Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Lucinda… Money can’t replace it
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sun-Times…
* WCIS | Illinois school districts brace for elimination of the U.S. Department of Education: More than 1,000 school districts in Illinois receive Title 1 funding to support underserved students. That money comes from the federal government. If the Trump administration shuts down the department of education, that funding could be gone. “You got Title 1, which provides, for example amongst other things, free and reduced lunch for impoverished families,” Illinois Education Association President, Albert Llorens said. “Without the department of education there to ensure that extra funding is there All that’s going to do is drive a deeper hole.” * Shaw Local | Illinois State Board of Education says its ‘deeply concerned’ about upcoming Department of Education changes: On the same day the White House announced that it planned to cut the staff of the United States Department of Education in half, the Illinois State Board of Education said it not received any official communication from Washington about changing policy. * WBEZ | Trans people facing gender-affirming care bans flee to Illinois, shield law states: About 40% of LGBTQ+ youth reported considering moving to a different state because of laws targeting LGBTQ+ people, according to the Trevor Project’s 2024 U.S. National Survey on the Mental Health of LGBTQ+ Young People, a survey of nearly 19,000 LGBTQ+ people ages 13 to 24. Nearly 20% of trans people in that age range had to cross state lines for medical care because of the policies. * WTTW | Petition Filed Seeking to Transfer the Last 12 Men Out of the Aging Stateville Prison: The move is part of a lawsuit filed last month over 21 men who were housed at the derelict facility, alleging they were being kept in solitary conditions without programming. The filing states there are still a dozen men left in the facility’s medical unit, “condemning them to isolation and neglect.” IDOC’s inaction, it states, is inflicting irreparable harm. * Crain’s | Chicago under pressure to kickstart talks with largest water customer: The city and the DuPage Water Commission have been in negotiations for years over a contract for the suburban entity to continue buying Lake Michigan water from Chicago under a new, lower rate. Claiming City Hall isn’t taking the negotiations seriously, the commission gave Johnson a deadline of the end of March to respond with a counter proposal. City officials told Crain’s they’ll meet that deadline. * WTTW | Cook County’s Top Prosecutor Eileen O’Neill Burke Marks 100 Days in Office With Focus on Tackling Gun Crimes, Retail Theft: Through her first 100 days, O’Neill Burke’s office has a detention rate of 51% in felony and misdemeanor domestic violence cases (1,128 total cases), 85% in felony crimes on CTA train and bus lines (42 cases) and 100% in domestic violence murder and attempted murder cases (12 cases), according to data released by the state’s attorney’s office Friday. * Daily Herald | Attorney jailed by DuPage judge responds — via TikTok: A TikTok-famous attorney thrown in the DuPage County jail last week for missing the start of a trial is addressing her time behind bars — over the social media site, of course. Cierra Norris posted three videos this week to her TikTok account with more than 477,000 followers about her jailing on March 5. That’s when DuPage County Judge Margaret O’Connell found Norris in indirect criminal contempt of court and gave her a five-day jail sentence. * Tribune | Chicago dental equipment manufacturer gobbles up logistics warehouse at former Allstate site in Glenview: The Logistics Campus, a sprawling north suburban industrial development on the site of the former Allstate headquarters, has landed its first tenant since completing the initial phase of construction in October. HuFriedyGroup, a century-old, Chicago-based dental equipment manufacturer, has agreed to lease a full 326,278-square-foot-building — the largest of five warehouses that have sprung up along the Tri-State Tollway in Glenview. * Shaw Local | Batavia multiplies penalties for illegal dumping by 100: Dumping prohibited materials into the Batavia’s sewer system could cost offenders up to 100 times what it would have before March 11, with the newly updated city code boasting much heftier penalties. Dumping fines were $200 last week, now up to $20,000 today. * WGLT | Court records show big retailers helped investigators make their case against B-N pawn shops: The Home Depot, Walmart, Target and Dick’s Sporting Goods all suspect Monster Pawn’s owners of profiting from organized retail theft from their stores. The lengthy investigation — at least 17 months — began in part because of a tip from The Home Depot’s retail crime unit, which suspected Monster Pawn of buying stolen tools and other new, in-box merchandise and then selling them on eBay. * WCIA | Urbana’s Sola Gratia among non-profits left uncertain amid USDA funding freeze: The organization said they were awarded $90,000 in federal grants from the USDA. The farm manager, John Williams, said the potential of grant cancellation makes spending that money a risky endeavor. “You know, in terms of these programs being reimbursement-based, it puts us in a hard spot where we can’t really move forward and spend that money because, you know, if we spend that money towards these different projects, it might not get reimbursed, and it might put us in a hard spot moving forward,” Williams said. * 21st Show | Cuts to the Weather Service in Illinois and Moline brings back the grocery tax: During our Friday Illinois Reporter Roundtable, we talked about stories in the Quad Cities, including a large rally from the local letter carriers union and a new dispensary and gas station coming to Rock Island meeting with some controversy. * PJ Star | Peoria native and judge named Bradley University’s new president: U.S. District Judge James Shadid has been named the new president of Bradley University roughly 10 months after former president Stephen Standifird resigned amid financial troubles at the school. Shadid, who serves as a federal judge in the Central District of Illinois, is a native Peorian and 1979 graduate of Bradley University. He inherits a school that struggled financially in the final months of Standifird’s tenure, which saw the university take a $13 million budget shortfall in 2023 that led to both staff buyouts and program cuts. * Rockford Register Star | Freeport area teacher accused in the sexual exploitation of a child: Federal prosecutors accuse Zier of sexually exploiting a minor in 2024 while he was working for Orangeville High. Producing child pornography carries a mandatory minimum sentence of 15 years and a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison. * WGN | Faced with fiscal fiasco, City of Chicago asks vendors for 3% discount: “Dear Valued Partner,” the message from Chicago’s chief procurement officer Sharla Roberts begins. “In light of the difficult economic times, the City of Chicago faces news challenges to reduces its costs.” One sentence later the email gets to the point: “Therefore, the City requests a price reduction of minimally 3% off all invoices sent to the City for the next twelve months off any contracts you currently hold as a prime contract with the City.” * Sun-Times | ‘Where’s my justice?’ Slim odds of an arrest when someone is shot in Chicago, Sun-Times finds: Tom Wagner was working as a rideshare driver when he got shot during a carjacking on the West Side in 2021. The shooting left a jagged scar across his abdomen where bullets pierced his gallbladder, colon and liver. After three years of calling detectives for updates — including 10 months during which he says he got no response at all — Wagner says he found out last month that the police have formally dropped the investigation of his shooting without an arrest. * Sun-Times | Immigration agents arrested a U.S. citizen and created warrants after an arrest, lawyers say in court: Chicago attorneys filed a motion in federal court in Chicago against the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency on Mar. 13, 2025. Attorneys accused the federal government of making arrests without proper warrants and creating warrants in the field after the arrests. Chicago attorneys with the National Immigrant Justice Center and the ACLU of Illinois accused the federal government in court Thursday of violating immigration law and the constitutional rights of at least 22 people who were arrested and detained in the midwest since President Donald Trump’s inauguration as part of his crackdown on immigration. Two people are still in custody, 19 were released on bond and one has already been deported. * Sun-Times | Michael Reese developers throw Hail Mary proposal for Bears stadium: Scott Goodman, principal of the Farpoint Development team that purchased the 48.6-acre site from the city, openly acknowledged that he has not met with the team, nor has he finalized the financing for either for the $3.2 billion dome or the $600 million in state money needed just to ready the site for development. * Tribune | Chicago weather: High winds, strong storms and possibility of tornadoes this weekend: A line of severe thunderstorms capable of producing “destructive winds” with gusts of 70 mph or higher is forecasted to move across the area late Friday evening into the early overnight hours, said Todd Kluber, a meteorologist with Chicago’s NWS. A few brief tornadoes are also possible, he said. “We cannot rule out some tornadoes,” Kluber said. “The conditions are a little bit less favorable as we go northeastward with this line of storms into the Chicago area but still can’t keep our guard down.” * Crain’s | Trump administration targets University of Chicago over DEI: The University of Chicago is the latest Illinois college to find itself under scrutiny by the Trump administration. The U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights announced today it opened investigations into 45 universities for alleged racial discrimination as part of the Trump administration’s effort to end diversity, equity and inclusion programs. * NYT | Young Democrats’ Anger Boils Over as Schumer Retreats on Shutdown: Younger Democrats are chafing at and increasingly complaining about what they see as the feebleness of the old guard’s efforts to push back against President Trump. They are second-guessing how the party’s leaders — like Mr. Schumer, who brandishes his flip phone as a point of pride — are communicating their message in the TikTok era, as Republicans dominate the digital town square. And they are demanding that the party develop a bolder policy agenda that can answer the desperation of tens of millions of people who are struggling financially at a time when belief in the American dream is dimming. * WaPo | Arlington Cemetery website scrubs links about Black and female veterans: A cemetery spokesperson confirmed Friday that it removed internal links directing users to webpages listing the dozens of “Notable Graves” of Black, Hispanic and female veterans and their spouses. On these pages, users could read short biographies about the people buried in the cemetery, including Gen. Colin L. Powell, the youngest and first Black chairman of the Joint Chiefs; Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, the first Black man to sit on the high court; and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who is buried alongside her husband, Martin Ginsburg, an Army veteran. * NBC | Publisher stands behind ex-Facebook employee’s book, rebuffing Meta: Book publisher Macmillan said on Thursday it would continue promoting a book written by a former Facebook employee who is now critical of the tech company, despite a statement by Meta that the book should not have been published and an order by an arbitrator for the author to retract claims she had made that were “disparaging, critical or otherwise detrimental.” The book, “Careless People” by Sarah Wynn-Williams, was published Tuesday, and it covers the six-plus years when Wynn-Williams worked at the social media giant. She oversaw Facebook’s government relations for entire continents and had direct contact with executives including CEO Mark Zuckerberg. * The Independent | March megastorm may bring blizzards, tornadoes, flooding and even fires across much of US:More than 100 million people in the U.S. will be in the path of an intense March storm starting Friday as the sprawling multi-day system threatens fires, blizzards, tornadoes, and flooding as it tracks eastward across the Great Plains. Scientists said the storm’s strength and potential for far-reaching impacts is notable, but its timing isn’t particularly unusual. Extreme weather can pop up in spring because storms feed on big temperature differences between the warmth that’s starting to show up and the lingering chill of winter.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Updates to previous editions (Updated x2)
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] A last-minute provision called the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act (IFPA) was snuck into the budget process last May and will create chaos for small businesses and consumers across Illinois if it takes effect on July 1, 2025. The IFPA gives corporate mega-stores like Walmart and Home Depot — who pushed for this backroom deal — millions more in profits, while small business owners get new expenses and accounting headaches. What’s more, consumers could be forced to pay for parts of their transactions in cash if this law moves forward. A recent court ruling in the litigation challenging the law suggests IFPA is likely pre-empted by federal law for national banks and will only apply to credit unions and local Illinois banks, putting local banks at a disadvantage against their national competitors. Illinois lawmakers should repeal the IFPA and focus on protecting small businesses and consumers across the state — not lining the pockets of corporate mega-stores. Stop the countdown to chaos by supporting a repeal of this misguided and flawed policy. Learn more at https://guardyourcard.com/illinois/ ![]()
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Gaming Board cracks down on PrizePicks, opposes iGaming bill, backs bill to ban retail sweepstakes machines
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Sun-Times…
* Meanwhile, here’s the testimony from the Gaming Board in a House committee earlier this week. House Bill 3080 legalizes internet gambling and the board opposes the bill…
* And in other news, Boyd Gaming owns Pala Interactive LLC, an online gambling company. The company is also a strong proponent of HB3080. From MarketBeat…
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Pritzker urges Senate Democrats to vote no on the Continuing Resolution (Updated x7)
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Governor JB Pritzker…
…Adding… CNN…
…Adding… Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton…
…Adding… US Sen. Tammy Duckworth…
…Adding… The Chicago Federation of Labor, Equality Illinois, Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, Personal PAC, and Sierra Club Illinois…
…Adding… Some discussion in comments about cloture. Duckworth is a ‘No’ on that as well…
Also, Rich checked and the governor is urging a ‘No’ vote on cloture, too. * Rich went over this topic with subscribers earlier today, including this…
…Adding… The Washington Post…
…Adding… The American Federation of Government Employees… …Adding… Durbin voted for cloture… ![]() …Adding… Some major groups are pretty upset at Sen. Durbin right now…
Emphasis added.
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It’s just a bill
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Crain’s…
* Johnathon Bush in the Sun-Times…
* Illinois House Republicans…
* WAND…
* Patch…
* WQAD…
* WAND…
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Intoxicating Hemp: No safety? No thanks!
