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Isabel’s afternoon briefing

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

Mayor Brandon Johnson touted his Springfield agenda as both “modest” and beneficial to the whole state of Illinois during a short Wednesday stop to the statehouse, where he will surely face steep headwinds to accomplish what he wants for Chicago during a tough state budget season. […]

“This is about what we have to do as an entire state to ensure that all of Illinois is supported,” the mayor told reporters ahead of a Wednesday meeting with Pritzker. “My responsibility is the city of Chicago. Our presentation is actually quite modest — the overall, ongoing issues for revenue, that will benefit the entire state.”

Johnson met with the governor for about half an hour, before convening with his former boss, Senate President Don Harmon of Oak Park, for about 10 minutes. He was also slated to meet Wednesday morning with House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch of Hillside.

After the disappointment from Johnson’s 2024 visit, the mayor hopes President Donald Trump’s second term, and the potential for the White House to deprive Illinois of key federal funding in a number of areas, has increased the urgency for state leaders to move on his Springfield wish list.

*** Statehouse News ***

* ABC Chicago | Chicago Mayor Johnson meets with Gov. Pritzker, others in Springfield over ‘reasonable’ funding asks: “I always appreciate the opportunity to speak with Mayor Johnson about Chicago’s priorities-many of which are already part of the ongoing conversations happening in the Capitol. Chicago is an economic and cultural engine for our state; when Chicago succeeds, we all succeed. It’s clear that the Trump Administration sees Chicago and Illinois as a top target of their cruel and chaotic agenda, so it’s critical that the leaders of our state maintain an open dialogue about how we keep Illinois moving in a better direction,” Welch said in a statement.

* CNN | Inside JB Pritzker’s public and private efforts to counter Trump and challenge fellow Democrats: [I]n the interview before the speech he stuck to saying he hasn’t even decided whether to launch the campaign for a third term as governor that aides are already planning, teasing more speeches around the country, and giving on-brand line: “This is a time for people to stand up and fight.”

* ICYMI: The governor is scheduled to appear on Jimmy Kimmel Live tomorrow night.

*** Statewide ***

* KFVS | AmeriCorps cuts affect programs across Missouri and Illinois: Katie Rhoades, Founder and Co-Executive Director, tells First Alert 4, “We heard at 7:14 p.m. on a Friday night that our AmeriCorps funding has been terminated, so we lost three federal grants before our original end date, which has amounted to about a $250,000 loss to the organization.” Rhoades says the organization is losing the equivalent of over 22,000 hours of service. Healing Action Network is now stopping victim intake and reducing staff.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Developer looks to force vote on $1B residential project near planned Bally’s casino: Zoning chair Ald. Walter Burnett, 27th, who also represents the area, has deferred the vote because of his fear it will be rejected unless the developer signs a labor peace agreement with SEIU Local 1 to not interfere with the union’s attempts to organize workers at its residential buildings. On April 21, the developer’s zoning attorney, DLA Piper’s Katie Jahnke Dale, sent Burnett a letter, reviewed by Crain’s, informing him the developer was attempting to bypass his committee through a city rule meant to prioritize affordable housing.

* Block CLub | Who Gets Housing First? While City Pressured To Fast Track Apartments For Some Homeless, Most Wait Years: But what happened at Gompers Park also revealed how the city’s process for determining who gets housing next is often secretive and confusing. And the events raise questions about whether the city plays politics by prioritizing housing for people in some encampments over many others in the city’s placement database. Without enough units to house everyone, the city and its nonprofit partners require unhoused people to enroll in a “prioritization” system to get connected to more long-term housing.

* WaPo | This patient expected a free checkup. The bill was $1,430.: Carmen Aiken of Chicago made an appointment for an annual physical exam in July 2023, planning to get checked out and complete some blood tests. […] A patient who needs blood tests for a specific medical concern — as Aiken did, for medication monitoring — could be required to pay part of the bill. That’s the case even if the blood test is performed during a checkup alongside preventive services. Some health insurers pay for standard blood tests as part of a preventive visit, but that’s not always the case.

* Crain’s | Chicago’s top cannabis companies lost millions amid industry slide: Verano Holdings lost $341.8 million and Cresco Labs lost $60.4 million in 2024, according to an analysis of public securities filings by Crain’s. The exception to the trend was Chicago-based Green Thumb Industries with $73 million in net income, filings show. The losses for Verano and Cresco were despite their respective revenues last year of $878.6 million and $724.3 million. Verano, founded in 2014, has marijuana operations in 13 U.S. states, while the footprint of Cresco, founded in 2013, spans eight states.

* Crain’s | Wacker Drive office tower hits the market, setting up a nasty blow for seller: There is no specific asking price for the property, but sales of other downtown office buildings in recent months suggest it is worth a fraction of that number today. The rise of remote work and elevated interest rates have driven away many deep-pocketed real estate investors from buying office buildings in Chicago, bludgeoning property values and fueling rampant distress that’s hampering the central business district’s post-pandemic recovery.

* WBEZ | Illinois’s coolest career is found in… rock and bone?: Pennsylvania’s coolest job was chocolate scientist at Hershey, while California’s was animator at Pixar. And Illinois? The survey found that respondents thought the coolest work you can do in Illinois is be a paleontologist for the Field Museum. […] Reset talks with Field Museum paleontologists to find out more.

* Sun-Times | 120-year-old Jackson Park pavilion sits as a park district ruin: A Chicago Park District spokesperson said it “is moving forward with plans” to renovate the building. She said the agency is working through a mandated federal environmental assessment procedure — a process that started this year — before work can begin. Here’s hoping that’s a good sign.

* Block Club | Uber Wrongfully Charged Riders Downtown Congestion Fee For Months: New rules went into affect Jan. 6 that allowed rideshare companies to charge a $1.50 congestion surcharge for all rides to and from Downtown between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. seven days a week, with the revenue benefitting the city. But customers since then have noticed they’ve been charged the fee late-night and early-morning trips outside of those hours. After Block Club Chicago reached out to Uber about the discrepancy, the company is now promising refunds.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Downtown alderman considering Cook County Board run against Preckwinkle: Reilly, 42nd, told the Tribune he would make a final decision in the coming weeks, but claimed he’d been approached to take on Preckwinkle — who is so far uncontested for her fifth term — in recent weeks. He made similar overtures for a Congressional run against Democratic Rep. Danny Davis in 2015 and has also explored mayoral runs in past cycles but has stayed put in City Hall.

* WGN | Records reveal Tiffany Henyard’s taxpayer-funded positions paid $347,000 last year: Newly obtained records show Henyard’s gross pay at her two government jobs totaled more than $347,000 last year. The payout includes a total of $282,812 from the township. That includes an annual salary of $202,950, in addition to allowances for a telephone, vehicle and $59,400 for “expenses.”

* Daily Herald | Iconic ‘castle’ in Fox River Grove cancels all events after village rescinds special-use permit: “The Village of Fox River Grove has informed us that our existing special use permit is no longer valid, as it was originally issued under our parents’ names. They are now requiring us to go through the full process of reapplying for a new special use permit in order to continue hosting tours and events at the Castle,” the statement read.

* Daily Southtown | Homewood cuts out No Mow May, encourages other options to help environment: A founder of the environmental organization South Suburbs for Greenspace, Varmecky said she’s not very happy with Homewood’s decision to not participate this year in No Mow May, something it promoted last year to support pollinator health. “They did not give people a ton of notice,” Varmecky said Wednesday. “If they had announced this last fall then people would have had time to do alternate methods.”

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | McLean County’s family treatment court lays groundwork to replicate program across Illinois: “It’s kind of an arm or an offshoot of the abuse and neglect courtroom,” connecting the recovery support process with intensive courtroom supervision, said McLean County associate judge Brian Goldrick, who presides over the court’s Child Protection Division. All family court clients are involved in Goldrick’s courtroom. He was among four panelists discussing the family court during a public forum Tuesday at the Bloomington Public Library. Women to Women Giving Circle hosted the event.

* WCIA | Vermilion Co. officials say loss of UPS facility would be ‘devastating’ after closing date set: Last month, officials in Vermilion County urged UPS not to close the Tilton shipping center in a letter. The letter, signed by Senator Faraci and Representative Schweizer, asked UPS to work with them to keep the facility open. As it currently sits, the facility will close on June 10th. 50 workers got word this week that their final days on the job will be June 9th.

* WSIL | Rural expressway expansion project from Southern Illinois to St. Louis Metro area moves to next phase: The project’s coalition held a meeting today to explain the environmental engineering study that will start in June. Murphysboro Mayor Will Stephens says they are still far away from starting construction. “This is a billion-dollar project, and so we have $6 million to help further the study of the corridor,” Mayor Stephens says. “But we are much closer now than we were six years ago.”

*** National ***

* NJ | Many nursing homes feed residents on less than $10 a day: ‘That’s appallingly low.’: In Illinois, Danielle Combs is suing River Crossing of Edwardsville, a half-hour drive from St. Louis, claiming the facility failed to assist her father Guy Combs when it knew that he was unable, or ill-equipped, to feed himself after having a stroke and losing some use of his arms. Each day, someone dropped off a tray of food in his room. Unable to feed himself, he could do little more than stare at the plate they had left for him, said his daughter.

  15 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

Retailers like Armando in Champaign enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.

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From the national legal front

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here for the amicus brief. Press release…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul today, as part of a coalition of 21 attorneys general, filed an amicus brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit, supporting fair housing organizations in their appeal of a ruling that lifted a temporary restraining order blocking the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) from canceling these organizations’ grant funding.

“The legacy of discrimination and segregation in housing continues to negatively affect the overall health of communities and limits the potential of neighborhoods throughout the United States,” Raoul said. “HUD is required to provide this funding under federal law, and it is crucial to the continued efforts to dismantle decades of discriminatory housing practices. I stand with my fellow attorneys general to oppose the Trump administration’s unlawful overreach in canceling this funding.”

Congress established the Fair Housing Initiative Program (FHIP) to provide funding to private, nonprofit housing organizations that work to prevent and eliminate discriminatory housing practices and enforce state and federal fair housing laws. According to the brief, in February 2025, HUD suddenly canceled 78 preexisting FHIP grants to housing organizations engaged in fair-housing work in 33 states. The cancellations were effective immediately and with no prior warning, despite HUD being statutorily required to provide such funding.

A group of 66 nonprofit fair housing groups subsequently sued HUD in the U.S. District Court for Massachusetts, and on March 26, the court granted a temporary restraining order reinstating the organizations’ grant funding. A week later, the U.S. Supreme Court issued an interim ruling in a separate case, and HUD sought to dissolve the district court’s temporary restraining order based on that interim ruling. On April 14, the district court granted HUD’s motion. The groups have appealed that order.

