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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Governor JB Pritzker put out a statement late last night on Trump’s tariff plan…

“Trump’s Tax on Working Families will have a devastating impact on Illinois’ manufacturing and agriculture sectors and will hurt hardworking Illinoisans at the grocery store checkout, on their utility bills, and at the gas pump. I have spent the past few weeks talking with farmers, manufacturers, and even breweries who have been preparing to reduce production and raise prices – actions that may have ripple effects for supply chains in Illinois and across the country. 
 
“Donald Trump swore to bring down costs on Day One. Instead, he’s taxing working families while embarrassing America on the world stage. I will be staying in close contact with representatives from Canada and Mexico to emphasize Illinois’ commitment to an ongoing trade partnership, and I will not stop fighting to ensure Illinoisans get a fair deal for our economy and our families.”
 
Governor Pritzker has repeatedly spoken out against the planned tariff increases. Last month, he met with Illinois agricultural leaders to identify how Trump’s Tax on Working Families will impact the Illinois beef, corn, pork, and soybean industries. Illinois is the nation’s third largest exporter of agricultural products and relies on these industries for employment and economic stability.
 
Trade is an anchor of the Illinois economy with state trade exports supporting 800,000 jobs across the state. Illinois’s top trading partners are Canada and Mexico, so Governor Pritzker has also held conversations with the Consul General of Mexico in Chicago and the Canadian Ambassador to the U.S. to affirm his commitment to maintaining a positive trade relationship with both countries.
 
Under Governor Pritzker’s leadership, the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) has supported more than 1,600 company trade missions to grow export sales – creating nearly 3,000 new jobs and retaining 9,000 jobs. For every $1 the State of Illinois has invested in its trade and export program, company sales generate a $253 return on investment.
 
More information about Illinois’ trade with other countries can be found here.

* NBC Chicago

Canada is one of Illinois’ biggest sources of oil and gas products, with more than $47 billion worth of those products imported each year, according to state data.

The imposition of tariffs could cause gas prices to rise, and could also impact heating bills.

Illinois’ primary import from Mexico are alcohol and tobacco products, with the state bringing in nearly $6 billion worth of those products each year.

Homeowners could also be hit hard with increased costs for electrical equipment and appliances, with the state importing nearly $2 billion worth of those products form Mexico each year.

* Illinois Farm Bureau President Brian Duncan…

“Illinois Farm Bureau urges President Trump to honor the USMCA, which was successfully negotiated during his last term, and to find other methods to combat illegal drugs and secure our border. We remain deeply concerned with the use of tariffs and their potential to spark retaliation on America’s farmers. Illinois farmers’ products – from grains and feed, corn, soybeans, ethanol, beef, pork, and more – rely on access to foreign markets and will undoubtedly be impacted by these new tariffs either through increased prices or decreased market access. This uncertainty coupled with an already struggling farm economy has farmers worried as we head into planting season.”

Illinois is the third largest exporter of agricultural commodities in the U.S. Total exports from Illinois in 2023 were estimated at $81 billion, of which $13.7 billion was attributed to agriculture.

According to the USDA Global Agricultural Trade System (GATS), in 2024 Illinois accounted for over $12.4 billion of agricultural product exports, including $3.6 billion worth of products to Mexico ($2.5 billion) and Canada ($2.1 billion). Similarly, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce, in 2024 Illinois accounted for over $784 million in agricultural product imports, including $542 million worth of products from Canada ($314 million) and Mexico ($228 million).

* FYI: Cafe Moxo is having a grand reopening at its new location this Saturday. Click here for more info.

*** Statehouse News ***

* ProPublica | Amid Increasing Domestic Violence, Illinois Struggles to Review Fatalities: In a near-unanimous vote, they passed legislation designed to blunt the trend. The state would establish a network of panels to review killings related to domestic violence and identify whether existing strategies for preventing them fell short. But since then the state has made only meager progress in implementing the plans laid out in that law, and the number of domestic violence killings continues to increase.

* Journal Courier | Illinois invests $15M in Polish bonds for portfolio diversification: The Republic of Poland bonds were purchased to diversify the state’s portfolio and achieve stable returns from a strong investment, he said. The bonds will mature in four years with an interest rate of 4.625% and a current yield of 4.831%.

* Public health expert joins UI Board of Trustees: The University of Illinois Board of Trustees seat vacated by former Chair Don Edwards is set to be filled by public health expert Suzet McKinney. Gov. J.B. Pritzker appointed McKinnney, who has served as principal and director of life sciences at Sterling Bay, CEO and executive director of the Illinois Medical District and deputy commissioner of Public Health Preparedness and Emergency Response at the Chicago Department of Public Health.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Trump seeks to put 443 federal properties up for sale — including 11 in Chicago: In total, the structures represent almost 80 million rentable square feet (7.4 million square meters) of usable space — 12 times the size of the Pentagon. The GSA estimates that selling them could save more than $430 million in annual operating costs, a key focus for Trump and his efforts to reduce government spending. The president is expected to address a joint session of Congress later Tuesday.

* WBEZ | Chicago Teachers Union pushes petition drive as strike threat looms: The Chicago Teachers Union will deliver a stack of petitions to the Board of Education Wednesday that leaders say will show there is widespread member support to keep pushing on five key issues, but the union is holding off on a vote to authorize a strike. Nearly a year into negotiations between CTU and Chicago Public Schools, the legal process that must be undertaken before a strike is called is almost complete. A month ago, the union rejected an independent fact finders report after which they could issue a strike authorization at any time, but still had to wait 30 days to actually call a strike. The 30 days are up on Friday.

* WGN | Chicago small business owners concerned over Trump’s tariffs on Mexican imports: Mexico is the third largest importer of goods for Illinois, bringing in an estimated $18 billion dollars in 2023. The talk of tariffs comes at a time when business owners say Mexican brands were beginning to recover from the pandemic. […] Meanwhile, the Illinois Hispanic Chamber of Commerce is tasked with easing consumers and conglomerates as they attempt to build more Mexican investment in Illinois. WGN Investigates’ Lourdes Duarte spoke with one business owner who laid out what it means for Illinois.

* Tribune | Effort to house Gompers Park homeless moving forward, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration says: City officials laid out their plan Tuesday for an “accelerated moving event” at the Northwest Side park where people have lived in tents for months. The delayed effort’s “north star” is to get the encampment’s 29 residents into permanent housing, but the city will not be asking people to leave, Chief Homelessness Officer Sendy Soto said. “We want to ensure that they are receiving the services and that this does not feel like a displacement for them, but rather receiving a benefit and an opportunity,” Soto said.

* Block Club Chicago | Chicago’s Most Endangered Buildings 2025: Delaware Building, Darrow Bridge And More: A bridge named for legendary attorney Clarence Darrow, one of Chicago’s oldest post-fire towers and a landmark house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright are among this year’s “most endangered” properties, local preservationists announced Tuesday. Preservation Chicago released its annual “7 Most Endangered” list Tuesday, coinciding with Chicago’s 188th birthday. The nonprofit has updated the list annually since 2003, highlighting significant local buildings most threatened by neglect or impending demolition.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Two write-in candidates create contested race for District 211 school board election: The declaration of two write-in candidates has made the Palatine-Schaumburg High School District 211 board of education election on April 1 contested for the first time since two different candidates were removed from the ballot in December. Violetta Flis of Hanover Park and Natasha Mucci of Palatine met the filing deadline to be considered valid write-in candidates, the Cook County Clerk’s office confirmed Tuesday. Flis’ name appears as Wioletta Myskal-Flis on the write-in candidacy paperwork filed with the clerk.

* Daily Southtown | Attendance doubles for Palos Heights Library’s Ramadan story hour: Rashid said library director Jesse Blazek and staff embraced her events when she suggested them. But Rashid said a goal was to make children happy. “I love when I see children happy,” said Rashid, who has three sons, ages 8, 13 and 16 and lives in Palos Park. It was also good to see their community, growing, she said. While 30 people attended the story hour last year, there were 65 this time.

* Pioneer Press | Northbrook, Glenview candidate forums set for March 13, 16 for April 1 election: The League of Women Voters of Glenview-Glencoe has announced the dates of candidate forums that will take place prior to the April 1 consolidated election in the Chicago suburbs. Voters will elect mayors, trustees, school district board members, park district commissioners, library board members, township officials and officials of some other local offices.

*** Downstate ***

* WTVO | Winnebago County Juvenile Center recognized for sexual abuse prevention:
The Juvenile Detention Center becomes the fourth out of fifteen facilities in Illinois to receive recognition from the federal government. […] Over the last six months, detention center staff worked to bring the facility in line with federal requirements, including enhancing PREA signage, improving PREA investigation forms used during inquiries, developing and implementing a direct supervision staffing schedule, providing resident education on PREA, conducting training for both residents and staff on PREA, and increasing accessibility to reporting channels and PREA procedures for residents.

* Rockford Register Star | What next for set of Rockford office, retail buildings purchased in $8M deal?: An Oklahoma City real estate investor said he chose Rockford for his latest acquisition of office space because it is a safe investment untouched by inflationary pricing and remains in demand. Mason Ghaniabadi of Spark Properties Group said that with the properties already at 80 to 90% occupancy, he is not planning major renovations. Ghaniabad acquired the Rockford-based Fridh Corp.’s portfolio of five Rockford office and commercial buildings.

* WCIA | Decatur City Council tables massage parlor ordinance discussion: The City of Decatur is looking to explore new requirements and regulations for massage parlors. It’s after similar measures were enforced in Springfield last month, which resulted in 11 parlors shutting down after not following new guidelines. The proposed ordinance would look to establish rules on preventing illicit activities within massage parlors. Although nothing illegal has happened in a Decatur parlor, officials say it’s meant as a preventative measure.

*** National ***

* WGN | Shoeless Joe Jackson’s personal scrapbooks hit auction: The first scrapbook has a leather back cover with the front cover missing. There are about 118 pages in the scrapbook that contain various newspaper articles, box scores, summaries of baseball games and photographs of Jackson mounted to the pages, which are filled with various, mostly pre-1920s newspaper articles on Jackson.

* WaPo | Senate blocks ban on transgender athletes, as Trump pushes forward: The Senate on Monday blocked legislation that would have banned transgender girls and women from competing in female sports in elementary school through college. But even without a new law, the Trump administration is advancing the cause, opening investigations and notching victories, particularly in college sports. The vote was 51-45. The bill needed 60 yes votes on the Senate floor to overcome a Democratic filibuster and advance. That required at least seven Democrats to vote yes; none did.

* WaPo | RFK Jr.’s focus on vitamin A for measles worries health experts: Kennedy, who in his years as an anti-vaccine activist criticized measles shots and boosted vitamin A as a treatment, is now using his government position to tout the vitamin’s accepted benefits. The Department of Health and Human Services has directed the nation’s top public health agency to add similar language to its guidance for caring for measles patients.

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Legislature’s COGFA predicts lower revenues than governor’s budget office

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability released a report today noting differences between its revenue forecasts and the forecasts used by the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget

By removing the estimated $492 million in revenue adjustments proposed in the FY 2026 Budget Book, GOMB’s FY 2026 General Funds revenue forecast would be reduced from $55.453 billion to approximately $54.961 billion. However, the Commission’s FY 2026 estimate of $54.224 billion would still be $737 million lower than this “current law” adjusted figure, a difference of -1.3%.

• The primary differences between the adjusted GOMB estimate and the CGFA estimate are in the “big three” revenue sources. The Commission is taking a more cautious approach in its outlook for the Personal Income Tax [$414 million lower], the Corporate Income Tax [$370 million lower], and the Sales Tax [$187 million lower] in FY 2026 given the economic uncertainty related to potential federal changes, potential tariffs, and the volatile geopolitical climate.

• CGFA is slightly more optimistic in its outlook for All Other State Sources [$195 million higher] and Transfers In [$39 million higher]. CGFA adopts GOMB’s Federal Sources estimate due to its tie to anticipated spending.

* The current fiscal year’s revenue is also disputed

• The Commission estimates that the State of Illinois is on pace to reach and slightly surpass the $53.281 billion assumed revenue total for the enacted FY 2025 General Funds budget.

• While the Commission’s $333 million upward adjustment in FY 2025 to $53.614 billion is below GOMB’s recently revised increase of $619 million to $53.900 billion, the $286 million difference between the two forecasts is only 0.5% apart.

• If income tax revenues come in strong during the upcoming final tax period, and if other revenue sources, such as the sales tax, continue to improve, the Commission could potentially make another upward revision in May.

* Senate Republicans…

Today, the bipartisan, bicameral Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability (COGFA) released their updated revenue projections, painting Illinois Governor JB Pritzker’s budget as more than $1 billion out of balance.

“The independent COGFA numbers show the governor used aggressively inflated revenue projections to minimize the cuts or tax increases his budget would require to be balanced,” said Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove). “This is why it is absolutely necessary that the governor rein in the spending on unsustainable non-citizen programs and prioritize the taxpayers he was elected to represent.”

The COGFA revenue report projects state revenues for the next fiscal year at $740 million below the figures that the governor used in his recent budget address. When removing the governor’s proposed changes to state law, as required by statute, the total deficit increases to $1.2 billion.

It should be noted that the budget proposed by the governor was once again heavily dependent on theoretical policies and tax increases that have not been proposed or approved by the General Assembly.

“I would like to say that I’m shocked that the governor’s plan is so far out of whack, but the truth is that we’ve been saying this all along,” said Senate Republican Chief Budgeteer Chapin Rose (R-Mahomet). “Every year the governor tells us he’s passed another balanced budget, only to find out the next year how upside-down his spending plan really was.”

Worse yet, if the governor fails to follow through on his promise of cutting spending for noncitizen healthcare, the total projected deficit will grow to $1.6 billion.

“While the governor spends his days chasing national headlines doing interviews on anything but the state he was elected to manage, this new report shows that his fuzzy math budget is out of balance by over $1 billion,” said State Senator Don DeWitte (R-St. Charles). “This means he and his Democratic allies will either have to cut spending, increase taxes or both. It is time for the governor to take a break from the national stage and focus on the dire financial situation he has created by irresponsible spending in our state.”

The COGFA report also projects a deficit for the current fiscal year of roughly $525 million. If the projections hold true, that would mean that the state has to cover a half a billion dollars of money for the previous year, before even dealing with the next fiscal year.

* From Alex Gough in the governor’s office…

Senate Republicans are living in a different world than hardworking families who are dealing with high costs that they are doing nothing to address. Governor Pritzker has proposed and passed six balanced budgets – all of which produced surpluses.

The Governor’s budget team has been clear with the legislature that Donald Trump and Republicans are creating national economic uncertainty from tariffs that are a tax on working families to reckless cuts to federal programs that people rely upon. The Governor’s budget team operates in reality and always uses the most up to date data available to us in our forecasts from outside firms like S&P. Instead of spreading falsehoods, I’d recommend they be transparent about their priorities and put together a budget proposal.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Some session stuff

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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A look at law enforcement concerns about Karina’s Law

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a Capitol News Illinois story after the governor signed Karina’s Law

House Bill 4144, also known as Karina’s Law, clarifies that local law enforcement must temporarily remove guns from a person who has an order of protection against them when the alleged victim successfully seeks firearm removal as a remedy in court.

Current law allows people asking a court for an order of protection to request a “firearm remedy” that would lead to law enforcement removing guns from the alleged abuser’s possession. Karina’s Law closes the loophole that made it unclear who was responsible for removing the gun from the situation.

Under the law, the person who seeks an order of protection can also ask the court to issue a search warrant that will allow local law enforcement to seize firearms from the alleged abuser. The petitioner or state’s attorney must demonstrate probable cause that the alleged abuser poses an immediate threat to the petitioner. Law enforcement would then be required to execute the warrant within 96 hours of it being issued.

“Taking lethal weapons from those who have already done harm and are an immediate and present danger to do further harm is simply common sense,” Pritzker said.

* Shaw Local’s Tom Collins interviewed several area law enforcement officials about enforcing the law. While they agreed that “temporarily disarming firearm owners charged with domestic violence is a worthwhile and a noble goal,” and that “Anything we as law enforcement can do to help protect victims will be welcome by our agency without question,” they had concerns about implementation

“The biggest concern is officer safety: You don’t know if the guy is standing behind the door ready to blow somebody away,” [La Salle County State’s Attorney Joe Navarro] said. “We have good officers, but we don’t always have good people who need their guns taken away.” […]

For La Salle County, that might not be a small number of warrants. La Salle County Circuit Court records about 250 domestic violence charges a year – a figure that does not include orders of protection filed in civil court – which could require police to seize dozens of firearms from suspects not keen on giving them up.

Susan Bursztynsky, executive director at Safe Journeys, which assists victims of domestic and sexual abuse, said not many victims request for firearms to be removed in an order of protection situation. […]

“We have a lot of domestics in Streator,” [Streator Police Chief John Franklin] said. “It’s going to seriously overtax our investigators and patrol officers to get these warrants, go into houses and retrieve these weapons.” […]

One possible solution is to persuade the domestic suspect to release his firearm not to police but to a friend or family member with a valid firearm owner’s ID card.

“We currently see this happen a lot when someone has their FOID or concealed carry permit revoked or suspended,” [Spring Valley Police Chief Adam Curran] said, “and I would anticipate this will occur with Karina’s law.”

Go read the rest.

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A month later, ICE still won’t reveal who it arrested in Chicago

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW

A man was detained outside a Chicago charter school Wednesday morning, apparently by agents with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, according to charter officials.

In a letter to families Wednesday, officials with the Acero charter school network said the individual was taken into custody by ICE agents.

An ICE spokesperson on Thursday confirmed its agents arrested 37-year-old Francisco Andrade-Berrera — whom they identified as a citizen of Mexico — without incident. ICE in its statement claimed Andrade-Berrera is “a known member of a violent street gang with criminal convictions for drug trafficking, gang loitering, and damage to property,” whom they said was previously “removed from the U.S. to his home country in 2005 and 2013.”

* But when it comes to providing records of all ICE arrests in Illinois and Chicago, journalists get the cold shoulder. Block Club Chicago

Over the last five weeks, Block Club submitted more than a dozen inquiries and records requests to ICE seeking basic information about the enforcement actions during the early days of Trump’s new administration.

The agency has not answered any of Block Club’s questions directly. It has also failed to produce even a summary of people it has rounded up or the charges they’ve faced.

On two occasions, ICE public affairs officials responded with promises to follow up later with information. They never did.

Another time, an ICE official emailed a written statement that didn’t answer any questions and included no information about the January arrests. Block Club’s follow-up questions were ignored.

* The Sun-Times in January

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement released little information about the people who were detained or why they were sought. Nationwide, ICE said 956 arrests were made Sunday. The Trump administration says it “removed” 7,300 people in its first week, “including hundreds of convicted criminals.” ICE averaged 311 daily national arrests through Sept. 30.

Bloomberg News reported that 260 people were targeted in the Chicago area on Sunday, although just seven had criminal arrest warrants.

* Last month, the Tribune was able to piece together where some immigration detainees were being held

[T]hough, precise information about who was swept up and why remains elusive, as federal officials have declined to release detailed information about raids in Chicago. And even though national data from the first few weeks of the Trump administration have begun to trickle in, an independent group that compiles the figures said in a news release Wednesday that its analysts found inconsistencies.

In a system where people can be detained with little public information available, rosters for out-of-state jails that hold many Chicago-area detainees offer one of the only glimpses of people taken into custody amid the heightened fear and uncertainty of the past several weeks.

Though they do not represent a complete picture, the jail logs, obtained by the Tribune via public records requests, present a rare, if narrow, window into a byzantine and opaque immigration system, where people can be detained and not go before a judge for weeks, or even months. In contrast, in Illinois’ criminal justice system, arrestees must go before a judge within 48 hours and police must make arrest reports with identifying information available within 72 hours. […]

Of the nearly 200 detainee names reviewed by the Tribune, about half could not be located with confidence in national databases or local public record searches. Some appeared linked to other states in the Midwest or across the country.

* More…

    * Aurora Beacon-News | Fear of ICE arrests keeping customers at home, immigrant-owned businesses in Aurora say: Of its nearly 180,000 residents, Aurora is more than 40% Hispanic, according to the most recent available census data, compared to 19% in Illinois and just under 30% in Chicago. Its population was just over 25% foreign-born from 2019-2023, compared to roughly 14% in Illinois and just over 20% in Chicago. In Aurora, Salmeron described a chilling effect from the Trump administration’s immigration policies. With a customer base made up of mostly Hispanic residents, some of whom are undocumented, he said his business and those around him are struggling to stay afloat.