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] A federal loophole has led to a booming gray market across Illinois for intoxicating hemp products, which use synthetics to alter the composition of hemp to get consumers high. This is happening outside the structure of the state’s legal cannabis industry. This means intoxicating hemp faces NO quality testing, NO age restrictions, NO packaging requirements, NO potency rules, and NO taxes to fund programs in communities impacted by the War on Drugs. Most intoxicating hemp products aren’t even produced in Illinois. By contrast, Illinois cannabis businesses face extensive rules and regulations to operate, with products tracked from seed to sale. When consumers purchase legal cannabis grown and processed in Illinois, they know their products are safe. Hemp and cannabis come from the same plant. Both products can get users high. Why the different rules? Illinois already has a system in place to regulate hemp – it’s called the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act. It’s time for Illinois to close the intoxicating hemp loophole.
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Open thread
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * We made it to Friday! What’s going on?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Illinois department streamlines online licensing system. Capitol News Illinois…
- In late 2023, IDFPR Director Mario Treto, Jr. said applicants were experiencing “historic wait times” and officially called the situation a “crisis.” - During his testimony in the committee meeting Wednesday, IDFPR Director Mario Treto, Jr. said the department has outlined six specific phases in order to fully implement a complete, comprehensive online licensing system. The CORE startup in October completed Phase 1. - Phases 2 and 3 include the continuous rollout of the rest of the license types, which Treto said will come in rollouts of small numbers of license types until all types have been launched online. * Tribune | Chicago-area housing organizations see HUD grants abruptly cut or in limbo: Chicago-area housing organizations are facing funding cuts from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, with some recently receiving termination notices for grants while others are in limbo as they wait for overdue contracts or to see what happens with expected awards. The groups say the disruption in funding could potentially halt their work, which includes providing services to the homeless population and people facing housing discrimination, as well as supporting community revitalization efforts. * Illinois Answers Project | City Reaches Tentative $11.5 Million Settlement With Companies Of Woman Dubbed ‘Worst Landowner’: The city of Chicago has reached a tentative $11.5 million agreement to settle its legal battle against the companies of a north suburban woman that city attorney’s have dubbed Chicago’s “worst landowner,” who has accrued millions of dollars in unpaid fines for hundreds of weed-strewn and garbage-filled lots across the South and West Sides. The settlement would resolve the city’s ongoing legal claims, which are estimated at $49 million, and speed up the process of selling off the vacant lots owned by the businesses of Northbrook resident Suzie B. Wilson and her sister, Swedlana Dass. * Capitol News Illinois | Democratic lawmaker grows concerned with use of AI in health care: “Artificial intelligence is here, whether we like it or not,” Morgan said in an email to Capitol News Illinois. “When it comes to health insurance, the stakes are simply too high to allow unchecked automation to dictate decisions that could determine whether someone receives life-saving treatment or faces financial ruin.” One of Morgan’s sponsored bills — House Bill 1806, which deals with the use of AI in online mental health services — passed unanimously out of the House Health Care Licensing Committee on Wednesday. * 21st Show | IL Latino Lawmakers unhappy with Pritzker’s plan to cut healthcare for Immigrant Adults: One of the big proposals from Governor JB Pritzker’s office for Fiscal Year 2026 would eliminate programs that allow some middle-to-older age non-citizens to receive healthcare coverage. That drew the attention of the Illinois Legislative Latino Caucus. We talked with the co-chairs of the caucus about this proposal and other issues facing Illinois’ Hispanic residents. * Chicago Reader | Banning paper from prisons is a bad idea: This spring, the Illinois House is set to take up a bill that would make all prisons in the state paperless. This legislation is sponsored by Republican lawmakers and supported by American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees Council 31, the public-sector employee union that represents corrections officers. If it passes, new rules will ban all mail to prisoners until it is digitized, as well as books and newspapers. Why would they do this? Ostensibly, it’s necessary in the name of public safety: keeping Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) employees and residents safe. A common refrain is that paper is a conduit for illegal drugs. * Center Square | Illinois stands to become leader in the production of sustainable aviation fuel: Sustainable aviation fuel, or SAF, is made from non-petroleum feedstocks that reduces emissions from air transportation. It takes about 1.5 gallons of ethanol to make one gallon of sustainable aviation fuel. All conventional aircraft are capable of flying on a maximum 50% blend of SAF and jet fuel. However, by 2030, it is expected that a large portion of airplanes will be capable of flying with up to 100% SAF. At this week’s Sustainable Aviation Fuel and Beyond Conference in Rosemont, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said the state is positioned to be a major player in the aviation fuel producing market. * Crain’s | Unions waging turf battle to organize Uber and Lyft drivers: As they fight against a Chicago rideshare ordinance, Uber and Lyft have found themselves in the middle of a battle between politically powerful unions competing to organize their drivers. Despite Uber signing a neutrality agreement with a separate union, a pair of unions are teaming with an advocacy group to ramp up pressure on the companies while vowing to organize the industry themselves. * ABC Chicago | Chicago police officer’s gun found unattended in bathroom at Cook County courthouse, officials say: Sheriff’s deputies reported that a firearm was found in a women’s bathroom on the sixth floor of the building, a spokesperson for the Cook County Sheriff’s Office told ABC7. Authorities determined the weapon belonged to a Chicago police officer, and it was later returned to the officer, officials said. * Crain’s | Chicago Sun-Times editorial page editor leaving as buyout deadline looms: Chicago Sun-Times Editorial Page Editor Lorraine Forte is taking a buyout offer as the deadline for Chicago Public Media employees to voluntarily leave the struggling nonprofit nears. Forte, who began leading the editorial page in 2021, announced the decision in a LinkedIn post yesterday. The move comes days before certain staffers have to decide whether to take the offer that was given in January. * Sun-Times | Rogers Park tax preparer admits arranging $3.6M in phony PPP and EIDL loans for himself and others: Farooq Khan, 31, faces a possible sentence of four to five years in prison for defrauding the Paycheck Protection Program and Economic Injury Disaster Loan program. He admitted he submitted false applications for himself and other people who paid him kickbacks of up to 20% of the money they got. Khan pocketed more than $1 million in fraudulent loan proceeds, prosecutors said. He also arranged about $2.6 million in loans for people who used fake or insolvent companies to get loans from the corruption-riddled PPP and EIDL programs, which were overseen by the Small Business Administration in 2020 and 2021. * Tribune | Scientists study fish behavior