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Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Selena

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - More campaign updates

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers have read a lot about American Future, the DraftKings-backed committee that’s poured more than $2.6 million into statehouse races. They recently hired FM3 Research to poll the US Senate race

Methodology

From March 10-12, 2026, Fairbank, Maslin, Maullin, Metz & Associates (FM3) conducted a survey among 648 Illinois Democrats who are likely to vote in the March 17th statewide primary election. The survey was conducted using a dual-mode methodology where voters were contacted by telephone (cellular and landlines) by live interviewers or text message to take the survey online. The margin of error for the full sample is +/-4.0% at the 95% confidence level. Not all results will sum to 100% due to rounding.

*** Statehouse News ***

* GOP candidate Ted Dabrowski put together some clips of his NBC Chicago interview



* Capitol News Illinois | Business coalition warns against phasing out use of natural gas in Illinois: In their petition to the Illinois Commerce Commission filed Feb. 24, the coalition called continued efforts to phase out natural gas in Illinois “unreasonable and ill-advised.” The petition cited the report’s finding that Illinois still relies on natural gas, even as the state moves toward renewable energy sources and decarbonization goals. Conducted by the ICC in partnership with the Illinois Power Agency and Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, the report assessed progress toward the state’s energy and emissions goals and measured the current and projected status of electric reliability.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Interim CPS CEO Macquline King Among 3 Finalists to Become School District’s Next Permanent Leader: King is joined on the list of finalists by former New York City Public Schools Chancellor Meisha Porter and Sito Narcisse, who previously led the East Baton Rouge Parish school district in Louisiana and served as the District of Columbia’s chief of secondary schools. “The process moving forward will entail an interview with Mayor Brandon Johnson and a Candidate Community Engagement session,” the board said in a statement. “A special meeting will be scheduled for discussion leading to a vote.”

* Sun-Times | Chicago police, other agencies take in millions by seizing cars, cash even without an arrest or conviction: Under Illinois law, though, the police can seize property based on suspicion alone — even if the owner is never arrested, never charged with any crime, never convicted. A 2023 report from the Chicago Appleseed Center for Fair Courts, an advocacy group, called for Illinois to scrap civil asset forfeitures, arguing that the system is fundamentally unfair. U.S. Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch has questioned the constitutionality of civil asset forfeiture, saying, “Even innocent owners can wait for months or years for forfeiture proceedings to play out.”

* WGN | Southwest Airlines to discontinue service to O’Hare Airport: Southwest announced Friday that it would be discontinuing service to Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport on June 4. A spokesperson for the airline said that the decision was made as part of its ongoing efforts to refine its network.

* WBEZ | Matisse ‘Jazz’ exhibition at Art Institute shows a creative hitting his stride in his 70s: “Matisse’s Jazz: Rhythms in Color” is not an expansive retrospective or major survey. There is no catalog, no high-profile loans nor any big historical points being made. That said, this compact, thoughtfully installed show has its own appeal. It offers the museum’s first-ever display of all 20 color plates from “Jazz” as well as a focused, digestible look at the artist’s trajectory to that point.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Illinois EPA rejects coal ash cleanup plan in Joliet, a ‘heartening’ win for environmentalists: The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency denied Midwest Generation’s application to clean up more than 3 million tons of toxic coal ash in Joliet earlier this week, saying the company’s proposal was “insufficient.” The decision marks the first time the agency has rejected a coal ash cleanup permit since Illinois finalized its coal ash regulations in 2021, said Jenny Cassel, a senior attorney with Earthjustice. “This is a place that has been fighting for so long and dealing with so many burdens,” Cassel said. “It is absolutely heartening to see the agency telling Midwest Generation, ‘Go back to the drawing board.’”

* Pat Hynes: Why Bally’s got the break — and the Bears didn’t: In his response, Kaegi acknowledged that the 2024 assessment for the Bally’s property appeared low compared with the sale price. He suggested this was only temporary and that the value would change once the final project is assessed in 2025. This is misleading at best. The assessor has already completed the 2025 assessment book. The values assigned to the Bally’s parcels are not higher. They are substantially lower. In fact, the 2025 assessed values for the parcels included in the original Bally’s purchase are roughly half of the already discounted 2024 assessment levels. That is a critical detail missing from the assessor’s explanation. Equally troubling is how differently the assessor treated another major development site in the Chicago area that sold three months later.

* Crain’s | Baxter’s new CEO paid $29.8 million for less than five months of work in 2025: Baxter International CEO Andrew Hider was compensated $29.8 million in his first five months running the Deerfield medical device maker despite the company’s continued struggles with production problems and missed financial targets. The hefty pay package, disclosed in a proxy statement filed this morning, underscores the premium Baxter paid to lure Hider from Canadian automation solutions firm ATS. While much of the pay package was “make-whole” compensation tied to his ATS earnings, the nearly $30 million in overall compensation puts the new CEO among the highest-paid executives in the Chicago area.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Metro-east city considering stricter rules for data centers during moratorium: Troy officials on Thursday night offered a preview of stricter rules they are considering for data centers. The city originally passed an ordinance on data centers in November. Now, its planning commission has voted to recommend the City Council pass a six-month moratorium on data center proposals while leaders rewrite regulations for those developments based on research of other towns’ rules and concerns residents have raised. For months, Houston-based development company Cloverleaf Infrastructure has been exploring potential locations for a data center in Troy and assessing public opinion at community meetings.

* WGLT | McLean County pauses contentious intergovernmental sales tax agreement: McLean County took the first step to pause an intergovernmental agreement with Bloomington and Normal, voting Thursday to stop collecting money from the municipalities for a three-month period. The amendment to the agreement — that also must be approved by Bloomington and Normal — will forgo the money that would come in during April, May and June, said McLean County Board Chair Elizabeth Johnston.

* Crain’s | West Coast cannabis firm expands to Illinois after taking over shuttered PharmaCann grow site: The West Coast firm announced its entry into the state this week, which was made possible with the $1 million lease of a cultivation facility in the town of Dwight, roughly 80 miles southwest from downtown Chicago. Grown Rogue, which trades publicly on the Canadian Securities Exchange as well as on over-the-counter markets in the U.S., leased the grow site from Innovative Industrial Properties, a real estate investment trust that owns cannabis facilities all over the U.S. The facility had previously been run by Illinois-based multistate cannabis company PharmaCann, but it notified the state of its pending exit from the plant in November, and laid off all its employees in January.

* WCIA | IDOT releases new map of Route 66 to celebrate highway’s 100th year: The new map is a collaboration between the Illinois Department of Transportation and the Illinois Route 66 Scenic Byway. They said the map is still the perfect tool for road trippers, taking a nostalgic look at America’s most famous highway. The map not only shows pit stops and sightseeing, but also the historic road’s evolution.

* BND | Pope Leo appoints 10th bishop of the Diocese of Belleville: The Very Rev. Godfrey Mullen, the Benedictine monk who has been serving as the “diocesan administrator” for the Belleville Diocese and as rector of the Cathedral of St. Peter in Belleville, will be installed as the new bishop for the diocese on May 1, according to an appointment by Pope Leo XIV announced Friday by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. It was Mullen who conducted a news conference in his home parish Friday morning to announce locally his new job as the 10th bishop in the history of the Belleville Diocese.

*** National ***

* Where’s Your Ed At? | Premium: The Hater’s Guide To The SaaSpocalypse: Before 2018, Software As A Service (SaaS) companies had had an incredible run of growth, and it appeared basically any industry could have a massive hypergrowth SaaS company, at least in theory. As a result, venture capital and private equity has spent years piling into SaaS companies, because they all had very straightforward growth stories and replicable, reliable, and recurring revenue streams. Between 2018 and 2022, 30% to 40% of private equity deals (as I’ll talk about later) were in software companies, with firms taking on debt to buy them and then lending them money in the hopes that they’d all become the next Salesforce, even if none of them will. Even VC remains SaaS-obsessed — for example, about 33% of venture funding went into SaaS in Q3 2025, per Carta.

* AP | Cracks emerged in a resilient US economy before war in Iran sent oil prices rocketing: The economy barely grew in the final three months of last year, the Commerce Department said, as it cut its estimate of fourth-quarter growth in half. Consumer spending, after adjusting for inflation, was anemic in January, as inflation remained sticky-high. Hiring has also ground largely to a standstill. And Americans’ outlook for the economy tumbled after the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran, according to a survey of consumer sentiment also released Friday.

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Catching up with the congressionals (Updated x2)

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WBEZ digs into the seemingly endless super PAC ‘blitz’ in four congressional primaries

National special-interest groups, which now include deep-pocketed cryptocurrency and artificial intelligence interests, have spent tens of millions of dollars to influence four hotly contested Democratic congressional primaries in the Chicago area.

Through Thursday, super PACs whose donors are hard to track had reported spending more than $31.4 million, including more than $6.1 million for attack ads that are swamping voters ahead of Tuesday’s primaries.

The portions from the crypto, AI and pro-Israel groups total $26.9 million, a WBEZ review of federal campaign disclosures has found.

The super PAC spending is far more than the last time the Chicago area had U.S. House primary races without an incumbent. In 2022, U.S. Rep. Jonathan Jackson’s campaign saw more than $1.1 million in super PAC support, while U.S. Rep. Delia Ramirez’s bid got a $1.5 million boost.

Click here for WBEZ’s breakdown of each PAC and their backers.

* An AIPAC-affiliated group that has spent $266,000 in opposition of 9th CD candidate Kat Abughazaleh is running negative broadcast ads against Junaid Ahmed in the 8th CD


* The Oak Park Journal

A lawyer for 7th Congressional candidate La Shawn K. Ford sent a cease-and-desist order to a crypto currency funded PAC March 10, demanding it stop producing and disseminating video and print political attack ads containing what it calls “false, misleading, and defamatory statements” against Ford. 

According to the AdImpact group of Alexandria, Virginia, as of March 6, the cryptocurrency funded PAC, Fairshake, of St. Paul, Minnesota, has spent $1.92 million on video and printed mailer attack ads suggesting Illinois State Rep. Ford (D-8) was convicted of felonies related to bank fraud, that he has been part of a pattern of corruption and had engaged in “misuse of power” while serving in the Illinois General Assembly.  […]

the Illinois House of Representatives,” and that Ford has never, as alleged in the video, “been involved in ‘A Pattern of Corruption,’ has never been tried on, convicted of, or pled guilty to ’17 federal felony counts of fraud,’ has never “used his power and position to try to hide his fraud and self-dealing,’ (and) has never ‘filed a resolution in the legislature to keep his colleagues quiet and stop them from commenting to the press.’” 

Reyna said he was giving Fairshake the chance to acknowledge in writing that they will in fact cease “this tortious conduct.”

