concluded with city approval for the annexation, rezoning, and PUD for the 540-acre Project Steel data center, with 16 two-story warehouses. The near unanimous vote came after little discussion by any aldermen.

* AP | Senate approves funding for TSA and most of Homeland Security, but not immigration enforcement: The deal, which the Senate approved unanimously without a roll call, next goes to the House, which is expected to consider it Friday. “We can get at least a lot of the government opened up again and then we’ll go from there,” said Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D. “Obviously, we’ll still have some work ahead of us.”

* Sun-Times | Chase Meidroth, Munetaka Murakami mash — but Brewers smash White Sox’ Opening Day hopes 14-2: Chase Meidroth sent the White Sox’ good vibes soaring to a new stratosphere Thursday with a 417-foot laser over the left-field wall at American Family Field, slugging the first Opening Day leadoff home run in franchise history — and stoking hope for a big step forward for his rebuilding squad.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Legal Newsline | Mom of boy killed by ex-boyfriend released from prison early drops lawsuit vs IL: According to court documents, Smith told both police and a Cook County judge of Brand’s threats against her. However, on March 12, the IPRB nonetheless released Brand from custody after a hearing. According to court documents, Brand reportedly again lied at the IPRB hearing about going to Smith’s home. And according to court documents, the IPRB reportedly “accepted his version of events,” never following up on Smith’s allegations against him, including declining to ask Smith to testify and tell her account of the events.

* Journal & Topics | Del Mar Steps Down From Local GOP Leadership To Focus On Statewide Bid: In the race to succeed Del Mar as Palatine Township Republican committeeman, David Prichard defeated George Tuhowski III. Prichard earned 3,375 votes (75%) to Tuhowski’s 1,129 votes (25%). Though Prichard was not Del Mar’s preferred candidate, Del Mar said he is working with him to ensure a smooth transition.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | Watchdog To Host Hearing With Top Cop On Whether Chicago Police Helped ICE Agents
:
The Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability will host a special hearing with police Supt. Larry Snelling at 6:30 p.m. April 2 at Kelly High School, 4136 S. California Ave. The meeting will also be available on Zoom. […] Earlier this year, neighbors repeatedly questioned why Snelling was not part of the conversation at another public meeting where they raised concerns over police not doing enough to protect neighbors during last year’s immigration enforcement operations.

* Newsline | Chicago can’t ditch airlines’ suit vs ‘disruptive’ paid sick leave rules: “When one flight attendant calls in sick on short notice, for example, their unavailability plausibly affects the operation of an entire flight crew and flight, not to mention every subsequent connecting flight and the flights of any other employees who need to be rerouted as replacements,” the judge said.

* WBEZ | CPS Board selects Macquline King as permanent CEO, will vote on her contract Monday: The proposed contract would be effective July 1 through June 30, 2029 — meaning she would lead the district well past the transition to a fully elected school board. If approved, King’s salary will start at $380,000, more than former CEO Pedro Martinez was offered. He was paid $340,000 per year on a five-year contract. This brings to the end a protracted search for a new CPS leader that started last year after Martinez was fired.

* Block Club | New City Effort Will Bring Pop-Ups, Other Resources To West Side Retail Strips Hurt By Flooding: The city selected four agencies to administer the program in those neighborhoods, with the groups charged with identifying move-in ready vacant storefronts and hosting five pop-up activations, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office announced. The groups will also provide assistance to small businesses, including help with marketing, operational planning and securing leases, all with a goal to provide stability for entrepreneurs.

* Sun-Times | Johnson devising strategy to tackle pension crisis that includes ‘deferred retirement option’: Cash-strapped Chicago is crafting a plan to chip away at its $35.8 billion pension crisis that is likely to offer city employees the option of buying out a portion of their future pension benefits in exchange for a lump-sum payment upfront. Acting Chief Financial Officer Steve Mahr said Thursday he expects the so-called “D.R.O.P or deferred retirement option” to be one of “roughly a dozen or more ideas” that will “set the city’s agenda” for the next decade.

* WGN | Funeral for fallen Chicago firefighter postponed after widow goes into labor: Services for firefighter/EMT Michael Altman were scheduled to take place on Friday morning, but officials announced on Thursday that they had been postponed after Altman’s wife went into labor. Thursday afternoon, officials announced his wife gave birth to a baby girl named Evelyn Rose.

* Block Club | Mike Pence To Speak At UChicago’s Institute Of Politics In April: Pence, who served during President Donald Trump’s first term, will discuss populism, religion, bipartisan lawmaking and the executive branch in a student-moderated panel. The April 28 event is free and will be open to the public. Registration starts Friday via the Institute of Politics website.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Pioneer Press | West Suburban Medical Center closure leaves patients, workers scrambling: A hospital employee who asked to remain anonymous said workers were told via an email from Manoj Prasad, the owner of West Suburban Medical Center, that the hospital would be closing. Other than that, Prasad has not communicated with staff at the hospital, the employee said. Like McCullough’s doctor, many West Suburban health care providers were busy taking care of appointment disruptions and lining up destination hospitals for their patients before they could consider their own employment status. On Thursday afternoon, some patients were still finding out about the closure.

* Daily Herald | Elgin council gives staff more time to develop inclusivity and diversity ordinance: What started in December as an idea to declare Elgin a “welcoming city” for immigrants and migrants has expanded well beyond that scope. The 20-page ordinance would codify existing policies on local cooperation with federal civil immigration enforcement. Other measures include establishing an immigrant legal defense fund, creating a municipal ID program, addressing language access, and developing an inclusive procurement plan.