In their brief, Raoul and the attorneys general argue that the temporary restraining order should be reinstated because the plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits of their lawsuit. Additionally, if allowed to take effect, HUD’s sudden revocation of funding will upend the important work of housing organizations, resulting in more housing discrimination being left undetected and unaddressed, which harms their states and residents. In Illinois, Raoul’s office has collaborated with FHIP-funded organizations to identify and address housing discrimination, including by securing relief for individuals with disabilities and members of other protected classes who have faced discriminatory treatment in housing.

Joining Attorney General Raoul in submitting this brief are the attorneys general of California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island and Vermont.

* Click here for the complaint. Press release…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul, as part of a multistate coalition of 25 states and attorneys general, [yesterday] filed a lawsuit challenging the Trump administration’s termination of AmeriCorps grants and the dismantling of the agency.

Through an 85% reduction of its workforce, the Trump administration has effectively ended the agency’s ability to continue administering the programs, operations and funding that make its important work possible.

“Since 1993, approximately 1.3 million Americans have patriotically served their communities through AmeriCorps, assisting veterans and children and protecting the environment,” Raoul said. “The gutting of AmeriCorps is the latest example of the Trump administration’s disregard for the Constitution to achieve their political goals. I will continue to fight back against these illegal and meritless decisions that will have real negative consequences across our country.”

AmeriCorps is an independent federal agency that supports national and state community service programs by engaging Americans in meaningful community-based service that directly addresses the country’s educational, public safety and environmental needs. AmeriCorps also awards grants to local and national organizations and agencies which use funding to address critical community needs. These organizations and agencies use AmeriCorps funding to recruit, place and supervise AmeriCorps members nationwide.

Every year, the agency provides opportunities for more than 200,000 Americans to serve their communities. AmeriCorps members and volunteers have connected veterans to essential services, fought the opioid epidemic, helped older adults age with dignity, rebuilt communities after disasters, and improved the physical and mental well-being of millions of Americans.

In early February, the Trump administration issued an executive order directing every federal agency to plan to reduce the size of its workforce and prepare to initiate in large-scale reductions in force. Since then, AmeriCorps has placed at least 85% of its workforce on administrative leave immediately. In late April, Illinois received notice from the federal government that, effective immediately, they were eliminating 28 programs, impacting 632 workers or volunteers, on which individuals throughout the state rely.

In their complaint, Raoul and the coalition argue that by abruptly canceling critical grants and gutting AmeriCorps’ workforce, the Trump administration is effectively shuttering the national volunteer agency and ending states’ abilities to support AmeriCorps programs within their borders. The coalition explains that the administration has acted unlawfully in its gutting of AmeriCorps, violating both the Administrative Procedure Act and the separation of powers under the U.S. Constitution. Congress has created AmeriCorps and the programs it administers, and the president cannot incapacitate the agency’s ability to administer appropriated grants or carry out statutorily assigned duties. Further, by dismantling AmeriCorps and its programs, which are creatures of Congress, the administration has violated the Executive Branch’s obligation to take care that the law is faithfully executed.

Joining Raoul in filing the lawsuit are the attorneys general of Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington and Wisconsin and the states of Kentucky and Pennsylvania.

* Click here for the letter. Press release excerpt…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul [yesterday] co-led an open letter to the legal community, condemning actions by several of the country’s largest law firms to capitulate in the face of the Trump administration’s continued dangerous attacks on the rule of law. Some firms have even opted to strike deals to provide free legal services to support the president’s priorities.

“President Trump’s unlawful threats undermine the democratic principles upon which our nation was founded,” Raoul said. “Law firms that capitulate to these threats become complicit in the administration’s continued efforts to undercut the judicial process, which depends on the rights to free speech, effective counsel and due process. I am proud to stand with the many lawyers who have shown courage in the face of these unconstitutional attacks, and I call on all of my colleagues in the legal community to join us.”

Since taking office, President Trump has issued unconstitutional executive orders targeting several law firms because they have represented or employed political opponents of the administration or have expressed viewpoints disfavored by the administration.

In their letter, Raoul and the coalition argue that President Trump’s executive orders plainly violate the Constitution by retaliating against lawyers based on protected speech and association, as well as discriminating based on viewpoint. The orders also are inconsistent with the right to effective counsel, offend basic principles of due process and undermine bedrock rule-of-law principles. The letter points out that these unconstitutional attacks on the legal profession are an attack on our justice system and pave the way toward authoritarianism.

Raoul and the coalition highlight that four law firms – Perkins Coie, Jenner & Block, WilmerHale, and Susman Godfrey – have filed suit against the Trump administration over the president’s illegal actions and have succeeded in obtaining court orders temporarily blocking these orders.

Raoul and the coalition are calling on other law firms and lawyers to fight back against these unconstitutional executive orders and join former judges, law professors and the more than 800 other law firms that have joined amicus briefs against the president’s unlawful orders. The letter urges law firms to stand together with the coalition of attorneys general in preserving the integrity of the United States’ legal system.

  2 Comments      


New GDP numbers could signal trouble for Illinois’ more optimistic budget forecast

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability’s FY 2026 Economic Forecast and Revenue Estimate and FY 2025 Revenue Update

• [National] In February, an aggregation of economic forecasts predicts average real GDP growth of 2.2% for 2025 and 2.0% for 2026.

Real GDP in Illinois

• Illinois has consistently grown at a slower rate than the U.S. as a whole.
• Since 1998, the U.S. has averaged real GDP growth of 2.4% per year, while Illinois has averaged growth of 1.4%.
• Illinois has only grown faster than the nation in three years between 1998 and 2023.
• Illinois contracted in the first quarter of 2024 (-1.8%), before rebounding in the second (2.8%) and third quarters (2.0%).
• In February, S&P Global forecasted real GDP growth for Illinois of 1.8% for 2025 and 1.7% for 2026.

* NPR

Figures released by the Commerce Department Wednesday show that the United States’ gross domestic product contracted at an annual rate of 0.3% in the first quarter of the year, after growing at a solid pace of 2.4% in the final months of 2024. […]

Growth was dragged down in part by a surge of imports, as businesses and consumers raced to stock up before Trump’s sweeping tariffs took effect in early April. Imports are a net negative for GDP. Government spending was also down.

Personal spending, which is the biggest driver of the U.S. economy, also slowed during the first quarter, after robust growth at the end of last year. Personal spending grew at an annual rate of just 1.8% in January, February and March — less than half the pace of the previous quarter.

While the job market has so far held up well, with an unemployment rate of just 4.2% in March, the Conference Board’s survey found expectations about the job market are the worst since 2009, when the economy was hemorrhaging hundreds of thousands of jobs every month.

You’ll recall that COGFA’s projected revenue estimates were significantly lower than the governor’s budget office projections last month.

The governor’s budget director at one point hinted that April’s tax receipts might out-perform expectations, and we’ll know more in a few days or so about that (and since April’s receipts will be based mainly on last year’s income, they could very well be significantly higher). Illinois’ unemployment rate in March was 4.8 percent, unchanged from the previous month and down a tick from the previous year. Employment is a hard indicator. When jobs fall, trouble is afoot. But that hasn’t yet been reported. And the GDP drop, as noted above, is tied in part to a surge in pre-tariff import buying.

Anyway, that’s a lot to digest, and there’s even more out there, but the bottom line is the headline on this post. So, buckle up for FY26. [This post has been updated for clarity.]

  20 Comments      


Public Pressure Mounts For Nursing Home Accountability On Care And Safe Staffing

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In recent weeks, advocates for quality senior care have been joined by concerned lawmakers in an escalating and increasingly public call to ensure public funding is used to address the longstanding short staffing crisis in Illinois nursing homes.

In a March 12th S-T op-ed, SEIU Healthcare Executive VP Erica Bland noted that the COVID-19 crisis “revealed the true extent and human cost of the understaffing crisis.” The crisis, she said, has not improved.

Then, on April 8th, SEIU released a new report on the state of long-term care in Illinois and was joined by lawmakers, Alzheimer’s Association and AARP for a Blue Room press conference. The report detailed the failure of the industry to address longstanding short staffing: despite $15 billion in public funding over the past five years—including hundreds of millions intended to support staffing—1 in 5 nursing homes still fail to meet the legal minimum staffing standards.

The report caught the attention of the media, with coverage by Crain’s, FOX, NBC, CBS in Chicago, Springfield’s WICS, and other outlets. A follow up press conference on April 17th provided an example of the impact of short staffing at an individual facility, Southpoint Nursing Home, and gained additional coverage in Chicago on FOX and NBC—and a lengthy WVON interview.

The growing public concern about short staffing sends a clear message. It’s time to pass HB2507 to ensure public funding goes to care and not to profit.

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Mayor’s 87 percent transit ridership remarks turned back on him when it comes to funding (Updated)

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson held a quick press conference this morning before meeting with the three tops. He was asked several questions about mass transit governance and funding

Reporter: It’s not on your public list of priorities but, you know, transit. The governance and structural effects and potential funding. Why wasn’t that on your list of priorities and do you have a specific ask, either on the governance model or on how we raise revenue?

Johnson: Well, because it’s on the priority list of the entire state of Illinois. There’s a specific list and then there are the things that we know we have to do, right? So my team, working with the CTA, has been very clear about the importance of ensuring the region that generates 87 percent of the ridership has to receive its fair share in funding. That’s not an unusual ask. That’s been the ongoing characterization of the people of Chicago in the region since Mayor Harold Washington, right? So that has been a part of a larger, broader conversation around a host of issues. But these [his Statehouse list of asks] are very specific, modest presentations that speak to some of the technical things that we can do to sharpen our ability to deliver quality services for the people of Chicago.

Reporter: President Preckwinkle has told me she does favor a consolidation of the [transit] agencies. Are you worried that what may come out of this that you know, kind of Chicago loses its influence over regional transit?

Mayor Johnson: Well, again, my responsibility as Chief Executive of Chicago is to advocate for the best interest of the people in Chicago. That’s what I’m doing. It’s no secret, again in the CTA region, we generate 87 percent of the ridership. So the economic vibrancy of our public transit system is centered in the city of Chicago. So the city of Chicago deserves its fair share, and we continue to advocate for that as I’ve already done.

Reporter: Along the same lines, what sort of funding models do you think would be helpful for state lawmakers, at least in the short term?

Yeah, that’s a great question. Look, I think that there are a number of elements that have been discussed throughout this entire process. I’m not going to act as if there’s one particular form of funding that works best. What my intentions are is to ensure that the voice of Chicago is speaking in unison. Again… 87 percent of the ridership and the revenue was generated from the city of Chicago. And so a funding mechanism that doesn’t hurt anyone, working people, and a funding mechanism that allows for those that have means are able to contribute more to the vibrancy of our city and our state.

Reporter: Just to follow up. On every point you mentioned that [87] percent. Does that mean the city of Chicago, the residents should be the majority group funding public transportation?

Johnson: I mean, that’s a conclusion that one can draw, right? You know, look, I believe in sharing. I’m a middle child. I’m accustomed to do it, and the people of Chicago deserve their fair share. That’s all.