    * Axios | DHS registration order affects 400,000 Illinoisans: Last week, the Trump administration ordered all undocumented people in the U.S. to register with the Department of Homeland Security or face criminal penalties. Why it matters: Illinois is home to an estimated 400,000 unauthorized immigrants whose presence here constitutes a civil, not criminal, violation. This order may force them to choose between criminal charges for not registering or registration followed by deportation. […] ICE officials have, so far, failed to show how many individuals they apprehended in Illinois during January raids had criminal records.

    * NPR | ICE is making more arrests, but critics say some claims don’t add up: ICE made a total of more than 113,000 arrests last year. The vast majority were “custodial” arrests, meaning the target was already in the custody of state or local officials. A far smaller number of the arrests that ICE makes are considered “at large.” But Noem’s statement doesn’t make any of that clear. It also doesn’t specify how many of the 20,000 arrests ICE made in February were considered “at large” arrests and how many were not, leaving immigration experts frustrated.

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What Is A Credit Union?

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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Caption contest!

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WICS meteorologist Matt Bednar in real time as lightning hit the Illinois state capitol during this morning’s broadcast


* A screenshot of the strike…



Caption?

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It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Stateline

Illinois state Sen. Mark Walker already was working on legislation to bolster the state’s protections for consumers. But now that President Donald Trump has attacked the federal government’s consumer watchdog, Walker said it’s even more important for Illinois to act.

Walker, a Democrat, sponsored a bill to bolster the state’s existing bank regulator to help fill the void left by weakening of the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which Trump and billionaire Elon Musk have targeted for elimination.

Congress created the independent agency in 2010 in response to fallout of the Great Recession, when many people lost their homes, jobs or savings. It takes up individual consumer complaints, aims to protect against unfair banking practices and helps educate consumers. Weeks into Trump’s second term, the administration shuttered the bureau’s office, dropped pending cases against companies and ordered employees to stop work. […]

Walker says the state attorney general and the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation have expertise in enforcing consumer protections. His bill, modeled after a previous successful effort in California, would give more authority to the state regulator to enforce state and federal consumer laws. But Illinois leaders already face a $3.2 billion budget deficit and are bracing for federal cuts to social service funding.

* The Illinois Primary Health Care Association…

As state legislators debate prescription drug reform this spring, the Illinois Primary Health Care Association, on behalf of Illinois’ 56 community health centers, is proposing legislation to end unnecessary and unfair restrictions on prescription drug discounts through the 340B program. During IPHCA’s annual lobby day at the Capitol, members from across the state will be discussing this vital program that benefits uninsured and low-income patients at no cost to taxpayers.

The proposed Illinois Patient Access to 340B Pharmacy Protection Act is Senate Bill 2385, sponsored by Sen. Dave Koehler, and House Bill 3350, sponsored by Rep. Anna Moeller.

Since the early 1990s, the federal 340B program has allowed participating community health centers to purchase drugs at steeply discounted rates from pharmaceutical manufacturers. Health centers then pass those savings onto their patients in two forms. First, the roughly 300,000 uninsured Illinoisans who receive their care at health centers can obtain medications at affordable prices. Second, for patients with healthcare coverage, savings are generated from insurer payments for patient drugs, that health centers are then required by federal law to reinvest back into unfunded or underfunded services and supports. Examples include providing free colonoscopies and mammograms, offering free transportation for medical appointments, and bringing mobile clinics closer to meet patients where they are.

Recently, pharmaceutical companies have imposed dangerous restrictions on the 340B program that hurt patients and the centers where they receive care. The Illinois Patient Access to 340B Pharmacy Protection Act legislation is modeled after efforts that have passed in eight other states, including Arkansas, which saw its law upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court.

The legislation has no cost through state or federal funding, but simply prohibits drug companies from prohibiting, restricting, or interfering with local pharmacies’ participation in 340B programs. Supporters say the change is simple and necessary to ensure 340B can continue to provide a lifeline for patients and the health centers that serve them.

* Center Square

The Illinois Department of Natural Resources says it’s going to take $19 million to restore Lincoln’s New Salem State Historic Site in Petersburg.

State Sen. Steve McClure’s Senate Bill 1496 appropriates $5 million to site improvements. McClure’s Senate Bill 1417 would set up the New Salem Preservation Commission to determine the true renovation cost. […]

IDNR awarded a Chicago-based construction company, Premier Contractors, Inc., nearly half a million dollars in 2021 to replace a roof at the Lincoln’s New Salem State Historic Site. The Capital Development Board’s database shows $447,000 of taxpayer funds went toward a roof replacement.

But of the several other buildings on the historic location, McClure said one roof is “caved in.”

* IPM Newsroom

Champaign-Urbana will benefit most from the People Over Parking Act, according to Adani Sanchez, a volunteer for the statewide advocacy group Abundant Housing Illinois.

The bill would prevent local governments from enforcing minimum parking requirements on a development project within half a mile from a public transit stop.

Right now, every housing unit that’s built in Champaign County is required to have its own parking spot for every two hundred square feet of floor area. But for many people who don’t have a car, these parking spots aren’t necessary, and they take up space that could be used to construct more housing.

“The measure would mean that housing developers would not be given an arbitrary number of parking spots to build, but rather “can decide for themselves what the market need is,” Sanchez said. “This is going to be another way to encourage people to use the transit that we already have.”

* WGLT

State Rep. Sharon Chung of Bloomington is pushing a bill to expand the reach of the community’s wastewater treatment facilities to boost economic development.

Chung said she would like to see the Bloomington-Normal Water Reclamation District accept wastewater from a 50-mile radius and sell treated water to any private entity in McLean County.

This would amend a more than 100-year-old law that allowed only Decatur to send treated wastewater and receive wastewater for treatment within a 50-mile radius to the private sector. [….]

Chung said the new bill would help the community save on drinking water, as it wouldn’t have to put as much of it into construction and other projects.

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Open thread

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

A last-minute provision called the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act (IFPA) was snuck into the budget process last May and will create chaos for small businesses and consumers across Illinois if it takes effect on July 1, 2025.

The IFPA gives corporate mega-stores like Walmart and Home Depot — who pushed for this backroom deal — millions more in profits, while small business owners get new expenses and accounting headaches. What’s more, consumers could be forced to pay for parts of their transactions in cash if this law moves forward.

A recent court ruling in the litigation challenging the law suggests IFPA is likely pre-empted by federal law for national banks and will only apply to credit unions and local Illinois banks, putting local banks at a disadvantage against their national competitors.

Illinois lawmakers should repeal the IFPA and focus on protecting small businesses and consumers across the state — not lining the pockets of corporate mega-stores.

Stop the countdown to chaos by supporting a repeal of this misguided and flawed policy. Learn more at https://guardyourcard.com/illinois/

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. ICYMI: Judge tosses 4 of 9 counts in ComEd bribery case in wake of Supreme Court ruling. Sun-Times

Four ex-ComEd officials and lobbyists remain convicted of a criminal conspiracy involving former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan, despite a judge’s decision Monday to toss four of the nine counts in the case in the wake of a 2024 U.S. Supreme Court decision. […]

What happens next is unclear. When pressed by the judge after Monday’s ruling, Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu noted that sentencing guidelines for the four defendants still call for life in prison. He said a new trial on the four vacated counts might be “somewhat fruitless.” […]

Meanwhile, four remaining counts are tied to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. Defense attorneys in the ComEd case have cited an executive order from President Donald Trump calling for a pause and review of enforcement of that law.

[U.S. District Judge Manish Shah] declined Monday to put the ComEd case on hold while the consequences of Trump’s order are sorted out. However, Bhachu made clear to the judge “our office will comply with whatever instructions we receive” from the Justice Department when it comes to the FCPA.

* Related stories…

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Lake County News-Sun | Robert Crimo III pleads guilty to Highland Park parade shooting; Mayor calls it ‘1,000%’ better than a trial: It had been a strange day for Turnipseed, 43, one of the dozens wounded in the shooting. Upon hearing discussion of Crimo, she got down on one knee and wrapped an arm around her daughter. She and her husband previously had told the little girl that Turnipseed was going to talk about “the bad man who hurt Mommy” in court. But now, she explained in front of the checkout counter, Crimo had said he’d done it.

* WBEZ | Chicagoans urged to stay current on measles vaccinations amid national outbreaks: And although no cases have been reported in Illinois so far this year, those in Texas and other states are a reminder for people to stay vigilant, Tan said. “What people need to recognize is measles can be a serious disease,” she said. “And the vaccine for measles is the most important and effective preventative measure for protecting their child against measles.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Gov. JB Pritzker | Up to a million Illinoisans will lose health care coverage with slashing of Medicaid: One in four Illinois residents — more than 3.4 million people — are covered by Medicaid. Who are they? Medicaid provides health care for nearly half of our state’s children. It’s the largest insurer for people who live in nursing homes and for people with developmental disabilities. Farmers and rural farm workers will lose the ability to see a doctor when they’re ill. This is also a broader economic issue. Illinois hospitals and health systems support 445,000 full-time jobs and anchor many rural communities. Hospitals will close. People will lose their jobs.

* WSIL | Comptroller Mendoza announces new website for finances and credit ratings for Illinois: The new webpage now features information on budget-related bonds which are issued by the state and the progression on paying them off. Mendoza says the total outstanding bond debt stands at $40,424,563,000, as of December 31.

* CBS | How Illinois’ first lady and Willette Benford are giving second chances to women leaving prison: “I am what it looks like to give someone a fair chance, not a handout but a hand up,” Benford said. In 2022, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot wanted to brand the city a place for second chances. She tapped Benford as the city’s first director of reentry for people leaving prison and reentering society. In the role, Benford helped to reform background checks for 2,500 city jobs so that some convictions would not disqualify candidates from getting employment.

* Tribune | Judge dismisses lawsuit alleging violations in lucrative Illinois vendor program: A Cook County judge has dismissed a lawsuit alleging a company violated the terms of a lucrative state contract in ways that included failing to inform the state that a pair of political insiders profited from the deal. In a one-page order issued without commentary on Feb. 21, Judge Jerry Esrig dismissed the lawsuit with prejudice, meaning it can’t be amended or refiled.

*** Statewide ***

* SJ-R | Sexual and racial harassment investigations among those halted in Illinois schools: What investigations remain on hold? 201 investigations remain halted. Some of those listed are labeled as “racial harassment”, “sexual violence” and “sexual harassment”, and “Title IX athletics,” to name a few.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | GSA moves to close some SEC regional offices, including Chicago’s: The GSA plans to terminate the L.A. and Philadelphia leases, the SEC’s Chief Operating Officer Ken Johnson told staff in an email Monday that was reviewed by Bloomberg. The administration is also looking to terminate the lease of the Chicago regional office, though SEC said it had informed the GSA that terminating the lease at 175 W. Jackson Blvd. could result in significant financial penalties, the email said.

* Heh…


* Crain’s | As Trump tariffs move from threat to reality, these Chicago industries brace for the impact: “It’s going to affect everybody, but it will be different magnitudes,” says Don McNeeley, president of Chicago Tube and Iron, a steel supplier in Romeoville, who also teaches at Northwestern University’s McCormick School of Engineering. “If you’re seller, you love it. if you’re a consumer, you hate it.”

* Sun-Times | Swiss cement giant Holcim spinning off North American business in Chicago, calling it Amrize: Switzerland-based Holcim is the largest provider of cement in the U.S. and Canada. It currently employs roughly 400 people in the greater Chicago area, as well as about 60 in the city. It plans to add 50 jobs in Chicago, through the spinoff. The company has roughly 65,000 employees worldwide. Amrize will operate more than 1,000 sites with more than 19,000 employees.

* WBEZ | Art Institute of Chicago returns ancient Nepali sculpture, after researchers learned it had been stolen: As part of “ongoing research into the provenance of its collection,” researchers discovered that the sculpture had been stolen from Guita Bahi in the Kathmandu Valley, an Art Institute statement said. The institute then shared its findings with Embassy of Nepal in Washington. The sculpture is now in the hands of the Nepali government, said Jacques Schuhmacher, executive director of the museum’s Provenance Research, adding it will eventually return to its place of origin, but that timing has not been confirmed.

* Block Club Chicago | Zac Brown Band To Headline 2025 NASCAR Chicago Street Race: NASCAR’s Chicago Street Race Weekend returns July 5-6 for the NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series along the same 12-turn, 2.2-mile street course as in previous years. Tickets for the race weekend went on sale in January. They’re cheaper this year, and kids under 12 get in free on both days with the purchase of a general admission ticket.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* ABC Chicago | Dolton board takes action as Mayor Henyard skips 1st meeting since her landslide primary loss: Trustees at the meeting approved an amended collective bargaining agreement for Dolton firefighters as well as a contract for police records technicians. The board also cleared the way for the approval of a liquor license for one Dolton bar almost a year after the owner sued the village, alleging in a federal lawsuit that Henyard refused to renew the license after he declined to give her a campaign contribution.

* Daily Herald | Des Plaines council cutting city clerk’s oversight of staff: Clerk Jessica Mastalski and her eventual successors no longer will have the ability to “exercise general administrative direction and control over employees,” according to language that could be added to city code. Instead, workers in the office would be supervised by the city manager. Additionally, the clerk no longer would be allowed to coordinate the work of office personnel or have the power to delegate responsibilities to staffers. Rather, the clerk would have to work with the city manager or to determine what duties can be handed off to city staffers.

* Tribune | La Grange board challenger makes her case as only nonincumbent in race: Thursday night Carter talked about what she felt was needed to continue to attract business to the village. “I think the first thing we have to focus on is changing some of these antiquated regulations to allow more business diversity,” she said. “Because more business diversity equals more revenue. And we’re going to have some revenue issues with some big infrastructure projects that are coming.”

* Daily Northwestern | Northwestern’s lobbying spending balloons to more than $1 million in 2024: NU’s lobbying expenditures in the second half of 2024 totaled more than $800,000, significantly more than any of its total annual spendings in the last decade. Out of the eight recorded lobbyists, double the previous year’s amount, NU appeared to have enlisted a new throng of lobbyists from Harbinger Strategies, composed mostly of former staffers to Republican congressional leadership.

*** Downstate ***

* STLPR | $500 million expansion of Metro East copper plant to be complete in 3 years: Executives at Wieland Manufacturing, an international producer of copper and copper alloys, said the investment to a facility that employs 800 will make it sustainable for the long term. […] Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, leaders from Illinois’ Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity and Wieland announced the expansion plans last year, which include $231 million in state incentives under a program for clean manufacturing.

* Illinois Education Association | Southern Illinois University – Edwardsville faculty and staff demand to bargain over proposed cuts: “We strongly believe that the work and intellect of faculty and staff are cornerstones of the strong public university education our students deserve. The proposed campus reorganization and academic prioritization are mandatory subjects of bargaining and could result in the loss of student services and jobs. We look forward to discussing these issues at the bargaining table, including hearing from the administration regarding their concerns about the overall financial health and welfare of the institution. In this time of political and economic turmoil, it is important to remember that public universities and colleges across the state are significant engines for economic and cultural growth and offer opportunities to students that would otherwise be unavailable,” IEA spokesperson Bridget Shanahan said.

* BND | SIUE will start layoffs, cuts this spring to address $10.3 million deficit: To combat a $10.3 million deficit, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville will turn to layoffs and drop academic programs later this spring to cut costs, a university spokeswoman said Friday. “We have made important budgetary adjustments in recent years and are committed to making additional changes to ensure that the institution’s excellence continues,” SIUE spokeswoman Nicole Franklin said in a statement. “Unlike so many higher education institutions across the nation facing enrollment and financial challenges, SIUE remains in a strong position, and is acting to ensure that we are better positioned to compete in this challenging environment, innovate, and thrive.”

* WMBD | Washington latest Central Illinois community to discuss implementing local grocery tax: A similar tax has been implemented in Pekin, and East Peoria Mayor John Kahl stated that his city is looking to do the same. No action was taken at the meeting, as the city looked to gauge the opinions of aldermen. The city says it stands to lose around $500,000 each year, without the grocery tax being replaced on the local level.

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

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Mar 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Mar 4, 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

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

The so-called Department of Government Efficiency, led by Elon Musk, has listed seven leases in Illinois as being marked for imminent termination. At the DOGE website, the administration claims it will save the government more than $2.4 million a year by shuttering federal facilities in rented properties in Chicago, Hoffman Estates, Rockford, Rock Island, Champaign, Springfield and O’Fallon.

The office that would be shut down in Chicago belongs to the Federal Transit Administration and the move would save more than $471,000 a year, according to the DOGE website. The FTA’s office for a six-state region is in downtown Chicago, at 200 W. Adams St.

According to the DOGE website, the lease is being terminated for a Social Security office in Rockford and a National Archives facility in Hoffman Estates. The website does not provide further details about the leased space in the northwest suburb, but the government has rented an old furniture showroom in Hoffman Estates to store papers for the presidential library of former President Barack Obama.

That lease was scheduled to end this year anyway, officials had said, because the library will become completely digital. DOGE credits its decision on the Hoffman Estates property with saving almost $1.5 million.

* Congrats, Jaclyn! Stomping Ground Strategies



*** Statehouse News ***

* Shaw Local | Focused on Trump, Pritzker blasts administration’s actions in Kane County speech: While giving a speech Sunday evening in St. Charles echoing the pomp and sentiments of a presidential campaign, Gov. JB Pritzker denounced the actions of President Donald Trump and rallied voters to take action against their liberties being taken away. “We’ve got to tell people not just what we’re against, but also what we’re for, and then we’ve got to deliver on it,” Pritzker said during his speech. “Democrats are for making it easier to get childcare and to send your kid to preschool. We’re for making it more affordable to get quality healthcare and for seniors to grow old with dignity. We’re for raising the minimum wage so no family goes hungry without a roof over their heads. We spent the last six years doing that here in Illinois.”

* WTVO | Rep. McCombie reintroduces bill to repeal Illinois pro-abortion laws, faces activists in Pecatonica: McCombie stopped by the Pecatonica Library to discuss issues with her constituents and said she was surprised by the protests. […] She also acknowledged the bill had little hope of passing. “We’re in the super minority. This bill will sit like it does every year. It’ll sit where it is, and it’ll just die in rules,” she said.

*** Chicago ***

* The Atlantic | Migrants Prepare to Lose Their American Lives: One recent morning on Chicago’s southwest side, the manager of a Mexican grocery store began the day posted at the front door, rehearsing the phrase “I wish to exercise my right to remain silent” in English in case immigration agents showed up asking about employees. At a Mexican restaurant, the owner stashed newly laminated private signs under the host stand, ready to slap on the walls of the kitchen and a back dining room where workers could hide if agents arrived without a proper warrant.

* WTTW | 250 Jobs Charged With Implementing Court-Ordered Police Reforms Are Empty, Chicago Officials Say: Approximately 250 positions charged with implementing a court order that requires the Chicago Police Department to stop routinely violating Black and Latino residents’ constitutional rights are vacant, even as Chicago officials are facing increasing pressure from a federal judge to “accelerate” the reform effort, records show. A department spokesperson told WTTW News police officials are “actively” working to fill the vacant positions charged with implementing the court order known as the consent decree and reforming CPD, which has faced decades of scandals, misconduct and brutality.

* Sun-Times | CTA launching ‘Frequent Network’ bus service on some routes that will arrive every 10 minutes or sooner: The CTA said buses on eight routes will arrive every 10 minutes or sooner between 6 a.m. and 9 p.m. on weekdays and 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on weekends beginning March 23. Twelve more routes will be added later this year.

* Sun-Times | What is Pulaski Day? Here’s what’s closed and the history of this Chicago holiday: Pulaski Day, observed on the first Monday of March, honors Pulaski’s role in the American Revolution and celebrates the contributions of Chicago’s Polish American community. The holiday is held around Pulaski’s birthday, March 6. Illinois established the holiday in 1977 under Gov. James Thompson. In 1986, the Chicago City Council passed a resolution introduced by Mayor Harold Washington to officially recognize it, following strong advocacy from local Polish organizations and community leaders.