In the event that Fairshake does not cease its “dissemination of these false, misleading and defamatory statements,” Reyna wrote, “actual malice will be inferred.”

…Adding… Ralph Nader…

La Shawn Ford is running for an open Democratic seat in the 7th Congressional District of Illinois. He is a courageous, progressive state lawmaker. I saw that during the wrongful death litigation against Boeing, whose knowingly dangerous 737 MAX killed 346 people in a crash near Indonesia and another crash in Ethiopia.
Illinois had a crazy law that prohibited punitive damages in lawsuits brought by the families of their loved ones killed by the criminal negligence or worse of the companies. Had Boeing seriously injured these 346 innocent human beings, it would have had to pay punitive damages in the courts. So it was cheaper under this law to kill the victims than injure them. NO MORE.
In 2023 one – just one – lawmaker in Springfield, a young legislator by the name of La Shawn Ford looked at this crazy law and said – this is wrong, wrong, wrong and I am going to change this law.
At first, his colleagues thought he was dreaming – beat the Boeing and corporate lobbyist? Well, he did, persuading the Illinois Assembly and the Illinois Senate to pass a bill no one thought was possible for decades. That is the kind of character, determination and persuasiveness you’ll see in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Who is plastering television with ads against La Shawn Ford? The AIPAC – Israeli government can do no wrong lobby – which includes Netanyahu’s genocide with American made weapons in Gaza and the supporters of the war on Iran that is pushing gasoline prices on the Trump Pump skyward. Also the crooked cryptocurrency lobby because Assemblyman Ford voted in Springfield, with many other lawmakers, to regulate this out of control risky money laundering currency. Don’t be fooled by the fake sponsors of these lying ads – as from the “Fairshake SuperPAC.”
La Shawn Ford listens to the people and acts for the people.

Click here for Fairshake’s negative ad.

* Last month, U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky withdrew her endorsement after Donna Miller received campaign contributions from American Israel Public Affairs Committee donors and backing from an AIPAC super PAC running TV ads in support of her campaign. Cook County Commissioner Tara Stamps also appears to have rescinded her endorsement. Stamps is no longer listed on Miller’s endorsement page.

Click here for an archived version of Miller’s website.

* NBC Chicago

At question is the Abughazaleh’s characterization of her upbringing as working class, including an anime-inspired campaign mailer that showed her childhood home as a modest dwelling.

Her opponents have pointed out that the home was actually a $3.2 million residence, and are questioning her arguments that her upbringing was working class. […]

“This is something I think is being treated like some type of shocker, but I was given a lot of opportunities as a kid,” she said. “I was really lucky to have that, and I also as an adult have struggled like so many of my friends have.”

When asked by NBC Chicago’s Mary Ann Ahern if she considered herself “poor,” she was emphatic.

“Am I poor? Right now, yeah,” she said. “I have depleted my savings. I have been financially independent since I was 21.”

* MS Now unearthed a slimy group offering influencers money for posts attacking Abughazaleh. MS Now

The job offer, reviewed by MS NOW, came with a brief explaining how the group wanted Amanda — who declined to give her real name citing privacy concerns — to post for her roughly 100,000 followers. Democracy Unmuted explained that it wanted creators to “engage voters” and encouraged them “to look past viral personalities and ask real questions about who is running and why.”

The suggested talking points were all focused on Abughazaleh, the youngest candidate and a former journalist for the left-leaning website Media Matters. The offer called for influencers to “highlight more than one” of Abughazaleh’s alleged shortcomings: she was inexperienced, came from a wealthy family, may live with her partner in a different neighborhood and is too new to the area to serve. […]

One, from Justin Kralemann, a Missouri creator who posts about progressive politics, recited whole sentences from the Democracy Unmuted brief. Kralemann, wearing a white hat with “WOKE” emblazoned on the front, mispronounced Abughazaleh’s name and told his combined one million followers on Instagram and TikTok that it was important “to look past viral personalities and ask who is running and why” — a quote matching a suggested quote in the brief.

MS NOW requested an interview with Kralemann on Thursday evening, asking about the video and whether it was part of a paid campaign. Kralemann immediately removed his posts and declined, adding a statement that said in part: “Shortly after posting, I realized it did not meet the standards I’ve set for my platform, so I removed it.”

* Some new direct mail from 9th CD candidate Phil Andrew…

* More…

* Sun-Times | Broadview 4? Feds drop conspiracy charges against 2 ICE protesters, including Dem who ended campaign: Still charged are congressional candidate Kat Abughazaleh, Oak Park village trustee Brian Straw, 45th Ward Democratic committeeperson Michael Rabbitt and Andre Martin. They are accused of a conspiracy to impede a federal officer. Abughazaleh is seeking the Democratic nomination for Illinois’ 9th District congressional seat in Tuesday’s primary.

* Punchbowl | Warren stumps for progressives in Illinois: Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass) is taking a swing through Illinois to stump for progressive candidates ahead of the primaries there next Tuesday. Warren will appear with Illinois Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, who is running for Senate; Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, who is looking to replace retiring Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.); and nonprofit executive Junaid Ahmed, who is running for Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi’s (D-Ill.) seat. Krishnamoorthi is seeking the Democratic nomination for Senate.

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Big Tech sues over Chicago social media tax a month after Pritzker pitches statewide version

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times reporter Mitchell Armentrout

A coalition of the world’s largest tech companies is suing to block Chicago’s new tax on social media giants like TikTok, Facebook and X, claiming the city’s first-of-its-kind, per-user levy tramples over the First Amendment rights of major corporations that contend they’re part of the free press.

The lawsuit filed Friday in Cook County Circuit Court by the tech trade group NetChoice takes aim at the social media tax proposed by Mayor Brandon Johnson and retained in the budget ultimately approved by a recalcitrant City Council last fall.

Companies started paying the tax last month at a rate of $0.50 per user after the first 100,000 Chicagoans who log onto Snapchat, Reddit, Instagram and other popular sites, with city officials projecting a $31 million annual windfall for future mental health programs.

Big Tech wants to nip the nation’s first-ever enacted social media tax in the bud as several states, including Illinois, consider similar measures to wring money from companies to offset the public health threat many experts say their platforms can pose, especially for young people.

* From the complaint

[T]he Tax violates Article VII, Section 6 of the Illinois Constitution because it is imposed upon an occupation—the business of operating a social media website—but is not authorized by the General Assembly.

Third, a “discriminatory tax on the press burdens rights protected by the First Amendment.” Ark. Writers’ Project, Inc. v. Ragland, 481 U.S. 221, 227 (1987). Selective taxation of the media—like the Tax here—poses a “particular danger of abuse” and is presumptively unconstitutional. […]

The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution provides that “Congress shall make no Law . . . abridging the Freedom of Speech, or of the Press; or of the Right of the People peaceably to assemble.” U.S. Const. amend. I. The protections of the First Amendment have been incorporated by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution to restrict States and their subdivisions, including Chicago. These protections apply with full force to online expression, and governments cannot “regulate [‘social media’] free of the First Amendment’s restraints.”

Chicago’s Social Media Tax Implicates the First Amendment. The U.S. Supreme Court’s “cases clearly establish that a discriminatory tax on the press burdens rights protected by the First Amendment.”

These U.S. Supreme Court precedents are not limited to the journalistic press, as “liberty of the press . . . comprehends every sort of publication which affords a vehicle of information and opinion.”

* More from WTTW

Gov. JB Pritzker proposed a similar tax as part of his budget for the 2027 fiscal year that he said would generate $200 million.

For the largest social media firms with 1 million Illinois users or more, the proposal calls for charging $165,000 per month and an additional 50 cents per month for each user over the 1 million user mark, according to Pritzker’s proposal.

NetChoice has filed dozens of lawsuits against states attempting to tax and regulate social media, including against a California law designed to shield children from social media and other online content that could harm them mentally or physically.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals struck down an injunction on Thursday issued in that case.

* Related…

    * Akerman Intelligence | Is Social Media Tax Worth a Follow?: While the City successfully defended a previous extension of its Amusement Tax to streaming services such as Netflix and Spotify, it did so on the basis that the same content is subject to sales taxes when delivered in a physical format. A court may not necessarily reach the same conclusion for the SMAT, as social media is solely a creature of the Internet for which no physical analog exists. […] The Chicago SMAT, much like Maryland’s Digital Advertising Tax when it was first enacted, will likely serve as a test case, and other state and local legislatures will be watching carefully to see how it fares under scrutiny. But until the Chicago SMAT survives both administration and litigation hurdles, Illinois would be wise to be conservative in its budgetary projections from its SMP Fee.

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Indiana’s circular firing squad and what it means for Illinois

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Indiana state Senator Rod Bray’s Wikipedia page

In the 2025–2026 United States redistricting debate, Bray announced that he would not convene the senate chamber even though Governor Mike Braun had called a special session due to a lack of votes. This led to stark criticism from President Donald Trump who called Bray “weak” and “pathetic” and needed to be primaried.

* President Trump on February 25th

It is my Great Honor to endorse America First Patriot, Jeff Ellington, a terrific Candidate for Indiana’s 39th State Senate District (which I won by a whopping 55 points!). Jeff will be a fantastic replacement for RINO Eric Bassler, who may not even run again because Republicans are so angry with him over his betrayal he committed when he, for whatever reason, voted against Redistricting in Indiana, which essentially made him a partner to the Radical Left Democrats in their quest to take control of the United States House of Representatives, and reverse the great progress we have made in the last year. Bassler and his RINO friends made Indiana, a State I love that is full of Patriots who love America, the only State in the Nation that would rather turn over our Country to Democrats than fight back against their corruption, and finish the job we started over 10 years ago. We could have easily picked up two seats in Indiana, but Bassler, an America Last politician, was played for a fool by the Democrats who want to destroy our Country.

Now, because Bassler looks to be getting “run out of town” by his Voters, Indiana’s Chief RINO Rod Bray has recruited a new “pawn” in his game named Kristi Risk to run for this seat. She, like Bassler and Bray, was nowhere to be found for Republicans during Redistricting, which means she will never be there for you when the going gets tough. She said there were “more important things” than keeping the House Majority, and protecting the progress we have made over the last year to, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN. No smart, reliable Republican would ever say such a thing because they would never even think it. For that reason, and more, she cannot be trusted any more than the Failed and Weak “Senator” Bassler.

There’s also some polling data in that post which shows a Trump endorsement produces a huge bump for Ellington.

* Bloomberg on March 4

President Donald Trump met with several candidates for Indiana’s Senate in the Oval Office Wednesday afternoon.

The meeting comes a week after the president publicly endorsed several Republicans to replace state lawmakers who rejected the White House’s plans to redraw Indiana’s maps.

The candidates who joined Trump on Wednesday include Jeff Ellington, Michelle Davis, Brenda Wilson, Paula Copenhaver, Tracey Powell, and Blake Fiechter.