My hat’s off to Ben Szalinski of Capitol News Illinois for that last follow-up.

…Adding… Hmm…


Reminder: 55% of existing transit funding in northeastern Illinois — including taxes and fares — comes from outside the city proper

[image or embed]

— Star:Line Chicago (@starlinechicago.bsky.social) April 30, 2025 at 11:03 AM

* Meanwhile, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle had this to say to Isabel today about consolidating the mass transit systems…

Well, the first thing I have to say is our priority in this legislative session is transportation legislation… We believe that we have to have an integrated, comprehensive, accountable system, and that’s not where we are at the moment. So we really need support, both for changes in governance, in our system, and more resources. And RTA has estimated that the shortfall on the revenue side will be about $770 million in the coming year. So we’ve got challenges. […]

We’re interested in a system that’s more streamlined.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

  26 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WAND

A plan to stop all carbon sequestration over the Mahomet aquifer passed the Illinois House committee Tuesday. […]

Although the Mahomet bill gets that much closer to passing, it isn’t in its original form many lawmakers were hoping. Under the plan, carbon sequestration will be banned over the Mahomet aquifer. However, one facility in the town of Gibson by One Earth will be allowed to continue their construction of a carbon sequestration plant.

Andrew Rehn the Director of Climate Policy for the Prairie Rivers Network said this deal stopped most of the opposition to the plan.

“[The facility] is not over the aquifer itself, but supplies water to one of the recharge areas that supplies water to the aquifer,” Rehn said. “By passing this bill we significantly, significantly, significantly reduce the risk to the aquifer.”

* KBSI

A Native American advocate is speaking out in response to schools pushing back against an Illinois bill that would ban K-12 schools from using native names, logos, and mascots. […]

Native American advocate and Passamaquoddy tribe member Ted Trujillo said the mascots are dehumanizing and pointed out that the depictions are being used by non-native people.

“They’re not native,” he said. “They stole our identity. They took our customs and traditions and twist them and mock them to make them mean whatever they want it to mean.” […]

Trujillo said the mascots are offensive and often inaccurate caricatures of native people — pointing out the commonly depicted severed head of a native man wearing a feathered headdress.

“They’re plains headdresses,” he said. “They’re only used by a handful of tribes out in the western plains. They were never used in Illinois by any of the tribes over here.”

* WAND

A state Democratic plan would require insurance companies to cover screening for peripheral artery disease.

The disease happens when blood flow is blocked from reaching the foot. Most patients are asymptomatic until it is too late. Often times it causes severe health issues which require amputations.

Doctors at the hearing said once an amputation happens, in the next five years, the patients chance of survival drops to 20%. […]

State Representative Thaddeus Jones (D-South Holland) said in the committee he has lost multiple family members from diabetes, and hopes this bill will help reduce unnecessary deaths.

The proposal passed unanimously out of the House insurance committee. It will now head to the House floor, where lawmakers could talk about it in the coming weeks.

* Daily Herald

Harper College and other community colleges have renewed a long-sought plan to offer four-year bachelor’s degrees in select fields, but the effort has again stalled in Springfield amid opposition from universities.

The Palatine-based school first lobbied legislators in 2003 under then-President Robert Breuder, and tried again in 2009 and 2014. Now it is making another push with President Avis Proctor at the helm. She helped develop baccalaureate degree programs when she worked at a community college in Florida — one of 24 states that such schools to offer four-year degrees. […]

A coalition of university presidents said the bill could lead to duplicating efforts and increasing costs at a time of limited resources.

But they said they’re willing to compromise.

“We are encouraged by negotiations and remain committed to working collaboratively to build a higher education ecosystem that serves all of our students and employers,” the group said in a statement.

* WAND

School districts could soon be required to include suicide prevention contact information on the back of school employee IDs.

Illinois currently requires districts to include this information on identification cards for students in grades 6 through 12. This legislation would ensure teachers and other school staff have the same information readily available.

Sen. Doris Turner (D-Springfield) said the proposal is critical to ensure everyone knows there is help available. […]

House Bill 3000 passed unanimously out of the Senate Education Committee Tuesday. The measure gained unanimous support in the House earlier this month.

* Rep. Norma Hernandez…

State Rep. Norma Hernandez, D-Melrose Park, is taking aim at factors which contribute to shortages of specialist healthcare providers by passing three bills aimed at updating requirements and removing roadblocks that currently often lead to many Illinoisans being underserved. […]

Hernandez recently passed three bills aimed at helping underserved areas to see increased numbers of nearby specialist providers:

House Bill 2676 would allow ophthalmologists, optometrists and anesthesiologists to qualify for loan repayment assistance through the already-existing Underserved Health Care Provider Workforce Program (UHCPW). This program incentivizes newly-trained specialists to move to and practice in “designated shortage areas” by helping with their educational loans if they do so.

House Bill 3160 would require the Department of Human Services (DHS) to more promptly furnish providers of home and community-based services with updated and detailed rate sheets for the clients they serve. Rate sheets inform providers of the rates at which they can be reimbursed when caring for specific patients. Currently, some providers haven’t received updated rate sheets since 2019, which has made it difficult for providers to budget and maintain full operation. The bill would require DHS to furnish new rate sheets within 60 days of a provider’s request.

House Bill 3385 would require public colleges and universities to employ at least three licensed mental health professionals if the student body is at least 3,750 students or one licensed professional per 1,250 students otherwise. It also would change the makeup of mental health expert panels already required at public colleges and universities. Current law doesn’t explicitly spell out requirements for the makeup of the panels, but Hernandez’s bill would require them to have a minimum of two administrators, two faculty members and one mental health professional.

* WAND

The Illinois Senate Public Health Committee unanimously approved a bill Tuesday to require pharmacists to sell sterile hypodermic syringes or needles if they are in stock.

Sponsors said pharmacists would be able to use their professional judgement to sell the equipment to any customer for proper utilization or administration of medications.

Sen. Mike Simmons (D-Chicago) and Rep. Kelly Cassidy (D-Chicago) filed this bill after a constituent was unable to receive the medical equipment from her pharmacist. […]

The proposal now moves to the Senate floor for further discussion. House Bill 2589 gained unanimous support in the House earlier this month.

* Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford…

Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford is leading the charge to put an end to “resident dumping” – an inhumane practice in which a nursing facility discharges a resident and refuses to readmit them after a hospital stay.

“Resident dumping is a betrayal of trust at life’s most vulnerable moment,” said Lightford (D-Maywood). “Seniors have made these places their sanctuaries, their communities and their final homes. To deny them return is to strip away their belonging, security and dignity when they need it most.”

To strengthen resident rights in nursing homes and assisted living facilities, Lightford’s proposal would enhance the involuntary discharge process within these communities. If a resident leaves the facility for a medical reason – and would not create imminent danger to themselves or others – the facility would be required to let them come back home under House Bill 1597.

“Resident dumping” affects thousands of nursing facility residents who are uninsured or underinsured, have a mental health condition, or have had to spend time in a hospital or rehab facility and find they’re not allowed back into their nursing facility. […]

House Bill 1597 passed the Senate Health and Human Services Committee Tuesday.

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Healing Communities: Endeavor Health Is Helping Train The Next Generation Of Caregivers

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

With over $30.2 million from Endeavor Health’s Community Investment Fund (CIF), the Evanston-based health system is propelling efforts to enhance community health and well-being through partnerships and support local economic growth—which includes a serious effort to train future clinicians.

Last summer, Endeavor Health’s CIF partnership with ASPIRE Lake County funded healthcare internships for high school students and community members. Twenty-one paid interns were placed in clinical and non-clinical areas at Endeavor Health Highland Park Hospital, offering opportunities for future healthcare workers to learn firsthand how to coordinate and prioritize care.

“I really think of it as growing the next generation of healthcare workers,” said Magdelena Dudek, clinical nurse manager in the operating room at Endeavor Health Highland Park Hospital.

The program gives interns exposure to healthcare roles, builds job skills, and supports residents in securing a job in healthcare and meeting community employment needs. One intern, Madison, said the experience helped her understand the hospital setting and how to talk to people, among other benefits.

Like Endeavor Health, Illinois hospitals know the health of communities depends on a strong healthcare workforce. That’s why they’re prioritizing programs to train future clinicians. Learn more about how Illinois hospitals are healing communities.

Healing Communities: UChicago Medicine AdventHealth Provides Free Physicals for Special Olympics
To participate in Special Olympics, aspiring athletes must first get a physical. Yet some children who want to compete don’t have insurance, a primary care doctor or transportation to get an appointment. That’s where UChicago Medicine AdventHealth comes in. For the past three years, at Special Olympics Screening Events held in Bedford Park, UChicago Medicine AdventHealth residents have provided the needed physicals for free.

“One of the things that drew me to medicine is to be able to give back,” said Dr. Sravani Sagireddy. “It’s really nice to be able to step into the community and help people who really need it.”

At the screening events, the residents perform vision, hearing and motor ability tests. They carefully assess each child for medical conditions that might make it unsafe for that child to participate in athletics.

Special Olympics President and CEO Peter Beale-DelVecchio said UChicago Medicine AdventHealth “has been an incredible partner for us” and that the four-hospital health system is “helping us do more and more all the time.”

Beyond the 24/7 care provided within their facilities, hospitals and health systems across Illinois are having a positive impact on communities by addressing community needs and providing accessible care. Learn more about how Illinois hospitals are healing communities.

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Open thread

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Los Texmaniacs

The two countries are my homeland

Let us know what’s going on in your part of the world.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers can click here and here for a refresh. ICYMI: The RTA is running ads while riders and legislators are running out of patience. Rep. Kam Buckner

There’s a $750,000 campaign running across northeast Illinois right now — from TV to radio to billboards — asking the public to “Save Transit Now.” The Regional Transportation Authority says it’s meant to raise awareness about the $1.5 billion funding gap threatening our transit system’s future. But here’s the thing: We don’t need more awareness. We need leadership.

Let me be clear: The funding gap is real. As a legislator who has been working on this specific issue for two years, I know how critical this moment is. Chicago is a world-class city. Northeast Illinois is a global economic engine. And our transit system is the connective tissue that holds it all together. We’ve lagged behind other states for too long in both funding and foresight. The so-called fiscal cliff isn’t new; it’s the result of years of delayed decisions and deferred maintenance. This work should’ve started long before the pandemic. It didn’t. So here we are.

But to cry broke with one hand and drop three-quarters of a million dollars on a PR campaign with the other is wrong, and frankly, it’s irresponsible.

People don’t want more marketing. They want more buses that come when they’re supposed to. They want trains that feel safe, are clean and run on time. If your train shows up late every morning, a radio ad won’t make you feel better. If you’re scared to ride after dark, a hashtag won’t fix that.