* Sun-Times | She had a deal to run a coffee bar inside the Englewood Save A Lot, but Yellow Banana ghosted her: The Ohio-based company offered the Auburn-Gresham native a low-risk, low-cost opportunity: She’d pay them 5% of her shop’s monthly sales in exchange for using the space, as well as equipment Whole Foods left behind in 2022. But Simmons has since walked away from the deal, disgusted, after spending thousands on inventory. Her coffee bar never opened for business. The 38-year-old blames Yellow Banana, saying the company didn’t keep its end of the deal to provide working internet and equipment and then stopped responding when she spoke up. She describes a chaotic situation during the 16 months she showed up to prep for opening and run her online business.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Aurora Beacon-News | Fear of ICE arrests keeping customers at home, immigrant-owned businesses in Aurora say: ‘The streets were so lonely’: Just off the Metra tracks on the East Side of Aurora, Elotes Gus, a food truck, sits in a parking lot. It’s open every day, according to its owner, Gustavo Salmeron, 47. When he’s not working as a Spanish teacher, he’s probably there, serving tacos to the passersby and witnessing the hustle and bustle of the streets around him from his truck. On a recent Friday evening at just before 6 p.m., Salmeron’s truck has no line. He said on a typical day, even in the winter, there would regularly be three or four customers waiting for their dinner by now. But business has been slow lately, Salmeron said.

* Crain’s | Schaumburg reaches deal with Zurich in tax break dispute: The village and the insurance company were at odds over whether employees had to merely be “assigned” to a location or physically be onsite to meet the contractual requirement for the number of workers necessary to qualify for the tax break. At stake were millions of dollars a year. Under terms of original agreement, created two decades ago, the village offered to reimburse Zurich up to $100 million in property taxes over 23 years for building a gleaming $325 million headquarters on a 39-acre campus at Interstate 90 and Meacham Road, which would employ a minimum of 1,700 workers.

* Daily Herald | As U.S. sees rough flu season, what’s happening in the suburbs?: At Endeavor Health Edward Hospital in Naperville, it’s been a “very busy flu season,” says Dr. Jonathan Pinsky, medical director of infection control and prevention. There were 1,345 lab-confirmed influenza cases in the emergency room and in the hospital throughout the entire flu season in 2023-24.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Opening of Kane County Flea Market an early sign of spring for Aurora-area shoppers: With spring in the air, it wasn’t surprising to find Geneva resident Matt Jania looking for some baseball memorabilia on Saturday on opening weekend of the Kane County Flea Market in St. Charles. “I’ve been to a flea market a few times and this one is nice,” he said as he looked over some framed pictures of professional athletes. “I haven’t bought much, but when I find something that I like I’m a pretty good negotiator. I knew this weekend was coming, and I’m going to check out some other stuff like maybe a few jerseys and stuff to hang up in my room in the house.”

* Evanston Round Table | Picturing Evanston: 45 Paczki in 5 minutes: In honor of Guy Downer — the patriarch of Bennison’s who passed away this year five hours shy of this 101st birthday — portions of prune paczki sales are going toward “Folds of Honor,” an organization that provides academic scholarships to the children and spouses of fallen or disabled military members and first responders. Each competing team received 30 paczki, and the group that ate the most in five minutes won. Cups with warm water were a crucial component for the speedy and successful intake of the pastries.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Major construction underway on I-55 near Springfield. Here’s what to know.: Builders began widening the bridges last week as a step towards adding a northbound and a southbound lane to the bridges, as well expanding a stretch of the interstate. The bridges are just north of the northbound RailSplitter rest area. The project will also add safety and capacity improvements to the interstate, according to the Illinois Department of Transportation.

* WICS | Illinois Fire Service Institute to host Discover IFSI events in Champaign: Participants in the Discover IFSI events will gain insights into the requirements and process for becoming a firefighter in Illinois. The program includes guided tours of a fire service training facility and up-close observations of live fire and technical rescue fire training.

* BND | This $1 million road project is starting soon in St. Clair County: A $1 million road work project is expected to start this spring on a portion of Sullivan Drive, which runs through Belleville and Swansea. Crews will be repairing Sullivan Drive between Huntwood Road in Swansea and Illinois 161 in Belleville. This section of the road has an average daily traffic of 8,250 cars, according to data from the state transportation agency.

*** National ***

* STAT | HHS review of a vaccine contract sparks worries about preparedness for a potential bird flu pandemic: Most flu vaccines are currently made using a decades-old approach where viruses are grown in hen’s eggs, then inactivated — a process that can sometimes result in mutations that undermine the vaccines’ effectiveness. Production is slow and reliant on huge quantities of eggs — the supply of which could be threatened by outbreaks of H5N1 or other bird flu viruses, as is happening now. Wide-scale outbreaks of H5N1 in poultry are occurring in multiple parts of the country, forcing the culling of flocks and driving egg costs to historic highs.

* Politico | Top HHS spokesperson quits after clashing with RFK Jr.: The top spokesperson at the Health and Human Services Department has abruptly quit after clashing with Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his close aides over their management of the agency amid a growing measles outbreak, two people familiar with the matter told POLITICO. Thomas Corry announced on Monday that he had resigned “effective immediately,” just two weeks after joining the department as its assistant secretary for public affairs.

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Robert Crimo III pleads guilty to Highland Park parade shooting

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

Robert Crimo III unexpectedly pleaded guilty Monday to all charges in the July 4, 2022, Highland Park parade shooting that killed seven people.

Crimo’s trial was set to begin Monday in Lake County Court when his defense attorneys informed Judge Victoria Rossetti that Crimo wished to change his plea to guilty.

The judge then extensively questioned Crimo to make sure he understood what he was doing. […]

The judge set April 23 for a sentencing hearing. By law, Crimo will be sentenced to natural life in prison.

* WGN

But what happened Monday was not the result of any “deal,” Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart stressed.

“Let me be clear, this was not a negotiation, this was not a deal,” Rinehart told reporters after the hearing at county courthouse in Waukegan. “He made a free decision to plead guilty to every single count. He received nothing in exchange for this plea today.”

Crimo took an “open plea” in the case against him. In doing so, he avoids trial and allows a judge to sentence him without a prior agreement from prosecutors on what sentence they’d recommend. A defendant will sometimes reject an offer or deal in hopes of receiving a lesser sentence from the judge as opposed to what the prosecution might seek.

“This is no agreement whatsoever. He pleaded guilty to every single count,” Rinehart said. “He walked into the courtroom through his attorneys, who are incredibly experienced defense attorneys who have represented him for years.”

* Rep. Bob Morgan responded to Crimo’s guilty plea today…

Today, State Rep. Bob Morgan (D-Deerfield) reacted to the recently announced guilty plea of the Highland Park Mass Shooter (“perpetrator”). The perpetrator pleaded guilty to killing 21 people and wounding dozens of others during the 2022 Fourth of July parade in Highland Park. In 2022, the perpetrator was indicted on 117 charges, including 21 counts of first-degree murder stemming from the mass shooting.

“Today’s guilty plea is welcome news for weary hearts in the Highland Park community”, Rep. Morgan shared. “This is a small step towards justice following the July 4, 2022 mass shooting as we continue to recover and heal.” After pleading guilty to 21 counts of murder and 48 additional counts of attempted murder charges, the perpetrator will now face life imprisonment with no chance of parole. “I want to thank Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart and his exceptional team for helping secure this justice. Our gratitude also extends to the physical and mental health professionals that continue to care for those injured and impacted.”

Rep. Morgan joins the rest of the Highland Park community in mourning the tragic losses of Katherine Goldstein, Irina McCarthy, Kevin McCarthy, Stephen Straus, Jacquelyn Sundheim, Nicolas Toledo-Zaragoza, and Eduardo Uvaldo, and has been bracing with the rest of the community for a criminal trial. The news of the guilty plea avoids a lengthy trial that was bound to resurface profound trauma in a community that has been forever changed by a morning of violence.

Morgan witnessed the devastating effects that gun violence can have on a community. Highland Park, Illinois is a part of the 58th State Representative District, and Rep. Morgan was present at the July 4th, 2022 mass shooting with his wife and children, during which 83 rounds were fired in less than 60 seconds, killing seven and injuring 48 people.

Six (6) months following the Highland Park mass shooting, Rep. Morgan was the chief sponsor of the Protect Illinois Communities (“PIC”) Act, one of the strongest gun safety laws in the nation. The PIC Act bans the sale of assault weapons, which have been the lethal instruments used in multiple mass shootings, as well as large capacity magazines that hold more than 10 rounds of ammunition for a long gun or more than 15 rounds of ammunition for handguns.

* Another bill passed after the parade shooting which expanded police use of drones. WTTW

While Protecting Illinois Communities Act has received the lion’s share of attention, the shooting at Highland’s Park parade was the catalyst for other laws too, including one (HB3902 / Public Act 103-0101) that gives police greater license to use drones for crowd surveillance.

[Sen. Julie Morrison] said shortly after last year’s parade shooting, she met with area mayors, who told her “we need to have drones. We need the ability to put drones up in the air for our farmers markets, for our art fests, all these public things that we do. And parades.”

Previously, Illinois’ 2014 Freedom from Drone Surveillance Act strictly limited when police and law enforcement could use drones at special events. Drones could only be used for disaster response, with a warrant or there was a high risk of terrorism – limitations intended to protect the privacy of people attending large events.

The downside of those restrictions – the inability for police to surveil festivities like Highland Park’s Fourth of July celebrations, when a drone may have noticed the alleged shooter on a rooftop before he fired – is something Morrison said she hadn’t considered previously, despite (as politicians are wont to do) walking in innumerable parades.

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Question of the day

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release

Today, Governor JB Pritzker joined students and leadership from Lewis and Clark Community College to propose a new community college baccalaureate degree program. Through this consumer-driven, student-centered program, community colleges would be enabled by the State to offer four-year bachelor degrees, making degrees more accessible while meeting the needs of employers in key sectors, and keeping education costs low for students and working families.

“As the home of the third largest community college system in the nation, Illinois should be doing all that it can to leverage these world-renowned institutions to meet those goals,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “We have some really terrific four-year institutions that are a vital part of the higher education system in Illinois, but we need to recognize that there are geographic, financial, and accessibility constraints that close off too many students from attending those schools. With lower tuition rates and a greater presence across the state – especially in rural areas – community colleges provide the flexibility and affordability for students to pursue a quality education that works for them.” […]

The initiative centers equity and affordability with the following provisions:

    • Students living and working in regions outside of driving/commuting distance of traditional four-year universities will still have access to baccalaureate degrees.
    • Community colleges will not be able to charge more than 150% of their current tuition for the third and fourth years required for a baccalaureate degree.
    • Community colleges will be required to demonstrate how programs will reach students underserved by other higher education programming in the region.

* Quad Cities TV

If the bill is passed [Black Hawk College President Jeremy Thomas] said he thinks Black Hawk College will look to first add four-year degree programs in the health profession, advanced manufacturing, and cyber security.

“These are programs we already have faculty (for,) so we don’t have to start from scratch, but there will be approval processes,” Thomas said. “That’s all yet to be decided on what it will look like, so that will be the next step.”

* Forbes

The Illinois bills also come with various strings attached. For example, any new programs would need to be approved by both the Illinois Board of Higher Education and the Illinois Community College Board. And institutions would have to prove that new programs would improve access for underserved students and give them preference to meet workforce needs.

* More restrictions from the bill

The board of trustees has identified and documented, in writing, unmet workforce needs in the region served by the community college in the subject area of the baccalaureate degree program to be offered. […]

The board of trustees shall demonstrate the district has the expertise, resources, and student interest to offer a baccalaureate degree.

* BND

“We’re certainly 100% supportive of anything we can do to improve access for students who want to get a degree. We need to find, I think as a state, a way to provide that education,” said Dan Mahony, president of the Southern Illinois University system. “The question is, ‘What is the best way to do that?’”

Both Mahony and McKendree University President Dan Dobbins praised the existing collaboration between their institutions and community colleges. However, opening the door for community colleges to offer four-year degrees could lead to what Mahony called “unproductive competition.”

“I think there’s more to be gained by collaborating and working as partners than potentially putting us into competition with one another,” Dobbins said.

Currently 24 states allow community colleges to offer bachelor’s degrees.

It was discussed at the press conference today that half of community colleges are 30 miles or more from universities.

* The Question: Do you support or oppose allowing community colleges, with some restrictions, to offer four-year degrees? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.


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Tribune editorial board: ‘Nevermind’

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Chicago Tribune print edition

* To the editorial

In Gov. JB Pritzker’s Illinois budget address on Feb. 19, he lamented the decline of small-town independent pharmacies like those of Michelle Dyer, who abruptly closed three stores in rural Macoupin County during 2022, transferring their prescriptions to Walgreens.

As Pritzker described it, the reason for Dyer’s abrupt shut-down wasn’t competition from rival stores and online pharmacies but rather the actions of pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs. These are middlemen, acting on behalf of health insurers in negotiations with pharmacies and drugmakers. Retailers say they threaten the future of independent drugstores and the giant Walgreens alike.

The truth? More complicated than most anyone might think. And as for solving the problem of high drug costs, Pritzker’s proposal for a new bureaucracy empowered to set maximum prices faces a rocky road in Illinois and in other states that are trying it.

With his “Prescription Drug Affordability Act,” Pritzker envisions a blue-ribbon panel prying profits away from PBMs by capping prescription prices. But it’s unclear who would benefit in this highly integrated marketplace if a nanny state were to intervene. […]

The governor’s proposed “Affordability Board” would add another layer of complexity, potentially reducing access to cutting-edge drugs and likely facing a constitutional challenge if it followed through on fixing prices. And - do we really have to say it? — the last thing Illinois needs is yet another state board trying to control market forces the governor doesn’t like. For a couple of years now, the General Assembly has considered setting up one or these boards and, so far, opted to stay out of it. Here we go again.

Um, one problem: That’s not Pritzker’s proposal, it’s the Citizen Action proposal. The governor intends to introduce his own proposal without a state board.

* So, the Tribune rewrote the headline and the editorial, took out the remarks about Pritzker and appended this “Editor’s note” to the bottom of the piece

Editor’s note: An earlier version of this editorial misstated that Gov. JB Pritzker supports creation of a state Prescription Drug Affordability Board that would rein in certain practices of Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs). According to the governor’s office, Pritzker does not now support legislation that would create such a board, but instead will support legislation to be introduced soon that will address PBM practices with no new state board.

[Headline explained here.]

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Judge tosses bribery convictions in ComEd Four case, prosecutors indicate a new trial may not be necessary

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Lawyers in the ComEd Four case were back in court this morning to see whether Judge Manish Shah would pause proceedings after President Donald Trump ordered a review of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. Jason Meisner from the Tribune

* But

* The four were found guilty on all of these counts

Counts 3, 4, 7 and 9 are under the currently paused Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (15 U.S.C. 78dd-1).

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Fair hit?

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hmm…


* On Friday, we posted two items here, one directly after the other. The first one was what the Pritzker administration had done to slash the costs of providing health insurance to undocumented immigrants (mostly by limiting and cutting or even eliminating enrollment). The second was entitled: “Pritzker: Cuts to Medicaid will be devastating to Illinois.”

Both arguments are based on the fact that Illinois cannot afford to provide this healthcare assistance on its own.

But… Your thoughts on this criticism?

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When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Monday, Mar 3, 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 Stacy and Amanda enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.

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It’s just a bill

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ProPublica

A new Illinois bill aims to add some oversight of families who homeschool their children, a response to concerns that the state does little to ensure these students receive an education and are protected from harm.

The measure, known as the Homeschool Act, comes after an investigation by Capitol News Illinois and ProPublica last year found that Illinois is among a small number of states that place virtually no rules on parents who homeschool their children. Parents don’t have to register with any state agency or school district, and authorities cannot compel them to track attendance, demonstrate their teaching methods or show student progress.

Under the new bill, families would be required to tell their school districts when they decide to homeschool their children, and the parents or guardians would need to have a high school diploma or equivalent. If education authorities have concerns that children are receiving inadequate schooling, they could require parents to share evidence of teaching materials and student work. […]

Homeschool families and advocates said they will fight the measure, which they argue would infringe on parental rights. Past proposals to increase oversight also have met swift resistance. The sponsor of a 2011 bill that would have required homeschool registration withdrew it after hundreds of people protested at the Illinois State Capitol. In 2019, a different lawmaker abandoned her bill after similar opposition to rules that would have required curriculum reviews and inspections by child welfare officials.

* Hyde Park Herald

Three bills introduced in Springfield in mid-February aim to make housing development simpler in Chicago and Illinois.

Drafted by local state Rep. Kam Buckner (D-26th) with suggestions from the grassroots group Abundant Housing Illinois, the legislative package consists of the Affordable Communities Act, the Local-Accessory Dwelling Units Act and the People over Parking Act. Together, these bills aim to increase housing stock in cities, thereby bringing down costs of living, organizers behind the proposals say. […]

The Affordable Communities Act, or H.B. 3288, allows for the construction of multifamily housing by-right in any residential zone in cities with populations of 100,000 or greater. By-right development is development that can be built without needing discretionary review or approvals from planning commissions, zoning boards or other regulatory bodies. Advocates argue that this approach is faster and reduces overall development costs. […]

The Local-Accessory Dwelling Units Act, or H.B. 3552, allows accessory dwelling units to be constructed by-right in all residential zones statewide. An accessory dwelling unit can be an apartment above or in place of a garage, often known as coach houses or “granny flats,” or a separate unit inside the main structure on a property.

The final bill in the package, People over Parking Act, or H.B. 3256 and S.B. 2352, bars cities from imposing minimum parking mandates on development projects located within a half mile of a transit hub. A parking reform page on the city’s website, based on research done by advocacy group the Center for Neighborhood Technology, says that that city still “mandates specific amounts of off-street parking for new commercial and residential developments, even where it’s not needed.” These mandates, the site continues, leave less space for housing itself and increase construction costs, which may drive up rents.

* Illinois Environmental Council…

At 11 a.m. on Tuesday, March 4, Representative Ann Williams and environmental and consumer advocates will introduce the Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability Act (SB2473/HB3779) – legislation that addresses urgent challenges facing our electric grid while also prioritizing affordability for consumers and businesses. The grid is struggling to keep pace with a surge in demand for energy, largely caused by data centers, and Regional Transmission Organizations PJM and MISO have been woefully inadequate in connecting clean energy projects to the grid that could power millions of homes with clean, affordable electricity. The Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability (CRGA) Act offers a comprehensive suite of commonsense solutions that prioritize affordability, grid resiliency, and Illinois’ climate and clean energy goals.

WHEN: Tuesday, March 4, 2025 at 11am CT

WHAT: Press conference to introduce the Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability Act (SB2473/HB3779)

WHERE: Blue Room, Illinois State Capitol Building, 401 S 2nd Street Springfield, IL 62756

* Advantage News

An Illinois state legislator suggests a proposed amendment to the Prevailing Wage Act could drive up costs for taxpayers.

House Bill 1189 says if there is a federally-funded construction project that is run by the state or a unit of local government that the higher of the federal prevailing wage or the state prevailing wage will apply to that project.

Sean Stott, the director of governmental affairs at the Laborers’ International Union of North America, said the bill ensures Illinois workers protection from action on the federal level in regards to wage setting. […]

“Several other states follow this method including: Minnesota, California, Nevada, Oregon, Washington and even Missouri’s Department of Transportation follows this method,” [Rep. Jay Hoffman, the bill’s sponsor, said. “As you know, the prevailing wage in Illinois is set by what is in a collective bargaining agreement. That agreement is sent to the Illinois Department of Labor and they will change and update the prevailing wage in a given area and for a given trade. Unfortunately the federal government has not changed the prevailing wage to reflect the most recent collective bargaining agreement.” […]

HB 1189 passed out of committee 18 to nine.

* Belleville News-Democrat

A new Illinois bill championed by Gov. JB Pritzker would allow community colleges to offer four-year degrees, a move bill authors say would make baccalaureate degrees more accessible and mitigate workforce shortages.

“This is a natural extension of what we’re focused on as community colleges, (which) is our commitment to help improve career pathways for students,” said Ken Trzaska, president of Lewis and Clark Community College in Godfrey.

But universities in southern Illinois are apprehensive.

“We’re certainly 100% supportive of anything we can do to improve access for students who want to get a degree. We need to find, I think as a state, a way to provide that education,” said Dan Mahony, president of the Southern Illinois University system. “The question is, ‘What is the best way to do that?’”

Both Mahony and McKendree University President Dan Dobbins praised the existing collaboration between their institutions and community colleges. However, opening the door for community colleges to offer four-year degrees could lead to what Mahony called “unproductive competition.”