during dyeing of the Chicago River for St. Patrick’s Day: Last year, an extensive scientific study of fish behavior in the Chicago River system led by researchers from the Shedd Aquarium, Purdue University and the Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant offered a clue. In mid-March, as researchers studied aquatic activity they found a handful of the over 80 fish they were tracking were in the main branch downtown. On the day of the 2024 St. Patrick’s parade, none of the tagged fish rushed to find shelter from their suddenly green surroundings. “(It) was the first time that we could actually track how individuals behave when the river is dyed green,” said Austin Happel, a research biologist at the Shedd. “We didn’t see changes in what they were doing that day, or even the next couple of days afterward, so it doesn’t seem to be causing them to be agitated.” * Crain’s | Plans for Lakeview hotel focused on LGBTQ+ community move forward: Plans for a boutique hotel in Lakeview with a focus on serving the LGBTQ+ community took a step forward this week. The City Council signed off on zoning for a proposed five-story project at 3257 N. Halsted St. yesterday, as first reported by Block Club Chicago. Situated in the busy Northalsted entertainment district, the 51-room hotel with a rainbow-striped facade will also feature a restaurant and speakeasy-style lounge, as well as a rooftop pool * Tribune | ‘This experience is very traumatizing’: Former Mayor Lori Lightfoot testifies about death threat she received in 2022: Lightfoot, who served as Chicago’s mayor from 2019 to 2023, took the stand at the Leighton Criminal Court Building to testify against William Kohles, a Michigan man who is charged with two felony counts of threatening a public official. Cook County prosecutors alleged during opening statements that Kohles emailed a threat that said he had a “bullet with her name on it” if crime and violence in Chicago didn’t stop. His attorney, though, countered that Kohles was just spontaneously venting after watching a Fox News segment about violence, and did not have any real intent behind the missive. He also said Kohles has learning disabilities and has suffered brain swelling from meningitis. * Daily Herald | ‘On the right path’: Hayes thinks Bears will choose Arlington Heights: In his final state of the village address, Arlington Heights Mayor Tom Hayes said Thursday it would be a “dream” for the Bears to build their next stadium in his town, and he thinks that dream will come true. “I believe in my heart of hearts that we’re where we’re meant to be in this project, and that it’s going to happen,” Hayes told an audience of community leaders and business owners at the Metropolis Ballroom. “I’m very encouraged about where things are at. I actually feel better now than at any point in the past four years that this is actually going to happen.” * Daily Southtown | Group of ‘Friends’ forms to foster ancient landscape at Gensburg-Markham Prairie: A group of about 70 volunteers and representatives from the Friends of Illinois Nature Preserves and Nature Conservancy kicked off an effort last weekend to restore and preserve the Gensburg-Markham Prairie in Markham. Surrounded by expressways and suburban homes, the prairie escaped waves of suburban development in the 20th century and was dedicated as an Illinois Nature Preserve in 1980. * WCIA | Rantoul Superintendent discusses Dept. of Education Cuts: Rantoul City Schools Superintendent Scott Woods said he disagrees with these cuts. He said the agency gives money to the states for education and then makes sure it’s being used correctly. For his district, 22% of their budget comes from federal dollars — although not all of it is from the Department of Education. He’s worried about who would make sure states are using their money correctly without the federal government. * WIFR | Winnebago County Board votes for five-year proposal with BMO Center starting in 2027: Two million Winnebago County tax dollars will be used by the Rockford Area Venues and Entertainment (RAVE) Authority over the next five years to ensure the BMO Center is a top facility. After more than an hour of heated discussion among board members, the Winnebago County Board voted 12 to 9 in favor of the proposal Thursday night. * Bloomberg | Nobody Wants to Drink Sparkling Wine From the Midwest: Tariffs on products from the Champagne region of France will not make products from the Champaign-Urbana region of Illinois more appealing. * Daily Herald | Telephone town hall meeting spurs protest at Bost’s office: “Normally he doesn’t show up in person. He just talks on the phone, and the calls are monitored,” Ashby said about Bost. “He doesn’t just listen to everybody, and so he doesn’t show up. So we said, ‘Okay, we’ll come to his office here in Murphysboro and let them know what the rest of the world thinks.’” Ashby said that she felt like Bost does not respond to his entire constituency and questioned what he does in office. * WTVO | Boone County board member charged with stealing money from a church: Marion Thornberry, 77, faces charges of Theft of Less than $500 from a House of Worship. […] Board Chairman Karl Johnson released a statement Thursday, saying: “This is an ongoing investigation and therefore we cannot comment on it further. However, we do stress that these charges are not related to Mr. Thornberry`s role as a County Board member. Board members do not have access to any County funds and the County has worked hard over the years to implement policies that help ensure that County funds are protected.” * J. Hanley | Recruiting, retaining staff has been key for Winnebago County State’s Attorney’s Office: First, we sought to create the best culture of any prosecuting office in the State. At the heart of our culture is a shared value and a shared mission. The mission- to seek justice- was already present when I took office. It united the prosecutors that stood before me in late 2020 and, I’m proud to say, is shared by every prosecutor that has walked through the door since. What was lacking, however, was the shared value that has since come to define our office. That value is trust: the trust we place in each other and the trust we earn in our community and with victims. We emphasized trust, and celebrated those who embodied it. * WAND | Vermilion County Animal Shelter facing a crowd crisis, over 100 pets up for adoption: “We’ve had an overabundance of animals come in recently…” explained Kasey Snyder, Director at the Vermilion County Animal Shelter. Snyder and her team taking to social media this week, sharing they are completely out of space. “Within the last two weeks, we’ve actually had 66 dogs and 38 cats come in now up for adoption…” Snyder added, sharing that since the January they’ve had 490 animals total. * BND 2025 Voter Guide: Belleville candidates running for mayor, city clerk, school board: The News-Democrat has contacted the candidates running in contested seats and asked them to complete a candidate questionnaire. While this article has information about candidates in municipal and school board races in Belleville, you can go to this page at bnd.com to get links to read about candidates running for local and school board positions across the metro-east. * NYT | Dr. Oz Became Famous Giving Health Advice. Was It Any Good?: Much of Dr. Oz’s advice is rooted in strong science and conventional wisdom: Eat well, move more, prioritize sleep. But he has also frequently pushed products and hacks that have little to no scientific evidence showing that they stave off disease, drawing scrutiny from members of Congress and from researchers. In some cases, he has had financial ties to the products he has promoted.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Friday, Mar 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Attorney General Kwame Raoul…
* Subscribers were told about the Illinois connection to this story today. The New Republic…