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | After-school programs continue push for state aid: “There are decades of research that supports that after-school programs improve school day performance, grades and attendance, helps reduce violence, and also supports working class families,” Rep. Aaron Ortiz, D-Chicago, told a House budget committee Tuesday. Ortiz is the lead sponsor of House Bill 3082, which calls for $50 million to be distributed by the Illinois State Board of Education through a competitive grant program to entities that seek to provide tutoring and other enrichment services in high-poverty schools, where 40% or more of the students come from low-income households.

* WGN | Mayor Brandon Johnson heads to Springfield with a revised fiscal wish list: The mayor wants to generate $12.5 million through a tax on prepaid cellphone and calling cards, raise $27.5 million by extending the $5-a-month 911 surcharge, get more funding for the city’s unified shelter system and improve state reimbursement rates for various services including education.

* Sun-Times | Trump targets sanctuary cities like Chicago with new orders: ‘This administration already has it in for us’: One of the orders signed by Trump orders state and federal officials to publish lists of jurisdictions often referred to as sanctuary cities that limit cooperation with federal officials’ efforts to arrest immigrants in the country illegally. A second order signed by Trump calls for increasing access to excess military for state and local law enforcement. It also calls for bolstering legal support for officers accused of wrongdoing while carrying out their official duties. Trump also directed the office of Attorney General Pam Bondi to set up a system that would provide legal aid and financial protection to law enforcement officers “who unjustly incur expenses and liabilities for actions taken during the performance of their official duties to enforce the law.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* KWQC | IL Board of Higher Education questioned by lawmakers: The Legislative Audit Commission is calling for stronger internal controls at the Illinois Board of Higher Education. The commission found that the board made late voucher payments to schools 90% of the time in fiscal year 2023. Republican State Senator Chapin Rose noted that the Legislative Audit Commission made 17 compliance recommendations, nine of which were repeat findings.

* Daily Herald | Community colleges renew push for four-year degrees, but universities push back: The proposal was boosted by the endorsement of Gov. JB Pritzker during his State of the State address in February, when he said the plan would help fill the needs of regional employers and create a pathway to jobs for more people. Since then, Proctor — who will head the Illinois Community College President’s Council starting in July — has made advocating for four-year degrees a top legislative priority during the General Assembly’s current spring session. The House bill that would authorize baccalaureate programs at community colleges, sponsored by Democratic state Rep. Tracy Katz Muhl of Northbrook, now has 52 bipartisan cosponsors.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | The State of Illinois has a new Poet Laureate and fellow poets rejoice: This is an honorary position, “tasked with promoting access to literary arts and raising awareness through statewide community engagement.” It comes with a yearly salary of $35,000 and $10,000 for expenses. Many in the poetry community applauded the choice. Turcotte sent his friend poet/artist Tony Fitzpatrick a text earlier on Tuesday telling him the news. “I cannot think of a better choice for this honor,” Fitzpatrick told me. “I met Mark in the early 90’s when we both got to read poems in honor of Gwendolyn Brooks. We were thrilled. I read a poem about Satchel Paige and Mark read one from his then upcoming book, ‘Exploding Chippewas.’

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Trump administration launches investigation into Chicago Public Schools’ Black Student Success Plan: That long-awaited plan was unveiled in February and challenged the following day by Virginia-based conservative group Parents Defending Education, which filed a similar complaint against a Los Angeles Unified School District initiative. The group alleges that the CPS plan violates Title VI, a provision of federal civil rights law that bars discrimination on the basis of race or shared ancestry.

* Sun-Times | CPS plan to help Black students in crosshairs of Trump’s Education Department: CPS moved ahead with the initiative last week despite the federal complaint by the Virginia group. The school board launched the Black Student Success Committee to oversee the plan and tapped board member and longtime activist Jitu Brown as chair of the committee.

* WTTW | Chinatown Business Owners Brace for Impact of Trump’s Ongoing Trade War With China: “We’ve started importing a lot in the last two weeks to deal with the tariff increases, so we’re stocking up on what goods we can for now,” Grace Grocery Store owner Leo Li said through an interpreter. Li opened his shop nine years ago shortly after moving to Chicago. He estimates about 95% of his products are Chinese imports, which range from daily necessities like snacks and toiletries to gift shop items for tourists.

* Block Club | South Side Neighbors Want Housing Protections Before City OKs ‘Luxury’ Hotel Near Obama Center: Activists aren’t opposed to the hotel “in abstract,” but organizer Dixon Romeo said that it would be unacceptable for City Council to quickly advance a “luxury hotel” while renters and other South Siders await action on the housing ordinance. “There cannot be luxury hotels in our neighborhood until we have protections for all of these people here who make our neighborhood great,” Romeo said.

* WBEZ | UIC student has legal status restored, but only after leaving US: “What is going to make it hard for me to choose to come to the U.S. is that anything like this can happen again,” said Lev, an alias WBEZ is using to protect the student’s identity. “I want to make sure that my future is secure, that I am able to study, work and then move onto the next goal that I have in life, instead of having these abrupt situations where I have to completely change tracks.”

* Tribune | One mile, more than a dozen Latino-owned cafes: How Pilsen’s coffee culture is growing across 18th Street: A caffeinated tour of Pilsen might start on the east side, slightly off 18th Street at the vibrant La Malinche Coffee & Tea House on Halsted. There, with pink prominent and a bountiful menu, patrons sit and work and chat over sweet Cubano coffees with turkey pesto paninis. Turn onto 18th Street and get a cardamom or panela latte from Anticonquista and take in the leather, wood, revolutionary Central American literature and coffee-roasting equipment.

* Sun-Times | Chicago’s Doc10 returns to champion top films as pressure mounts on industry: Chicago’s Doc10 film festival — one of the only documentary-exclusive film fests in the country — is celebrating its 10th anniversary at a high-pressure time for the art form. The festival programs a highly selective list of 10 films and screens them through Sunday. Yet filmmakers say the surge of streaming sites like Netflix and Hulu has shifted demand away from more complex or highly political docs and toward commercialized films featuring cults, pop stars and celebrities.

* Tribune | Angel Reese aims to expand her shot profile in Year 2 with Chicago Sky — while continuing to dominate the boards: Two days into the Chicago Sky’s training camp, Angel Reese still hadn’t posted up. It was a distinct shift from Reese’s prior function in Chicago, but the second-year forward knew it was coming. In the first week of camp, new coach Tyler Marsh is tackling one of the most important challenges of his system — how to create enough offensive balance for both of his frontcourt stars to succeed.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Naperville Sun | Naperville advisory board debates how to fill $6.5M budget hole from loss of state grocery tax: Staff presented two possibilities: adopt a 1% city grocery tax or increase Naperville’s home rule sales tax by 0.25%. The board backed neither. Rather, by consensus, members sought more information from staff and agreed to continue the discussion at a special meeting tentatively scheduled for next month.

* Daily Herald | ‘Get it done. Please’: Father of teen killed by train implores Barrington officials to install safety gates: “Get it done. Please,” Michael Lacson told trustees at Monday’s committee of the whole meeting. “Somebody already died. It was a ticking time bomb, and unfortunately my daughter was the one who paid for it.” But Barrington officials said progress is being made toward getting the gates put in at the Hough Street crossing and the nearby Main Street/Cook Street crossings.

* Daily Herald | Six things you need to know about the Route 53 road construction project: IDOT is dividing up the work in segments. First up is a section from south of Kirchoff Road to south of Rand Road (Route 12), in Rolling Meadows, Palatine and Arlington Heights. Workers will reconstruct and resurface the 6.4-mile stretch, update traffic signals, lighting and drainage. Overnight lane closures will occur between 9 p.m. and 5 a.m. but one lane in each direction will be kept open.

* Daily Southtown | New owner plans to transform 68-acre property and horse training facility in Crete into men’s rehabilitation center: O’Connor hails from Evanston, but said he fell in love with the south suburbs after entering alcohol abuse recovery in 2016. It took him losing his relationships — his family, friends and employer — to admit he was an alcoholic, O’Connor said. But once he did, he entered a 28-day, in-patient program in Hazel Crest that eventually led him to the horse farm that inspired him to buy the 2400 East Bemes property. He said he plans to flip the farm into a picturesque recovery center where up to 14 men can live and work for as long as they need.

*** Downstate ***

* Sun-Times | Testimony begins in ex- Jan. 6 defendant’s murder trial: ‘It was only supposed to be me’: Moments before driving his GMC Sierra the wrong way onto a downstate highway in 2022, Shane Jason Woods complained he’d been in an argument, he faced a decade in prison, and he just wanted to “end it,” a police officer testified Tuesday. […] After the crash, jurors were told, Woods complained “it was only supposed to be me.”

* WGLT | Bloomington council passes housing incentive plan, recognizes outgoing members: The incentives will waive some city fees — 50% as a baseline and up to 100% for projects utilizing tax credits. Projects with affordable housing will be allowed extra density, and some may receive a five-year waiver of property taxes. Jurgens said the program will help attract the many types of housing the city needs.

* WCIA | Champaign judge reaches verdict in Sooie Bros. lawsuit: One chapter of a legal battle between the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District and a local restaurant has come to a close. On Tuesday, a judge ordered that Sooie Bros. BBQ Joint must stay closed until they either comply with the food service plan from 2023 and obtain a walk-in freezer, or until they apply and receive approval for an amended food service plan by CUPHD.

*** National ***

* Democracy Docket | Federal election panel chair opposes counting ballots that arrive after Election Day: “There should be a deadline for absentee or mail ballots prior to Election Day and then they should be returned by Election Day,” Donald Palmer, the chair of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC), said in a House hearing Tuesday on California’s ballot counting process. Palmer’s comments come after President Donald Trump has repeatedly called on states to no longer accept and count ballots that arrive after Election Day, and signed an executive order last month directing the EAC to withhold federal funding from states that continue to do so.

* RTDNA | Good News: TV salaries beat inflation … but just barely: After making up a fair amount of ground a year ago, the latest RTDNA/Newhouse School at Syracuse University Survey found local TV news salaries held their own and then a little more this past year. Salaries rose by 3.2%, edging ahead of inflation, which hit 2.9% for the year. Salaries were up 7.5% in 2023. Median — or typical — salaries are the best gauge, and they show that 14 of the 20 newsroom positions tracked are up in salary compared to the 2024 Survey. Only managing editors, news writers and social media producers/editors decreased in salary. News reporter, MMJ and assignment editor salaries all stayed the same.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Apr 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker’s campaign…

As Donald Trump marks 100 days in office, the Pritzker political operation is launching a new video series: ‘The Real Cost of Trump’s Cuts.’ The series will feature direct to camera videos highlighting Illinoisans whose lives have been upended by Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s destruction of the federal government.

In just 100 days, workers have lost their jobs, seniors have struggled to get food or access their social security payments, and families have had their childcare jeopardized. As Trump and Musk gut services that working people rely on to give the wealthy a tax break, the new series aims to tell the stories of their destruction and damage.

Moses’ national security job offer was rescinded when Elon Musk’s DOGE team came in and haphazardly cut positions. He has a family history of working in government and was excited to continue the tradition. Instead, Moses is now unemployed and left without insurance as he tries to take care of his ailing mother.