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State finally making major progress on funding ‘four core services’

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

The latest report from the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability shows that spending on four core state services in the governor’s proposed fiscal year 2026 budget will be 9.1% less in real dollars than it was way back in fiscal year 2000.

Those four core services are education, health care, human services and public safety.

The Center has been tracking this number for years. And although they didn’t mention it in their latest report, that 9.1% figure is actually a remarkable improvement. It’s also food for thought whenever you see claims that Illinois’ spending is at record levels. For core services, at least, we’re still far below where we were 25 years ago.

But that gap has closed a lot.

The fiscal year 2014 state budget’s core service expenditures (before the state budget impasse that lasted more than two years) were 28% less than in FY 2000, according to the Center at the time.

So, the “structural deficit,” as the Center calls this comparison to 2000, has fallen by more than two-thirds in real dollars since 2014.

Fiscal year 2022 ran from July 1, 2021, through June 30, 2022. The Center reported back then that expenditures on those four core services were 22.3% below that of FY 2000, after adjusting for inflation.

That means the structural deficit will fall by 59% in just four years, if the Center’s predictions and the budget hold up through next June 30.

Using federal pandemic money to pay off billions in state debt was a huge help.

And the state pension funding problem, which has historically crowded out necessary spending, has stabilized. Yes, the payments grow every year, but they’ve stayed somewhere around 20% of the total budget for several years.

Pension payments in the FY 2016 budget were $6.7 billion. They’re budgeted this coming year at $10.6 billion. After inflation is calculated over that 10 years, that’s about a $1.75 billion increase in today’s dollars (about $175 million a year), and it will be lower than that by the end of June 2026 when the fiscal year expires.

Speaking of pensions, the governor has proposed spending an additional $78 million in the coming fiscal year to make sure the state doesn’t have a “safe harbor” problem with Tier Two retirees.

The state passed what’s called a Tier Two pension plan because the original plan — which had been grossly underfunded and overpromised for decades — was simply costing too much to be affordable. The plan reduced pension benefits in several ways for new hires.

However, under federal law, state pensions have to be at least equal to Social Security benefits. And when the state lowered benefits, at least some folks won’t receive that bare minimum when they retire.

The penalty for not meeting the minimum requirement is severe. All employees would have to be put into the Social Security system and the state would have to give those workers retroactive Social Security benefits for up to 10 years, which could be billions and billions of dollars.

In addition, new hires wouldn’t be contributing to the pension funds, which would deprive those systems of revenue.

The teachers’ unions, however, say they want to go well beyond that minimum requirement. Taking care of the safe harbor issue would benefit mainly high-wage employees like principals. They want more money put into the system to increase benefits, to encourage more people to become teachers in the first place and keep them on the job.

The Illinois Federation of Teachers released a statement last month saying the governor’s proposal was just “the beginning of a broader repair to a grossly unfair pension that hobbles Illinois’ ability to recruit and retain educators. Our members will continue to press for a proper and full legislative repair to Tier 2 pensions this session.”

The Illinois Education Association’s statement last month said it wants “a fix to Tier Two that allows all those who serve students in Illinois an equitable retirement and that entices people to stay in the profession.”

That proposal would cost a huge amount of money. A study done for the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability found that the union proposal would cost the state $1.13 billion extra this coming fiscal year.

The governor has never seemed enthusiastic about that plan, hence his $78 million proposal.

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Intoxicating Hemp: No safety? No thanks!

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

A federal loophole has led to a booming gray market across Illinois for intoxicating hemp products, which use synthetics to alter the composition of hemp to get consumers high.

This is happening outside the structure of the state’s legal cannabis industry. This means intoxicating hemp faces NO quality testing, NO age restrictions, NO packaging requirements, NO potency rules, and NO taxes to fund programs in communities impacted by the War on Drugs. Most intoxicating hemp products aren’t even produced in Illinois. By contrast, Illinois cannabis businesses face extensive rules and regulations to operate, with products tracked from seed to sale. When consumers purchase legal cannabis grown and processed in Illinois, they know their products are safe.

Hemp and cannabis come from the same plant. Both products can get users high. Why the different rules? Illinois already has a system in place to regulate hemp – it’s called the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act. It’s time for Illinois to close the intoxicating hemp loophole.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Mayor Brandon Johnson arrives in DC to prep for testimony before GOP-led sanctuary city hearing. Sun-Times

    - A GOP House committee is intent on holding the Democratic mayors of Chicago, New York, Boston and Denver — all sanctuary cities — “accountable” for not cooperating with President Donald Trump’s orders to carry out deportation raids.
    - The Sun-Times learned that Johnson spent Sunday in a DC hotel prepping. City Hall has hired a Washington law firm with experience in helping witnesses get ready for congressional hearings and navigate unfamiliar terrain.
    - The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing, to kick off at 9 a.m. on Wednesday.

* Related stories…

* At 10:30 am Governor Pritzker will be in East Alton to celebrate the Wieland factory expansion. At noon, the governor will be in Godfrey to amplify a plan to offer bachelor degrees at some community colleges. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | People with developmental disabilities can wait years for community placements, state records show: Across Illinois’ seven state-operated developmental centers for people with developmental disabilities and medical or behavioral needs — known as SODCs — more than 200 residents were seeking placement elsewhere as of last month, close to 15% of the total population in those centers, according to records from the Illinois Department of Human Services. Of those, more than 125 had been on a waiting list for at least a year, records showed.

* Tribune | Midwest communities worry that firing of parks and forest employees will harm ecosystems, economies and education: “Since 2010, park staffing has gone down 20%, but park visitation has gone up 16% — so these park staff are resilient folks who have been doing more with less,” said Crystal Davis, Midwest senior regional director for the National Parks Conservation Association, a nonpartisan organization that advocates on behalf of the parks system. But the current changes are wide-reaching, she said, with a “devastating impact.”

* Bond Buyer | Illinois’ 2023 ACFR may become latest ever filed by state: Illinois’ Annual Comprehensive Financial Report for fiscal year 2023 is threatening to break California’s record for latest audit, having recently passed 600 days since that fiscal year ended, according to data on audit times.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Shaw Local | Focused on Trump, Pritzker blasts administration’s actions in Kane County speech: “Trump is going to try to tear down all of it from Washington D.C. if people don’t stand up, show up, speak at town halls and at Congress,” Pritzker said. “Everyone, even kids, need to get into the fight. Never give up. Never surrender. We are the bulwark of the resistance. The rest of the country is depending on Illinois.”

* Tribune | Federal funding freeze lifted for some Illinois clean energy projects: With the fight over a federal clean energy funding freeze entering its second month, two of the biggest prizes in Illinois are emissions-reduction grants totaling more than $570 million. Now, the state appears closer to claiming both of them. Money from an expected $430 million in federal Climate Pollution Reduction grants was blocked until Feb. 19, but the state can now access it, according to a statement from Gov. JB Pritzker’s office. Part of a $148 million National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure grant for public EV chargers also appears to be within reach.

* WJBD | State Representative Meier provides update on prostate cancer treatment: Meier says he is feeling great after completing the final treatment of his first round of radiation for prostate cancer. He notes after announcing his prostate cancer diagnosis earlier this year, he was totally overwhelmed with the outpouring of support, prayers, well wishes, and love from people across the country. Meier says every text, call, and message were a bit of encouragement he needed to get over this bump in the road.

*** Statewide ***

* NBC Chicago | 12 Illinois DMVs will offer only Real ID services on Saturdays. List of locations: On Monday alone, Giannoulias said his office saw a record 58,000 people on its website looking to make Real ID appointments. For the first 24 days of February, 860,000 people attempted to make appointments. “And this surge is not confined to Illinois. DMVs across the country have experienced unprecedented lines and wait times. In Miami, people are sleeping overnight outside of DMV facilities and in their cars just to improve their chances of getting a Real ID,” he said.

* Daily Herald | ‘Instability in the market’ or rightsizing? What does federal EV cold shoulder mean for Illinois?: Affected businesses could include: electric truck manufacturer Rivian in Normal; Stellantis, which is reopening its closed Belvidere plant to produce an electric Dodge Durango; and Gotion, which plans to open a EV battery factory in Manteno, he said. Meanwhile, Illinois Alliance for Clean Transportation Chairman John Walton noted rebates were first offered to offset the high prices of EVs for consumers new to the technology. “I think the rebates have served their purpose,” the Wheaton resident said. Now, “you can buy an electric car for just north of $30,000. I think the goal of what they wanted to do — bring the price down to where the average guy could afford one” has been met.

* Tribune | Ascension completes sale of 8 Illinois hospitals to Prime Healthcare for more than $370 million: The hospitals are all generally keeping their names but without the Ascension branding. The hospitals are: Holy Family Medical Center in Des Plaines, Mercy Medical Center in Aurora, Resurrection Medical Center in Chicago, Saint Francis Hospital in Evanston, Saint Joseph Medical Center in Joliet, Saint Joseph Hospital in Elgin, Saint Mary’s Hospital in Kankakee and Saint Mary of Nazareth Hospital in Chicago.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | After 4 years leading COPA, departing chief reflects on time at police oversight agency: Four years ago, 20 members of the Chicago City Council signed a letter to then-Mayor Lori Lightfoot, “vehemently” opposing her nominee to lead the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, Andrea Kersten, who was the agency’s deputy chief administrator at the time. COPA, bound by the city’s municipal code, had recently released its report on the Chicago Police Department’s botched raid at the home of Anjanette Young in 2019. In that report, authored by Kersten, the agency recommended a three-day suspension for police Officer Ella French because she didn’t have a body-worn camera.

* Click here for some background…

* Sun-Times | Chicago scientists reel from Trump funding cuts: ‘We are just going to abandon all those discoveries’: These three scientists aren’t professional agitators. None have ever organized a public protest before. But the trio is part of the effort behind Chicago’ s “Stand Up for Science” rally Friday at 12 p.m. at Federal Plaza, one of 32 rallies taking place nationwide to draw attention to the enormous damage caused by the Trump administration’s wholesale slashing of National Institutes of Health research.

* Crain’s | Bally’s Chicago IPO for women and minority investors hits a stumbling block: Bally’s plan to raise $250 million for its Chicago casino from women and minority investors is in regulatory limbo. Bally’s Chicago said in a securities filing today that “we have not yet received clearance from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to price and close our initial public offering.”

* Daily Herald | ‘The right stuff and more’: What happened in near miss at Midway Airport: As Dennis Tajer watched the video of a Southwest Airlines jet preparing to land at Midway International Airport as a smaller jet taxis into its path, he thought, “Oh no.” Then, “I thought, ‘Heroes,’” said Tajer, a spokesman for the Allied Pilots Association, which represents American Airlines aviators.

* Block Club | Indoor Sports Facility For Kids Opens In Little Village Thanks To Local Nonprofit: “I am so excited,” Raigoza said. “Spaces like this, we have to drive typically 45 minutes to see something like it. And now we have it here, in the heart of our community.” Upon entry to the building, patrons are greeted with the green turf of a miniature soccer field. The 3,000 square-foot, two-story building also contains two batting cages, a weight room and a yoga studio.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Lake County News-Sun | ‘Not every case is defendable’: Criminal defense attorneys evaluate Highland Park shooting trial as opening statements are set to begin: With opening statements in the trial set to begin Monday at the Lake County courthouse, Chicago-area criminal defense lawyers with experience in high-profile cases offered insight into how Crimo’s attorneys may go about the “next-to-impossible” task of defending a man some believe indefensible. “The reality of it is, not every case is defendable, and the evidence in that case is overwhelming,” said Mark Richards, a prominent defense attorney and a former prosecutor in nearby Racine County, Wisconsin. “Thinking you’re going to get a fair and impartial, unknowledgeable jury is just not realistic.”

* Daily Herald | Why some suburbs compensate members of appointed boards: A little more than half of 93 suburbs surveyed by the Daily Herald reported offering some type of remuneration to members of appointed boards such as plan commissions, and public safety and zoning appeal boards. In all, 47 suburbs in Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake and McHenry counties reported offering some type of pay that ranges from as little as $10 per meeting in towns like Batavia, Glendale Heights and Round Lake Heights to as much as $5,000 a year in Rosemont.

* Sun-Times | Workers at big employers like Northwestern get protections from Evanston City Council: A new law, the first of its kind in Illinois, means dining hall workers and housekeepers can keep their jobs if the university changes contractors. The university is worried about the costs.

*** Downstate ***

* WICS | ISBA working to combat growing attorney shortage in rural Illinois: Austin Willis, an associate attorney in Will County said, “A lot of older attorneys plan to retire. You’re just not seeing new people come in. There’s just not a ton of incentive.”Angel Wawrzynek from the ISBA explained that younger attorneys are hesitant to move to rural areas due to concerns about employment opportunities for their significant others or a preference for city living. The ISBA has mapped the availability of private practice attorneys across counties, revealing that some areas have fewer than five attorneys.

* PJ Star | ‘Adverse effect’: East Peoria mayor criticizes Pritzker for ending Illinois grocery tax: Kahl took aim at Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who decided to end the statewide 1% tax on groceries. It was a move that upset many municipalities, including Peoria and East Peoria. “I don’t want to be disparaging here, but that was not the governor’s tax to put a feather in his cap and give it back to the people,” Kahl said Friday. “He likes to talk about how he’s helping working class people, and I’m not going to dump on him, I’ll let him figure out his political aspirations for himself, I’m the mayor of East Peoria and my focus is here.”

* WGLT | State Farm’s financial results improve, as underwriting losses decline: State Farm released its annual financial results on Friday. State Farm says its core property-casualty business posted a $6.1 billion underwriting loss in 2024, much better than the $14.1 billion underwriting loss in 2023. That cut down operating losses from $8.5 billion last year to $111 million in 2024. State Farm said the improvement was due in part to “significant improvement in auto lines underwriting results which was partially offset by an increase in homeowners incurred catastrophe claims.”

* WCBU | Fate of East Peoria riverboat casino casts shadow over Kahl’s State of the City address: East Peoria Mayor John Kahl shared an optimistic vision for the city’s next few years Friday, albeit while speaking at a venue with an uncertain future. Kahl delivered his annual State of the City address from the banquet room at the Par-A-Dice Hotel Casino, steps away from the riverboat gambling attraction that parent Boyd Gaming is looking to replace.

* WMBD | Bloomington Mayoral candidates answer questions at student led panel: Mayor Mboka Mwilambwe, Cody Hendricks, and Dan Brady all said their top three goals are to focus on public safety, the affordable housing crisis and infrastructure needs like water and sewage. […] “I think it’s extremely important. We talk about our infrastructure needs when we talk about public safety and when we talk about economic development. For the city of Bloomington,” said Brady.

* WGLT | Bloomington does more testing as it tries to improve taste and remove odor in water: City manager Jeff Jurgens said he’s heard from restaurant owners, too. “[We’ve] talked to many business owners … about the taste of the water. That is an issue. It affects coffee, it affects tea and it’s not acceptable,” Jurgens said in an interview on WGLT’s Sound Ideas. said the city has upgraded its water filtration system in recent days and that seems to have made some difference. City officials said in a statement they’ve also “slowed filter flows to increase contact time and made strategic staffing adjustments to improve response efforts.”

* WCIA | Mahomet mothers concerned with federal cuts impacting rare diseases: Events for Rare Disease Day were supposed to happen this weekend in the nation’s capital. However, after federal layoffs and funding freezes within the FDA and National Institute of Health, it was postponed indefinitely. “The concerns are that when we’re making cuts at those agencies, the funding going toward rare diseases, and all diseases, will be impacted for research and supporting people that have these conditions,” Houser said.

* WIFR | Racial slur spray-painted on Ogle Co. business, investigation underway: On March 2, Clearly Customs Motorcycle Service at 206 Linn St., took to its Facebook page about the reported vandalism. “How do I move on from this. My business? I literally have no feeling left. I’ve lived in ogle county for almost 20 years,” a post from the business owner reads. […] About eight hours after the initial post, the business took to Facebook again, saying this isn’t the first threat the business has received and that it plans to close the Kings location. Owners say they will instead “rebuild in an environment more suited to who we are.”

*** National ***

* The Guardian | Formerly anti-vax parents on how they changed their minds: ‘I really made a mistake’: Anti-vax rhetoric may be so persistent because it is profitable. Research by the Center for Countering Digital Hate showed that 70% of Covid-19 anti-vax disinformation between February and March 2021 had been generated by 12 individuals with collective annual revenues of around $36m. They include Joseph Mercola, a content producer who made $7.2m during the height of the pandemic, and RFK Jr, who received a salary of more than $500,000 for chairing the anti-vax Children’s Health Defense in 2021, among other enrichment for his anti-vax views (Kennedy’s own children have been vaccinated).

* People | ‘Explicit’ Sex Claims ‘Exaggerated,’ Black and LGBTQ+ Characters Overwhelmingly Targeted, New Book Ban Analysis Finds: On Feb. 27, the nonprofit organization, which raises awareness about book censorship in the United States, analyzed the 4,218 unique titles banned in the country’s public schools during the 2023-2024 school year. PEN America documented 10,046 instances of book bans in total, marking a 200% increase from the previous school year. Per the analysis, 1,534 (36%) of banned unique titles featured real people or fictional characters of color. Of the nonfiction books banned, including historical titles and biographies, 44% featured people of color, with 26% of these titles specifically centering Black people.

* AP | Trump administration to slash funding for enforcement of fair housing laws: The grants are disbursed by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to private nonprofits, which act as the frontline enforcement of the federal anti-discrimination law. They educate communities on their rights, test whether a landlord is racially discriminating, investigate complaints, resolve disputes and can fund legal counsel. Of some 34,000 fair housing complaints lodged in the U.S. in 2023, these private nonprofits processed 75%, according to a report from the National Fair Housing Alliance. The rest were fielded by state and local governments, with HUD and the U.S. Department of Justice working on less than 6% combined.

* WIRED | The Incompetence of DOGE Is a Feature, Not a Bug: Just look at all of those firings. DOGE has targeted so-called probationary employees first, often without regard for their skill or the necessity of their roles. Do you know what a probationary employee is? It’s people who have been in their position for less than a year, or in some cases less than two years. That means new hires, sure, but also experienced workers who recently transferred departments or got promoted.

* FOX | Latest DOGE layoffs threaten lives, experts say: The first wave of firings, carried out Thursday, marked a significant reduction in NOAA’s workforce, an agency responsible for issuing weather warnings, tracking hurricanes, supporting wildfire response, and providing oceanic and atmospheric data used across industries.

* Forbes | 5 Essential Things To Know About Your Weather Forecasts: It is stunning to see posts and comments suggesting that we do not need the National Weather Service because we have Apps, TV stations, your favorite social media influencer and so on. To me, that is like saying, “Why do we need potato farmers when I can just get fries at my fast food place?” NOAA and the National Weather Service are significant providers of weather information, weather prediction models, upper atmospheric conditions via weather balloons, satellite images, Doppler-Polarimetric radars, ocean observations and more.

  16 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Mar 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Mar 3, 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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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here for some of the video. We’re going to end Black History Month with what I would contend is one of the top ten greatest live musical performances of all time. Turn it all the way up

Higher!

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers were told about this earlier. Daily Herald

For the second time in a month, Barrington Hills Trustee Darby Hills on Friday was named the new state senator for the 26th District.

Republican Party leaders representing various parts of the district chose Hills to succeed Republican Dan McConchie of Hawthorn Woods, who resigned Feb. 2. […]

Plaintiff Brittany Colatorti also alleged Hills was ineligible to be appointed because she lacked qualifying GOP activity.

Lake County Republican Party Chair Keith Brin, who led the legislative committee that met Friday, subsequently appointed Hills to an open Republican precinct committee post in an effort to boost her GOP bona fides.

* I wrote a piece about this hearing for subscribers yesterday. Capitol News Illinois

Metra, the Chicago Transit Authority and Pace, along with the Regional Transportation Authority, which oversees some aspects of the Chicago area’s transit systems, collectively face a $771 million funding shortfall in 2026 as federal pandemic dollars run out. That includes inflation, according to the RTA, which previously said the shortfall would be $730 million. […]

The transit agencies were peppered with questions from lawmakers during a House hearing this week about their shortfalls in planning, organization and execution of services. Lawmakers have said for months the agencies will not receive new state funding without major reforms to their operations happening first.

In a particularly tense exchange, Rep. Rita Mayfield, D-Waukegan, ripped into RTA Chair Kirk Dillard.