Trump has used his influence to recruit primary challengers against Republicans he believes are unsupportive of his agenda.

Photos and more are here.

* National Politico today

But fighting longtime incumbents in sluggish state Senate districts poses a challenge for MAGA.

“I will predict that none of them lose,” said Mike Murphy, the former Indiana state Republican lawmaker and Marion County GOP chair, before name-checking the Club for Growth president who mounted failed Indiana gubernatorial bids in 2000 and 2004. “What’s David McIntosh gonna do? Come on TV and say, ‘Hey, I’m David McIntosh. Remember me? I got my *ss kicked’?”

The retribution effort is also notable because the relatively enormous sum of money is being spent in a safe-red state — cash that could otherwise be deployed in a midterm battleground. […]

Former Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels, an opponent of mid-decade redistricting who privately counseled a handful of state senators against it, agreed to appear as a surrogate or have his name listed as a host of fundraisers for several Republican redistricting holdouts before the primary.

Gov. Pritzker had threatened to redraw Illinois’ congressional maps if Indiana redid theirs, so it’s basically a wash - but only if you believe Pritzker could’ve muscled it through. I’m not convinced of that, but the Hoosiers may have been.

To understand those people, you always have to remember that they love to troll Illinois, which is why they could approve a Bears stadium incentive package even though it created, raised or captured several different regional taxes.

In isolation, it’s far better to let Indiana build that stadium. Chicago still receives much of the benefit through its hotels, restaurants, etc. and Indiana picks up the tab.

In the long run, though, an interstate relocation could encourage more capital flight because this move would be so high profile.

* I’ve kinda strayed off topic, but while I’m there I might as well point out that the leader of the Better Government Association wants to allow private sports stadium owners access to a program for government-owned sports facilities

One possible option: Consider allowing the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority to lend to nongovernmental owners of stadiums inside the city limits, such as the Bears could be. Currently, the IFSA is allowed to finance only government-owned facilities, such as Soldier Field and Rate Field.

David Greising favors the former Michael Reese Hospital site, which the Bears have flatly rejected as being too small.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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It’s just a bill

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

A bill that would prevent streaming services from running commercials at a higher volume than the shows and movies people are watching passed through the Senate Energy and Public Utilities Committee on Thursday.

Senate Bill 3222 sponsored by state Sen. Doris Turner, D-Springfield, would allow Illinoisans to lodge official complaints over commercial volume if they’re substantially louder than the programs they accompany. […]

Commercial volume for TV stations, cable and satellite TV is already regulated at the federal level with the 2010 Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation, or CALM, Act. But those regulations don’t include streaming services. […]

State Sen. Mike Halpin, D-Rock Island, introduced a similar bill with a different enforcement structure, and he said he’s happy to join forces with Turner to regulate commercial volume on streaming services.

* WAND

A bill moving in the Capitol could expand broadband access to underserved areas across the state.

The proposal would require the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to create a new broadband grant distribution plan. Grant recipients could then install, maintain and use broadband infrastructure along a highway right-of-way.

This comes as Illinois faces a Dec. 31 deadline to submit final proposals to utilize $1 billion in federal broadband funding.

“The way farming is today, internet is pretty important,” said Sen. Patrick Joyce (D-Essex). “The way our kids are educated, you’re almost behind if you’re not getting reliable broadband.” […]

Senate Bill 3838 passed out of the Senate Energy and Public Utilities Committee on a 10-4 vote and now heads to the Senate floor.

* Press release…

Senate Deputy Minority Leader Sue Rezin (R-Morris), Sen. Sally Turner (R-Beason), and Sen. Darby Hills (R-Barrington Hills) today unveiled a legislative package aimed at strengthening Illinois law to better protect children from trafficking, grooming, sexual exploitation, and predatory offenders. […]

Sen. Rezin filed Senate Bill 284, also known as Andrew’s Law, named after the son of her constituent Michelle Peterson, who has become a leading advocate for stronger protections for children after her son was groomed by a trusted adult. The bill would eliminate plea deals for individuals charged with involuntary sexual servitude of a minor, trafficking in persons involving a minor, or grooming, preventing those charges from being reduced to lesser offenses. Andrew’s Law would also make it a Class 4 felony for a child sex offender to work at, volunteer at, or be present at a facility that exclusively provides entertainment for minors.

Sen. Turner is sponsoring Senate Bill 1572, which would increase penalties for human trafficking and related crimes by raising each offense by one felony class. For the most serious Class X offenses, the bill would set a prison sentence of 9 to 45 years. […]

Sen. Hills filed Senate Bill 2381, which would require sex offender registration for individuals convicted of unauthorized video recording of minors in private spaces if the offense was found to be sexually motivated. Sen. Hills’ legislation was introduced in response to an incident in Illinois in which a repeat offender was caught videotaping his students in a bathroom but was not required to register as a sex offender.

According to the senator, this was just one of several incidents that have recently come to light and exposed a serious gap in current Illinois law. As the law currently stands, offenders can avoid sex offender registration even in cases involving the secret recording of children in bathrooms, locker rooms, or other private areas.

* Capitol News Illinois

Right now, no one knows how much Illinois and other states are losing in untaxed prediction market bets — the markets don’t have to report betting data to the states. Illinois has netted nearly $1.1 billion in tax revenue since Illinois’ first legal sports wagers were placed six years ago. States have sued to gain the power to tax and regulate prediction markets, but the markets argue their platforms are not gambling, but financial tools to allow users to hedge risk.

In one effort to rein in the platforms, State Sen. Michael Hastings (D-Frankfort) introduced legislation last week that would require prediction market operators to pay a $1 million fee to the Illinois Gaming Board to obtain a “master prediction market license” and empower the state to collect a tax equal to half of a licensee’s adjusted gross receipts from bets made by in-state users. The bill is awaiting to be assigned to a committee.

Experts believe the legal question won’t be settled until the U.S. Supreme Court weighs in. But by then, prediction markets may have become as integrated into American life as sports betting has in the eight years since the nation’s high court struck down a nationwide gambling ban.

* Sen. Sara Feighenhotlz…

Continuing her efforts to expand less restrictive alternatives to guardianship, State Senator Sara Feigenholtz advanced a measure Wednesday aimed at maximizing the independence of people with and without disabilities through supported decision-making. […]

A supported decision-making agreement allows people to identify a supporter to help interpret information, weigh options, and communicate decisions about health care, life choices, and financial matters, fostering confidence in their ability to make informed decisions while maintaining autonomy.

Guardianship is more restrictive than a supported decision-making agreement regarding the autonomy someone has over their finances, employment, housing and other life decisions. Many people with disabilities do not need a guardian, but could benefit from assistance when making certain complex or weighty decisions.

Feigenholtz is spearheading legislation that would maximize opportunities for greater autonomy by establishing clear guidelines for supported decision-making implementation and oversight, ensuring the law’s effective and safe application. […]

Senate Bill 3568 passed the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday.

* River Bender

State Senator Erica Harriss (56th-Glen Carbon) has introduced legislation to strengthen transparency and accountability in the Illinois legislative process by ensuring lawmakers have access to fiscal impact information before voting on legislation.

Senate Bill 2094 amends the Illinois Fiscal Note Act to guarantee that when a member of the General Assembly requests a fiscal note on legislation, the request must be honored and cannot be dismissed by chamber vote. […]

Fiscal notes are reports that provide estimates of how proposed legislation may affect state revenues or expenditures. The idea is to know how much it will cost the taxpayers if a bill becomes law. Any legislator may request a fiscal note for a bill. However, such requests may be voted down, stopping that information from being made public. SB2094 ensures that fiscal notes are prepared whenever legislators request them.

“By strengthening the Fiscal Note Act, SB2094 promotes greater transparency in the legislative process and ensures that members of the General Assembly can obtain fiscal analysis when considering legislation that may affect the state budget,” concluded Senator Harriss.”

* More…

    * Press release | Ventura legislation to allow to plug-in solar panels for Illinois residents passes committee: Plug-in solar systems, already widely used internationally, offer households the ability to generate clean power for low installation costs while saving hundreds of dollars a year on their energy bills. Supporters of the bill, such as Permit Power and Vote Solar, say this technology can also help reduce strain on the electric grid while expanding energy independence. An identical version of the bill, House Bill 4524, has been introduced in the House of Representatives by State Representative Daniel Didech, who also prefiled for SB 3104.

    * WAND | Senate committee approves bill requiring 988 info in public buildings, suicide prevention curriculum in health courses: Sponsors said 988 information should be visible in county shelter care homes, daycares, public libraries, colleges, hospitals, assisted living facilities and nursing homes. This comes as more than 1,500 lives are lost to suicide in Illinois each year. The legislation also requires school boards to include age-appropriate suicide prevention curriculum in health courses for students in sixth through 12th grade.

    * Press release | Canty Supports Bill Creating Further Fraud Protection for Seniors: House Bill 4767 names investment advisers and other financial institution employees as mandated reporters of potential fraud or exploitation. This will allow a financial institution and its employees to hold transactions that seem suspicious, and conduct an internal review of the transaction according to each institution’s review policies.

    * WCIA | Cervantes measure to protect consumers’ energy backup systems: The measure would require Illinois to adopt the most recent version of the National Energy Code as a standard for the installation and inspection of residential-sized batteries. The legislation’s intent is to simplify the process for installing and inspecting batteries that are used with solar panels. Currently, there are regulations for commercial batteries but not for residential batteries. The measure would define “residential energy backup systems” as backup energy systems providing less than 50 kilowatts of electricity or 200 kilowatt hours. It would also include the system’s infrastructure, equipment and components.

    * Press release | Cunningham legislation supports solar development on public school campuses: Under Senate Bill 3273, electric utilities would be required to complete interconnection-related evaluations, reviews and screenings within 30 days after determining that a request is complete. Public school projects would also bypass the standard interconnection queue, allowing them to move forward more quickly. The legislation also would requires utilities to disclose upgrade costs and construction timelines to schools as soon as possible after completing interconnection reviews, giving school districts clearer information when planning projects.

    * WCIA | Illinois Sen. advances bill to simplify subscription cancellations statewide: This measure, Senate Bill 3562, would give people clear, retainable disclosures before subscriptions are activated. It would also guarantee that cancellations can be completed easily online or in the same way the consumer signed up. The bill would also make sure companies provide timely notice for any price increases or changes to subscription contract terms.

    * Press release | Johnson works to expand access to life-saving asthma medication at Illinois schools: “Students should be able to participate in sports and school activities without worrying that life-saving medication is too far away when they need it,” Johnson (D-Buffalo Grove) said. “This measure helps ensure asthma medication is available where students are most likely to experience symptoms so schools can respond quickly in an emergency.” Senate Bill 2837 would allow schools to maintain a supply of asthma medication in any secure location that is accessible before, during or after school where a person may be at risk – including practice fields, gyms and other athletic facilities.