* January poll of Illinois AFL-CIO union members finds strong support for pension and retirement benefits, ranking the issues ahead of all other priorities. Click here for the polling memo and a letter to legislators. * The Detroit News | U.S. reps want Illinois to quit delaying project to block invasive carp from Great Lakes: Bipartisan members of Congress from Great Lakes states are urging the state of Illinois to “promptly” end its delay of construction of a $1.15 billion project to prevent invasive carp from the state’s waterways from infiltrating Lake Michigan. “This project is essential to prevent the spread of invasive carp throughout the Great Lakes. Both Illinois and Michigan signed the project partnership agreement with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in 2024, now Illinois must take action to allow construction to proceed,” the lawmakers said in a joint statement. * Chicago Eater | Illinois Considers a Ban on Black Market Restaurant Reservations: Illinois, California, Nevada, and Florida are among the states where lawmakers are considering legislation, following New York’s lead with measures that would make selling restaurant reservations illegal. Their reasoning? Scalpers make reservations scarce, using bots that swarm reservation sites. As a result, normal customers miss out on scoring a table and potential walk-ins won’t stop by because the restaurants appear fully booked. And when reservations don’t sell, restaurants are left to deal with no-shows that hurt business. * ABC Chicago | Gov. Pritzker, educators rally against Dept. of Ed cuts at Illinois Education Association assembly: “Students in rural communities who have relied upon federal funding to keep their schools open are likely to see closures and will have to travel further,” Pritzker said. There is deep concern among state educators at the representative assembly about the future of federal funding for their schools, especially Title 1 schools who receive federal dollars for students who are low-income. * Jonathon Bush | Lawmakers can help former inmates trying to clean slates, get lives back on track: I had an opportunity not long ago to do something a bit different: I joined a mentorship program to give entrepreneurial advice to incarcerated individuals who are getting ready for a fresh start. During the session, one gentleman who had been baking lots of cookies while in prison came up to me and told me that he wanted to become a baker when he got out. He asked me for my advice on how to start his own business. Now, as the owner of a wholesale bakery, I have a soft spot for warm cookies and a lot of respect for anyone with that kind of passion. But I also know how tough starting a small business is, so I gave it to him straight: I told him that even though people love cookies, there’s also a lot of competition in the baking space. If he’s going to be successful, he will have to offer a product that’s truly unique or special. * Politico | Top Illinois Democrat readies a Senate bid — and tells people she has major backing: In a brief interview Wednesday, Durbin acknowledged the lieutenant governor was among the Democrats who are preparing for his possible retirement: “She said if I run she’s not going to.” * Daily Herald | Judge orders Trump to reinstate probationary workers let go in mass firings across multiple agencies: U.S. District Judge William Alsup on Thursday found the firings didn’t follow federal law and required immediate offers of reinstatement be sent. The agencies include the departments of Veterans Affairs, Agriculture, Defense, Energy, the Interior and the Treasury. * Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy | Tesla Reported Zero Federal Income Tax on $2 Billion of U.S. Income in 2024: Tesla’s annual financial report, released this morning, shows the company enjoyed $2.3 billion of U.S. income in 2024 on which it reports precisely zero current federal income tax. Over the past three years, the Elon Musk-led company reports $10.8 billion of U.S. income on which its current federal tax was just $48 million. That comes to a three-year federal tax rate of just 0.4 percent – more than 50 times less than the statutory corporate tax rate of 21 percent. * WaPo | How microplastics could be affecting our food supply: Microplastics are floating in the air around us, surging through rivers and streams, and burrowing deep into soils. And now, a new study suggests that all those tiny pieces of plastic are also disrupting the growth of plants. A paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Monday found that the tiny plastic particles could be slashing photosynthesis rates globally. Microplastics, the scientists estimated, are responsible for a reduction in photosynthesis of 7 to 12 percent worldwide in plants and algae. That cut in photosynthesis, the researchers warned, could also impact large-scale crops that humans depend on, such as wheat, corn and rice. * NPR | Trump’s hiring freeze has halted local head counts and could threaten the U.S. census: “This was unexpected. We didn’t think that it would affect something like this. But it did,” John Corbitt, White House’s mayor, tells NPR. The Tennessee town — about an hour north of Nashville and named after what was once a white-painted inn — paid the U.S. Census Bureau more than $581,000 upfront last August for a local head count ahead of the next once-a-decade, national census in 2030. A more up-to-date tally could boost the town’s share of population-based funding from the state by as much as $875,000 a year, local officials estimate. * Capitol News Illinois | ‘You are flying.’ Inside the harrowing 100-mile police chase in Sangamon County: When Sangamon County Sheriff’s Deputy Jonathan Pearce saw a white pickup spotted outside a motorcycle shop that had been burglarized earlier that night, he punched the gas and chased the fleeing truck, reaching race car speeds and screeching his tires through hairpin turns. Sgt. James Hayes, his supervisor, asked whether he had enough gas. “I got a full tank, baby,” Pearce said on a dispatcher’s recorded line. * Illinois Times | DOGE cuts come to Springfield: Springfield business owner John Chiang received a letter March 10 that landlords dread: a tenant is breaking its lease. The tenant is the U.S. government’s Department of Labor, which rents office space on the second floor of the building at 3161 W. White Oaks Drive. The building is owned by Chiang, 82, who also owns the information technology company Novanis that operates out of the same building. “In Springfield, the commercial real estate market is not so great. It could take a while to fill this vacancy,” he said. * Illinois Times | The future of electric vehicles: According to Kelly Blue Book, electric vehicle (EV) car and pickup truck sales reached 1.3 million in 2024, which is a 7.3% increase from 2023. EVs made up 8.7% of all vehicle sales last year, and during 2025 one in four vehicles sold are expected to be EVs or hybrids, which use a combination of electricity and gasoline for power. In Illinois, approximately 3,500 fully electric vehicles are being purchased by residents every month. * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago’s fight over school staff pensions: 4 big things you need to know: The budget amendment on the school board’s agenda for its March 20 meeting accepts an additional $139 million in unexpected revenue, but does not spell out what the board will spend the money on. It lays out three possibilities: paying the yet-to-be determined costs of a new contract with the Chicago Teachers Union, funding an inaugural collective bargaining agreement with the union representing principals, and giving the money to the city as a contribution to the retirement fund that supports non-teaching school staff. * Crain’s | Johnson and other big-city mayors asked to meet with DOJ task force on antisemitism: The federal task force, led by Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Leo Terrell, claims there have been instances where schools