“I think that we need to blow up the RTA, totally blow it up, get rid of everyone, because again, systemic incompetence for the last 50 years,” Mayfield said. “I don’t want to keep anyone other than the janitors and the basic clerical staff. Anybody in a leadership position needs to be removed.” […]

Current state law limits the power of the RTA to regional planning, setting standards for the service, developing performance measures, allocating funding, financial oversight, and capital planning. The three agencies that actually provide public transportation are left to determine levels of service, schedules and fares.

“What the RTA’s role is at best is the bully pulpit and trying to coordinate, convene and have conversations if there is no compelling mechanism — financial, statutorily or out of penalties — whereby the RTA can control that outcome,” [RTA Executive Director Leanne Redden] said.

*** Statewide ***

* Shaw Local | Illinois AG warns of ticket scams as festival, outdoor concert season nears: As tickets for spring and summer concert tours, festivals and sporting events begin to go on sale, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul cautioned about ticket scams. Buying tickets from a third-party vendor or private party increases the risk of fraud and Raoul warned residents to avoid paying for tickets with anything other than a credit card.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Discontinued violence-prevention program for struggling teens revived with $25 million: A Chicago non-profit received $25 million in funding Thursday to lead a previously discontinued violence-prevention program after the school board voted unanimously for its restatement. The program, called Back to Our Future, was designed to be a trailblazing initiative to prevent gun violence and reengage youth ages 14 through 21 who were disconnected from Chicago public schools. Armed with an $18 million grant, the joint effort between the city of Chicago, the state, the University of Chicago’s Crime Lab and three local non-profits aimed to reach 1,000 youth in 15 neighborhoods on the South and West sides who had stopped going to school 18 months prior or longer and re-enroll them in school.

* Sun-Times | Feds want hearing after expert finds ex-Ald. Carrie Austin unfit for trial on bribery charges: Indicted former Chicago Ald. Carrie Austin (34th) has been found not medically fit for trial by an expert appointed by the federal judge presiding over Austin’s nearly four-year-old criminal case. Defense attorneys say that should be enough to call off her trial, set for Nov. 3. But prosecutors say they still want an evidentiary hearing to gather “additional facts” from the expert “about her analysis and conclusion” so U.S. District Judge John Kness can make a more informed decision.

* WBEZ | Former Chicago Mayors Rahm Emanuel and Lori Lightfoot are helping Brandon Johnson prepare for DC testimony: Lightfoot, who is meeting with Johnson on Saturday, echoed that sentiment in a statement to WBEZ. “When Chicago leaders are given a national platform, it’s important to combat the cynical and false narratives about our city,” she said. “Anything I can do to help push back against the Trump Republicans and right wing media to tell the true story of this great city, I will do. I look forward to talking with Mayor Johnson.”

* Sun-Times | Fenwick High School is keeping secrets about teacher’s alleged sex abuse of female students: The suit accused the school of conducting a “sham” investigation seemingly designed to clear Dineen, and failing to notify authorities about the accusations — even though that was required under state law — or girls’ parents. Fenwick also didn’t document anything in Dineen’s personnel records — essentially white-washing matters so he would be able to get another teaching job, the suit says.

* Crain’s | American Airlines takes some of the hassle out of boarding at O’Hare: The carrier is deploying software at O’Hare International Airport that’s designed to keep passengers from jumping the line during boarding. The software sounds an audible alert to gate agents as passengers scan their boarding passes if they are trying to board before their group is called.

* Tribune | Two reputed Mexican cartel figures brought to Chicago in historic prisoner transfer: Norberto Valencia González, a financial guru affiliated with the once-powerful and notoriously violent Beltrán-Leyva cartel, was extradited to Chicago and made an initial court appearance Thursday on an indictment alleging he conspired to traffic kilogram quantities of cocaine and launder drug proceeds, according to court records. The trafficking activity took place between 2013 and 2017 in Chicago and nearby areas, including Arlington Heights, Morris and Plainfield, the seven-page indictment states.

* Tribune | Can a Chicago White Sox investor actually buy the team — or is it just a pipe dream for angst-ridden fans?: The light at the end of the long, dark tunnel suddenly seemed real. A savior would arise from these streets and start handing out nine-figure contracts like candy, changing the culture of the Sox organization and ending their seasonal pain. This sudden burst of optimism stemmed from a report in The Athletic that an anonymous investor and limited partner of the Sox was attempting to buy shares from other limited partners. That mystery investor, author Jon Greenberg wrote, was none other than Justin Ishbia, who co-owns the Phoenix Suns and Phoenix Mercury with his brother, Mat, and recently had pulled out of a plan to buy the Minnesota Twins.

* South Side Weekly | Traveling Exhibit at Chicago Public Libraries Honors History of Black Steelworkers: “When I moved to the Southeast Side, I became interested in the region’s steel history and began doing personal research,” said Bianca Milligan Garcia, Harold Washington’s library associate for exhibits. “I wanted to make an exhibit about my community and our contributions to Chicago’s labor history but couldn’t find a narrow enough topic to make into an exhibit. I saw an opportunity when ASALH announced its 2025 theme.” After pitching the idea to the Exhibits Team and the African American Heritage Committee (of which she is a member), Milligan Garcia began the time-consuming process of finding information about the Black labor experience in Chicago’s steel industry by digging through archives at the Chicago Public Library’s repositories and exploring articles by scholars across various disciplines.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* AP | Jury finds Illinois landlord guilty of murder, hate crime in 2023 attack on Palestinian American boy: Joseph Czuba, 73, was charged in the fatal stabbing of Wadee Alfayoumi and the wounding of his mother, Hanan Shaheen on Oct. 14, 2023 in Plainfield, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) from Chicago. Authorities alleged the family — who were renting rooms in Czubas house — was targeted because of their Islamic faith and as a response to the war between Israel and Hamas that erupted on Oct. 7, 2023. Jurors deliberated less than 90 minutes over the crime that renewed fears of anti-Muslim discrimination in the Chicago area’s large and established Palestinian community.

* WGN | FBI drops new subpoena on Dolton: WGN Investigates has obtained a copy of the subpoena which is dated February 25… Election Day. A source says FBI agents hand-delivered the subpoena to Dolton Village Hall late Thursday. The subpoena seeks records related to the development of a restaurant and entertainment venue on land once reportedly owned by Henyard’s boyfriend. “They wanted to take our land,” Tiffany Kamara told WGN Investigates in a story broadcast one day before the subpoena was served.

* ABC Chicago | Northwestern among 10 schools to be visited by federal antisemitism task force: DOJ: The U.S. Department of justice announced the visit in a news release Friday. “The President, Attorney General Pamela Bondi, and the entire Administration are committed to ensuring that no one should feel unsafe or unwelcome on campus because of their religion,” Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Leo Terrell said in a statement. “The Task Force’s mandate is to bring the full force of the federal government to bear in our effort to eradicate Anti-Semitism, particularly in schools. These visits are just one of many steps this Administration is taking to deliver on that commitment.”

* Shaw Local | Abraham Lincoln visits Morris to teach students the value of honesty: 16th US President Abraham Lincoln (R-Illinois) visited Morris on Thursday and Friday, first stopping in for a haircut with Dick Sohan Thursday before stopping in at Morris Elementary for a talk with third grade students. For Lincoln, it was a retreading of old ground: He last visited Morris in 1858, stopping for a haircut at about the same location as the Sanitary Barber Shop at 121 W. Washington St. and sleeping at an inn that was somewhere close to Corleone’s at 110 Liberty St.

*** Downstate ***

* WSIL | Senator Fowler provides updates on Cairo Port District project: “Planning for the Alexander-Cairo Port District has been ongoing for nearly a decade,” Senator Fowler said. “Local, state and federal officials have been working to secure funding and advance the next stages of the project, which are expected to generate economic development, as well as possibly establish the Port District as a National hub for river commerce.”

* WCIA | VA employees ‘scared to death’ over federal cuts, dismissals: The federal government is continuing its effort to cut government spending, with some coming through workers with Veteran Affairs. Since the beginning of the month, there have been almost 3,000 VA employees dismissed across the country, some of whom were let go at the VA Illiana Health Care System in Danville. The VA Illiana in Danville confirmed a small number of probationary employees were dismissed this month. It put some employees who are within their first couple of years out of work.

* WCIA | Concerns over homeless prevention programs rise as cuts loom: Heartland Housed helps the homeless in the Springfield area, and they rely on Federal funds for a third of it’s funding, but that money isn’t just dropped in the organizations accounts. Josh Sabo says they have to work to get as much money as they can, and HUD staff is often very helpful with that.

* 25News | Lawyer proposes locally-owned cannabis dispensary in Pekin: A local lawyer specializing in cannabis industry law, Thomas Howard, proposed the business to the Pekin City Council on Monday. He said it would be the first and only locally-owned dispensary in the area. The business would potentially revitalize 359 Court St., the vacant, 12,000-square-foot historic Pekin Performing Arts Center. Howard said through the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act, the store would also be a licensed social equity dispensary in what the act defines as a “disproportionately impacted” area.

* WAND | Upgrades to the I-55 bridges over the Sangamon River: The Illinois Department of Transportation announced Thursday that a $29.5 million project to expand the Interstate 55 bridges over the Sangamon River north of Springfield is starting this week. […] “Improving these bridges is a major investment in the Springfield region and a big first step to modernizing a vital corridor for freight and travel for Illinois and the entire country,” said Lora Rensing, IDOT’s chief engineer and director of highways project implementation. “While we are busy working on I-55, we’re asking drivers to be patient, slow down and pay extra attention approaching and driving through the work zone.”

* Herald & Review | Decatur Public Library to celebrate 150 years of service to community: Activities are scheduled throughout the year, including a performance by folk artists Hungrytown on Saturday, March 1, a visit by PBS personality and social media library enthusiast Mychal Threets on March 22, and a 2-mile Color Run on April 12 that will have participants running/walking past previous library locations.

* WSIL | Upcoming event will commemorate 100th anniversary of Tri-State Tornado: The Tri-State Tornado stuck parts of southeast Missouri, southern Illinois, and southwest Indiana, on March 18, 1925. In our area, impacted communities include Gorham, Murphysboro, De Soto, Hurst-Bush, Zeigler, West Frankfort, Eighteen, Parrish, Crossville. Murphysboro was one of the hardest hit, with nearly 300 people killed, and thousands of buildings destroyed.

* WICS | Gabby Barrett to headline Du Quoin State Fair: Gabby Barrett will take the stage at the Du Quoin State Fair Grandstand to close out the 2025 Fair on Monday, September 1. Barrett’s debut single “I Hope” ruled the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart for a record-breaking 27 weeks, making her the youngest artist with a #1 debut on country radio in over two decades.

*** National ***

* Democracy Docket | Democrats Sue Trump Over Attempt to Control Independent Election Agency: The Democratic Party is suing President Donald Trump over an executive order that could make it easier for him to tilt elections in the GOP’s favor. The lawsuit, filed Friday by Elias Law Group on behalf of the three national Democratic committees, challenges an expansive executive order Trump issued earlier this month that would give him unprecedented power over key regulatory agencies that were designed to operate without direct White House control.

* WaPo | Trump officials start dismantling civil rights offices, as part of DOGE’s secret plan: Leaders at the Labor Department are planning to cut by 90 percent the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, which for decades has worked to ensure government contractors took affirmative action to end discrimination at their firms, documents obtained by The Washington Post show. The Federal Trade Commission, meanwhile, has halved its internal equal employment opportunity office to three employees from six, and similar moves have taken place at NASA, where most information about how to file complaints has been removed from its websites.

* CNN | Skype is shutting down after two decades: Skype will “no longer be available” to use starting in May, the company confirmed on X, telling users that their log-in information can be used on Microsoft Teams’ free tier in the “coming days.” Skype’s shutdown comes 14 years after Microsoft bought the service for $8.5 billion in cash, marking the company’s largest ever acquisition at the time. Microsoft integrated the service into its other products, such as Office and its ill-fated mobile operating service Windows Phone.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Updates to previous editions

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Pritzker: Cuts to Medicaid will be devastating to Illinois

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Gov. JB Pritzker, joined by Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin and several members of the Illinois congressional delegation, spoke this morning about the devastating impact to Illinois Medicaid recipients the federal budget represents.

The House budget calls for $2 trillion in cuts focused on safety-net programs like Medicaid, though it does not specify exact measures on individual cuts.

Almost 3.4 million people, including half the children in the state, are covered by Medicaid, Pritzker said. Medicaid is the largest insurer of people in nursing homes, he noted.

Click here to view Medicaid enrollment by Illinois State House and Senate districts.

* The Governor was asked about the budget ramifications if Federal Medicaid funds were cut

There’s no chance that the state of Illinois can make up for the dollars that we would lose if Medicaid is impacted in the ways that we believe that it will be because you’re talking about, if you just talked about the Medicaid expansion, which they’re talking about seemingly much more than that. But if you just talk about that piece, right, that’s about seven and a half billion dollars that the state of Illinois would have to come up with in order to extend that program and pay for it ourselves. There is not seven and a half billion dollars in the state of Illinois that we have to make up for that program. What would we have to do? I mean, we have contingency programs that we’ve thought up and put on paper that we want to put in place if, God forbid this happens.

But the reality is, it’s going to involve encouraging free care clinics, making sure that hospitals stay open as best we can, because they’re going to be layoffs across the state of Illinois. And Senator Durbin said earlier that he’s from Springfield, all across central Illinois, where he’s from, there will be closures. I mean literally, these hospitals cannot survive without they serve. They have populations, sometimes 60, 70, 80 percent of the population that they serve are Medicaid recipients, just like the safety net hospitals here in the city of Chicago. So I it’s it will be devastating.

There is not enough that the state can do to make up for the damage that Elon Musk, maybe I should say President Musk, and President Trump will do to the people of Illinois.

* From the governor’s press release

Illinois Medicaid By-the-Numbers:

    - Illinoisans Covered by Medicaid: 3.4 million. Approximately 1 in 4 Illinoisans
    - Illinois Children Covered by Medicaid: 1.4 million
    - Percentage of Illinois Births Covered by Medicaid: 44%
    - Illinois Adults Covered by ACA Expansion: 770,000
    - Illinois Nursing Home Days Covered by Medicaid: 68%
    - Percentage of IL Community Mental Health Center Patients Covered by Medicaid: 80%
    - Percentage of people in IL living with HIV covered by Medicaid: 50%
    - Number of people employed by Illinois hospitals and health systems: 445,000 (11% of the state’s total employment)

Among the most vulnerable to Republican cuts are the 770,000 Illinoisans who are covered through the ACA expansion, who would otherwise be ineligible for Medicaid. The last time Republicans attempted to eliminate the ACA Medicaid expansion in 2017, it was estimated that Illinois could lose between 55,000 to 60,000 jobs statewide and $7.5 billion in annual economic activity.

Cuts to Medicaid will affect the most vulnerable people in our communities – low-income adults, children, pregnant women, individuals with disabilities, seniors with limited financial resources, and people living in rural areas. A reduction to Medicaid services would also have a devastating impact on hospitals and health systems. In fiscal year 2024, the Medicaid program in Illinois paid $10.8 billion to hospitals, $3.8 billion to Long-Term Care facilities, $4.5 billion to pharmacies, and $2.1 billion to physicians and clinics across the state.

Medicaid also plays a critical role in Illinois’ economy, supporting jobs and communities across the state. Illinois’ hospitals and health systems, most of which serve Medicaid enrollees, annually generate $117.7 billion for the state. This breaks down to $50.3 billion for payroll, $61.8 billion for supplies and services, and $5.6 billion in capital funding. Every dollar spent on these categories, generates an additional $1.40 in spending, ultimately contributing to the growth of local economies across the state. Illinois hospitals and health systems also support 445,000 full-time jobs, comprising 11% of the state’s total employment.

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A look at the history of Illinois’ health insurance program for undocumented residents

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Flashback to May 27, 2020

Illinois will become the first state to provide Medicaid for undocumented seniors not only because of what state Rep. Delia Ramirez has heard from her constituents, but because of her own family’s experience.

Tucked in near the end of the 465-page budget implementation bill that passed the Illinois General Assembly late Saturday night was a provision giving Medicaid access to noncitizens over 65 years old and whose income is $12,670 or less, which is at or under the federal poverty level.

Gov. JB Pritzker said he will approve next year’s budget and its implementations. Medicaid services for qualified undocumented seniors will kick in July 1 when the 2021 budget year begins.

The expansion was a big win for the Legislative Latino Caucus, which Ramirez took lead on the effort through the health and human services working group leading up to the special session. She said the coverage will save the state money in the long run, costing about $2 million, which in her opinion, “is nothing to a $2 billion Medicaid bill.”

Emphasis added because cost and enrollment have always been extremely tough to predict, partly because not enough is known about the folks who are eligible and whether they’d even apply. That $2 million prediction was widely believed at the time, but the Fiscal Year 2021 cost for the senior program turned out to be $67 million and it doubled a year later and more than tripled by FY23.

* People ages 42-64 were added during the Fiscal Year 2022 budget. First-year costs were about $52.5 million. The following year, in FY23, costs rose 725 percent to $433 million. Total costs for all age groups was $644 million by that time, up from $187 million the year before.

And that’s when this happened

On June 16th, 2023, Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services abruptly announced that enrollment for the Health Benefits for Immigrant Adults (HBIA) program, which provides vital health coverage for Illinois immigrants ages 42-64, will be paused effective July 1. The notice also permits co-pays and reduced reimbursements to hospitals. One of the largest parts about HBIA and HBIS was that this Medicaid-like health insurance provided access to healthcare coverage with $0 premiums and $0 co-payments. With the changes that have been made, no new applicants of HBIA or HBIS will be accepted and those who are currently covered by these programs will have $250 co-pays for inpatient hospitalization, $100 co-pays for emergency room visits and will be charged 10% of the department rate for hospital or ambulatory surgical treatment center outpatient services.

Those changes were authorized by SB1298.

The actions stopped the rapid cost increases, and enrollment fell

In FY21, 6,884 individuals were enrolled in HBIS (65+). HBIS (65+) enrollment increased to 11,362 in FY22, 15,831 in FY23, and decreased to 11,464 in FY24. The HBIA (55-64) enrollment increased from 6,675 in FY22, to 17,024 in FY23, before decreasing to 13,596 in FY24. The HBIA (42-54) enrollment increased from 5,823 in FY22, to 36,912 in FY23, before decreasing to 27,941 in FY24.

And by this past December, total projected costs for Fiscal Year 2025 were down to $558 million, with total enrollment plunging from about 70,000 at its height in FY23 to 41,505.

* Even so, the costs were still far too high. During his budget address, the governor proposed eliminating the program for everyone but the seniors

Gov. JB Pritzker’s recently unveiled 2026 budget proposal includes a controversial cut.

It proposes to get rid of two programs that allow immigrants without legal status to receive healthcare coverage, specifically impacting undocumented adults aged 42 to 64. However, coverage for those 65 and older will remain intact.

The move has sparked backlash from the General Assembly’s Latino Caucus, as well as pro-immigrant advocacy groups.

If the HFS projected costs for this fiscal year holds up, getting rid of coverage for the 42-64 age cohort would save the state $419 million, leaving a $139 million cost for seniors, although that will likely fall too because entry is still cut off.

* The governor’s office undoubtedly knew the recent audit findings were published before he made those proposals. The Auditor General must submit his reports to agencies and allow them to respond. HFS responded on January 21st, so it had the report on-hand long before the governor’s budget address on February 19th.

The report focused on two things: Actual enrollment and costs far exceeded initial projections; And

During a review of the enrollment data, auditors identified 6,098 enrollees designated as “undocumented” who also had a Social Security Number. Auditors provided the 6,098 enrollees to HFS asking whether enrollees classified as undocumented enrollees should also have a Social Security Number. HFS officials reviewed and provided responses for a sample of 94 enrollees. Auditors determined that 19 of the 94 should have been recorded in the system as lawfully present or as being a legal permanent resident, not undocumented. This is an important distinction as after five years in the country, legal permanent residents become eligible for Medicaid and thus the State would receive federal matching dollars.

Auditors identified 688 enrollees who were enrolled in the HBIS (65+) program who were not 65 years of age or above. These 688 exceptions were provided to HFS for comment. After HFS’s review of 151, it was determined that 79 were signed up in error. Many of the errors occurred from incorrect birthdates provided by the enrollee, which were later corrected when documentation was provided.