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Chaos Coming July 1: Illinois’ Radical Credit Card Law Could Upend Everyday Purchases

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Starting July 1, Illinois families could face chaos when paying for everyday purchases like groceries, gas, or a dinner out because of a new state law that changes how credit cards work.

At the checkout line, shoppers may suddenly be told they cannot use their credit cards to pay for sales taxes or tips, forcing them to split payments or pay those portions in cash.

It is a radical change that only benefits corporate mega-stores, while small businesses, local banks, and consumers are left to deal with the fallout.

Experts who understand the global payments system have been sounding the alarm for months:

    • The Biden administration’s Department of Treasury noted the law is an “ill-conceived, highly unusual and largely unworkable state law,” and “it is likely that fraud risk would increase significantly, consumer services would be constrained and public trust would decline.”
    • A federal judge weighing a preemption-related matter noted the policy is “indisputably disruptive,” “costly” and calls out “business-ending consequences” for local banks and credit unions.
    • Crain’s Chicago Business said, “Springfield’s Swipe Fee Gamble Deserves an Appeal.”

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

Learn more at: guardyourcard.com/Illinois

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois regulators say prediction markets are illegal gambling, but bettors — and the Trump family — love them. Capitol News Illinois

    - The Trump administration has not only promoted prediction markets but vowed to fight state efforts to regulate them as they do online sportsbooks.
    - On-line sportsbooks businesses must pay millions of dollars in taxes to the state for each bet placed, forgo bets on in-state college teams, limit customers to those 21 and older, advertise help for gambling addiction and help pay for addicts’ treatment. Prediction markets do none of that.
    - Right now, no one knows how much Illinois and other states are losing in untaxed prediction market bets — the markets don’t have to report betting data to the states. Illinois has netted nearly $1.1 billion in tax revenue since Illinois’ first legal sports wagers were placed six years ago. States have sued to gain the power to tax and regulate prediction markets, but the markets argue their platforms are not gambling, but financial tools to allow users to hedge risk.
    -Experts believe the legal question won’t be settled until the U.S. Supreme Court weighs in. But by then, prediction markets may have become as integrated into American life as sports betting has in the eight years since the nation’s high court struck down a nationwide gambling ban.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Daily Herald | Play clock ticking: Bears won’t wait past March for stadium deal, Arlington Heights mayor says: “Waiting until the end of May I think is a no go for the Bears,” Tinaglia said during a state of the village address, his first since his election nearly a year ago. “They’ve already been through the (wringer) too many times.” Arlington Heights officials, the Bears and their lobbyists have circled next Wednesday on their calendars when the House returns after a nearly three-week break.

* Sun-Times | Why was Tuesday’s record-breaking hail so huge?: “It didn’t just break the record, but it shattered the record,” Gensini said. “We’ve never seen anything like this since we’ve been recording hail, which started in the mid-1950s.” […] “Regardless of the impact of climate change, I can guarantee you that we’re going to see more hailstorm disasters in the future,” he said. “It has really nothing to do with climate change. It has everything to do with the fact that … our cities are growing larger and the bullseyes on the dartboard, so to speak, are growing larger as sprawl continues.”

* Sun-Times | Older Chicagoans at high risk of losing SNAP food assistance as new work rules kick in: The new requirements call for people to work or volunteer 80 hours a month, which translates to about four hours a day. The rules also were expanded to include veterans and parents whose youngest child is 14 years or older. If SNAP recipients don’t meet the rules or get an exemption by May, they will begin losing their benefits. Older people who have been out of the workforce might find it harder to compete for jobs, especially because of continuing ageism, advocates say. This group also often spends time looking after older and younger relatives, making it harder to meet the 80 hours each month. In response, community groups across Chicago are expanding volunteer opportunities. But they aren’t seeing the expected demand and are bracing for households to be pushed out of the program.

*** Statewide ***

* WILL | Heavy rain reaches Illinois, but drought is far from over: This week, Illinois has finally experienced rainfall, but it’s not enough to alleviate the ongoing drought. Since August of last year, Central Illinois has experienced a severe drought with precipitation deficits of 15–20 inches. This has led to mandatory water restrictions in places like Bloomington and Decatur. University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign graduate student Maddie Stover and Illinois State Climatologist with the Prairie Research Institute, Trent Ford talk about what it means for Illinois to still be in a drought, the agriculture and impacts in poultry and what kinds of conditions it would take to get out of it.

*** Chicago ***

* Click here to watch last night’s episode of Chicago Tonight.

* CBS Chicago | CTA vows to move forward with Red Line Extension Project despite federal funding uncertainty: The CTA said early work on the extension will begin this spring. The project has a price tag of $5.7 billion, but in October, the Trump administration said it was freezing $2.1 billion federal funding earmarked for the project, citing what it said were concerns of race-based contracting. That’s on top of $50 million the administration is threatening to pull if the CTA doesn’t sufficiently adjust safety and security on the mass transit system.

* Tribune | First round of Neighborhood Capital Fund gives almost $8M to projects in underinvested communities: Seniors in Bronzeville will soon have a permanent home to kick up their heels and socialize with their set, thanks to an $820,000 grant from the Neighborhood Capital Fund, which supports real estate development in underinvested Chicago communities. The Silver Fox Cafe, an endeavor conceived by the seniors in the South Side community, will be a mixed-use space where, during the day, folks can eat breakfast and lunch in the on-site restaurant, and seniors can partake in exercise classes, art therapy and other enrichment activities in the rear of the building.

* ABC Chicago | Report on UIC lab falls short in addressing allegedly flawed results in DUI cases: commission: The commission issued strong statements and recommendations on Tuesday around an attorney-authored report issued last May by the university. The commission said, in part, that the UIC report is insufficient to address the allegations of faulty testing used in criminal prosecutions. […] A Criminal defense attorneys, who represents clients charged with cannabis DUI, told the I-Team that the UIC report is just a corporate whitewash.

* WGN | Evidence from DHS contradicts woman’s story of 43-hour detention after landing at O’Hare: “The fact that this could happen to any U.S. citizen should terrify us all,” Cook County Comm’r. Kevin Morrison, who is running for Congress, said on behalf of the family. […] WGN-TV has reached out to Morrison for comment. A spokesperson said they are continuing to follow the developments, but are withholding comment at this time.

* WTTW | Key City Panel Rejects Bid to Ban Video Gambling in 6 Chicago Wards, Defying Local Alderpeople: The ordinances rejected by the committee would ban video slots and poker machines in Ald. Jessie Fuentes’ 26th Ward, Ald. Walter Burnett’s 27th Ward, Ald. Jason Ervin’s 28th Ward, Ald. Rossana Rodriquez’s 33rd Ward, Ald. Anthony Quezada’s 35th Ward and Ald. Maria Hadden’s 49th Ward. Both Burnett and Ervin asked Ald. Debra Silverstein (50th Ward), the chair of the City Council’s License and Consumer Protection Committee, not to hold a vote on the two measures during Thursday’s meeting. Similar requests are routinely honored by committee chairs, particularly when the impact of the proposal is limited to specific wards, rather than citywide.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | A new Chicago program aims to keep teens facing serious charges out of detention — and out of trouble: To participate, teens have to go to school five days a week and take part in cognitive behavioral therapy, mentoring, and other services provided by two community nonprofits. The pilot program is a nod to the key role that school can play in reengaging youth facing criminal charges — and, on the flip side, the havoc that stints in detention can wreak on their odds of graduating.

* Sun-Times | CTU plans to join May 1 ‘no school, no work’ day of action, wants classes canceled: That day, the union wants members and students to take part in “age-appropriate” civic education, labor history programming, voter registration and know-your-rights training, as well as rallies and marches. “Teaching our students what civic action looks like requires more than textbooks when the President sends federal agents to occupy our cities and the Governor chooses to continue giving tax breaks to billionaires instead of giving our students the school day they deserve,” CTU Vice President Jackson Potter said in a statement.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* CBS Chicago | Domestic violence homicides up 15% in Chicago; Cook County creates specialized unit to prosecute: A new specialized unit is being created to prosecute domestic violence homicides in Cook County, as these killings surged 15% last year, even as overall violent crime declined across Chicago. Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke announced the launch of the Domestic Violence Homicide Unit, staffed with prosecutors focused solely on these cases. Since Burke took office in December 2024, her office has charged 32 homicides involving domestic violence, with the majority of victims being women killed by intimate partners.

* Tribune | Cook County assessor candidates grapple over the reasons for skyrocketing property taxes: Hynes has seized on anger over spikes to South and West Side assessments and bills last year, the hundreds of new or renovated properties Kaegi’s office failed to catch during the pandemic, and other assessment or exemption errors Hynes personally worked to correct as a suburban assessor since 2021. […] Kaegi, meanwhile, says his challenger would take the office’s ethics backwards, citing Hynes’ roster of campaign donors, which includes several property tax appeals attorneys and appraisers. The donations are not only an ethical problem, he said, but a signal that Hynes’ practices would be more favorable toward big businesses.

* Pat Hynes


* South Side Weekly | Demystifying the Cook County Board: “Commissioners don’t intervene in how court cases are handled, and they don’t intervene in who gets care at Cook County Hospital in the same way an alderman might intervene over getting a pothole fixed,” Simpson told the Weekly. Instead, he said, commissioners might reach out directly to department heads or to the Board president, to accomplish an aim more informally.

* Tribune | Feds drop charges against 2 of the ‘Broadview Six’ immigration protesters : In a one-paragraph filing, the U.S. attorney’s office moved to dismiss the indictment against Catherine Sharp, a onetime candidate for Cook County Board, and Joselyn Walsh, a part-time garden store worker and singer, “in the interests of justice.” “As the United States Attorney’s Office does in every case, the government has continued to evaluate new facts, evidence and information to ensure that the interests of justice are served,” wrote Assistant U.S. Attorneys William Hogan and Matthew Skiba.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora Mayor John Laesch’s ethics reform package faces further delays: The proposed regulations would prevent those who are doing business with the city, or looking to, from donating more than $1,500 per year to candidates running for city office. It would also expand economic interest disclosures required of candidates, elected officials and certain city employees. In a 9-3 vote, the proposal was sent back to one of the City Council’s committees for further review. The ethics reform package, which was a key part of Laesch’s mayoral campaign, has seen delay after delay and various changes since it was first formally proposed in early October.

* Daily Southtown | Homer Glen eyes its own police needs analysis in wake of Will County sheriff service study: Since the village incorporated in 2001, it has worked out an agreement with the Will County sheriff’s department to provide police services within its borders at a cost of about $5.2 million a year. Last month, the Will County Board agreed to pay an outside consultant up to $75,000 to provide a financial analysis of the sheriff’s department’s services provided to Homer Glen, noting it would be the first time an outside firm would be engaged to create a formal study.