in Chicago, New York, Boston and Los Angeles “may have failed to protect Jewish students from unlawful discrimination,” according to a press release from the U.S. Department of Justice. The aim of the meeting, to take place in Chicago, is to gather information and determine if further action is required. * Tribune | CPS data breach: Here’s what to know to protect yourself: To follow standard good security practices, parents should ensure they’re using strong passwords and enable two-factor authentication, according to Chetty. Good cyber-security hygiene will prevent someone from compromising your account, even if they’re able to get ahold of your password. “Because you can’t predict when that information will be exploited or exactly what it will be used for… then it’s hard to know what else you can do to safeguard yourself.” * Block Club | Chicagoans Ditch Their Teslas To Protest Elon Musk: ‘Nobody Wants To Buy Them’: Skylar Damiano went from owning a Tesla to spitting on them. The Humboldt Park resident would take his 2022 Tesla Model Y on roadtrips from Detroit to Dollywood — but he finally had enough of Elon Musk by President Donald Trump’s Inauguration Day, when the Tesla CEO made what appeared to be a Nazi salute. Damiano promptly traded in his Tesla, the first car he owned, for another electric vehicle at a “huge loss,” he said. That suburban dealership told Damiano nine people came in trying to offload Teslas in just two weeks, he said. * WBEZ | Inside the fossil hunt: Digging for the monsters of Illinois’ Mazon Creek: Under McFetridge Drive in Chicago, two stories down in the catacombs of the Field Museum of Natural History, Jack Wittry slides open a handmade wooden drawer. There are thousands of such drawers that visitors never see, in row after row of towering, metal cabinets. These drawers hold more than 63,000 specimens that were dug out of the ground 50 miles south of Chicago over a 200-year period. Hammered open by people like Wittry to find a prize inside, they represent one of the most spectacular fossil beds on the planet: the Mazon Creek lagerstatte, or mother lode. * Tribune | Colson Montgomery ‘looks like a big-leaguer’ — but Chicago White Sox prospect will start the season in minors: “He’s got a really good head on his shoulder,” Venable said Tuesday at Camelback Ranch in Glendale, Ariz. “He looks like a big-leaguer, he walks like a big-leaguer, he talks the talk. You get the sense that he’s a really good player, and we expect him to be that.” Montgomery’s development will continue in the minors after the Sox optioned their 2021 first-round pick to Triple-A Charlotte. * Bloomberg | Chicago’s Koval joins distillers racing to flood Europe with whiskey: To cope, some are ferrying as much product as possible to the EU — one of the industry’s biggest export markets — before the April 1 deadline. Koval, a Chicago distillery founded in 2008, is ramping up shipments to reassure distributors, keep prices stable and secure shelf space against competitors, said co-founder Sonat Birnecker Hart. * Daily Herald | Real estate company withdraws plan for apartment building in downtown Des Plaines: The city council needed to approve a development agreement for the project. It publicly discussed the proposal in December and suggested revisions. The council was again scheduled to discuss the plan in February but postponed the review to give Advent time to adjust the plans, city senior planner Samantha Redman said in a memo to City Manager Dorothy Wisniewski. But on March 4, following several delays requested by the company, a lawyer for Advent emailed city officials and announced it is withdrawing its application. * Tribune | Ravinia Festival 2025: Beck, Lenny Kravitz and a mouth-watering weekend with celebrity chefs: The festival, which usually ends in mid-September, will run from June 5 to Aug. 31 to clear the way for a multimillion-dollar renovation of the Ravinia Pavilion. The renovation is scheduled to be completed by next summer, at which point the festival will begin updating other structures on its Highland Park campus.
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Candidate claims son fled to Minnesota homeless shelter to obtain free gender transition service
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Republican press release with emphasis added by me…
* I followed up with a question about the highlighted text above. Response…
Um, OK. I could not find any evidence to back that up, so I asked what shelter his kid lives in. I didn’t hear anything back. * I asked Rep. Kelly Cassidy (D-Chicago) for a response…
* And today, Goodman began fundraising off the story…
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What Is A Credit Union?
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department
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IDHR warns local governments about potential legal action for violating rights of homeless people
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Click here for the press release. The Illinois Department of Human Rights Director Jim Bennett and the Illinois Office to Prevent and End Homelessness sent a letter to local governments today, warning them about criminalizing homelessness and their obligations under state law in the wake of the US Supreme Court’s 2024 ruling in Grants Pass v. Johnson. The letter included a warning that “Enacting and enforcing ordinances that interfere with the rights of persons experiencing homelessness to access public spaces may give rise to legal action”…
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Pritzker talks legal battles with Trump, campaign plans
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * After his speech to the Illinois Education Association Representative Assembly, Governor Pritzker was asked about cuts to the U.S. Department of Education.…
* More on the suit the governor referenced from Reuters…
Click here to read the lawsuit. * A reporter asked the governor if Illinois has the money to keep fighting in the courts…
* Governor Pritzker was also asked today about his campaign plans…
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It’s just a bill
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* WAND…
* WTTW…
…Adding… Casino Reports…
* WAND…
* More…
* WAND | IL Native Americans hope to ban stereotyped school mascot: Native Americans across Illinois headed to Springfield Wednesday to celebrate recent laws and promote a new bill to ban stereotyped school mascots. […] State Rep. Maurice West (D-Rockford) was emotional throughout the whole press conference. He said when he went on a trip with his daughter to see the Potawatomi tribe, he was moved when they acknowledged the American flag. […] The proposal is now in the rules committee where it waits to be assigned to a committee. * WAND | Illinois bill could require suicide prevention contact info on school employee IDs: It’s good for them to have the same information that the students have just so they know who to refer someone to and to refer them to their own IDs if they need assistance calling 9-8-8 or one of the hotlines,” Rep. Amy Elik (R-Alton). “But also, teachers and staff may use that information for themselves too.” House Bill 3000 passed unanimously out of the House Education Policy Committee Wednesday. Rep. Norine Hammond (R-Macomb) has seven co-sponsors for the legislation as it heads to the House floor. * WAND | Illinois proposal could expand automatic voter registration system: The legislation would allow anyone to be registered to vote when they apply for a REAL ID or standard driver’s license as long as they show a document confirming US citizenship. Leaders told the House Ethics & Elections Committee Tuesday that Illinoisans would only be able to opt out of the automatic voter registration when they receive a postcard from their local election authority. Residents would have 23 days to return the postcard to election officials if they would like to be removed from the state database.