“Donald Trump and Elon Musk are ruining people’s lives to fund the largest tax break in history for the wealthiest Americans. Illinoisans across the state are paying the price for Trump and Musk’s’ cruelty, and their stories deserve to be heard,” said JB for Governor Senior Political Advisor Mike Ollen.

* The video


Thoughts?

*** Statewide ***

* IPM News | The federal library department has put almost all of its staff on leave. What does that mean for your town’s library?: Libraries across rural Illinois rely on federal funding more than their suburban and urban counterparts. According to IMLS data from 2019 for Illinois, federal funding made up about 1.63% of rural library operating budgets, compared to 0.43% of city library budgets. Most of the libraries that received large percentages of their budgets from the federal government in 2019 and 2022 were in rural areas or towns.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ‘Hurting very, very badly’: YNOT founder shares statement on Chatham tragedy: In a post on Facebook, YNOT Founder Jaime Loftus addressed the loss of four female students — some as young as 7-years-old — and also revealed new details about the crash as it was caught on camera. Loftus said the car that hit their building was seen leaving Walnut Street, traveling through a farm field and crossing Breckenridge Road, before hitting the building. Due to the time of the crash, there were students and staff present in the building for the after-school programs.

* WAND | U of I Researchers give update on dust storm study: On April 10, the team shared some of their findings so far through the University of Illinois’ farmdoc project. “The bottom line is bare soil,” reads the article’s conclusion. “It is always the most critical component for any dust storm.” The presence of bare soil at the time of the storm combined with unique weather conditions, which included dry days that turned colder later in April, said Professor Jonathan Coppess in an interview with WAND’s Agribusiness Today.

* WCIA | New manufacturing facility planning to add dozens of jobs to Champaign-Urbana: The company is opening a center near Apollo and Olympian Drives in Champaign. The space is wide open now, as crews start to build power distribution units for data centers. “Our technology essentially takes the power from the utility, brings it into the data center, cleans it up, protects it, and distributes it to the racks appropriately so that the servers that run things like your Google searches are run on clean power and are protected from failure,” Evan El Koury, the company’s president, explained. He said he is excited to work with engineering students at U of I, and others with similar experience, as he expects to add 50-75 jobs in the next few months.

* WCIA | ‘We miss him’; Fallen Illinois State Troopers honored on Workers Memorial Day: In Champaign, two state troopers were honored for making the ultimate sacrifice. Family members sat in the front of the ceremony in Dodds Park. Behind them, a line of state troopers stood honoring their colleagues, 28-year-old Corey Thompsen and 45-year-old Todd Hanneken, whose lives were cut short while on duty in Champaign County. […] “We miss him,” John said. “He was a young man at 28 years old just beginning. He’d been on the force about five, going on six years.”

* WICS | Illinois Secretary of State’s Vehicle Show to celebrate 75th year in 2025: The Illinois Secretary of State’s Vehicle Show is set to celebrate its 75th anniversary this fall, with a special highlight on the 70th anniversary of the iconic Chrysler 300. Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias announced that the event will take place on Saturday, September 6, 2025, from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in downtown Springfield. A limited number of commemorative license plates featuring the Chrysler 300 are now available for $35 per pair until June 10. Illinois vehicle owners who purchase the plates may display them on their vehicles for up to 60 days before the show, from July 8 to September 6, 2025.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Highland Park officials settle on permanent memorial sites for July 4 mass shooting: Highland Park city officials are moving forward with the recommendation of two sites for a permanent memorial to the victims of the July 4, 2022, parade mass shooting. Last week, the 24-year-old Highwood man who pleaded guilty to 21 counts of first-degree murder and 48 counts of attempted first-degree murder received seven life sentences for the July 4 shooting. He killed seven people and wounded 48 others that day.

* NBC Chicago | Niles demolishes ‘Leaning Tower’ YMCA building to make way for shopping, entertainment: A big wrecking ball was in suburban Niles Monday morning, right near the suburb’s historic “Leaning Tower of Niles” to make way for a giant new development with shopping and dining and more, according to an announcement. The Leaning Tower YMCA residential building, located at 6300 W. Touhy Ave., was demolished starting at 10 a.m., the announcement said. It’s part of a “significant step” in the village’s plan to revitalize the area, the announcement added.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Oswego trustees discuss options for possible grocery tax: The state tax was a revenue generator for Oswego, Lamberg has said, saying that “using actual 2024 sales tax data received from businesses that sell groceries, staff estimates the village received $1 million to $1.25 million in (state) grocery tax revenue in 2024.” “Implementing a 1% local grocery tax will maintain the village’s revenue base,” she has said.

* Pioneer Press | Morton Grove trustees approve local 1% grocery tax as state one is repealed: Officials said that without imposing the local tax, Morton Grove stands to lose more than $150,000 in sales tax revenue. Village Administrator Charles Meyer explained the ordinance before the board at its April 22 meeting amended a current village code to add a new article entitled “municipal grocery tax.”

* Crain’s | Congress wants to question Northwestern’s president — again: The U.S. House Committee on Education & Workforce is seeking a transcribed interview with Northwestern University President Michael Schill over allegations of antisemitism on campus. In a letter sent to the school, U.S. Rep. Tim Walberg, R-Mich., the committee’s chair, accused Schill of failing to fulfill commitments made in front of congressional leaders last year over his plan to combat antisemitism on campus.

* Daily Herald | Rolling Meadows police sergeant on leave after arrest in road rage shooting: Saez, 58, of Elgin, is charged with two felony counts of aggravated battery and one felony count of reckless discharge of a firearm. During a detention hearing Friday, a Kane County judge ordered him to be released with pretrial conditions — including that he must surrender all firearms — pending his next court date June 12. Saez’s attorney Alex Bederka said Monday he is now in the discovery process collecting videos of the incident, including from a nearby gas station and witnesses, and may be prepared to comment further after the next court hearing.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | ‘I didn’t take this job because I thought it would be easy’: Chicago’s new U.S. attorney balances office’s tradition with new directives from DC: In his first interview since assuming the powerful law enforcement post three weeks ago, however, Boutros said he’ll be doing it with less manpower than in recent years, as there are now fewer than 100 federal criminal prosecutors and a hiring freeze mandated by the president that has no end in sight. “I didn’t take this job because I thought it would be easy,” Boutros told a group of reporters who cover the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse. “I took this job knowing full well that there are tremendous pressures and expectations put on being U.S. attorney. …I expect this to be a tough job. But I believe and continue to believe that I am the right person for this job and I will work tirelessly to carry out the mandate to the best of my ability.”

* Crain’s | Johnson joins lawsuit seeking to prevent Trump’s federal government overhaul: The city of Chicago has joined other cities, unions and nonprofits in filing a lawsuit asking a judge to block President Donald Trump’s administration from firing federal workers and implementing a sweeping reorganization of the government. Arguing that Trump lacks the sole authority to force an overhaul of the federal government without congressional approval, the lawsuit seeks an injunction to prevent the downsizing, which Mayor Brandon Johnson says is already “disrupting vital city services.”

* Sun-Times | Revised teen curfew proposal poised for Council committee approval — over Mayor Johnson’s objections: With 31 co-sponsors, downtown Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd) plans to push the compromise through the City Council’s Committee on Public Safety he chairs in hopes of preventing large groups of young people summoned by social media from assembling downtown with violent consequences, known as “teen trends.” “The city should definitely anticipate litigation being filed over this proposal,” said Sheila Bedi, a clinical law professor at Northwestern University. “I’ve heard no amendments that would suggest that any of the constitutional issues have been redressed.”

* Sun-Times | Developer convicted in crooked Bridgeport bank embezzlement scheme get almost 7 years: A real estate developer was sentenced Tuesday to almost seven years in prison for collecting more than $2.6 million as part of a massive embezzlement scheme that caused a clout-heavy Bridgeport bank to fail. Miroslaw Krejza lived off the loans he collected from Washington Federal Bank for Savings from 2005-17, ostensibly to develop several Northwest Side houses, federal prosecutors said.

* Block Club | New DuSable Park Plans Would Bring A Boardwalk, Lush Greenery To The Lakefront: The 3.5-acre park at 401 N. DuSable Lake Shore Drive is on a small peninsula east of Lake Shore Drive. It has been in the works since 1987, when former Mayor Harold Washington gave the land to the Park District to develop a park in honor of Jean Baptiste Point du Sable. Ross Barney Architects and Brook Architecture, selected as the lead design firms for the park in 2022, submitted their plans this month, two years after being awarded the project.

*** National ***

* AP | UPS to cut 20k jobs, close 70 facilities as it reduces Amazon shipping volume: “The actions we are taking to reconfigure our network and reduce cost across our business could not be timelier,” CEO Carol Tomé said in a statement on Tuesday. “The macro environment may be uncertain, but with our actions, we will emerge as an even stronger, more nimble UPS.” UPS announced three months that it had reached a deal with Amazon to lower its volume by more than 50% by the second half of 2026.

* Crain’s | U.S. Supreme Court rules against Advocate Christ in fight over billions in Medicare payments: In the 7-2 decision on Advocate Christ Medical Center v. Kennedy announced Tuesday, the high court determined the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services does not need to count all beneficiaries enrolled in both Medicare and Supplemental Security Income, or SSI, when tallying how many low-income patients a hospital treats. As a result, health systems will get paid less than they sought.

* Report: A Call to End Daylight Saving Time—Implications for Public Health: Many studies seem to show an acute worsening of health with the spring transition, but not the fall transition, suggesting the health issues are due not only to acute changes in clock time but also to the discrepancy between clock time and circadian rhythm. The effect of a chronic discrepancy between personal schedule and innate circadian rhythm, called social jet lag, is well studied in the sleep medicine literature. This chronic misalignment is associated with obesity, metabolic syndrome, heart disease, and depression. Because studies show that ST aligns better with circadian rhythm, a permanent DST will impose chronic social jet lag on the population.

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Progressive groups unveil menu of tax proposals

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Illinois Revenue Alliance

Members include: Brighton Park Neighborhood Council, Chicago Teachers Union, Grassroots Collaborative, Healthy Illinois, Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, Jewish Council on Urban Affairs, ONE Northside, PEER Illinois, SEIU Healthcare, Shriver Center on Poverty Law, The People’s Lobby, Workers Center for Racial Justice.

* Excerpts from the more detailed page

Proposal: Impose a 10% tax on digital advertising revenue on corporations that make over $150 million from digital ads. This tax would only impact the largest corporations profiting off of our personal data. Revenue Estimate: FY25-$775 Million, FY26-$895 Million

Proposal: Illinois should implement worldwide combined reporting worldwide combined reporting (WWCR) for corporate tax filing. This would require multinational corporations to include the income of their foreign subsidiaries when calculating Illinois’ share of their profits. Currently, six states and DC states require corporate filings to include foreign subsidiaries located in known tax haven countries. One state, Alaska, requires WWCR for oil companies. Revenue Estimate: $1.2 Billion.