* Tribune | Lurie reveals exact location of new Downers Grove children’s hospital, offers more details: Lurie Children’s Hospital is planning to build its new pediatric hospital on now-vacant land in Downers Grove near the intersection of I-88 and I-355, hospital leaders revealed at a community meeting Thursday evening. The new facility, which Lurie announced in January, would be Lurie’s first hospital with inpatient beds outside of its main location in Streeterville. Lurie is in the process of buying the land, a Lurie spokesperson said. Lurie must still get approval from the state Health Facilities and Services Review Board and zoning approval from Downers Grove before moving forward with construction.

* Shaw Local | City says no more Old Joliet Haunted Prison, but entertainment company wants to return: A representative for Thirteenth Floor said Tuesday the company was surprised to learn that it would not be welcomed back in 2026. […] Sylvester, who also is the director of cultural affairs and special events for the city, said the removal of the haunted house is related to a new lease that Joliet negotiated with the state last year. She said in an email that “under that agreement, all activities at the Old Joliet Prison now require state approval. At this time, Thirteenth Floor Entertainment Group is not an approved use under the terms of that agreement.”

*** Downstate ***

* Center Square | Pritzker: ‘God was looking out for people’ in storm-damaged Kankakee County: “But one thing, and God was looking out for people here, is that there were really very few injuries. They were relatively minor. There were no deaths,” Pritzker said. Pritzker said almost 500 structures were affected and at least 30 homes were totally destroyed. “Many of the people who have been displaced have family that live in the area, and they’ve gone to stay with their family while their homes are being repaired or maybe for longer,” Pritzker said.

* Tribune | Nearly 500 structures damaged by Kankakee County tornado, Gov. JB Pritzker reports: Pritzker, a Democrat who has routinely tussled with Trump on federal immigration enforcement efforts and an array of other issues, said he expects the state will receive federal funds for Tuesday’s disaster because the damage is so visible. He said that isn’t always the case for areas requesting federal funding. But the Trump administration has punished states that didn’t vote for him in 2024, repeatedly targeting blue states with funding cuts in health care and transportation.

* Tribune | EV manufacturer Rivian announces pricing for midsize R2 SUV, set to roll off Normal line in spring: Two years after Rivian announced the midsize R2 SUV would be built at its Normal plant, the first versions of the potentially game-changing EV are packaged, priced and getting ready to roll off the line this spring, the company announced Thursday. Starting prices range from $45,000 to $58,000 – substantially lower than its full-size SUV – which could position Rivian as a mass market EV automaker, substantially ramping up production in the downstate college town.

* BND | State police investigate video of metro-east cop allegedly punching woman: In one video, a male police officer apparently throws a punch at a woman who is wearing a red dress, who then fell backwards onto the street. The audio recorded the use of profanity and racial slurs, apparently from the person operating the camera. Also, a woman can be heard saying “Get my phone” at least three times. Shortly after she says this, a police officer picks up an item off the street and throws it. […] The second video is taken from farther away and shows a woman apparently being handcuffed near a tow truck and then later swinging a leg at an officer. After this swing, she ends up on the street.

* WCBU | Tazewell County clerk’s office adds AI search enhancement to analyze handwritten details in historic documents: A recently added AI search engine enhancement on the county clerk’s website can analyze handwritten details in digitized copies of archived county board minutes and military discharge records. Tazewell County Clerk John Ackerman says the new technology will save time when they’re trying to find names and other details contained in the records. “This will unlock for us a treasure trove of historical information and make it easier for staff to locate information that they’re looking to obtain from these records,” Ackerman said during a news conference Wednesday afternoon.

* IPM News | Emmy-nominated talk show host and University of Illinois alumnus Sean Evans selected as 2026 commencement speaker: “Sean Evans defined his own path and reimagined the role of a journalist and a talk show host in the modern media landscape,” U of I Chancellor Charles L. Isbell, Jr. said in a statement. “We encourage Illinois students and alumni to be innovative, and Sean created something no one else had. His work inspires us to continue to push boundaries, to challenge convention and to develop new ideas instead of just adopting old ones.”

The announcement


*** National ***

* CNBC | Black women were disproportionately impacted by DOGE cuts. A year later, they’re rebuilding careers for themselves and each other: Among those disproportionately impacted were Black women, who make up 12% of the federal workforce (almost double their 7% share in the overall U.S. workforce) and experienced the largest federal employment losses between 2024 and 2025, says Valerie Wilson, a labor economist and director of the Economic Policy Institute’s program on race, ethnicity and the economy. The DOGE cuts, which continued for several months, contributed to a disturbing trend: Black women’s unemployment rate skyrocketed to a high of 7.5% in September 2025, compared to 4.4% unemployment among all U.S. workers at that time.

* Legal Newsline | Allstate can’t delete class action over alleged secret app tracking: In an opinion filed March 3, U.S. District Judge Jeremy Daniel said a group of Allstate auto insurance customers accused the carrier of cooperating with AllCorp, which owns three Arity subsidiaries, in using a software development kit that tracked customers’ movements and phone usage. Among the applications in question is Allstate’s Drivewise, which like the other technology would only function properly on phones with location information enabled. The lawsuit was first filed in Chicago federal court, but was quickly followed by other complaints, all of which were consolidated before Judge Daniel in Chicago.

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Good morning!

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rosali



Paste magazine

Lead single “Rewind,” though it elicits flickers of some standstill romantic dissolution, is not informed by heartbreak at all. The “I’ll rewind for you” lyric was actually inspired by Rosali’s dog. “I was walking with her, and I just started singing it to her,” she says. “She was a really challenging puppy, but I liked the idea of ‘Well, I’d still rewind for you. This is all still worth it.’” From there, the song transformed into a broader take on having no regrets and being open and willing to still love and interact with the past.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Mar 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The New York Times

Days before the primary race ends on Tuesday, Black political leaders in Chicago are growing more frustrated with the efforts to divide the state’s Black voters. “I’m sure that Raja is very happy from the fact that there are these two distinguished Black women who will split the Black vote to some degree,

Ms. Stratton’s supporters are openly angry at Ms. Kelly and the Congressional Black Caucus, which typically backs its own members seeking higher office. Caucus members have refused to back down in the face of claims that they are poised to hand a Senate seat to Mr . Krishnamoorthi. […]

Super PACs allied with Mr . Krishnamoorthi are certainly happy Ms. Kelly is in the race. The crypto industry, unhappy with Mr . Pritzker’s regulatory efforts as governor , has spent $8 million on ads slamming Ms. Stratton and elevating Ms. Kelly in an attempt to help Mr . Krishnamoorthi. […]

“It’s very hard to watch, ” said Willie Preston, a Democratic state senator who is the chairman of his chamber’s Black caucus. He has remained neutral in the Senate primary while running his own race to replace Ms. Kelly. “If it was not for this dark money coming in and the divide-and-conquer of the Black community, Raja wouldn’t be close. He’s benefiting from intentionally divided Black politics right now.”

* Fox Chicago

The Chicago Board of Education president is targeting members of the media as an internal probe into alleged board “leakers” drags on.

On Wednesday, Fox Chicago reporter Paris Schutz received an email from the law firm Salvatore Prescott Porter and Porter saying:

“As you know, we are conducting an investigation involving the CPS Board of Education and communications with the media. We understand you have information relevant to our investigation. If you are willing to talk to us, we would appreciate scheduling time to speak with you.”

The inquiry revolves around the alleged “leaking” of information regarding a special public board of education meeting that was called in late December, where members voted to hike the Chicago Public Schools property tax levy by the maximum amount allowed under state law.

Multiple board sources told Fox Chicago that Harden threatened to “out” the leaker and “force their resignation,” although there is no evidence that the information was provided by any member of the Board of Education. Sources also say the law firm was brought in to probe a similar leak to a Chicago Sun-Times/WBEZ reporter after that publication ran a story about the search process for a new superintendent.

* Stop the presses! Breaking news from the Prairie State Wire

Illinois has two state lawmakers who have dyed their hair blue—more than any other state.

That’s according to an analysis of state lawmaker hairstyles by Prairie State Wire.

Illinois State Reps. Kelly Cassidy (D–Rogers Park) and Eva-Dina Delgado (D–Belmont Cragin), both of whom represent districts on Chicago’s North Side, dyed their hair blue for official state photos. […]

There are no lawmakers with dyed blue or purple hair in any Midwestern state, including Minnesota, Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, Iowa, or Nebraska.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Legal Newsline | Court shoots down bid by IL judges to undo Tier 2 pension reforms: On March 5, a three-member panel of Illinois state appellate court justices turned aside the bid by Cook County Judge Natasha Toller and retired St. Clair County Judge Patricia Kievlan to overturn limitations on judges’ pensions enacted in Illinois’ so-called Tier 2 pension reform law. In the ruling, the appeals panel said the judges’ claims against the Tier 2 law fell short because they became judges after the law took effect, and can’t now try to escape the terms and limits in place when they essentially signed the contracts governing their pension benefits.

* Illinois Review | After Illinois Review Story, AM 560 Quietly Deletes Social Media Attacks on Conservative Gov. Candidate Darren Bailey: The criticism was not just about tone – it was about conflicts of interest. Two of the station’s most prominent hosts, Dan Proft and former state Rep. Jeanne Ives, are also senior political advisors to the gubernatorial campaign of Ted Dabrowski, Bailey’s opponent in the Republican primary. To many conservatives, that raised serious questions about whether AM 560 had allowed its media platform to be used as a political weapon.

* Center Square | With teachers union support, committee approves charter school mandates: State Sen. Celina Villanueva, D-Chicago, told the Illinois Senate Executive Committee on Wednesday she has been working on Senate Bill 3391 for a couple of years. The Chicago Teachers Union supports the legislation. CTU Legislative Director Hilario Dominguez said Chicago Public Schools spent about $35 million stabilizing failed charter operators. “This legislation simply ensures that when organizations receive public funds to educate our children, they are accountable to the public,” Dominguez told the committee.

*** Chicago ***

* Bloomberg | City defers big slice of bond sale as Mideast conflict upends yields: Chicago put off the sale of about $292 million in tax-exempt bonds the city planned to sell this week as conflict in the Middle East rattles global markets. The debt was a part of an $800 million package that the city had scheduled to price on Tuesday, according to bond filings. Chicago proceeded to price the $511.9 million taxable general obligation bond portion of the deal. The tax-exempt bonds will price at an undetermined future date, Chicago Acting Chief Financial Officer Steven Mahr said in an email. The city currently expects to return to the market to sell general obligation bonds in the second and third quarters of 2026 but it may speed up or postpone those transactions based on factors including market conditions, he added.