* Tribune | Buyer who paid $9.5M for Michael Jordan’s Highland Park mansion has a new plan to convert it into a museum: John Cooper, a Lincolnshire resident, brought a concept for the plan to Highland Park leaders in December, and he now has fleshed it out with specifics involving his business plan, access to the property, parking and economic impact. Calling the 37,700-square-foot mansion Champions Point — for promotional reasons, Cooper doesn’t directly refer to Jordan because of potential trademark or right-of-publicity claims — Cooper told the Tribune he envisions tours of the mansion and its surrounding property as a way for people “to have introspection.”

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Bloomington resumes search for new water sources: The City of Bloomington is engaged in a significant planning effort to find ways to expand its drinking water supply, with water director Brett Lueschen saying the city will likely need more water in the future. “We’ve seen some growth within Bloomington, and we want to make sure that we have a good water supply to be able to plan for the future,” said Lueschen. He said the city will likely issue a “request for qualifications,” or RFQ, to find an outside firm to help.

* The Southern | Saline County Board meets in lobby after courtroom ban: The Saline County Board held its first meeting outside the courtroom Thursday, moving just steps away to the courthouse lobby after a judge barred its use of courtroom space. The board gathered in the lobby for the meeting, marking its first session since the change took effect. The move came after Resident Circuit Judge Jayson M. Clark ordered the board to stop holding meetings in courthouse courtrooms.

* BND | Bullying allegations at metro-east high school spark petition, district response: Mascoutah community members and school district officials addressed allegations of bullying and inadequate intervention circulating on social media at Tuesday night’s school board meeting. The district largely reiterated that it takes bullying seriously and takes action against it, but that student privacy laws prohibit much information from being disclosed. Meanwhile, community members said they still have concerns. Namely, they said they find it troubling that speaking out led to court orders against two students. […] The petition called for action regarding alleged bullying by a specific group of high school students. It said these accused students, who were named in one version of the petition, took place in-person on school grounds and on digital platforms.

* WGLT | Normal announces Route 66 commemorative projects: Projects include a 1950s-themed picnic at One Normal Plaza on June 7, a commemorative logo and a mural at Sprague’s Super Service. “Route 66 is more than just a road or stretch of pavement. For our community, it’s a symbol of progress, connection and hospitality,” said Mayor Chris Koos. A grant from the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity will allow the Town of Normal to refurbish Sprague’s Super Service, a historic landmark on Pine Street, with a mural. The mural portrays a night in Normal. The grant was secured by VisitBN and will support enhancements to attractions and visitor experiences throughout McLean County.

* AP | Illinois clamps down on Houston for a 65-55 March Madness win to reach Elite Eight: In the Sweet 16 for a seventh consecutive time, the second-seeded Cougars (30-7) were thrilled to be playing just over two miles from their campus. But their poor shooting gave Houston fans little to cheer about and delighted the orange-clad Illini faithful who made the long trip to Texas. “At the beginning of the game Houston fans were a little louder, but as game was going, (our fans) started being louder in their city,” Mirkovic said. “So it’s just really important for us, I would say just like a wind to our back. They pushed us and thanks for them.”

* WREX | Rockford Vintage Fest returns amid rising demand for vintage finds: As vintage markets started popping up more in cities like Chicago, he realized Rockford was missing something. “The reception was great. The people here in Rockford were just so happy,” Smiley said. “Usually you have to travel to Chicago to go do something like this, so to have it in Rockford, it did great. And I was like, well, I just got to keep doing this here.”

*** National ***

* NPR | A $50 billion fund to help rural hospitals could actually lead to service cuts: That’s because the five-year federal program focuses on new, creative ways to improve access to rural health care, not on directly funding services and renovations. And Montana is one of at least 10 states whose leaders say projects launched under the federal program could lead rural hospitals to cut services so they can continue to afford to offer emergency and other essential care.

* NYT | Sheriff in California Seizes More Ballots, Ignoring State Attorney General: Chad Bianco, the sheriff of Riverside County, seized 426 boxes of ballot materials on Tuesday, adding to the even larger tranche of 650,000 cast ballots he took last month, according to a lawsuit filed Thursday by California’s attorney general, Rob Bonta, a Democrat. Mr. Bonta petitioned the court to halt Mr. Bianco’s investigation, which he said has not identified any crimes.

* ABC | Hotel and stadium workers can refuse work if ICE is present, union says as World Cup approaches: UNITE HERE Local 11, the union that represents 32,000 workers in Southern California and Arizona, said that the presence of federal immigration agents creates “unusually dangerous conditions” and under existing collective bargaining agreements, employees have the right to refuse to work. This comes as the FIFA World Cup 2026 approaches. Inglewood’s SoFi Stadium is set to host eight games this summer.

  15 Comments      


Good morning!

Friday, Mar 27, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Fontella Bass and Tina Turner

* What’s going on?

  3 Comments      


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

Friday, Mar 27, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Mar 27, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Mar 27, 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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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Pritzker unilaterally pauses data center tax break agreements in wake of legislative inaction, angers IBEW: 'No governor is a king'
* Bears calling Illinois pols to inform them they're moving forward with Indiana plan (Updated x13)
* Reader comments closed until Monday
* When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
* Yesterday's stories

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