During a review of the enrollment data, auditors identified 394 enrollees who appeared to have been enrolled in HBIS or HBIA after they had been in the country legally for over five years. These individuals are eligible for Medicaid, thus the State would receive federal matching dollars. These exceptions were provided to HFS for review and comment. HFS reviewed a sample of 17 and determined that 13 were approved incorrectly. Allowing ineligible enrollees in State-only funded programs should be avoided when possible.

HFS pledged to strengthen its internal controls. We’ll see.

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When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Friday, Feb 28, 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 Barb enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.

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If you won’t listen to me, Sen. Durbin, then listen to this expert and look at what got us here

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. From a Sun-Times op-ed by Seth Stern, the director of advocacy at Freedom of the Press Foundation and a First Amendment lawyer

Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin wants to sunset Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which protects websites and apps from liability for posts created by users. Without it, the internet as we know it couldn’t function — the legal risks of interactivity would be too great.

Politicians often frame Section 230 as a gift to big tech. That’s incorrect. Big tech companies are the only ones that could afford to survive without it. Upstart competitors couldn’t. Independent news outlets that foster dialog certainly couldn’t. Illinois political blog CapitolFax.com says Durbin’s plan would put it out of business. […]

As was the case before Section 230, post-repeal platforms might be safer taking a completely hands-off approach to content moderation than risking negligence lawsuits for trying, but inevitably failing, to police speech. […]

Durbin’s disdain for censorship led him to support the PRESS Act. With a president eager to silence journalists, now’s not the time to risk silencing free speech. A two-year sunset period offers cold comfort absent a plan to mitigate the damage during that window. Even if Durbin had one, there’s no reason to believe our dysfunctional Congress can pass it.

Demanding the elimination of Section 230 is probably the dumbest thing that Sen. Durbin has ever done.

* Here’s what led to the original congressional passage of the Communications Decency Act of 1996

In October 1994, an unknown user posted statements on Prodigy’s “Money Talk” bulletin board indicating that Stratton Oakmont, Inc., a Long Island securities brokerage firm, and its president, Daniel Porush, had committed criminal and fraudulent acts in connection with the initial public offering of Solomon-Page, Ltd. As a result, Stratton and Porush sued Prodigy and anonymous defendants in New York state court for defamation.

The plaintiffs argued that Prodigy should be considered a “publisher” of the anonymous poster’s statements. Under the common law of defamation, if Prodigy were considered a publisher, it could be held liable for the statements of the unknown user. Conversely, if it were found to be merely a “distributor,” it could not be held liable unless it knew or had reason to know about the allegedly defamatory statements.

“Money Talk” was, at the time, a widely read forum covering stocks, investments, and other business matters. Prodigy contracted with Charles Epstein to act as “Board Leader,” a position entailing, in part, participation in board discussions, board promotional efforts, and board supervision. In its argument that Prodigy was a publisher of the defamatory statements, the plaintiffs pointed to representations Prodigy had made in various newspaper articles representing itself as an organization that exercised editorial control over the content on its servers.

In making their case, the plaintiffs also pointed to Prodigy’s “content guidelines,” which stated rules that users were expected to abide by, a software screening program which filtered out offensive language, and the employment of moderators or “Board Leaders” who were responsible for enforcing the content guidelines.

In May 1995, on the plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment, the court held that these representations and policies were sufficient to treat Prodigy as a publisher. In so holding, the court distinguished the case from an earlier one involving CompuServe, which was found merely to be an “electronic for-profit library” or repository and thus a passive distributor. In particular, the court pointed to Prodigy’s creation of an “editorial staff of Board Leaders who have the ability to continually monitor incoming transmissions.” The court noted, however, that bulletin boards should normally be considered distributors when they do not exercise significant editorial control, as Prodigy had done.

Prodigy moved for reconsideration of the May 1995 decision, but the party’s settled in October 1995, apparently before the motion was decided.

In passing the Communications Decency Act of 1996, which, among other things, established immunity for internet service providers for publishing “information provided by another information content provider,” 47 U.S.C. § 230(c)(1), the House explicitly stated its intent to overturn the result reached in the Prodigy case. See H.R. Conf. Rep. 104-58, at 194.

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Please, don’t do stuff like this (Updated)

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Daily Herald poses a campaign question to a government employee on state time

Prompted by what he calls “radical” changes in Illinois’ criminal justice system, DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick is skipping a potential third term as the county’s top cop and setting his sights instead on the governor’s mansion. […]

Pritzker has not said whether he will run again in 2026. With a growing national profile as an outspoken opponent of President Donald Trump, his name also has been floated as a possible Democratic nominee for president in 2028.

Press secretary Alex Gough said via email Thursday that nothing has changed regarding Pritzker’s reelection plans, and declined to comment on Mendrick’s announcement.

Apparently, Gough told him Pritzker had already spoken to this and then referred the reporter to the campaign side.

* I don’t have hard data, but I have decades of experience listening to state government spokespersons regularly complain about reporters asking them campaign questions during state hours.

Hey, I’ve done it sometimes without thinking. It happens. But it’s not right to put a government employee in that position.

People write stories all the time about ethics violations, etc., yet it’s reporters who might be committing the most common ethics breach.

* Anyway, here’s an announcement/background roundup from Isabel…

    * WGN | DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick announces GOP run for Illinois governor: DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick on Thursday announced a Republican bid to become the next governor of Illinois. Seeking the GOP nomination in 2026, Mendrick declared that he would not be running for a third term as DuPage County Sheriff. Mendrick endorsed Undersheriff Eddie Moore as his successor.

    * Politico | Illinois Playbook: Mendrick doesn’t even have a campaign manager yet. His wife, a psychiatric nurse, filled the role in his two bids for sheriff, “but this will be too big for her to do alone so we’re going to figure all that out this weekend,” he said in an interview with your Playbook host. […] “I did not plan on running for sure,” Mendrick said. He made the surprise move after choosing not to leave Illinois because he didn’t like how it’s being run. He’s now staying put in Woodridge after his 25-year-old son said he wasn’t budging. Mendrick and his wife also have a 22-year-old son with autism and are active in the disability community, he said.

    * FOX Chicago | DuPage County sheriff announces run for Illinois Governor: What’s next: Mendrick will need strong Republican backing to mount a successful campaign against Governor Pritzker, who has a significant financial advantage with $323 million spent on past campaigns. “The backing I’m already getting is more than I expected. Will I be able to match a billionaire? No, probably not, but I just watched a presidential candidate (Kamala Harris) spend $2 billion and get nowhere with it,” he said.

    * Daily Herald | ‘We want our state back’: DuPage sheriff announces he will run for governor in 2026: Mendrick acknowledges that running for governor is a costly proposition, especially if he ultimately faces off with a self-funded billionaire like Pritzker. Even so, he said he didn’t make much effort to contact Republican leadership to line up support and fundraising before Thursday. “I think my message is strong enough that it will draw support,” he said, adding that he’s already been inundated with calls and messages from people offering support.

    * Tribune | DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick seeking GOP bid for Illinois governor in 2026: “I don’t care if the Democrats hate me and the media hates me. Do you really think I’m gonna get their votes anyway? I mean, really. And this is the Republican problem. A lot will be, ‘Oh, I’m so sorry. Let me join with …’” he told the GOP group. “No. Absolutely not. Hold firm. Do your job. Be a Republican. And don’t waver to these people just because they’re crying and screaming at you.”

    * ABC Chicago, 2023 | Hundreds pack DuPage County Board meeting to criticize, laud sheriff over assault weapons ban: The large response comes after DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick said he would not enforce the ban. He is one of more than 80 of the 102 sheriffs in the state who said they are not enforcing the new law.

    * NCTV | No censure for DuPage Sheriff, agreement reached on weapons ban enforcement: On Jan. 23, U.S. Representatives, state legislators, members of the Illinois congressional delegation, and DuPage County Board members met at the Danada House in Wheaton for a press conference, speaking out against Mendrick’s stance. During it, Rep. Sean Casten called for Mendrick to either retract his statement or resign. After the announcement, Mendrick released a statement saying the legislators held the press conference “to admonish and berate me, your DuPage County Sheriff, for questioning their authority of a very poorly written piece of legislation that has no clear direction on who will be enforcing new gun laws.”

…Adding… The governor was asked about Sheriff Mendrick during an unrelated event…

Good luck. Everybody has the option of running for public office. I understand he announced yesterday on his Facebook page, and so I don’t really have anything to say more about that. And I have not made up my mind about whether I would run for re-election.

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There’s No End To Credit Card Swipe Fee Greed

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Credit card companies collect more than $172 billion in swipe fees from customers and businesses each year, but it’s not enough to satisfy their greed. As consumers and retailers continue to grapple with inflation, Visa raised swipe fees on January 1.

Gov. JB Pritzker, Senate President Don Harmon, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch and the General Assembly took a stand against swipe fee greed by passing the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act, which limits swipe fees from being charged on the sales tax and tip portion of transactions. This law will provide tangible relief to Illinois families and retailers of all sizes.

While Visa and Mastercard fight to protect their unchecked duopoly in court, Illinois policymakers have sent a clear message that enough is enough.

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It’s just a bill

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

Senate Bill 148 would enable Illinois residents to open a special kind of savings account that could only be used to pay eligible costs for the purchase of a single-family residence. Deposits into those accounts would be deductible from state income taxes with some limitations.

The deductions would be limited to $5,000 per year for individuals and $10,000 per year for joint accounts, up to maximum aggregate amounts of $25,000 per individual and $50,000 for joint accounts over a 10-year period.

The accounts would be available to Illinois residents who have not owned or purchased, either individually or jointly, a single-family residence during the prior 10 years. That would include both first-time and “second-chance” buyers – people who may have purchased a home previously and now want to get into the ownership market again.

“When you look at the median sales price of a home in Illinois in 2024, it was almost $300,000,” Sen. Christine Castro, D-Elgin, said during a news conference Thursday. “That’s 8% higher than in 2023 and almost 40% then higher than in 2019. So you see the rapid (rising) cost of homes.” […]

The bill has been assigned to the Senate Revenue Committee and is awaiting further action.

* WAND

Illinois Senate Republicans are renewing their calls for property tax reform.

Caucus leaders told reporters in Springfield Thursday that Illinois should raise the income eligibility for the low-income senior citizen assessment freeze homestead exemption to $75,000 and tie future increases to inflation. […]

Sen. Chapin Rose (R-Mahomet) said lawmakers must pass a bill to cap the assessed value of properties at the rate of inflation. He argued Illinoisans should not have to see their property assessments rise higher than the rate of inflation. […]

Another proposal could allow taxpayers to receive a refund for any excess credit. In other words, people paying more in property taxes but less for income taxes would get a refund for the difference.

* House Minority Leader Tony McCombie…

House Minority Leader Tony McCombie is providing an update to constituents in her 89th District on Chronic Wasting Disease, fatal disease of the central nervous system in deer and elk. Since its first detection in a northwest Boone County deer in 2002, state efforts to manage the disease have had a lasting impact—especially in Leader McCombie’s legislative district. As a result, McCombie has filed a legislative package to produce state-based solutions.

“Input from residents has been the driving force behind my efforts to address Chronic Wasting Disease. Because of this feedback, I have identified legislation that represents our community’s voice and will make significant change,” said McCombie.

Based on overwhelming feedback from residents, Leader McCombie is advancing the following measures:

    - End the CWD sharpshooting program entirely (HB3858)
    - Automatically phase out the sharpshooting program in any area that has not had a confirmed CWD case in three years (HB2339)
    - Encourage responsible hunting by allowing special deer, turkey, and combination hunting licenses for landowners with at least 20 acres in counties where CWD has been identified (HB2340)

McCombie is urging constituents to stay involved on the issue. To date, two of the bills have moved forward, HB2339 and HB2340; they are assigned to the Agriculture and Conversation Committee in the Illinois House.

“Our community knows what is best, and I am relying on the voices from local residents to help me forge the path forward and ensure we reach a suitable outcome,” continued McCombie.

* WCIS

Insurance could potentially look a little different in Illinois. Lawmakers are pushing to enact a new bill that will require gun owners to have insurance.

Illinois State Representative, Bob Morgan, told me this idea has been in the works for years, and the main goal is to make Illinois a safer state.

Morgan is in the early stages of getting a gun insurance task force approved to help this legislation come to life.

“It’s representation from the insurance industry,” Morgan said “ Those who are promoting gun violence prevention, and those who are focused on gun rights, gun owner rights. Basically, have a broad-based representation to have this conversation and figure out whether this is something we can, and should do in Illinois.”

* Rep. Jed Davis…

tate Representative Jed Davis (R-Yorkville) has filed two bills to improve teacher recruitment in Illinois.

“As the son of a teacher who spent over 30 years in the classroom, I know firsthand the value of promoting and supporting educators,” said Rep. Davis. “It’s why I filed these bills – to tackle Illinois’ teacher shortage.”

House Bill 1101 increases funding for the Teach Illinois Scholarship Program, encouraging students pursuing education degrees in Illinois to stay and teach in communities facing critical shortages.

House Bill 1112 updates licensing requirements, allowing individuals with extensive hands-on experience in Manufacturing, Engineering, Technology, or Trade (METT) to earn an Educator License without a bachelor’s degree. This bill not only fills critical teaching gaps but also expands career pathways for young people choosing a route other than college.

“We desperately need more teachers to equip the next generation workforce,” Davis added. “These bills will help remove barriers holding back recruitment and bring more qualified educators into our classrooms.”

* Crain’s

General Assembly members are also considering several bills involving abortion, as well as attempting to pass an assisted suicide bill, something that’s come up perennially in recent years.

HB 3279, sponsored by Rep. Anna Moeller, D-Elgin, would provide immigrants residing in Illinois, whether lawfully admitted for permanent residence under the Immigration & Nationality Act or not, the same family planning medical coverage that the state now provides U.S. citizens under its Medical Assistance Programs. This includes coverage of reproductive services, including abortion. The bill has been sent to the Rules Committee.

HB 2904 and SB 1679, called the Health Care Transparency Act, are designed for the state to identify health care facilities that, for nonmedical reasons, won’t provide services like abortion, transgender care and end-of-life care. […]

HB 3637 is meant to protect health care workers governed by an Illinois licensing board from disciplinary actions for health care actions that aren’t illegal in Illinois, such as abortion services.

* WAND

A new bill in Springfield could require the state to provide funding for the mutual aid box alarm system to help first responders address disasters at large warehouses.

Rep. Katie Stuart (D-Edwardsville) said many leaders quickly learned about the importance of MABAS after the 2021 tornado that killed six employees at the Amazon warehouse in Edwardsville.

Stuart told her colleagues Thursday that fire departments deserve state funding for MABAS to alleviate difficulties instead of forcing small governments to pay the bill. […]

House Bill 1271 passed unanimously out of the House Police & Fire Committee Thursday. The measure now moves to the House floor.

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Open thread

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Mayor Brandon Johnson to appoint Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa to lead Park District. Tribune

    - The mayor will recommend Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, 35th, to be Parks superintendent, Ramirez-Rosa told the Tribune.
    - The Park District Board of Commissioners on Friday will approve Ramirez-Rosa’s appointment, effective April 1.
    - It would also open up a midterm vacancy in City Council that provides Johnson his first chance to exercise his mayoral powers to appoint an alderman

* Related stories…

* Governor Pritzker will be At UI Mile Square Health Center at 10:30 am to advocate against potential cuts to Medicaid. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Workers at big employers like Northwestern get protections from Evanston City Council: When big companies or institutions change contractors, workers can suddenly lose their jobs. But Evanston now is the first municipality in Illinois to give them some protections. The Evanston City Council passed the Workers’ Retention Ordinance Monday, requiring hotels, restaurants, cafeterias and educational institutions with at least 200 contracted positions to take steps to retain existing workforce. Currently, only Northwestern University meets the threshold.

* Tribune | Chicago faith and civic leaders encourage people to participate in nationwide ‘Blackout Friday’: Faith-based and community leaders from across Chicago urged the public to not buy from major retailers and companies on Friday as part of nationwide ‘Blackout Friday’ protest. The movement is a 24-hour economic blackout in which consumers are not supposed to buy from corporations, avoid all nonessential purchases and if necessary, only shop at local businesses.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Center Square | Craft distillers call for updated spirit distribution laws in Illinois: Craft distillers in Illinois are trying to level the playing field when it comes to distributing their products. According to the Illinois Craft Distillers Association, while 47 states allow for the direct shipment of wine directly from winemakers to consumers, only 11 states currently allow distillers to ship their products directly to consumers and Illinois is not one of them.

*** Statewide ***

* WCIA | Illinois DNR encourages residents to buy fishing license, invest in conservation: When buyers purchase an Illinois fishing license, they’re paying for fishing privileges for the year. But, they’re also investing in conservation, education and economic activity throughout Illinois. Illinois fishing licenses go on sale March 1 and cost $15.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Chicago’s top film post vacant as production season kicks into high gear: Kicking off production season, Apple TV’s Dark Matter is opening up portals in Wicker Park, The Bear is cooking up drama downtown and the seemingly omnipresent One Chicago (Fire/Med/P.D.) is staging emergencies across the city. But who’s here to roll out the red carpet as those teams arrive? The city’s top film post has been vacant since December.

* Tribune | As distraught parents plead, school board votes to keep Acero charter schools open, despite financial warning: The Chicago Board of Education approved an amended resolution Thursday requiring Chicago Public Schools to keep open several charter schools slated for closure despite financial warnings that doing so would be unwise. After a protracted and often confusing debate on the feasibility and fine print of the amendment, the school board voted 16 to 3 with one abstention to keep five of the seven schools slated for closure in Acero Charter Network open through the end of the 2025-26 school year and incorporate them as district schools the next year. The board did not provide a concrete determination for the other two schools.

* WGN | Chicago drivers will face an additional 50 speed cameras this year: While locations for the additional cameras have largely not yet been determined, CDOT officials said they’ll consider crash data and requests from alders over the last three years. By state law, cameras can only be within 660 feet of a school or a park.

* Crain’s | CTA unveils plans for space beneath new Red and Purple Line el tracks: The design plans, developed in conjunction with Chicago-based Site Design Group, were presented to residents of Edgewater and Uptown at public meetings this week. The concept for the space includes a pedestrian trail, dog parks, playground, fitness area, benches and a plaza space for community events.

* Tribune | In Midway near-collision, NTSB chair cites business jet crew’s apparent ‘failure to listen’: “We don’t believe that this was an air traffic control issue,” Jennifer Homendy, chair of the National Transportation Safety Board, said in an appearance Wednesday morning on “Fox & Friends.” “It appears this was a failure of the flight crew from Flexjet to listen and abide by the instructions of air traffic control.” The NTSB is continuing to investigate, as is the Federal Aviation Administration. But Homendy said the crew of the smaller plane, operated by private jet company Flexjet, was supposed to line up and wait short of the runway on which the Southwest plane was to land. The smaller plane failed to do so.

* WTTW | Have You Seen Little ‘Blue Lobsters’ Washed Up on Chicago Beaches? Congrats, You’ve Met One of the Great Lakes Most Successful Invaders: For an invasive species specialist like Reuben Keller, Lake Michigan is teeming with research opportunities. “Almost everything that we see in the lake that is alive is invasive,” said Keller, a professor at Loyola University Chicago’s School of Environmental Sustainability. “Any rocks are covered in zebra or quagga mussels, both of which are invasive. Most of the time that we dive, the only fish that we see are round gobies, which are an invasive fish.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Mundelein mayoral candidates spurn Trump on mass deportations, say police shouldn’t assist U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement: The stance shared by Robin Meier and Tim Wilson aligns with current village policy and defies attempts by President Donald Trump to quickly purge the nation of immigrants living here illegally. The issue particularly is pertinent in Mundelein, where more than 36% of residents are Hispanic and more than 45% of residents age 5 or older live in homes where languages other than English are spoken, according to the latest U.S. census data.

* Daily Herald | ‘We want our state back’: Why DuPage sheriff says he’s running for governor in 2026: Mendrick, a Republican from Woodridge, announced Thursday he will run for Illinois governor in the 2026 election. He’s the first candidate to formally declare for the race. In a phone interview Thursday, Mendrick said he’s been thinking about running for governor for about two years, as he’s watched legislation like the state’s SAFE-T Act — which eliminated cash bail in Illinois — have what he sees as negative impacts on law and order.

* Daily Southtown | Homewood OKs new TIF district with eye toward redevelopment on Halsted: Homewood officials have approved a new tax increment financing district that takes in property along the Halsted Street commercial corridor and includes the vacant Walmart property, empty for nearly two years. Using increases in property tax revenue, the village hopes to spur redevelopment in that area of the community, which includes commercial businesses as well as empty office space at the northwest corner of Halsted and Ridge Road.