* WBEZ | CPS should work to prevent future attendance drops due to immigration enforcement, community groups say: A coalition of community groups and a parent advocacy organization are urging Chicago Public Schools to take steps now to prevent attendance declines should there be another surge in federal immigration enforcement. Among the things they are asking for: More frequent updates about attendance trends and designated safe spaces where students and parents can retreat should they encounter a threat while going to or from school.

* ABC Chicago | Trump Tower in Chicago makes improvements after failing health inspection: In December, a health inspector cited the downtown Chicago hotel for six issues, including flies in the bar and dish areas, and improper storage of cold food. They were instructed to have all areas affected by pests checked out by an expert. The hotel later passed inspection on December 23rd.

* Block Club | How 7 Families Celebrate The South Side Irish Parade, From Breakfast With Politicos To A Backyard Mass: The breakfast usually brings in a number of politicians who are going to be in the parade. Gov. JB Pritzker, Sen. Dick Durbin and Rep. Sean Casten have all attended — as did Barack Obama years before he ran for president. Jack Kelly is a member of the parade committee, and Maureen Kelly said her family often jokes that the day is “better than Christmas.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* NBC Chicago | Suburban school district uses license plate readers to verify student residency: According to the school district, her daughter’s new student enrollment form was denied due to “license plate recognition software showing only Chicago addresses overnight” in July and August. In an email sent to Sánchez in August, the school district told her, “Although you are the owner on record of a house in our district boundaries, your license plate recognition shows that is not the place where you reside.” Sánchez is adamant she and her daughter have been steadily living in their home since moving in. As for the location of her car—she says she loaned it to a family member in Chicago last summer. Now it’s back in her driveway.

* Press release: Personal PAC, the Chicago Federation of Labor, Sierra Club Illinois, and ICIRR Action teamed up through their political organizations to run joint ads supporting Toni Preckwinkle ahead of the March 17 primary. This coalition, activated in the wake of Trump’s Inauguration, has also been a driving force behind the large-scale “No Kings” rallies and the Hands Off Chicago coalition. This group will continue to find ways to support one another and join together with other advocacy groups to protect Chicago, fight for our values, and support elected leaders who can deliver real progress.



* WTTW | Group of Cook County Leaders Seek Special Prosecutor, Claim Eileen O’Neill Burke ‘Abandoned’ Duties to Investigate ICE: That coalition, which includes more than 200 elected officials, community organizations, attorneys and religious leaders on Thursday filed a petition in Cook County court after they said State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke has failed to hold federal agents accountable. “Absent such (an) appointment, the message to federal agents operating in Cook County would remain clear: you may shoot unarmed civilians, assault journalists and clergy, brutalize protesters, and lie under oath with impunity,” the group wrote in its 55-page petition states.

* CBS Chicago | Ex-custodian accused of secretly filming students, staff in bathrooms at suburban middle school ordered held: Garcia-Espinal formerly worked at the Sunset Ridge School at 525 Sunset Ridge Rd., where, in 2020, he allegedly hid a video camera in a school bathroom and recorded students and staff without their knowledge or consent. Police said Garcia-Espinal fled the United States following the incident at the school. He spent the past six years on the run before he was arrested for a similar incident at a Los Angeles restaurant.

* CBS Chicago | 2 boys pulled from Lake County, Illinois, schools in separate child abuse cases raise questions about oversight: When a child is expelled from school, the Illinois State Board of Education is notified, but not necessarily when a child is pulled out by their parents. It raises questions about whether additional oversight should be put in place, but past legislative attempts have been met with significant pushback. A Fox Lake couple was arrested and charged Friday with physically abusing the woman’s 11-year-old son for years before he was able to make a daring escape for help. […] In both cases, investigators said the boys were removed from school by their parents after questions of abuse were raised.

* Daily Herald | St. Charles wants to revamp portions of downtown for improved traffic, cyclist flow: The city of St. Charles could undergo a significant transportation and safety upgrade in a section of the downtown experiencing surging numbers of commuters and bicyclists. To explore options, including streetscaping improvements, the city is seeking a $99,245 planning contract with Civiltech Engineering for the first phase of work in the southeastern portion of the downtown area.

* CBS Chicago | Ravinia Festival 2026 schedule features lineup with Paul Simon, Chance the Rapper and Ricky Martin: Paul Simon, Chance the Rapper, Ricky Martin, Brandi Carlile and Hugh Jackman are among this year’s artists performing in the redesigned Hunter Pavilion in Highland Park from June through September. This year’s lineup also features Miranda Lambert, Alabama Shakes, Rod Stewart and Ziggy Marley. The 2026 season includes over 50 artist debuts.

*** Downstate ***

* WGEM | Quincy City Council doesn’t plan on additional subsidy for public library as budget progresses: For years, the Quincy City Council approved a subsidy for the Quincy Public Library on top of the .15% they earn on city property taxes. This year, the subsidy is expected to stop. “Council has made it very clear that they do not want to subsidize the library or any outside entity,” Moore said. Last year’s initial budget was denied over what the council found to be an unrealistic proposed subsidy exceeding $400,000. Instead, they narrowly passed a budget which gave the library $350,000.

* The Southern | American Airlines presents bid for Veterans Airport service: As Veterans Airport of Southern Illinois continues reviewing options for the future of air service in the region, American Airlines presented its proposal Wednesday to replace the airport’s current carrier. Airport Manager Doug Kimmel said the airport is reviewing multiple proposals before submitting a recommendation to the U.S. Department of Transportation. “This is the best slate of air service proposals that we’ve had to review and to choose from,” Kimmel said.

* WMBD | Big Al’s could reopen as strip parlor and concert venue: Ty Seibert, a veteran owner and operator of Peoria nightclubs, hopes to soon revive the venue at 400 SW Jefferson Ave. The site has been dark since 2024, when the city revoked Big Al’s liquor license after multiple shootings at the club. Further, then-owner Kenneth Kummerow had to divest himself of the business, which would be transferred to a new owner subject to city approval – a prospect that still remains viable. Seibert, 53, has submitted a business plan to City Hall. Mayor Rita Ali, who also serves as the city’s liquor commission, declined to comment at length about his intentions.

*** National ***

* WIRED | How ‘Handala’ Became the Face of Iran’s Hacker Counterattacks: Even among American cybersecurity researchers who closely track state-sponsored hacking groups, Handala—which takes its name from the well-known Handala character in the political cartoons of Palestinian artist Naji al-Ali—has until now hardly achieved much notoriety. But those who have followed the group’s evolution, particularly in Israel’s cybersecurity industry, say the group is now widely believed to be a front for Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence, or MOIS. They’ve seen the hackers become the most prominent player in a wave of Iranian state cyber operators who pose as hacktivists while seeking to inflict noisy, often politically motivated chaos on adversaries. Handala, or the same group operating under earlier names, has launched data-destroying and hack-and-leak operations for years against targets ranging from the Albanian government to Israeli businesses and political officials.

* Crain’s | With women’s sports primed for profitability, Ariel’s Project Level eyes its next deal: With two deals already under its belt, Ariel Investment’s Project Level is looking at the WNBA for its next investment, as the fund’s manager says the high-flying but undervalued league represents one of the best arbitrage opportunities in sports. “The fundamentals on what drives value in sports franchises are all up and to the right for women’s sports — sponsorships, ticket sales, viewership, quality of players,” said Jason Wright, a former Northwestern University and NFL football player who serves as the fund’s managing partner and head of investments.

* SJ-R | ‘Too many maybes’: Expert can’t be sure of source of Lincoln casket flag : An authority on the assassination of Abraham Lincoln said there may be holes in the story about an American flag that draped the casket of the 16th president from Springfield. Keens, a New York City steakhouse, recently purchased the flag for over half a million dollars and first displayed it publicly on the Lincoln’s birthday.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign stuff

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Today’s fun read

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Beverly Review’s South Side Irish Parade Guide profiles Sen. Bill Cunningham’s great-grandfather

One of the most interesting, colorful and important early Irish-American Catholics who moved to the Ridge was James Dominic “Yank” Cunningham, who started the commercial district along 111th Street in Mt. Greenwood. […]

“The place my great-grandfather opened, like a lot of pubs of that time, was a social and cultural center for immigrants,” said Bill. “In the 1890 census of Chicago, 80 percent of the population of the city was immigrants or the children of immigrants. They went to the local pub to find a job or find a room to live in, to get their local news and share stories. They built up life around a tavern.”

Yank Cunningham developed a friendship and working relationship with James “Big Jim” O’Leary, the son of Catherine and Patrick O’Leary, in whose barn the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 is said to have started.

Big Jim O’Leary, born in 1863, was called “the king of gamblers” in Chicago, the “man who would bet on anything.” He was known for being very honest, and his patrons had confidence that he would always pay up if he lost. His involvement in a gambling operation was a sign that it would be run fairly and honestly—even if it was illegal. […]

“I like to think that my great-grandfather and grandfather would have gotten a real kick out of the idea that one day one of their descendants would hold public office,” said Bill Cunningham, “because when they first got out here to the Ridge, they weren’t very welcomed by the people who held public office.”

Go read the rest.

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Catching up with the federal candidates

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Raja’s closing TV ad

Script

[RAJA] Running for office takes thick skin. I get that.

But my opponent’s lies about me ignore something you need to know.

I’m an immigrant myself.

It wasn’t easy, but when things got tough our neighbors had our backs.

That’s why stopping Trump and ICE’s attacks on our communities is deeply personal to me.

It’s why I won’t give Trump’s ICE another nickel.

And I’m the only one with a real plan to hold Trump accountable.

I’m Raja Krishnamoorthi. I approve this message.

People can lie and call me names.

But as always, you can just call me Raja.

Your rating?

* WGN’s Tahman Bradley asked Raja about the Tribune report alleging mistreatment of staff


Click here for the full interview.

* The American Prospect

In Illinois’s Eighth Congressional District, a former investment banker is attempting a political comeback after a stretch as perhaps the most conservative Democrat in Washington. Against a field of grassroots challengers, big money is pouring in to assist the return of “Wall Street’s Favorite Democrat” to Congress.

There are eight candidates in the race, but with less than a week to go until the March 17 primary, the two main contenders are Melissa Bean, the aforementioned former Blue Dog member of Congress, and Junaid Ahmed, a progressive backed by Justice Democrats (the group behind the “Squad” in Congress). […]

Elect Chicago Women, the innocuously named AIPAC shadow PAC, has spent nearly $4 million in support of Bean’s campaign already. The pro-AI PAC Think Big, which is also backing Jesse Jackson Jr.’s campaign in Illinois’s Second District, has spent over $1 million. Bean is also backed by the New Democrat Majority PAC, which supports centrist Democratic candidates; she was a member of the New Dems and the Blue Dog Coalition in her first stint in Congress. […]

Bean, who represented the Eighth District from 2005 to 2011, is hoping to regain her seat now that incumbent Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi is stepping aside to run for Senate. She’s backed by a staggering amount of super PAC money, including from an AIPAC shadow PAC and a pro-AI group. Pro-crypto PACs have also pledged to spend $1 million in the race.