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Open thread
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please!…
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RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments. Retailers like Kristina enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Veteran of Burke, Madigan trials to lead US attorney’s office Public Corruption section. Tribune…
- The Public Corruption section is one of the most storied and critical in the office, responsible for bringing high-profile cases over the years that decimated the leadership of the Chicago Outfit and sent a seemingly endless parade of elected officials to prison. - Streicker, 45, joined the office in 2009 and was one of the lead prosecutors in the 2011 trial of Tahawwur Rana, a Chicago businessman accused of helping Pakistani American David Headley plot the deadly 2008 terror attack on a hotel in Mumbai. * BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here. * CBS | Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs denounces 3 a.m. protest at his house: Frerichs released a statement reading: “I will always defend the right of people to peacefully protest. But coming to my home with bullhorns at 3 a.m. and frightening my family simply goes too far. This is intimidation to cause fear through scare tactics. They made it clear as they were leaving that they would continue to harass my wife and children where they sleep until my office divests from Israel Bonds. I won’t back down from these threats. I stand by the investment decisions I’ve made.” * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago’s fight over school staff pensions: 4 big things you need to know: The budget amendment on the school board’s agenda for its March 20 meeting accepts an additional $139 million in unexpected revenue, but does not spell out what the board will spend the money on. It lays out three possibilities: paying the yet-to-be determined costs of a new contract with the Chicago Teachers Union, funding an inaugural collective bargaining agreement with the union representing principals, and giving the money to the city as a contribution to the retirement fund that supports non-teaching school staff. * Daily Herald | All aboard the M1? Metra considers renaming train lines: The discussion comes as the Union Pacific Railroad is handing off its routes to Metra to operate. The commuter railroad intends to discontinue “Union Pacific” as a route name. Currently, Metra’s line names “follow no logical or consistent pattern,” officials said. * WCIA | IL early childhood education advocates rally for more funding: As a part of an annual Early Childhood Advocacy Day, a group of parents and childcare providers gathered at the state Capitol to call on legislators to increase funding for programs that affect young children and families. On Tuesday, March 4, in the middle of the Capitol rotunda, children and adults raised banners and signs written “Fund the ECACE scholarship” and “Fund Early Intervention’’. Educators spoke at the podium urging stronger investment in the state’s early education workforce. * 21st Show | IL Senate Minority Leader John Curran takes aim at Democratic bills and budget: Senate Republicans want the Pritzker administration to provide more details about how the state has spent money on programs for asylum seekers and undocumented residents. They argue the state has made it difficult to see exactly where resources have been spent. “We’re unable to do that because of all the workarounds by this administration through executive orders and the state of emergency declarations that are constantly issued,” Senate Minority Leader John Curran, R-Downers Grove, said Tuesday at a Capitol news conference. * Crain’s | Illinois university leaders show united front as Trump threats loom: Illinois university leaders showed a united front at Crain’s Power Breakfast today, reaffirming commitments to diversity on their campuses and touting the importance of colleges as vital drivers of local economies. University presidents from Northwestern University, the University of Illinois System, the University of Chicago and Chicago State University joined Crain’s for a wide-ranging conversation on how higher education is shaping Chicago and the Midwest while also touching on the state of higher education under a new presidential administration. * WCIA | Vermilion Co. UPS facility shutting down permanently: The UPS Customer Center on the border of Tilton and Danville is shutting down permanently. A spokesperson for the company said the UPS building made a notice in January that they’ll be making changes to optimize their network and improve efficiency. After hearing about the hub closing everything, the Mayor of Tilton is disappointed to see another business leave their county. “We can’t keep letting stuff move away. Yes, I understand, Champaign-Urbana is bigger; we’re not, I’m not going to argue that. But we’re losing a lot of things,” said William Wear, Mayor of Tilton. “We’ve lost Quaker Oats, we’ve lost General Electric, we’ve lost stores, we lost Ball Aluminum. We, Vermilion County, somewhere has got to stand up and fight and quit losing everything.” * WCIA | Four Springfield officers must ‘complete retraining’ for violating rules in retired officer’s DUI crash: The Springfield Police Department has released the findings of the Internal Affairs investigation into a former Springfield Sergeant’s DUI crash. A six-month investigation by the Illinois State Police involved talking with witnesses and DUI experts, combing over a timeline of events and reviewing officers’ bodycam footage and their reports of what happened that night. The Springfield Police Department said that Internal Affairs “examined the actions” of the responding officers and worked to make sure that all “laws and department policies” were followed. * WCIA | U of I Soybean Innovation Lab to close next month: On Jan. 27, they got an Executive Order to cease normal operations, minimize costs, engage in no new programming and conduct no further business with clients and partners. Three days later, the university lost all access to SIL’s research accounts in Washington — meaning there were no funds to pay expenses including salaries. That was when a closure plan was put in place. April 15 was chosen to be the lab’s last day. * Rockford Register Star | Rockford-area leaders discuss workforce, childcare crisis: Rockford-area leaders and members of ReadyNation Illinois gathered Tuesday morning to discuss a workforce crisis as business leaders are struggling to hire skilled applicants due to lapses in adequate available childcare. A survey by ReadNation Illinois found more than 91% of poll respondents support greater public investments in quality childcare and early education. The survey results coincide with a ReadyNation report saying more than four out of five business leaders have seen their employees struggle to find affordable and stable childcare. * PJ Star | Illinois Central College won’t offer on-campus housing after spring semester. Here’s what’s next: Illinois Central College students looking for housing will need to seek alternatives to the junior college’s on-campus apartment complex. ICC president Sheila Quirk-Bailey, in an email to the college, said that the group that manages on-campus housing, called WoodView Commons, informed the school they will not be leasing after the Spring 2025 semester. Quirk-Bailey added that ICC will compile a list of available housing options no later than March 21. * 25News Now | An official says the teacher shortage is ‘worse than ever’ in Peoria County: The Regional Superintendent for Peoria County Regional Office of Education (Peoria County ROE), Beth Crider said the teacher shortage is “worse than ever [before].” Crider said there are shortages statewide, but Peoria County