Proposal: Apply Illinois’ corporate income tax and personal property replacement tax to GILTI, a 9.5% tax rate. Since the federal government only taxes 50% of GILTI, Illinois should tax the other half. This would impact large multinationals with access to offshore tax havens. Revenue Estimate: $200 Million.

Proposal: Place a 17% surcharge on all carried interest income by hedge fund and private equity executives, the percentage by which carried interest is under-taxed federally. This would eliminate these executives’ tax advantage while preserving the incentive to be a successful hedge fund manager. Revenue Estimate: $1.5 billion.

Proposal: Impose a “mark-to-market” wealth tax, which would apply Illinois’ personal income tax (4.95%) to the appreciation of billionaire’s assets. This solution was also proposed in the Biden-Harris administration’s FY 2025 budget. Revenue Estimate: $840 million

Proposal: Impose a tax of 7% on long-term capital gains on assets other than real estate over $250,000 in a given tax year. The average income of an individual being taxed under this surcharge is $4.2 million, and over 99% of the tax would be paid by people in the top 20% of income. Revenue Estimate: $1.7 billion

Proposal: Raise the Illinois corporate income tax rate from 7% to7.92%, which is the maximum increase allowed underthe IL constitution (tax limited to 8/5 of the personal income tax). Revenue Estimate: $830 million (2)

Proposal: Eliminate the remaining corporate tax loopholes identified by the governor’s administration, which include:

    * Manufacturing Equipment Subsidy: Remove production-related tangible personal property from the manufacturing machinery and equipment sales tax exemption (loophole originally closed in 2008 but reopened in 2019).
    * Corporate Construction Subsidy: Eliminate the add-on corporate income tax credits for construction job payroll.
    * Biodiesel Sales Tax: Accelerate the expiration of the remaining sales tax exemptions for biodiesel, which is scheduled to sunset in 2030.

Revenue Estimate: $175 million

Proposal: Reduce the state estate tax exemption to $2 million, returning it to the more equitable level it was set at until 2011. Revenue Estimate: $150 million

More at the link.

Which ones do you like and which ones do you not like?

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Securing The Future: How Ironworkers Power Energy Storage With Precision And Skill

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As Illinois accelerates toward a clean energy future, ironworkers are doing more than just supporting the transition—they’re making it possible with safe, skilled, and reliable rigging and equipment setting on some of the state’s most critical energy storage projects.

Thanks to bold investments by Governor Pritzker and the Illinois General Assembly, energy storage—especially battery systems—has become a centerpiece of the state’s green infrastructure. Behind the scenes, union ironworkers are the ones rigging and setting massive battery units and essential equipment with unmatched precision. These are not just construction tasks—they’re mission-critical operations that demand expertise, coordination, and an unwavering commitment to safety.

From anchoring battery enclosures to securing large-scale energy storage units in place, ironworkers are central to ensuring these projects meet performance and safety standards. Their contribution is foundational to the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA), which is reshaping how Illinois stores and delivers clean power.

Including highly trained union labor on these complex jobs not only protects workers and communities—it guarantees the success of each installation. When you see a battery system supporting solar or wind energy in Illinois, know that ironworkers had a hand in setting it safely, skillfully, and reliably.

In every bolt tightened and every rig lifted, ironworkers are powering a greener tomorrow.

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Feds accuse Madigan of lying during testimony, ask judge to deny new trial

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* From the federal government’s latest filing

The UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, by and through its attorney, Andrew S. Boutros, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, respectfully submits this response in opposition to the post-trial motions filed by defendant Michael J. Madigan (R. 396, 401).

The evidence presented at trial overwhelmingly proved that (i) Madigan solicited and accepted bribes paid by Commonwealth Edison in exchange for Madigan’s official action on legislation, in the form of jobs (including no-show jobs) for Madigan’s allies; and that (ii) Madigan agreed to use his position as Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives to try to get Chicago Alderman Daniel Solis appointed to a paid State board position, in exchange for Solis steering business to Madigan’s private law firm.

Madigan’s motion for judgment of acquittal under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 29 ignores the overwhelming evidence presented over 11 weeks of trial and the deferential standard that must be applied. Considering the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, there was ample evidence to convict Madigan on all charges on which the jury found him guilty. Madigan has failed to meet the nearly insurmountable hurdle he faces in attempting to overturn the jury’s verdict through a judgment of acquittal.

Madigan’s motion for a new trial under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 33 is similarly ill-founded. For the reasons discussed below, the trial record conclusively demonstrates that there were no errors during the trial that jeopardized his substantial rights. […]

Madigan ignores the standard applicable to a Rule 29 motion and presents a cherry-picked version of the evidence presented at trial. The evidence, particularly when considered in the light most favorable to the government, abundantly proved Madigan’s guilt as to the counts of conviction. There is no basis for the Court to take the extraordinary step of overturning the jury’s verdict.

* From Madigan’s March post-trial motion for a new trial

The Court should grant a new trial “if there is a reasonable possibility that a trial error had a prejudicial effect on the jury’s verdict. The Court has broad discretion in making this determination because it “heard all the evidence, watched both the witnesses and the jury,” and is in the best position to determine whether any improper evidence “tipped the scale against” a defendant. Id. at 438. Additionally, if the Court “believes there is a serious danger that a miscarriage of justice has occurred—that is, that an innocent person has been convicted—[he] has the power to set the verdict aside, even if he does not think that he made any erroneous rulings at the trial.” […]

Madigan is entitled to a new trial because jury instruction and evidentiary errors had a prejudicial effect on the jury’s verdict. In addition to these errors, a new trial is required because the verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence, as described in the Motion for Judgment of Acquittal. […]

Madigan also proposed the following jury instruction, which the Court declined to give:

If the defendant believes in good faith that he is acting within the law or that his actions comply with the law, he cannot be said to have acted corruptly or with the purpose to obtain an unlawful benefit for himself or someone else. This is so even if the defendant’s belief was objectively unreasonable. However, you may consider the reasonableness of the defendant’s belief together with all the other evidence to determine whether the defendant held the belief in good faith. […]

The jury should have been instructed on the accurate mens rea. That is, a defendant acts “corruptly” when he specifically intends to receive a private financial benefit in violation of his legal duty to faithfully represent his constituents and the citizens of Illinois. Instead, the instructions reduced the mens rea to mere “knowledge” requiring only that the defendant understand that an exchange occurred.

“Section 666(a)(1)(B) makes it a crime for state and local officials to ‘corruptly’ accept a payment ‘intending to be influenced or rewarded’ for an official act.” Snyder v. United States, 603 U.S. 1, 10 (2024). The Supreme Court recently explained that that Section 666 requires: (1) “that the official have a corrupt state of mind[;] and [(2)] accept (or agree to accept) the payment intending to be influenced in the official act.”. The Seventh Circuit has also made clear that the requirement of corrupt intent is a key safeguard against criminalizing innocent conduct.

* Back to the feds

Madigan asks this Court to ignore binding Circuit precedent and impose a heightened mens rea standard under § 666, where none exists.

Before the jury instruction conference, Madigan asked the Court to instruct the jury that “[a] person acts corruptly when that person acts with the knowledge that his conduct is unlawful.” R. 261 at 95. On January 19, 2025, after the Court’s initial ruling on the term “corruptly” (Tr. 8105-19), Madigan shifted positions and offered a new proposed definition of “corruptly,” that a “defendant acts corruptly when he specifically intends to receive a private financial benefit in violation of his legal duty to faithfully represent his constituents and the citizens of Illinois.” R. 317 at 9 (copying Madigan’s email to the Court dated January 19, 2025).

The Court properly declined to give Madigan’s novel proposed definition of “corruptly.” Instead, the Court instructed the jury, largely consistent with the Seventh Circuit Pattern Instructions, but adding the specific requirement of an intended “exchange,” that:

A defendant acts “corruptly” if he acted with the understanding that a ‘thing of value’ is to be exchanged for an “official act” with the intent to influence or reward a State agent in connection with his official duties . . . In other words, the government must prove that when a defendant solicited, demanded, accepted, or agreed to accept, a “thing of value” with the intent to be influenced or rewarded in connection with his official duties, the defendant did so knowing it was a “this for that” exchange of a “thing of value” for an “official action.”

* The federal government’s list of Madigan’s alleged lies

Although the government’s evidence amply supports the verdict, Madigan’s lies on the witness stand gave the jury additional reason to find that he acted with corrupt intent, (jury may conclude based on false testimony, that the opposite of the false testimony is in fact true). The jury clearly discredited Madigan’s testimony that he never traded official action for private gain and never believed that any company to whom he recommended people intended for him to trade official action. Madigan lied on numerous other occasions:

    • Madigan lied when he testified that McClain never said he believed or suspected that any of the people that Madigan and McClain had referred were not working. This testimony was a lie, as demonstrated by a call the jury heard between Madigan and McClain in which they laughed about the fact that multiple people were paid by ComEd for little work.

    • Madigan lied about his involvement with Ed Moody’s contract. Specifically, during his direct examination, Madigan was shown Government Exhibit 248, a December 7, 2018, call where McClain asked Madigan: “So do you want us to keep going with Ed Moody under that ComEd agreement or do you want us to pull off a little bit because of this Recorder of Deeds thing?” Madigan told two lies to the jury. First, he claimed that he merely understood McClain to be “asking for some advice.” Id. Second, Madigan claimed that McClain’s request for advice was because Moody now had a full-time government job (as Recorder of Deeds), as opposed to his prior part-time job with the Cook County Board. Id. (“in light of his [Moody’s] assumption of a full-time executive position, that he ought to pull back on his extra work with ComEd”). This testimony was false. As an initial matter, Ed Moody had a full-time job that Madigan helped obtain with the Circuit Court of Cook County from 1993 to 2016, as Madigan acknowledged during cross examination. And Madigan’s claim that McClain was merely asking for “advice” makes no sense. McClain was clearly asking for instruction from Madigan. GX248 (“Do you want us to keep going with Ed Moody” and “Do you want me to call Ed and tell him?”) In both instances, Madigan gave instructions to McClain, demonstrating his knowledge of and control over the subcontractor arrangement.

    • On direct examination, Madigan testified that his motivation for recommending people for jobs was to help people who came to the 13th Ward office in need. Madigan testified that he viewed it as part of his job as a legislator and as Speaker to help people, including with jobs. Madigan’s testimony on direct glaringly omitted any mention that in return for finding employment, Madigan expected certain of those individuals to do political work for Madigan. On cross-examination, Madigan was confronted with an interview he gave on this topic in 2009 (GX1) and acknowledged that he used his governmental position to help find jobs for people with the expectation that some of those people would do unpaid political work for Madigan in return. Madigan’s true motivations for finding jobs for his associates demonstrated why Madigan wanted to secure payments for people like Ed Moody and Ray Nice at ComEd and how that work personally benefitted Madigan. Madigan’s attempt to hide his motivation from the jury was an attempt to falsely deny the bribery charges.