* Justice Democrats Communications Director Usamah Andrabi


* Fairshake, a Crypto-backed super PAC, attacks Rep. La Shawn Ford again


* 9th CD candidate Bushra Amiwala claimed a recent Evanston Roundtable poll allowed people to vote multiple times


Sen. Fine repeating the same claim


* Evanston Roundtable reporter Alex Harrison says Sen. Fine is lying….

* More…

    * Press release | Indivisible Skokie–Morton Grove–Lincolnwood Endorses Bushra Amiwala for Congress: “From fighting the ICE terror machine, to standing against voter suppression, to opposing Trump’s unconstitutional war in Iran, Indivisible has been a fearless voice for justice at a critical moment for our country,” said Amiwala, an elected member of the Skokie District 73.5 School Board. “I’m honored to earn their endorsement and grateful for the grassroots organizing they bring to our district.”

    * Press release | Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Endorses Junaid Ahmed in the 8th Congressional District: As Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez endorses Junaid Ahmed, she joins a growing grassroots progressive coalition rallying behind Junaid, who is taking on millions of dollars in outside spending from corporate and special-interest super PACs backing Melissa Bean. In a new article published today, The American Prospect highlights how groups aligned with AIPAC, pro-AI interests, and other corporate-backed super PACs are pouring massive sums into the race to boost Bean. The report notes that an AIPAC-aligned group alone has spent nearly $4 million supporting Bean, with additional spending from pro-AI and pro-crypto PACs attempting to shape the outcome of the Democratic primary.

    * The Daily Herald | U.S. Rep. Casten continues to outraise and outspend Ruzevich in 6th District’s Democratic showdown: Casten, who’s seeking a fifth term in Congress, had nearly $1.2 million in his campaign coffers as of late February, federal documents show. That’s more than 50 times the $21,573 challenger Joey Ruzevich’s campaign reported having. Casten and Ruzevich filed financial reports with the Federal Election Commission late last week detailing donations received and purchases made between Jan. 1 and Feb. 25. Ruzevich’s team submitted an updated report Wednesday after being alerted to discrepancies by the Daily Herald.

    * Press release | Daniel Biss and Sen. Elizabeth Warren to Hold Get Out the Vote Kickoff Event in Evanston: Tomorrow, March 13, Congressional candidate Daniel Biss (IL-09) and U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) will gather with supporters and volunteers for a get out the vote kickoff event in Evanston. Illinois 9th Congressional District Candidate Daniel Biss and U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, with supporters and volunteers.

  16 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

The Senate Pensions Committee advanced a bill that would require local governments to establish a version of the state’s pension buyout program.

Senate Bill 3404, sponsored by state Sen. Rob Martwick, D-Chicago, passed on an agreed bill list, though some changes are expected to address concerns from the Illinois Municipal League, Martwick told Capitol News Illinois.

Under the proposal, local governments would need to establish a pension buyout program, and it would remain at their discretion whether and when it is offered. […]

The Senate Executive Committee unanimously advanced Senate Bill 3449, a bill that specifies that anyone, including law enforcement, cannot take possession of a mobile device to verify the device owner’s identity if they use their device as identification cards.

* Center Square

State Sen. Ram Villivalam, D-Chicago, said Illinois Senate Bill 2906 would give collective bargaining rights to transportation network drivers. […]

SEIU Local 1 President Genie Kastrup told the Illinois Senate Labor Committee on Tuesday that SB 2906 would require rideshare companies to negotiate a collective bargaining agreement if organizers get support from 30% of active drivers. […]

Illinois Labor Relations Board Executive Director Kimberly Stevens told the committee that the bill’s 20-cent per ride administrative fee on riders would be an issue.

“That would come to the board to then create and administer grants back to the union out of that funding, which presents a conflict of interest for an agency that is supposed to be neutral,” Stevens said. […]

SB 2906 would also require the Illinois Labor Relations Board to collect driver information from their employers.

[Stevens] said her agency does not currently do data collection.

* Sen. Michael Hastings…

State Senator Michael E. Hastings is speaking out on the need for stronger oversight of Buy-Now-Pay-Later programs, a fast-growing form of short-term credit that allows consumers to pay for purchases in installments. [..]

Hastings advanced legislation that would require BNPL lenders to register with the state and provide full disclosures about repayment terms, interest rates and potential fees while maintaining fair and transparent dispute or refund processes. The legislation also would ensure consumers understand the total cost of borrowing and can make informed financial decisions.

The measure is intended to protect consumers while allowing responsible BNPL programs to operate fairly. Hastings emphasized that accountability and transparency are key to preventing abusive practices and promoting financial literacy across the state. […]

Senate Bill 3561 passed the Senate Judiciary Committee Wednesday.

* WAND

Sen. Doris Turner has filed a bill to help bring more economic development and housing to Downtown Springfield.

Her legislation could expand the current boundaries of the Springfield medical district from Madison Street to South Grand Avenue. It would also rename the Mid-Illinois Medical District to the Capital City Downtown Medical District.

“We’ve seen too many businesses come and go from downtown,” Turner said. “It’s past time we bring in much-needed economic development opportunities to bolster our community and breathe new life into this once buzzing central hub.”

Senate Bill 2829 passed unanimously out of the Senate Local Government Committee Wednesday. It now moves to the Senate floor for further consideration.

* Sen. Rachel Ventura…

A new measure introduced by State Senator Rachel Ventura to establish the Illinois Psilocybin Advisory Board to investigate and advise on best practices for psilocybin treatments to help tackle treatment-resistant conditions such as PTSD passed the Senate Executive Committee Wednesday.

“I remain committed to passing the CURE Act in its entirety and providing real change for individuals who have exhausted other treatment methods,” said Ventura (D-Joliet). “This bill is an important first step in that effort and will provide legislators with essential research on the safety and efficacy of psychedelic use in therapeutic treatments.” […]

The measure led by Ventura this year – Senate Bill 2772 – would implement a part of the CURE Act, establishing the Illinois Psilocybin Advisory Board under the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. The board would advise on a training program, ethical standards and licensing requirements as it related to psilocybin. During a two-year program development period, the board would issue recommendations for health and safety regulations to agencies tasked with regulating psilocybin production and use. Ventura remains committed to passing the CURE Act in its entirety at a later date. […]

Senate Bill 2772 passed the Senate Executive Committee Wednesday and now heads to the full Senate for further action.

* WQAD

A bill sponsored by State Sen. Mike Halpin, D-Rock Island, would allow retired teachers to work additional paid hours as substitutes. It recently passed the Illinois Senate Education Committee, and proponents say it could help address ongoing teacher shortages across the state.
Senate Bill 2953 would extend the sunset on a provision allowing retired teachers to work up to 120 days or 600 hours per school year without affecting their pension benefits, giving schools more flexibility to fill gaps in classrooms and substitute positions. […]

SB 2953 now awaits further consideration in the Senate. If passed, it would allow retired teachers to work additional hours as substitutes through June 30, 2029, an increase from the current sunset of June 30, 2026.

* More…

    * Press release | Castro fights for improved charter school oversight: Senate Bill 4040 would automatically transfer any state-authorized charter school located outside of the geographical area of a school district back to the local school board or boards. The vast majority of charter schools in Illinois are locally authorized – meaning they apply directly for authorization with their local school board. The other nine are state-run charter schools with ten campuses total. State-run charter schools apply for authorization through the Illinois State Board of Education rather than their local school board. Because current law does not allow school board oversight of state-run charter schools, Castro’s legislation aims to provide this mechanism for the local community.

    * Capitol City Now | IL plan could help municipalities lower speed limits in urban areas: “If they decide that they want their entire municipality to go from 30 miles per hour to 25 miles per hour and the roads that are there are able to do that, they are welcome to do that,” Goldstein said. “But if they want to do just one stretch, then they can do that too.” Senate Bill 3374 passed unanimously out of the Senate Executive Committee Wednesday. It now moves to the Senate floor for further consideration.

    * WAND | Downcoding transparency bill heads to IL Senate floor: This proposal states that doctors should make all decoding decisions, and insurance companies would be required to notify providers if a service is downcoded. It would also ban insurers from downcoding in a discriminatory manner against doctors who routinely treat patients with complex health conditions. “The problem is assistance they are using tend to only look at the final diagnosis,” said Erin O’Brien from the Illinois State Medical Society. “They are basing the payment of the physician based on the final diagnosis. They are not paying us what they negotiated with us pursuant to the contracts that we negotiated in good faith.”

    * Press release | Stadelman measure to strengthen transparency of digital product sales: Senate Bill 2822 protects consumers in online marketplaces by making it unlawful for a digital seller to offer for sale or advertise digital goods using the terms “buy,” “purchase,” or other similar terms without making available a clear disclosure, including a list of restrictions and conditions, which may include an affirmative acknowledgment from the consumer.

  4 Comments      


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

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

340B was a lifesaver for Correy Bell. At the March 1 rally for House Bill 2371 SA 2—the Patient Access to Pharmacy Protection Act—she shared how the program helped her. With chronic asthma and bronchitis, Bell relies on an inhaler. One time, she found herself in a frightening scenario: out of town for work with no inhaler. Bell, a comedian, owns her own business and is uninsured.

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

A long-time patient at Family Christian Health Center, Bell said the 340B drug discount program helped her access needed medication at a price she could afford—“no confusing hoops, no shame, no judgment, just real savings when I needed it the most,” she said.

State Rep. Anna Moeller, lead House sponsor of HB 2371 SA 2, told the 500 people at the rally that the bill is “a vital step in protecting access to affordable medications for patients who rely on this program. And it doesn’t cost Illinois one dime.”

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

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Heiress claims to be poor

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Kat Abughazaleh on a recent podcast

But there’s also this aspect about primaries where polling purposely weights likely primary voters more, and that’s usually older, white, affluent people. And we want to reach those people, but we want to reach everyone. And we have a huge amount of our base that is young. We have a huge amount of our base that are immigrants, or have immigrant families or even undocumented family members. A large part of our base are renters that are poor, like myself.

Somebody who grew up in wealth, initially lived rent-free in somebody else’s sweet lakefront condo, then moved to the district after announcing her campaign, has zero self-awareness and even less of a clue by claiming she’s “poor.” Period.

To be clear, I don’t begrudge people who were raised in money. You don’t pick your parents.

But as a person who grew up in a family which had zero money and then scratched its own way to security, I find her claim repulsive.