sees it in special education, early education, and high school math. She added that 87% of districts report a shortage, 65% of districts report that half of the teacher applicants are unqualified, and 91% of districts have fewer than five applicants for each role. * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson pushes CPS to refinance $240M in debt, experts warn of long-term risks: In a briefing with reporters Tuesday, senior aides to Mayor Brandon Johnson said the district could get the money released out of an existing debt service fund, which school districts use to pay off debt similar to a mortgage or a construction loan on a house. CPS borrows money by selling bonds and has to pay it back over time. CPS could then pay it back with expiring tax increment financing money — tax money set aside to spur growth in neighborhoods — in two to 10 years, Johnson’s aides said. But the city and outgoing CPS chief Pedro Martinez are in a tough spot, financial experts say. * WTTW | With Latest Settlement, Taxpayers Spent $8.7M to Settle, Defend Lawsuits Accusing CPD Officers of Misconduct During Protests, Unrest in 2020: The Civilian Office of Police Accountability, the agency charged with investigating police misconduct, concluded the officer used excessive force against Boyd, tried to prevent her from recording police and made false, misleading or incomplete statements in his report of the incident. The officer resigned after COPA urged the superintendent to fire him. More than $3 million of the $8.7 million went to pay private lawyers to defend the conduct of CPD officers from late May until mid-August 2020, one of the most tumultuous periods in Chicago history, according to records obtained by WTTW News through multiple Freedom of Information Act requests. * Capitol Fax | Council votes down Chicago fur ban: Facing opposition from the Black clergy and the Black Caucus, the Council voted 26 to 19 to reject a citywide ban on the sale of new fur products championed by Ald. Ray Lopez (15th). Black Caucus Chair Stephanie Coleman (16th) led the charge against the ban in defense of Island Furs, a Black-owned furrier at 1827 W. 103rd St. in Beverly. Island Furs owner Gerard Brown was in the Council chambers as the City Council decided not to sign what he said would have amounted to a death warrant for his business. * Sun-Times | Trump slashes environmental programs in Chicago that protect poor communities: It’s unclear how many positions will be cut in Chicago, but union officials estimate it may affect 20 to 30 of the roughly 1,000 EPA regional employees. Most significantly, the order ends a practice of “environmental justice” at the agency that has responded to people threatened by pollution in urban and rural areas. Environmental justice, born in Chicago decades ago, is a movement that recognizes how poorer communities often experience more air, water and ground pollution than more affluent areas. At the EPA, environmental justice programs have zeroed in on drinking water protections as well as hazardous waste and other problems. * Sun-Times | Education Department layoffs gut civil rights offices in Chicago, nationwide: The layoffs are eliminating Chicago’s Office for Civil Rights, one of seven around the country where all positions are being cut, officials with the union that represents department employees said Wednesday. The office is tasked with enforcing federal anti-discrimination laws in schools. That will leave five offices at a time when the Education Department faces a backlog of complaints from students and families. * Sun-Times | City clerk wants closer scrutiny of CTA, CPS, Chicago’s other sister agencies: City Clerk Anna Valencia has joined forces with Ald. Scott Waguespack (32nd) on a resolution directing the Council’s Committee on Ethics and Government Operations to create a subcommittee charged with “examining the process for appointing board members at sister agencies and establishing best practices relating to transparency, accountability and the democratic process.” * Crain’s | Two more showrooms leaving Merchandise Mart for Fulton Market: The moves fortify Fulton Market’s growing profile as a hub for designer furniture brands, a shift that has come at the expense of the Mart and its longtime local dominance in the sector. Senator and KI follow a line that includes Steelcase, Herman Miller, Knoll, Allsteel, Teknion, Gabriel and Tarkett, among the brands that have set up shop in Fulton Market in recent years. The gritty-turned-trendy former meatpacking neighborhood now hosts its own “Design Days” showcase during the Mart’s annual NeoCon commercial interior design convention. * Daily Herald | Mending relationships with teachers, community among priorities for District 128 candidates: With five of seven seats up for election and a tumultuous period in Libertyville-Vernon Hills High School District 128 still fresh, guiding the next steps will be up to a new school board. Four incumbents are not running, guaranteeing a majority of members will be new after April 1. And there could be five new members if an appointee whose term is ending is not reelected. Candidates Wes Polen, COO of a consulting firm; health care executive Doug Fleegle; attorney Marnie Navarro; Mithilesh Kotwal, managing director of a consulting firm; and, Rahul Deshmukh, a private university educator, are running for four, 4-year terms. * Shaw Local | Pistakee Country Club near Lakemoor could become a solar farm; hearing Wednesday evening: According to slides that are part of a presentation planned for a Wednesday evening public hearing, the proposal is for a solar farm of about 32 acres, which would be screened from nearby homes that would include “extensive existing vegetation and additional buffer and native pollinator plantings.” The farm’s entrance is proposed to be off Cuhlman Road, which runs north-south on the east side of the property. * Daily Herald | Filling gaps and protecting rookeries among goals of two additions to Lake County forest preserve system: Forest commissioners Wednesday approved buying two properties totaling about 88 acres for nearly $2.4 million as additions to existing areas on opposite ends of the county. Lakewood Forest Preserve on the south near Wauconda is the largest and one of the oldest in the Lake County Forest Preserve District system. Lotus Country Conservation Preserve in Antioch Township in northern Lake County is among the newest and was acquired last summer for its valuable ecological features, including the largest heron and egret rookery. * Maybe we’ll see her in the Bear… * WIRED | The Violent Rise of ‘No Lives Matter’: The US Department of Justice classifies Com and 764 as a “Tier One” terrorism threat, the highest priority afforded to an extremist group, ideology, or tendency in American law enforcement’s internal rubric. Intelligence documents reviewed by WIRED show a stream of concern from analysts about the group’s harm to juvenile exploitation victims and the growing exhortations to physical violence that embody the No Lives Matter ethos. * NPR | EPA announces dozens of environmental regulations it plans to target: The Environmental Protection Agency announced plans to target more than two dozen rules and policies in what the agency called the “most consequential day of deregulation in U.S. history.” The EPA didn’t provide details about what it wants to do with the regulations — whether it will try to weaken them or eliminate them entirely. In most cases, the agency said it is reconsidering rules that apply to things like climate pollution from vehicles and power plants, wastewater from coal plants and air pollution from the energy and manufacturing sectors.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Thursday, Mar 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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