    • As another example, Madigan acknowledged helping Kathy Laski finding a job during his direct examination and testified that he met her at a block party. Madigan failed to mention during direct that Laski’s husband had been alderman of the 23rd Ward, which was part of Madigan’s legislative district.

    • Madigan repeatedly lied when he attempted to minimize his relationship with McClain. As just one example, when asked during cross-examination by McClain’s attorney about the repeated times that Madigan went to McClain for help with problems, Madigan testified that he asked for McClain’s help on “some of them, but not all.” Tr. 8856. Madigan refused to admit that he “regularly” asked McClain to help with problems, stating only that “some” problems were “submitted” to McClain. Id. Madigan’s testimony was in stark contrast to the many emails and calls admitted into evidence that showed Madigan relying on McClain to solve sensitive problems for him (including having McClain talk to legislators who served under Madigan) and make numerous job requests on his behalf.

    • Madigan lied when he denied having told Cousineau to round up the final votes necessary to pass FEJA. Tr. 1637-39, with Tr. 8662. Madigan’s denial stood in stark contrast to the evidence, as discussed above, that corroborated Cousineau’s account.

Discuss.

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Illinois Head Start Association, others sue Trump administration

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Illinois Head Start Association, along with several other Head Start associations from across the country, filed a lawsuit against the federal government late Monday over its plans to eliminate the early childhood development programs nationwide.

The suit alleges the executive branch has disregarded congressional budget extensions, which had allocated funding to the programs through September, as well as the Head Start Act, which has required the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to allocate at least as much funding for Head Start programs as the year before.

It also cites improved economic and health outcomes for children and families who participate in the program and warns of the damage if programs close amid the uncertainty of funding.

“[The federal government’s] actions disrupt — and are designed to disrupt — the ability of Head Start agencies to provide quality service to children and parents,” the suit reads. “They are part and parcel of Defendants’ unlawful policy of winding down the Head Start program without Congressional approval.”

* From the lawsuit

On March 14, 2025 the Administration for Children and Families within HHS issued a letter implementing the President’s ban on “DEI.” The letter threatened funding consequences for agencies that “promote” or “take part” in any “diversity, equity, annd inclusion initiatives.” […]

Illinois HSA members received conflicting responses when they requested guidance about how to comply with the March 14 DEI Ban. Some members were told that their program Specialists could not discuss it. Some members were advised to delete words like “diversity,” “equity,” “inclusion,” and “accessibility” from their renewal applications but to otherwise leave the substance of the programs the same. And other members were instructed to remove entire sections of their applications-such as anti-bias training, and a program goal aimed at addressing marginalization of underrepresented groups in the workplace — and resubmit them. […]

[A] Program Specialist instructed an Illinois agency to remove “non-English speaker” as a selection criteria for participants, yet ensuring access to such participants is how the program complies with its obligation to “welcome children from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds” and to offer “limited English proficient children” “culturally and linguistically appropriate instructional services.”

* LA Times

The lawsuit, filed in the Western District of Washington, also alleged that the administration’s directive to strip the program of diversity, equity and inclusion efforts is “unconstitutionally vague,” violates the free speech of its teachers and does not provide enough guidance for providers to know what must be done to avoid losing federal funding. […]

Head Start, which has provided child care, health screenings and meals to millions of low-income children since its founding in 1965, has faced multiple disruptions since the start of President Trump’s term. Centers faced funding delays after an executive order temporarily froze federal aid in January, causing some providers to struggle to meet payroll and others to shutter temporarily. Then, scores of federal Head Start workers were laid off in February, followed by the closure of five of 12 regional offices in April, including the Region 9 office, which oversees California.

Most recently, a leaked draft of the budget proposal for the Department of Health and Human Services revealed the department’s proposal to totally defund Head Start by 2026. The budget proposal must be approved by Congress.

“We know what this administration’s goal is — they’ve told us,” said ACLU Women’s Rights Project attorney Jennesa Calvo-Friedman, who is lead counsel in the case. “It’s to terminate the Head Start program. We are seeing them already take steps to do that.”

* Back to the lawsuit

In Illinois, roughly 28,000 children are currently enrolled in Head Start. Of those, 14.3 percent are children with disabilities; 3.8 percent are children in foster care; and 7.9 percent are children experiencing homelessness. Nearly two-thirds are children of color, with 41 percent identifying as Black and 36 percent identifying as Hispanic. They live in communities ranging from Chicago, the third largest city in the country, to rural farming areas. To meet these widely and richly diverse needs, Illinois HSA members offer an equally wide array of services, including initiatives focusing on school-readiness for Black boys (which has recently been discontinued); English language learning and job placement resources for immigrant parents; on-site health clinics and food pantries; and regular staff training to reduce bias and improve equitable access to all Head Start services. […] Illinois Head Start agencies employ over 8,700 residents.

* Related…

    * WBEZ | With Head Start preschool on Trump’s chopping block, parents warn of impact on kids: According to the AP, the draft says: “The budget does not fund Head Start” which is consistent with the Trump administration’s “goals of returning control of education to the states and increasing parental control. The federal government should not be in the business of mandating curriculum, locations and performance standards for any form of education.”

    * Chalkbeat Chicago | Illinois Head Start providers worry about the future as Trump eyes potential cuts: Blythe and other Head Start providers in Illinois are concerned about the future of the 60- year-old federal program that serves children from birth to 5. Almost $500 million flowed from the federal government directly to Illinois Head Start providers during fiscal year 2024, according to the Illinois Head Start Association.

    * RiverBender | Riverbend Head Start Joins Illinois Campaign to Save Funding: Riverbend Head Start & Family Services (RHSFS) is teaming up with the Illinois Head Start Association (IHSA) in their #SaveHeadStart advocacy campaign. Head Start locations throughout the state will take part in the “For the People, By the People” photo series, which willhighlight the people and programs that keep Head Start running in our communities. The series will roll out in the coming weeks on social media and the web. The #SaveHeadStart series and other advocacy efforts are in response to an April 16th article in the Washington Post indicating that the White House’s 2026 budget proposal would eliminate funding for Head Start altogether.

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It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

After more than a decade of negotiations and failed efforts to reduce the use of plastics, Illinois lawmakers are considering legislation that would prohibit large retailers from offering single-use plastic bags and ban the use of most” polystyrene containers in the state over the next four to five years.

Advocates, citing the threat of rising plastic waste to human and environmental health, say the timing for the bills is ripe given rising health concerns about microplastics and the passage of similar legislation in states like New Jersey and California. Retailers also support the measures, calling the requirements balanced and flexible, according to a statement from the Illinois Retail Merchants Association. […]

In addition, some labor unions, including the Illinois Pipe Trades Association and AFL-CIO, oppose the move to do away with foam food containers. Manufacturers have expressed concerns the measures could lead to thousands of layoffs if the facilities that make the banned products are forced to shut down as their in-state customer base disappears.

Two bills are awaiting a vote in the state Senate. One measure would use financial penalties under the jurisdiction of the attorney general and local state’s attorney offices to restrict the sale or distribution of disposable containers made of polystyrene — known by the brand name Styrofoam — with the exception of egg cartons, starting in January 2030. The other bill would prohibit retailers with more than a dozen stores from offering or making available single-use checkout bags by January 2029.

* WGLT

With hate crimes rising across Illinois in the last five years, lawmakers are considering a bill that would allow people to sue if they receive threatening flyers on private property due to protected identity characteristics.

Democratic state Rep. Sharon Chung jumped on the bill as a co-sponsor after Bloomington-Normal faced its own incident recently with antisemitic flyers from white supremist groups. […]

While it has gained support, opponents say the bill’s language is vague and could be weaponized to hurt certain groups such as student protesters and activists.

The National Lawyers Guild Chicago opposed the bill in a statement.

“This legislation raises significant concerns regarding free speech rights and is ripe for potential misuse,” the organization wrote, “If passed, this legislation would deter Illinoisans from engaging in First Amendment protected activity. While attacks on free speech are always concerning, this bill is particularly troubling given the attacks on our democracy the U.S. is currently facing from the Trump administration.”

* KWQC

A new bill in Illinois would try and protect elderly people from scams by putting more power in the hands of financial advisors.

If passed, financial planners would have the power to slow down or freeze transactions that they fear are scams.

Though Democrats passed the bill through the state senate, some are concerned that this could create a liability nightmare for financial institutions.

“There’s already plenty of examples of how that system is in place and could be improved upon, but this isn’t one of them and it sets every organization up, that this bill impacts for severe liability,” Republican State Sen. Jason Plummer said.

* WAND

State lawmakers could pass multiple insurance reform proposals before session ends next month, but researchers believe Illinois should be cautious about overregulation. […]

Lynne McChristian runs the UIUC Office of Risk Management & Insurance Research. McChristian told WAND News Monday that insurers employ nearly 160,000 people across the state and provide benefits for consumers when they face life challenges.

“With insurance, you pay it forward for what you think might happen in the year ahead of the six months ahead,” McChristian said. “Planning for that takes a lot of variables, a lot of planning, and also a great deal of caution.”

Senators could discuss a bill this week to require insurance companies seek approval from the state for any homeowner or auto insurance rate increases, with a cap of 15% per year unless justified. Yet, Senate Bill 268 would also ban insurers from using credit scores or occupation to set premiums.

McChristian said Illinois should look at the unintended consequences states like California and Washington faced after implementing similar policies.

* Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea and Sen. Robert Peters

Every morning, hundreds of thousands of Illinois workers clock in with a simple expectation: to return home safe. But across our state, that basic right is under attack. […]

Last month, the Trump administration’s Robert F. Kennedy Jr. took a sledgehammer to worker safety by gutting the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) — laying off more than 1,000 employees, shuttering research centers, and stalling life-saving rules. This isn’t “trimming the fat.” It is a direct assault on the American workers who rely on these agencies to enforce safety standards to ensure that they return home to their loved ones after a hard day’s work. […]

That’s why we’re fighting back with SB1976, the Illinois Workers’ Rights and Worker Safety Act. This bill ensures that no matter what reckless decisions are made in by the Trump administration, Illinois will uphold the hard-fought federal workplace protections that have existed for decades. More than that, it allows our state to raise the bar on safety, not lower it.

Here’s the truth: a safe job isn’t a luxury. It’s a right. And when that right is stripped away, working people die. Illinois can lead the nation by saying no to dangerous deregulation and yes to real, enforceable worker protections.

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Repeal IFPA Now

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Casey Martin, CEO of Midwest Coalition of Labor CU:
IFPA Will Harm our Members and our Communities.
“My members are going to come to me to explain something I don’t understand.”
Stop the Chaos for Our Hard-Working Union Members!

Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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Open thread

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  16 Comments      


Misguided Insurance Regulation Proposals Could Increase Premiums For The Majority Of Illinoisans

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Several bills proposed this legislative session seek to ban certain factors that insurance companies use to set fair and accurate insurance pricing for customers. The bills would ban the use of credit-based insurance scores, zip codes, age, and gender in insurance pricing.

An op-ed published recently in the Chicago Tribune explains why such bans could cause insurance rates to rise for the majority of consumers.

Case in point: When the use of credit was banned in Washington in 2021, more than 60 percent of Washington drivers saw an increase in their insurance premiums. Should similar legislation pass in Illinois, the majority of Illinoisans with better-than-average credit could see premium increases.

With stubbornly high inflation and high property taxes, now is not the time to pass bills that could end up hiking insurance premiums for most Illinoisans.

Click here to learn more.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers were briefed on the mayor’s visit this morning. ICYMI: With big problems and modest requests, Mayor Johnson heads to Springfield hoping to break losing streak. Sun-Times

    - Mayor Brandon Johnson wants to revive a tax on prepaid cellphones and calling cards, extend the $5-a-month 911 surcharge, ratchet up funding for the city’s unified shelter system and improve reimbursement rates for transportation, bilingual education and special education services provided by the Chicago Public Schools.
    - “He’s coming down rather late. Time is ticking. You would hope to have these requests earlier in the session,” state Rep. Anna Moeller, D-Elgin, said.
    - Johnson is expected to meet Wednesday with Pritzker, Harmon and Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch.

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


Sponsored by the Illinois Pharmaceutical Reform Alliance

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

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker dismisses as ‘ridiculous’ GOP accusations he urged violence in New Hampshire speech: Gov. JB Pritzker on Monday rejected accusations from Republicans — including the state party and the White House — that he was inciting violence with a fiery speech in New Hampshire in which he said Republicans shouldn’t “know a moment of peace.” “That’s ridiculous,” Pritzker said at an unrelated news conference when asked about the GOP response to his speech. “The peace that I’m talking about is making sure that they know at all times that the American public opposes the policies of congressional Republicans and of the White House.”

* AP | Authorities believe crash through Illinois after-school building that killed 4 wasn’t targeted: Authorities said Tuesday they believe a crash through an Illinois after-school building that killed three kids and one teenager wasn’t targeted. A car traveled through a field, then smashed through a building in a small city of Chatham outside Springfield, Illinois, on Monday afternoon. In an update Tuesday morning, police said two 7-year-olds, an 8-year-old and an 18-year-old were killed. Six more children were taken to hospitals and one remains in critical condition. The Illinois driver, who was not injured, was taken to a hospital for evaluation and police said toxicology reports were pending. Police haven’t said if the driver was arrested or taken into custody.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Information of more than 9,000 people potentially exposed in Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois data breach: The personal information of more than 9,300 people may have been exposed in a recent data breach at health insurer Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois, according to the company. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois became aware of the problem in February, according to a notice posted on its website. An unauthorized person may have viewed individuals’ personal health information through the insurer’s online portal for members, called Blue Access for Members, between Nov. 8 and March 5, according to the notice. The breach was related to member account registrations, according to Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois.

* Crain’s | Advocate doctors to drop Blue Cross Illinois HMO plan: “Advocate Physician Partners has informed us that Advocate Physician Partners, including Advocate Medical Group, will be leaving BCBSIL’s HMO Illinois network on July 1, 2025,” BCBSIL said in an emailed statement. “This change does not impact Advocate Health hospitals or other facilities, which will remain in the HMO Illinois network.” “HMO Illinois members can select a new medical group in the Blues plans’s HMOI network by May 31, or they will be assigned to a new medical group effective July 1,” the statement said.

* Sun-Times | Tariffs, funding cuts and migrant raids — how Trump hit Chicago and Illinois in his first 100 days in office: Gov. JB Pritzker has loudly sounded the alarm on the impacts of the Trump administration’s actions, including in late January when he said the administration was “either lying to us or they are critically incompetent” — amid a directive to temporarily freeze federal grants and loans pending a spending analysis aimed at rooting out “wokeness.” Since then, Pritzker has toured the state to highlight Trump cuts to healthcare, child care, infrastructure and Social Security. On Monday, the Democratic governor continued that message at the University of Illinois at Chicago to highlight what he called a “slash and burn” campaign affecting higher education.

* Daily Herald | ‘The drunk driving of our time’: Teens must now watch distracted driving video to get learner’s permit: “Make no mistake, distracted driving is an epidemic in America. It is the drunk driving of our time,” Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias said last week while announcing the “One Road. One Focus” public safety campaign. The campaign will include requiring teens watch the video when applying for a learner’s permit, as well as billboards warning about the consequences of taking your eyes off the road and more police patrols.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson hesitant on giving police ‘snap’ teen curfew power: Mayor Brandon Johnson wavered Monday on the idea of giving Chicago police the power to declare “snap” curfews to rein in so-called teen takeovers, days before aldermen are set to consider such a measure. Johnson sidestepped questions about how he will respond to the curfew push led by Ald. Brian Hopkins in the wake of two recent high-profile, large teen gatherings that ended in shootings. The mayor pointed to ongoing negotiations, but did not say what he wants to see enacted.

* Block Club | Violent Crime Down In Chicago, Matching National Trend, City Leaders Say: Mayor Brandon Johnson and Chicago Police Department Supt. Larry Snelling are touting a decline in violent crime this year in Chicago, a shift that comes as cities across the country have seen a reduction in homicides and other crimes since a post-pandemic spike. Flanked by fellow mayors and police chiefs Monday morning at a Chicago meeting of the U.S. Conference of Mayors that focused on public safety, Johnson and Snelling broadly argued that city and department initiatives — such as a robbery task force introduced last year — have contributed to the city reporting fewer crimes in most categories so far in 2025.

* Sun-Times | West Side flood victims still struggling with mold, damage almost 2 years on: Shaw, 43, said she has been helping people with flood damage since the storm hit July 3, 2023, leading to more than 12,000 reports of flooded basements. First she helped people through the process as part of the West Side Long Term Recovery Group, created after the flooding. Now she volunteers her time to guide seniors through the red tape. “It’s been one headache after another,” Shaw said. […] She said the initial payouts from the FEMA program were not enough, averaging around $3,000 to $4,000. She shared news that FEMA has allocated an additional $426 million for victims of the 2023 and 2024 floods in and around Chicago.

* Tribune | Funeral services to honor fallen Chicago Fire Department Capt. David Meyer scheduled for this morning in Niles: Meyer, 54, served as a captain of Truck 29 and spent most of his roughly three-decade career on the West Side. He is survived by his wife, four children and his parents, according to his obituary, which noted that “his devotion to his family was known to all who met him.” Around 4 a.m. Wednesday, Meyer responded to a garage fire in the 5500 block of West Crystal Street. The fire was extinguished, but Meyer was critically injured when the roof of the garage collapsed on top of him as he was working.

* Block Club | West Loop Neighbors Demand ‘Justice For John’ After Beloved Doorman Shot Dead By CTA Worker: John Flemister was fatally shot outside the UIC CTA station by a worker who didn’t have a concealed carry license, officials said. The worker wasn’t charged with Flemister’s death. “We feel like there’s a one-sided story being told,” one resident said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Recommended for discipline, Kane County cop who muted his cameras amid car chase, fatal shooting is promoted: Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain has promoted an officer who just two weeks ago was publicly criticized by the area’s top prosecutor for turning off the audio of his squad camera and bodycam during a car chase that ended in the fatal shooting of the suspect by police. Kane County State’s Attorney Jamie Mosser said at an April 11 news conference there would be no charges against the three cops who fired on James Moriarty on May 24, 2023, killing him after a high-speed chase and crash in the far western suburbs.

* WSPY | Elburn trustee Lou Santoyo enters Kane County Sheriff race: Retired Cook County Sheriff’s Police Detective and Elburn Village Trustee Lou Santoyo has officially launched his campaign for Kane County Sheriff. At a campaign kick-off event last week in downtown Aurora, Santoyo said his goal is to restore the trust and honor behind the badge, not just wear one. He emphasized that law enforcement should be built on trust, not fear. […] He’s running as a Republican in the 2026 election.

* Daily Herald | Mundelein Mayor Steve Lentz honored as he prepares to leave office: Lentz presided over his last full village board meeting Monday night. A tribute video — featuring testimonials from family members, former trustees and others — played on the boardroom’s TV screens before Trustee Tim Wilson read a resolution lauding Lentz for his service. Wilson spoke of Lentz’s “extraordinary service, vision and commitment, which have improved the lives of countless residents.” Additionally, Mayor-elect Robin Meier thanked Lentz for educating her about the job and creating a smooth transition. She takes office May 12.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Metro-east school district moves toward restrictive cell phone policy:Currently, Collinsville High School students may use devices in the classroom for educational purposes with teacher permission, during passing periods, before school and at lunch. At its May meeting, the Collinsville Community Unit School District 10 board might change this policy, requiring that high school students have their cell phones off and put away during instructional time and passing periods.

* SJ-R | With more backing from county, Massey Commission has familiar name as assistant managing director: Sontae Massey, a cousin of Sonya Massey, a Black woman who was fatally shot by a former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy in her home in an unincorporated neighborhood of Springfield on July 6, is now assistant managing director after previously serving on the commission. The commission has become “a forum for analysis and inquiry into the systems and conditions” that serve as context for Massey’s killing as well as others who have suffered at the hands of first responders in the county.

* Crain’s | U of I faculty votes to joins Big Ten alliance to defend against Trump attacks: Faculty at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign adopted a resolution today to join a mutual defense pact with other Big Ten schools as a way to blunt the Trump administration’s aggressive posture toward higher education. U of I is the first university in Illinois to join the Big Ten mutual defense pact, which has now been adopted by a growing list of Big Ten universities as faculty push to create a unified front to defend academic freedoms against the Trump administration’s attacks.

* ABC Chicago | University of Illinois shares class of 2024 success rates report: The new report found that 90% of graduates were employed before leaving campus last year. […] Ninety-one percent of graduates who found jobs participated in an internship of some kind or studied abroad, according to the study. Also, the average salary for an Illinois graduate was $75,000 last year, with a $5,000 signing bonus, according to the report.

* Photos: PJ Star | McClugage Bridge truss falls in nighttime implosion

*** National ***

* NPR | The White House threatens sanctuary cities in another EO, but courts are skeptical: The Trump administration has previously tried to withhold funding from sanctuary cities and states. During President Trump’s first term, the Justice Department tried to withhold funding from several jurisdictions — but they fought back, and were often able to defeat those efforts in court. […] Last week, a federal judge blocked the administration’s latest effort to withhold funding from 16 jurisdictions, including San Francisco, Portland, Seattle, Minneapolis, St. Paul and New Haven. “Here we are again,” wrote U.S. District Judge William Orrick in San Francisco, who found that the Trump administration’s actions were likely unconstitutional and granted a preliminary injunction.

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