* Daily Herald | Honoring history: Elk Grove Village’s plan to revive a revolutionary relic: Elk Grove Village plans to annex the historic final resting place of a number of notable locals — including the only two known Revolutionary War veterans interred in Cook County — while launching a fundraising campaign to fix faded and sunken graves and make other upgrades. Elk Grove Cemetery — a 38,000-square-foot graveyard tucked in between Arlington Heights Road, the Jane Addams Tollway and a Nicor gas pipeline — is a relic of pre-suburban sprawl, when pioneers arrived from the east and found expansive land to till.

*** Downstate ***

* PJ Star | ‘Full of gratitude’: Peoria mayor comfortably wins primary: Peoria Mayor Rita Ali and at-large City Councilmember John Kelly have secured their spots as Peoria’s mayoral candidates in April’s general election after emerging as the top two vote getters in Tuesday night’s primary election based on unofficial election results. With 100% of precincts reporting, mayoral candidate Chuck Grayeb, a city councilmember representing the 2nd District, does not have enough votes to advance in the race.

* Rockford Register Star | Rockford elects 21 year old to City Council: Tamir Bell, 21, easily defeated a field of three opponents to win the Democratic primary election Tuesday. He is expected to appear on the April 1 consolidated election ballot unopposed. Bell said he entered the race to provide better leadership for the city’s westside and give its residents a louder voice in city government.

* BND | Former bookkeeper sentenced in theft of $135K from metro-east school district: A former bookkeeper for Dupo School District 196 has been sentenced to 15 months’ incarceration for embezzling from the district. Linda J. Johnson, 58, of Waterloo, was employed by the district from 1993 to 2022. She was accused of pocketing $135,566.80 in cash that she was supposed to deposit in a school district bank account to support student athletics, clubs and other extracurricular activities.

* WCIA | Danville resident reminisces about Gene Hackman after his death: But — many people in Danville still wanted to save the Fischer Theatre, a downtown staple since 1884. So, Norris and two other men started the Vermillion Heritage Foundation. […] Norris said they needed about $4 million for the project. So, in 1988 they hosted a fundraiser at the home of Julius Hegeler — and invited Hackman, Dick and Jerry Van Dyke, Bobby Short and Donald O’Connor.

* WCIA | World’s oldest brewery is coming to Central Illinois: The world’s oldest brewery is coming to Central Illinois. Yuengling will be hitting shelves in hundreds of stores next week. An Effingham based company called Koerner Distributors will be handling the distribution in Central Illinois. The president of Koerner Distributors said they’ve been planning this launch for about a year now.

*** National ***

* LA Times | Mass firings across National Weather Service, NOAA ignite fury among scientists worldwide: The full extent of the layoffs across NOAA were not immediately clear, but Democratic legislators said hundreds of scientists and experts had been notified of terminated employment. NOAA — which includes the National Hurricane Center and the Tsunami Warning Center — is the latest in a string of federal agencies targeted for cuts by billionaire Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Feb 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Feb 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

As the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget Director Alexis Sturm warned a House committee that uncertainty about President Donald Trump’s economic and administrative policies could affect Illinois revenue, the president announced new tariffs will take effect Tuesday on imports from some of Illinois’ top trading partners.

After initially pausing implementing 25% tariffs on products from Canada and Mexico, Trump announced in a social media post Thursday morning that tariffs will begin on March 4. In addition, he said the U.S. will add another 10% tariff on Chinese goods. […]

Meanwhile in the Illinois Statehouse, Sturm told the House Revenue and Finance Committee that revenue projections in Gov. JB Pritzker’s introduced budget account for the possibility of tariffs affecting the economy.

“There’s a lot of uncertainty in our outlook based on what’s going on at the national level regarding tariffs, tax policy, what the Federal Reserve is going to do,” Sturm said. […]

Asked whether there are any spending cut plans for downturns in revenue projections, Sturm the governor’s office doesn’t have a backup plan.

“At this point, no,” Sturm said. “I think the important thing to watch is what happens in April.”

Sturm hinted there could be some good news for state finances when income tax revenue is reported at the end of April. She said state officials are expecting a “pretty significant April tax payment,” which could cause state officials to reevaluate their revenue projections for the current fiscal year.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WCIA | ‘Drugs don’t work if you cannot afford them’: Rally held in Illinois Capitol to regulate prescription costs: Many people across Illinois are struggling to pay for their prescriptions, and around 250 people came together in the Capitol with an idea to curb the prices. Advocates are fighting for the Illinois lawmakers to pass a bill to create a Prescription Drug Affordability Board. That five-person board will cap the prices of certain drugs across the state to ensure residents can afford them.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Chicago sees dealmaking slump as early Trump moves drive uncertainty: Dealmaking has remained stuck in neutral in 2025 as uncertainty about the impact of President Donald Trump’s early actions has kept mergers and acquisitions activity light, belying forecasts for a long-awaited market surge this year. “It certainly has not materialized,” said Brad Haller, senior partner for mergers and acquisitions at business and technology consulting firm West Monroe. “In terms of new inbound activity, the first two months of this year, it has not met our expectations.”

* Fox 32 | Why is Brandon Johnson testifying before Congress?: In January, the House Committee on Oversight and Reform sent a formal letter to City Hall, requesting Johnson’s participation in a public hearing on Capitol Hill. The letter cited concerns about the impact of sanctuary policies in Chicago and three other cities—New York, Boston, and Denver. It claimed such policies fail to comply with federal law and suggested, “Citizens of all four cities have suffered due to sanctuary policies.” House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) confirmed all four mayors will testify at the full committee hearing on March 5.

* Bloomberg | Walgreens rises on report that Sycamore would split company: Sycamore, which has been reportedly exploring a purchase of Walgreens for months, is planning on splitting up the company’s US and UK pharmacy businesses, as well as its specialty pharmacy unit, the Financial Times reported Thursday. Walgreens shares rose as much as 7.3% when US markets opened. They had gained 18% this year through Wednesday’s close. Representatives for Walgreens and Sycamore declined to comment. The stock was up 4% at about $11.50 as of 11:50 a.m. on Thursday.

* Sun-Times | Bears have 4th-most salary-cap space as NFL announces record-high $279.2 million cap: Regardless of where the final number fell, the Bears were set to have the fourth-most salary-cap space when the new league year begins March 12. After recent cuts of tight end Gerald Everett and defensive end DeMarcus Walker, they’re on track to have $79.5 million in space when they start negotiating with free agents March 10. That trails only the Patriots at $127.8 million, the Raiders at $96.5 million and the Commanders at $81.9 million. NFC North rivals the Vikings ($63 million) and Lions ($51.5 million) also are in the top 10, and the Packers have $48.8 million to spend.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Monica Gordon | Lives are lost in south suburban Cook County because it’s a trauma center desert: In the heart of the Southland, a critical health care gap has been widening, one that endangers lives every day. The absence of a trauma center in this region is more than an inconvenience; it is a public health crisis that demands immediate attention and collective action. As someone who has lived and worked in the south suburbs throughout my career and served as an elected official, I have seen firsthand the devastating impact of this health care void. Trauma centers are not just hospitals; they are lifelines. These centers significantly improve survival rates and patient outcomes for traumatic brain injuries, gunshot wounds, injuries sustained in motor vehicle crashes and so much more.

* Naperville | Naperville craft brewers worried about potential impact of Trump’s aluminum tariffs: For Naperville’s Go Brewing, aluminum cans play a substantial role in manufacturing. Ask president and founder Joe Chura, and he’d say about 99.99% of the nonalcoholic craft brewery’s offerings are doled out in aluminum cans. So with President Donald Trump’s 25% tariffs on all imported aluminum set to go into effect on March 12, the potential local impact “is really on our mind,” Chura says.

* Sun-Times | Graduate saddled with $138K debt for ‘worthless’ degree sues loan servicer Navient for fraud: An Aurora woman who attended a “predatory for-profit” college in the Loop filed a proposed class action lawsuit Wednesday on behalf of student loan borrowers who were shut out of getting their loans discharged, following a 2022 settlement against loan servicer Navient Corp. Amanda Luciano, 38, racked up more than $138,000 in debt and has paid off about $52,000. The lawsuit says Navient should have erased her loans because she attended a “predatory for-profit” school. Instead, the company refused and wouldn’t explain why. Luciano filed the lawsuit against Navient and its subsidiary, Navient Solutions, in Cook County Circuit Court, saying the servicer fraudulently and unfairly denied her request to have her loans discharged. Her complaint seeks class action status for other Illinois borrowers who also received “boilerplate” denials from Navient.

* Tribune | Ex-sailor pleads guilty to terrorist plot to attack Naval Station Great Lakes in 2022: A former sailor at the Naval Station Great Lakes has pleaded guilty to a 2022 terrorist plot to attack the base in Chicago’s northern suburbs on behalf of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, purportedly to avenge the death of an Iranian general killed by U.S. forces. Xuanyu Harry Pang, 38, of North Chicago, pleaded guilty to conspiring to and attempting to willfully injure and destroy national defense premises with the intent to obstruct the national defense of the U.S., court records show.

*** Downstate ***

* WJBD | Demolition work underway for new operating and emergency room at Salem Township Hospital: Demolition work is now underway in the future area that will house the Salem Township Hospital emergency and operating room areas. Hospital CEO James Timpe says no surprises have been found. “Demolition has been underway for about three weeks, and we’re seeing the area downstairs that used to be the rural health center is being cleared out,” Timpe said. “It’s looking good, and we should have a plan from our architect in a couple of weeks. They’ll send that out for bids, and we’ll see if we can come in under budget.”

* Shaw Local | Keast ousts Schore in Bourbonnais mayoral primary: The village of Bourbonnais will have a new mayor after the April 1 consolidated general election. Trustee Jeff Keast soundly defeated four-term incumbent Mayor Paul Schore in Tuesday’s Bourbonnais Citizens Party primary race. Keast has been a trustee for 10 years. According to unofficial results, Keast finished with 1,061 votes (60.7%) to Schore’s 686 votes (39.3%).

* WJBD | Marion County Board hires new county highway engineer: The Marion County Board has hired Alex Kreke as its new county highway engineer, pending IDOT approval. Kreke is currently an engineer with the city of Wentzville, Missouri. Road and Bridge Committee Co-Chair Adam Smith says Kreke is originally from Dietrich and wanted to return to the Southern Illinois area. “He seems to be really motivated to be back in the area, and he seems like he’s very much interested in learning about the county highway business,” Smith said. “He’s got a lot of experience with city streets, sewers and infrastructure, so he ought to be a great fit for our county.”

* Illinois Times | The Taste of Black Springfield: Celebrate Black History Month and experience the best of local Black-owned food, music and fun at the same time. This event’s menu ranges from barbecue to soul food to sweet treats. Entry is free but event attendees are urged to donate to vendors at the event. Fifteen Black-owned businesses are set to provide their specialties for this event.

*** National ***

* Bloomberg | From egg prices to housing, US inflation is heating up again: “Our outlook is very much for inflation to be coming back. We’ve been saying second half of this year, but it seems like the pressures are already starting to build,” said Lauren Saidel-Baker, economist at ITR Economics. And between the administration’s policies on tariffs and immigration, there’s more to come, she said. “I want to be absolutely clear: there are upside risks to our inflation outlook.”

* NYT | Organ Transplant System ‘in Chaos’ as Waiting Lists Are Ignored: For decades, fairness has been the guiding principle of the American organ transplant system. Its bedrock, a national registry, operates under strict federal rules meant to ensure that donated organs are offered to the patients who need them most, in careful order of priority. But today, officials regularly ignore the rankings, leapfrogging over hundreds or even thousands of people when they give out kidneys, livers, lungs and hearts. These organs often go to recipients who are not as sick, have not been waiting nearly as long and, in some cases, are not on the list at all, a New York Times investigation found.

* The Atlantic | Inside the Collapse at the NIH: The lights at the NIH are on; staff are at their desks. But since late January, the agency has issued only a fraction of its usual awards—many in haphazard spurts, as officials rushed grants through the pipeline in whatever limited windows they could manage. As of this week, some of the agency’s 27 institutes and centers are still issuing no new grants at all, one NIH official told me. Grant-management officers, who sign their name to awards, are too afraid, the official said, that violating the president’s wishes will mean losing their livelihood. (Most of the officials I spoke with requested anonymity, out of fear for their job at the agency, or—for those who have left—further professional consequences.)

  3 Comments      


Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois

Thursday, Feb 27, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

A last-minute provision called the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act (IFPA) was snuck into the budget process last May and will create chaos for small businesses and consumers across Illinois if it takes effect on July 1, 2025.

The IFPA gives corporate mega-stores like Walmart and Home Depot — who pushed for this backroom deal — millions more in profits, while small business owners get new expenses and accounting headaches. What’s more, consumers could be forced to pay for parts of their transactions in cash if this law moves forward.

A recent court ruling in the litigation challenging the law suggests IFPA is likely pre-empted by federal law for national banks and will only apply to credit unions and local Illinois banks, putting local banks at a disadvantage against their national competitors.

Illinois lawmakers should repeal the IFPA and focus on protecting small businesses and consumers across the state — not lining the pockets of corporate mega-stores.

Stop the countdown to chaos by supporting a repeal of this misguided and flawed policy. Learn more at https://guardyourcard.com/illinois/

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DuPage County sheriff says he’s running for governor (Updated)

Thursday, Feb 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick’s Facebook page

Sheriff Mendrick is running for Governor of Illinois!!!

Today I’m announcing that I will not be running for a third term as DuPage County Sheriff in the election cycle of 2026. This was a very hard decision to make. The legislation changes that have been imposed on Illinois from the governors office are state laws that directly conflict with existing federal laws. The safety act stops us from rehabilitating people in our jails and the sanctuary city laws force federal authorities into our neighborhoods because these state laws deny them access to these criminals while they are in custody within a correctional facility. This is not right. My family and I have decided that we want our State back. We don’t like being fearful of crime that is randomly occurring now in our streets, homes and our retail stores due to soft on crime legislation. We don’t want to move out of Illinois like so much of our population. We really don’t. We love this state. That’s why I’ve decided to run for the Office of Governor of Illinois. I will bring safety, security and fairness to the city of Chicago and the rest of our State. I will bring more than 30 years of law enforcement and correctional facility experience in the second largest county in the State of Illinois to a city that desperately needs it. I will bring State laws back into alignment with law enforcement principles that make rational sense and will once again create an environment in our homes that will make all of us feel safe. An environment where citizens will once again apply to be police officers. Our culture is being eliminated by senseless laws created by our current government that persecutes cops and empowers criminals. I’m here to stop the bleed. To do this we must have strong leaders with actual law enforcement experience. That’s why my current Undersheriff, Eddie Moore, has my full support and endorsement to be the next DuPage County Sheriff. Undersheriff Moore has been with me from the beginning and has helped me create what the DuPage County Sheriff’s Office is today. I feel secure in my home County where I can run for Governor and still have a Sheriff that will keep us safe and secure. Eddie Moore is that person. He has no equal in a race for Dupage County Sheriff. I’ve asked a question to thousands of people over the last 6 years and have only received one response, without question; “do you think that DuPage County should be more like Chicago and mimic their attributes or should Chicago be more like DuPage County and assimilate our attributes?”Take a guess at what every single answer was? DuPage!!!We are DuPage strong. Let’s be Illinois strong! What we have done can be done Statewide. Don’t let them put you to sleep with “it’s always been this way” talk. We need a secure future for our State and we will make Chicago and Illinois safe again.

* Sheriff Mendrick went on Ray Stevens’ WLS program today. Core message

We have two, I’d say, major problems in this state, and it’s going to be the sanctuary city status, and it’s going to be the SAFE-T Act.

I mean, starting with sanctuary city, you know, you have a safety issue there too. But what, I guess I don’t understand, because, you know, we have a very large budget too, and the sheriff’s office is the biggest, second biggest county in the state. But I get audited all the time. I mean, I get audited probably three, four times a year by all kinds of different entities. I don’t see how you could go so over-budget. And whether you agree with the sanctuary state or don’t, I don’t understand the concept of having a policy that enables something that’s going to blow your budget out of the water. I don’t know how you can say, ‘Hey, I’m going to have a policy. I know it’s going to cost a billion dollars more than the budget that I’m given, but I’m going to keep this policy, and I’m going to still cost money.’ And what a billion dollars was last year will probably be more like $3 billion this year.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

* Regarding Gov. Pritzker’s rhetoric about President Donald Trump and whether that has had an impact on DuPage County

Well, there have been some things that were staged shortly, nothing that was disruptive, though. I think what they’re trying to do is just to make sure there’s a heartbeat behind the budget request. I mean, when you’re that far again over budget and, you know.

I want to talk really quick about the ICE raids too, you know, I get a kick out of this where we’re hearing all these complaints about ICE raids, ICE raids. But then I want to go back to policy. We have a sanctuary state policy that says we cannot speak to the federal government that’s in charge of a nationwide push for illegal immigrants, and they’re saying that they want to get rid of their rapists and murderers. But part of that is you have no access, ICE has no access to our jail system. So you got to feel bad for the federal government in a way, because they’re charged with the job, the only way they can do it now, they’re being forced to not go to a jail, which is a safe environment where you’re going to get your rapist or murder. I don’t have anybody in my jail, neither does Cook County, that is there just for immigration. They’re there for whatever any other citizen would be arrested for. So they’re in this environment, and they don’t allow access to a jail. So then ICE is forced to go into neighborhoods, find them where they are, and then, yeah, there’s collateral damage now, too, because if say there’s two criminal illegal aliens, and then there’s two people who are just here illegally, if they let those people go, they’re technically committing a crime on ICE laws. I mean, these are federal laws. I mean, so you have a policy that defies federal laws, and it’s also causing your budget to blossom billions over what it’s supposed to be.

* SAFE-T Act

I gotta go back to the SAFE-T Act, and why it bothers me so bad is it actually promulgates long term incarceration. So you take, before the SAFE-T Act, you take a burglar, you come in. We used to classify like a burglar. We call them low hanging fruit. It’s usually a substance driven crime. We do full detoxification stabilization of your personnel through psychiatric services. We have 200 classes, courses taught by 80 counselors and educators per week. And then we start vocational training. We have welding, tiling, dry walling, horticulture, indoor and outdoor, small engine repair, the tattoo removal, suits for success, they get suits. And then we have a re-entry program, so we bring our recidivism rates down from a 75 percentile level down to more closer to 20%, so that is because we’re stabilizing a personality and getting them a job. And what the SAFE-T Act does is they let them go. They believe they’re just getting a ticket, but that still qualifies as an arrest. So when you get three more of them and finally wind up in front of a judge, you’re a multiple offender, and you can do 15 years in IDOC, so the SAFE-T Act actually pumps them out temporarily, until they go to court, then they’re getting the big charges. So the SAFE-T Act fails. And we have so many people on warrants, we haven’t reduced our population. Nothing in the SAFE-T Act worked, other than demoralizing the police being soft on crime and, you know, taking away, I would say, just the protections from the police and giving those protections to criminals.

* Asked whether he has campaign donors

So you know, I’ve been an elected official for six years, and we actually ran pretty hard. We ran for preparatory about two, three years prior to that to first get elected. So through the course of my political career, I’ve have thousands of donors. So I do have donors en masse, and I have been starting getting calls just yesterday without announcing, people are hearing rumblings. And these are from some of the bigger guys that are saying that first they want to make sure that a) that I’m Republican. I think a lot of these people don’t want another, and I mean no offense to Democrats, it’s just that the Democrat policies that have led to what I think, the dismantling destruction of Illinois, aren’t popular anymore. I think they want to see conservative values. And when I say I’m a Republican, that means, yes, I am conservative. It doesn’t mean that I’m hardcore and, you know, extremist, no, not at all. In fact, you know, I understand the value of the real business.

In ten years, he’s raised $854K. As of the end of the last quarter, he had $87K in the bank. He had one race, in 2018, which he won. He was unopposed in 2022.

* You’ll likely hear this question a lot from him

Obviously, I want to protect the police. I want to see police empowered again. I want to see us be tough on crime again. You know, I always ask this question every forum I go. Thousands of people, I’ve never had an adverse reaction to this question other than one answer. Now you’ll see clearly what question this is? So, I would say, so do you think that DuPage County, second biggest county in the state, right next to Chicago, do you think that they would do better by absorbing the attributes and being more like Chicago? Or do you think Chicago could benefit from absorbing the attributes of DuPage County and being more like us?