  72 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Ethos Training Systems in Chicago’s Roscoe Park neighborhood is where fitness meets a holistic approach to health. Co-owners Tim Cohen and Cory Lester created Ethos to help people understand their potential and elevate both body and mind while fostering a strong, caring community. At Ethos, workouts support all experience levels and ages, focusing on accessibility, sustainability, and results that keep you coming back.

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

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

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois officials say the state is mostly insulated from Trump’s election threats. Capitol News Illinois

    - Illinois election officials and community leaders say they are confident the state is mostly insulated from the Trump administration’s aggressive moves and heated rhetoric on election administration as Illinois’ March 17 primary approaches.
    - Republican county clerks said that while they weren’t fazed by President Donald Trump’s messaging or proposed changes to voting laws, they are concerned about how federal cuts to cybersecurity initiatives could affect future elections in the state.
    - Late last month, the FBI led a call with state election officials from across the country, including Illinois, to discuss the upcoming election. During the call, federal officials reportedly tried to assuage concerns of the prospect of a federal presence at voting locations.

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

Sponsored by PhRMA:

340B hospitals charge big medicine markups. Illinois pays the price.

340B medicine markups are big business for hospitals. Under the federal 340B program, nonprofit hospitals can buy medicines for pennies, then charge huge markups – even on life-saving medicines. Big hospital systems pocket the program profits – passing the bill to Illinois patients, employers and taxpayers who are hit with higher medicine costs. The program’s lack of oversight has led to 340B becoming a profit engine for hospitals, PBMs, private equity firms and big chain pharmacies. It’s time for Congress to hold hospitals accountable and fix 340B. Read more.

* At 2:15 pm, Governor Pritzker will join local officials to assesses storm damage in Kankakee County. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* ABC Chicago | Governor JB Pritzker to visit Kankakee Co. as tornado damage cleanup continues: There’s been an overwhelming show of support for people impacted by the storm with a Red Cross shelter stationed at the Kankakee Community College. Resources are also available at Grace Baptist Church, which will open at 8 a.m., according to their Facebook page, for people in need of food, water and other supplies for cleanup

* Daily Herald | Developer withdraws application for controversial Lisle data center: Berry, who lives in a subdivision near the Lockformer property, helped organize residents opposed to the data center proposal. “Our stance was we’re not against data centers, we just don’t want them 150 feet from our homes,” she said. Berry said she plans to work with residents to ask the village board to impose a moratorium on any new data centers until the state provides further guidance and more research can be done.

* Tribune | Gargantuan hail, destructive tornadoes: Climate change making Illinois storms more severe: “I told somebody yesterday that I had the record-breaking hail for about five minutes until somebody else broke it,” said the Northern Illinois University professor, who has been researching hail for over a decade. “Once it gets that big, we call it gargantuan. And that’s, like, a scientific term: gargantuan hail.” […] “It is exceptional to get that large of hail (this) far east,” Gensini said. “We do see a lot of hail like that every year, in Texas and Oklahoma and Kansas. To get it in Illinois, you have to have a perfect setup. And we definitely had that yesterday.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Michael Frerichs and Harold Pollack | More Illinoisans with disabilities can now save and invest: In 2014, President Barack Obama signed the landmark Achieving a Better Life Experience Act (ABLE). The law allowed people with disabilities and their families to save without running afoul of a $2,000 federal asset limit. They can accumulate up to $100,000 in an ABLE account, contributing up to $20,000 a year, without endangering their Supplemental Security Income or Medicaid. The accounts, however, were only available to people who became disabled before age 26. The ABLE Age Adjustment Act that took effect this year could help an estimated 6 million Americans who acquired their disability before turning 46. About 250,000 disabled Illinois residents are now eligible for ABLE accounts, allowing them to save and invest to increase independence and improve quality of life.

* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker administration launches new down payment assistance program: The Illinois Housing Development Authority program, dubbed Access Home, would combine a 30-year, fixed rate mortgage with up to $15,000 in assistance for existing and new-construction homes. The assistance is provided as a zero-interest silent second mortgage with repayment deferred for up to 30 years unless the home is sold or refinanced earlier.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Ald. Nugent pushes to freeze the phase-out of Chicago’s subminimum wage for tipped workers: At next week’s City Council meeting, Far Northwest Side Ald. Samantha Nugent (39th) plans to use a parliamentary maneuver to resurrect a stalled proposal that would freeze the subminimum wage at 24% of the $16.60 minimum wage paid to hourly Chicago workers who do not receive tips. Without the freeze, tipped workers now paid $12.62 an hour would receive a raise to 16% of Chicago’s minimum wage. That amount is re-set every July 1.

* WTTW | Protesters Disrupt Park District Board Meeting as Tensions Flare Over Looming Encampment Closure: The Legion Park encampment, primarily centered in North Park on the channel’s west side, has become a flash point for several reasons including numerous fires caused by propane tanks in tents. The park’s configuration has also caused tents to be wedged in a narrow strip between the channel’s banks and a residential street. For months, people who live near the encampment have raised safety concerns at Park District board meetings and requested housing for the people living in tents. Meanwhile, advocates for the unhoused have lobbied the Park District for expanded encampment services within parks, including access to electricity, showers and restrooms, as well as an area for cooking.

* Block Club Chicago | What To Know Before Sunday’s 48th South Side Irish Parade: Leading the march will be this year’s grand marshal, the Tunnel to Towers Foundation, and the parade honoree, St. Christina Parish in Mount Greenwood. The grand marshal and parade honoree are chosen each year by the parade committee to highlight and honor two organizations making an impact on the community.

* Daily Herald | O’Hare and Midway so far avoiding TSA delays plaguing airports elsewhere: Flyers at William P. Hobby Airport in Houston and Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport spent hours in checkpoint lines over the weekend with U.S. Transportation Security Administration staffing shortages. “Passengers should arrive four to five hours before their flight to allow for extra time for TSA screening,” Hobby officials announced on X Sunday amid lines that snaked outside the airport building. “TSA wait times could exceed 180 minutes.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Crete Village Board annexes property for construction of 2,400-acre solar farm: The Crete Village Board voted Monday on approvals to allow the construction of a 2,400-acre solar farm that will span parts of the village and unincorporated Will County, despite strong backlash from residents. Earthrise Energy, based in Arlington, Virginia, operates a natural gas plant in Crete and plans to use that infrastructure to connect to the electric grid and provide solar power to an estimated 50,000 households in Illinois. Following approvals at the county level, the company expects to begin construction in the Plum Valley area later this year and connect to the power grid in 2028.

* Daily Herald | Elk Grove Village tightens short-term rental rules: Elk Grove Village has tightened its restrictions on short-term rentals, extending its required minimum length of stay at a residence from 30 to 90 days. […] “We thought by getting 90, you get a more stability factor,” Mayor Craig Johnson said Wednesday. “It’s not kids renting it for parties. It’s truly some serious renters there.”

* The Hill | Former embattled Democratic mayor in Illinois running as GOP candidate in Georgia: [Tiffany Henyard] lost reelection bids in Illinois for mayor and township supervisor. Two days after losing her mayoral bid in 2025, she registered to vote in Georgia, according to WGN 9. Her campaign in Georgia may be short-lived, as county records show she hasn’t lived in the area for more than a year, which is a requirement for candidacy.

* Daily Herald | Kane sheriff GOP candidates differ on need for laboratory, accreditation: Russell worked for the DuPage County Sheriff’s Office for nearly 20 years, then was coroner from 2012 to 2024. He works for Harper College police and the Hampshire Police Department. Russell said the office should seek accreditation from the Illinois Law Enforcement Accreditation Program. The work to be accredited could improve the office and provide proof to the county board why the sheriff’s office needs the money it requests, he said.

*** Downstate ***

* ABC Chicago | Kankakee County cleans up damage left by EF-3 tornado, record-breaking hail; several injured: One tornado lasted nearly 90 minutes, starting at 6:18 pm. and ending around 7:39 p.m. It tracked nearly 40 miles, starting near Aroma Park and ending near De Motte, Indiana. The tornado that ripped through Aroma Park had 115 mile-per-hour winds, making it an EF-3, the National Weather Service said.

* IPM News | The primary election is during U of I’s spring break. Some students are working to increase turnout: U of I junior Carter Wood, who chairs the Illini Democrats “Get Out the Vote” effort, said that while it’s unfortunate timing, they’re doing what they can to increase voter turnout among students. “It is frustrating because normally Election Day is the most kind of glamorous time to go out and vote — you get your sticker, everyone’s talking about it and whatnot,” Wood said. “We want to make sure a lot of students know they could go home and vote as well.”

* WAND | Candidate for Macon Co. Sheriff files lawsuit against current sheriff: Beck filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday in the Central District of Illinois, which claims that Root and Chief Deputy Matthew Jedlicka began treating him differently after he told Root that he would run against him in this year’s election. Beck claims in the lawsuit that Root and Jedlicka prevented him from earning a promotion to assistant shift commander in February 2025 and removed him as a field training officer two months later, a position he had served in for over four years.

* WGLT | Economic Development Council head departs, opening door to dialogue on EDC’s future: The head of the Bloomington-Normal Economic Development Council has submitted his resignation. Patrick Hoban, who has led the EDC for six years, said on his LinkedIn page that he is transitioning to a job as an economic development manager at Ameren. Hoban cited achievements of the EDC and its team in helping to secure more than $3.6 billion in private investment in the community and thousands of new jobs. He said the EDC advocated for stronger enterprise zone incentives, more housing, and site readiness “that will power McLean County for decades.”

* SJ-R | Hotel near Illinois State Capitol Complex listed for more than $5M : The State House Inn, a trademark collection by Wyndham at 101 E. Adams St., has been on the market since November 2025. The listing on Century 21 Commercial sets the starting price for the 125-room hotel at $5.3 million, or roughly $42,400 per room.

  8 Comments      


Good morning!

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Jazz guitarist Emily Remler



* JazzTimes

“When I’m playing, I don’t know whether I’m a girl, boy, dog, cat or whatever,” the guitarist Emily Remler said in late 1983, during an interview for Canadian radio. “I’m just playing the music. When I leave the stage, that’s when people remind me that I’m a woman.”

But just a year and a half later, Remler, then 27, saw things differently. Jazz author Julie Coryell asked her in May of 1985 if she’d had to work harder for acceptance as a woman. “I still do,” she replied. “I didn’t conquer it. Are you kidding? Now they know that I can play. But I still have to prove myself every single time.”

Prove herself she did. By the time she talked to Coryell, Remler had already recorded four albums as a leader for the Concord Jazz label, including one consisting solely of original compositions. And she had wowed legendary guitarists like Jim Hall and Herb Ellis—the latter telling People magazine in 1982, “I’ve been asked many times who I think is coming up on guitar to carry on the tradition, and my unqualified choice is Emily.”

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

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and more

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Thursday, Mar 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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