…Adding… From DuPage County Board Chair Deb Conroy…

MAGA Jim Mendrick’s brand does not match the majority of voters in DuPage County. This is a great day for JB Pritzker, Illinois and DuPage Democrats.

* Related…

    * Capitol News Illinois | Audit finds Illinois’ noncitizen health care programs far outstripped original cost estimates: The audit, which lawmakers requested in late 2023, comes one week after Pritzker delivered his annual budget proposal to the General Assembly. The governor’s plan would defund the newer of the two programs, which is aimed at noncitizens aged 44 to 64, while leaving in place the smaller program for noncitizen seniors aged 65 and older.

    * Tribune | Audit finds many were improperly enrolled in state health care program for noncitizens, while costs were vastly underestimated: The cost overruns were particularly pronounced in the program meant for recipients ages 42 to 64, with the actual expenditure of $485 million through the three years ending June 30, 2023, the period covered by the audit, coming in at nearly four times the initially estimated cost of $126 million, according to the report. During the same period, the actual cost of the program for those 65 and older was $412 million, nearly double the original projection of $224 million.

    * Crain’s | Illinois’ immigrant health plans cost taxpayers much more than projected, audit finds: Auditors found 6,098 enrollees designated as “undocumented” who had Social Security numbers. When that information was presented to the Illinois Department of Healthcare & Family Services, or HFS, the agency provided responses for a sample of 94 enrollees. Auditors determined that 19 of those 94 should have been designated as lawfully present or as being a legal permanent resident — an important distinction because legal permanent residents become eligible for Medicaid after five years in the U.S.

    * Sun-Times | Pritzker team vastly underestimated health care costs for adults who lack legal status, state audit finds: At a news briefing in Chicago Wednesday, Pritzker bypassed some of the errors spotlighted in the audit and focused on the fleeting nature of immigration status. He also spoke of his support for universal health care. “I think the thing that is missing from the reporting, and what I would point out to you, is that number one, people’s immigration status changes during the course of a year. You’ve got people who were eligible for the program, who became ineligible for the program,” Pritzker said.

    * WTVO | Audit finds Illinois vastly underestimated cost of noncitizen heathcare on taxpayers: Republicans have been critical of the program since its inception. “We’re the only state that puts this burden on Illinois tax on their own state taxpayers taking this on and to not run it properly and to have these large cost overruns, that’s how you end up with a budget deficit,” Senate Minority Leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove) said Wednesday. “That’s what’s crowding out spending on education. That’s what’s crowding out spending on other components of the state budget. That’s why we need an audit.”

  64 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Thursday, Feb 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* HB1710 from Rep. Kam Buckner was discussed in a subject matter hearing of the House Gun Violence Prevention Committee yesterday. WAND

State Rep. Kam Buckner (D-Chicago) has been working on a law enforcement transparency bill for several years. The plan would require law enforcement to create quarterly reports on all homicide and violent crime in their communities.

In the report would be the crime, the date it happened and the status of the case. This would let people keep themselves updated on police progress on crimes that impacted their families. […]

“Nobody wants to get rid of gun violence more than legal gun owners,” State Rep. C.D. Davidsmeyer (R-Jacksonville) said. “I want to reiterate the need for proper prosecution and not just for penalizing the individual but for closure for the victims and the victims family. I appreciate what you’re trying to do.”

Illinois State Police are currently against the bill, but are in conversation with Buckner to change some language of the bill. […]

The bill is still in committee where lawmakers could vote on it later in session.

* Sun-Times

Decades of predatory towing practices in Illinois have led to pulled licenses, a name change, at least one folk song and many a frustrated driver.

Now state legislators have proposed a bill to curb towing companies’ ability to take advantage of car owners whose vehicles crash or break down.

The bill would give the Illinois Commerce Commission the authority to crack down on businesses that use loopholes under current laws and hold towing firms accountable, said state Sen. Celina Villanueva, D-Chicago.

The commission has fined repeat offenders hundreds of thousands of dollars, but many of these fines go unpaid, while some bad actors continue operating by renaming their businesses.

More from ABC Chicago

“The problem is these fines go unpaid, and the bad actors continue to be just that,” said Ruben Ramirez Jr., Chief of Police at Illinois Commerce Commission Police. “They ignored the citations we write and continue illegal operations, and because of the way the current towing safety towing law is written, they can register with a new towing license just by using a new company name.”

“Our bill, Senate Bill 2040, takes aim at these bad actors and their shady business practices,” State Senator Celina Villanueva said. “Their predatory practices will no longer be tolerated. One critical provision in the Bill would ban towing companies from holding on to personal property.”

The proposed bill would not be regulating pricing, which is done by federal law. ABC7 will provide updates as to when the new bill moves forward for a vote it’s in the beginning stages.

* WAND

The Illinois Pharmacists Association and Illinois Council of Health System Pharmacists are backing Gov. JB Pritzker’s plan to lower drug prices and increase access to community pharmacies. […]

“It is through the tireless efforts of these elected officials that we hope to see the end of PBM-driven practices that have long terrorized patients and pharmacies here in Illinois,” said IPhA President and Petersburg Pharmacist David Bagot. “Together, we can ensure PBMs no longer control the system at the expense of the patients and the pharmacies.” […]

The governor’s legislation could set new transparency requirements and penalize PBMs when they fail to comply. Sponsors told WAND News that they plan to have the bill language filed next week. […]

Still, the Pharmaceutical Care Management Association told WAND News last week that Pritzker missed the mark on the value of pharmacy benefit managers. Their organization argued that the core mission of PBMs is to lower prescription drug prices and increase access.

“PBMs are working on behalf of Illinois employers, unions, and patients in the fight against high drug costs and are the only stakeholder in the prescription drug supply chain dedicated to lowering drug costs,” PCMA leaders stated. “In fact, PBMs save patients and employers $1,040 per person per year in the state and will save Illinois patients and health plans $39.9 billion over ten years.”

* Sen. Robert Peters…

Illinois workers are on track to receive more options and better security when it comes to saving for retirement thanks to a new measure sponsored by State Senator Robert Peters, which advanced out of the Senate State Government Committee Wednesday.

“We know retirement savings can be a challenge for Illinoisans, especially those without access to a 401(k) or similar employer plan,” said Peters (D-Chicago). “This bill gives workers more flexibility to choose the best retirement savings options for their situation.”

In 2015, the state created the Illinois Secure Choice Savings Program to address the growing gap in retirement savings for Illinois workers. Nearly 40% of private sector workers in Illinois do not have access to an employer-sponsored retirement plan, leaving many with no way to save for the future. Since its inception, the program has helped over 150,000 participants save more than $200 million for retirement, with more than 25,000 employers offering the program to their workers.

Peters’ measure is designed to expand these efforts, giving workers more options for retirement savings. By allowing workers to hold both a traditional IRA and a Roth IRA, the bill offers more flexibility and personalized savings strategies. The initiative would also make the program more portable, meaning workers can continue contributing to their retirement savings even if they change jobs, without losing track of their funds.

“We’re not just creating savings accounts, we’re creating a system that supports our workers throughout their careers,” said Peters. “This measure ensures workers can manage their savings no matter where they work, while also holding employers accountable for properly enrolling their employees and submitting contributions. It’s a win for our state’s workforce and their financial futures.”

Senate Bill 1441 awaits further consideration from the full Senate.

* WCIA

A proposal to exempt the Mahomet Aquifer from carbon sequestration projects is picking up steam in the Capitol. […]

“What we’re looking for right now is more co-sponsors and seeing if we can get this moved along quickly,” [Annette McMichael, a Hopedale resident and boardmember for Illinois’ People’s Action,] said. “It’s really more of an amendment to the current bill to make sure that we protect our only water source in central Illinois.” […]

There are currently several iterations of the same bill, but they all seek to accomplish the same goal. Representative Carol Ammons recently added over 20 cosponsors to her version — HB 3614.

“Our risk level is zero on this bill, and that’s why we are working on this session to make sure we can be clear about that and protect the aquifer,”

As of this morning, HB3614 has 24 Democratic co-sponsors.

  15 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Feb 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  10 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Feb 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker announces round 3 of medical debt relief program at University of Chicago. WGN

    - The third round of medical debt forgiveness has erased more than $220 million in medical debt for about 170,000 Illinois residents.
    - The two previous rounds eliminated $345 million in debt for 270,000 Illinoisans.
    - Pritzker said that while the state is implementing programs to forgive medical debt, he remains concerned about potential cuts to vital services like Medicaid at the federal level, pointing out that cuts to programs like Medicaid threaten access to critical healthcare for Illinois families.
    - “If Donald Trump and the Republican congress eliminate the Medicaid expansion, we will have people who get sick and die because they don’t have coverage,” Pritzker said.

* Related stories…

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | State representative blasts Metra for failing to release internal investigation results: State Rep. Kambium “Kam” Buckner called on Metra to release the findings of an internal investigation, expressing his “deep disappointment” in the rail agency’s decision to withhold the results of the work of an outside law firm. “At a time when fiscal constraints require us to scrutinize (transit) governance, operations and agency structures, this lack of transparency raises serious concerns,” he wrote in a letter to Metra’s board. “Simply put, you cannot ask taxpayers to pay for an investigation and then tell them they have no right to know the results.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Audit finds Illinois’ noncitizen health care programs far outstripped original cost estimates: A pair of health care programs that benefit noncitizens – one of which is already on Gov. JB Pritzker’s budgetary chopping block – far outstripped its original estimated price tag and cost the state of Illinois $1.6 billion through last summer, according to a new audit of the programs published Wednesday. The report also found more than 6,000 people enrolled in the state-funded programs were classified as “undocumented” despite actually having social security numbers. Some of those people were green card holders who would have instead qualified for health coverage like Medicaid or traditional insurance.

* ABC Chicago | Couple shocked by $26K water bill from city of Chicago, others come forward: ‘We’re on edge’: Elizabeth Finan and her husband have owned a North Side apartment complex for decades. She said every other month, they get a water bill for about $3,000, but her January bill made her jaw drop: $26,369.94. […] Finan said they called an engineer the next day to inspect the building for leaks, but nothing was detected. So, she called the city’s Department of Water Management. “She said the last actual reading was in 2017, and these are all estimated and when they came out and read the meter, this was the bill,” Finan said.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | Doug Scott confirmed to five-year term as ICC Chairman: Scott was reappointed to a five-year term by Governor JB Pritzker in January 2024 after serving out the remainder of former Chairman Carrie Zalewski’s term. […] “States are at the forefront of keeping the country’s clean energy ambitions apace. Three years ago, the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA) charted Illinois’ path to a 100 percent clean energy economy, and in the years to come, the ICC will continue to play a critical role in steering Illinois toward its decarbonization goals,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “As a regulator, Doug Scott understands the importance of balancing reliability, safety, and affordability alongside these goals. Illinois is fortunate to have Chairman Scott at the helm of the ICC.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker says federal funds still being withheld; warns of further spending cuts: Meanwhile, Pritzker also warned this week that as many as 770,000 Illinoisans stand to lose Medicaid health care coverage under a Republican-backed budget resolution that cleared the U.S. House Tuesday night. That resolution, which would amend the current federal fiscal year’s budget, calls for deep cuts in federal funding for Medicaid, a health insurance program for low-income and disabled individuals that is jointly funded with state and federal money.

* WAND | Senator Rose responds to Health Alliance’s decision to end majority of coverage by 2026: State Sen. Chapin Rose (R-Mahomet) is also looking for answers. “I wish I had answers, I don’t, but we’re trying to get them. And I’ve already talked to CMS, the meeting is set for Tuesday of next week to to try and figure out where they’re going to go in open enrollment,” said Rose. Nearly 200,000 people are losing their health insurance. And 600 people are potentially losing their jobs.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | In anticipation of rush, DMV facilities to open on Saturdays for Real ID applicants: The extended hours begin this Saturday and will run through May 10. Twelve of the facilities will be open to walk-in customers on Saturdays for the first time, starting at 7:30 a.m. In addition to the Chicago DMV at 7301 W. Lexington Ave., the facilities in Addison, Aurora, Des Plaines, Elgin, Joliet, Lake Zurich, Melrose Park, Plano, St. Charles, Waukegan and Woodstock will have Saturday hours.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | To balance Mayor Brandon Johnson’s 2025 budget, Chicago installing 50 new speed cameras to ticket drivers: Chicago will add 50 speed cameras as part of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s plan to balance this year’s budget, increasing the stock of the devices used to ticket drivers by 30% citywide. The city’s Department of Transportation confirmed this week that it is “actively working” to install the 50 cameras this year but declined to share the locations, saying they have yet to be finalized.

* Tribune | City Council passes Mayor Brandon Johnson’s $830 million infrastructure bond plan after pushback: Aldermen approved the plan in a 26-23 vote a day after Johnson’s administration proposed a version with clearer spending guardrails. While opponents decried the debt package as financially irresponsible, allies of the mayor defended it as a typical and crucial way to fund basic infrastructure work. “We are not mortgaging the future of our children. We are building the roads that they are going to use,” Ald. Pat Dowell, 3rd, said.

* Sun-Times | After OKing plan to save 7 Acero charter schools, CPS may decide to close several of them after all: The about-face would suddenly leave three campuses shuttered at the end of this school year and the other four facing uncertain futures. But it’s not a done deal — some board members are pushing to keep at least five schools open next year.

* Tribune | Trauma on trauma: Immigration agents detain Acero charter schools parent on eve of school board vote to shutter some locations: In a letter Wednesday, Acero officials said “Community Wellness Protocols” were immediately implemented at two schools, Victoria Soto High School and Jovita Idar Elementary, which share a campus, to “maintain the safety and security” of the schools’ community. Chicago Public Schools’ Office of Safety and Security was also engaged, according to the letter signed by the schools’ principals, Elizabeth Obrzut and Nicolle Macias. ICE agents did not attempt to enter either school, according to the letter. ICE did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

* Crain’s | Tech incubator 1871 is leaving the Merchandise Mart: “As you all know, 1871 has not been immune to the post-COVID challenges that many organizations — especially nonprofits — have faced,” CEO Betsy Ziegler told members and partners in a letter today. “While our impact across Chicago and beyond has grown significantly, like many other businesses, we were not able to adapt our real estate model quickly enough to the evolving economic landscape.

* Sun-Times | Federal lawsuit says Chicago police officers framed man in 2011 slaying of fellow cop: One of the men who was initially charged in the 2011 slaying of Chicago Police Officer Clifton Lewis has filed a federal lawsuit alleging fellow officers “perpetuated a wide-ranging scheme” to manufacture evidence to secure convictions in the case. Alexander Villa’s conviction was vacated and charges were dropped in October after the Cook County state’s attorney’s office learned that the defense had not been provided with some potentially exculpatory evidence — evidence that could have been favorable to their client.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Suburban Chicago elections: Two high-profile politicians ousted, Larry Dominick keeps control of Cicero: Closer to Chicago in west suburban Cicero, town President Larry Dominick appeared to hang onto his seat, with 57% of the vote against challenger Esteban Rodriguez. Dominick started working for the town’s public works before becoming a police officer and then mayor in 2005. He said his major achievements include reducing local gang killings and improving town services.

* Shaw Local | Nguyen likely secures ballot bid for DeKalb mayor race in April election: If unofficial results hold, Nguyen’s name will appear with three other challengers to be DeKalb’s next mayor: incumbent Cohen Barnes, 7th Ward Alderman John Walker and Kouame Sanan, who works in NIU’s IT department.

* Fox Chicago | Chicago suburb approves ban on Delta-8 and Delta-9 THC edibles: The Elgin City Council has officially approved a ban on certain THC products, a move that will remove Delta-8 and Delta-9 THC edibles from store shelves. […] Unlike cannabis products sold at licensed dispensaries, these edibles are largely unregulated and have reportedly been linked to a surge in poison control calls.

* Tribune | State police: Crete man sent threatening email to Gov. JB Pritzker : The email containing “a message of a threatening nature” was sent to Pritzker’s Office of Constituent Affairs from an email associated with Michael Dascenzo, 49, on Jan. 9, state police said in a news release. Authorities didn’t say exactly what the email stated but did say the email sparked an investigation that led to them obtaining an arrest warrant on Tuesday.

*** Downstate ***

* Herald Whig | One day after primary, Moore kicks campaign into high gear: Independent mayoral candidate Linda Moore kicked her campaign into high gear on Wednesday ahead of the April 1 consolidated election when she will face Mayor Mike Troup. “(It’s the) first day of the consolidated election cycle,” Moore told those gathered for her press event Wednesday afternoon. “I am so excited to be able to share with you my plan for how we’re going to fix and grow our city.”

* WGEM | Prairie Farms announces Quincy expansion: At a Planning Committee meeting on Wednesday, Mayor Mike Troup announced plans for Prairie Farms to expand. Troup said the company bought two lots next to their property at 24th and Broadway. According to Troup, the expansion will add 10-15 jobs.

* 25News Now | Bloomington non-profit suggests cabin village for housing city’s homeless: “The shelter village would really be able to cater to those individuals who really just need their own space to connect with others when they choose and to be alone when they want to be as well,” said Audrey Cail, Home Sweet Home’s Director of Client Services. It will cost about $2.5 million to build the village. HSHM plans to fundraise and apply for a grant through McLean County to pay for it. They need a lot of money to make this happen, but the Home Sweet Home staff, believe in what they’re doing.

* Rockford Register Star | Rockford Public Schools: Girl’s tragic death is a ‘wake-up call’: An 11-year-old student in Rockford, Illinois, died by suicide on February 21st. The student’s family alleges that bullying at Eisenhower Middle School contributed to her death, but the school district says they have not found evidence of this. [Superintendent Ehren Jarrett] emphasized the importance of communication and encouraged students to report any concerns they have, assuring them that resources are available.

* KWQC | Rock Island cancels meetings after protesters gather outside of city hall: The protesters are angry at the city after an officer fatally shot a driver on Jan. 5. After an investigation, the officer returned to duty and the county attorney’s office released body camera footage of the shooting. At one point Monday, Davenport police blocked access to the Centennial Bridge.

*** National ***

* Florida Politics | Who will run for Byron Donalds’ seat in Congress?: Former Illinois state Sen. Jim Oberweis could also jump in. The investment manager and frequent CNBC guest now lives in Southwest Florida and could bring an opportunity to self-fund. Catalina Lauf, another former Illinois congressional candidate who worked in the Commerce Department under Trump, has also moved to Florida and been suggested as a possible candidate.

* WaPo | Finally, something is puncturing conspiracy theories: A new paper in the journal Science by Thomas Costello of MIT’s Sloan School of Management, Gordon Pennycook of Cornell University and David Rand, also of Sloan, is so exciting. It finds hope in new technology: a conversation partner powered by artificial intelligence. In a pair of studies involving more than 2000 participants, the researchers found a 20 percent reduction in belief in conspiracy theories after participants interacted with a powerful, flexible, personalized GPT-4 Turbo conversation partner. The researchers trained the AI to try to persuade the participants to reduce their belief in conspiracies by refuting the specific evidence the participants provided to support their favored conspiracy theory.

* NBC | FDA cancels meeting to select flu strains for next season’s shots: The email, Offit said, offered no explanation for the scrapped meeting. A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the FDA, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The cancellation comes as the United States is in the midst of a particularly severe flu season. So far, 86 children and 19,000 adults have died this season, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

* NYT | The Covid Alarmists Were Closer to the Truth Than Anyone Else: Five years later, though the world has been scarred by all that death and illness, it is considered hysterical to narrate the history of the pandemic by focusing on it. Covid minimizers and vaccine skeptics now run the country’s health agencies, but the backlash isn’t just on the right. Many states have tied the hands of public health authorities in dealing with future pandemic threats, and mask bans have been implemented in states as blue as New York. Everyone has a gripe with how the pandemic was handled, and many of them are legitimate. But our memories are so warped by denial, suppression and sublimation that Covid revisionism no longer even qualifies as news. When I come across an exchange like this one from last weekend, in which Woody Harrelson called Fauci evil on Joe Rogan’s show, or this one from last year, in which Rogan and Tony Hinchcliffe casually attribute a rise in excess and all-cause mortality to the aftereffects of vaccination, I don’t even really flinch.

  23 Comments      


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Thursday, Feb 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Feb 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Thursday, Feb 27, 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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