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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Feb 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Bloomberg

Illinois is planning to sell $725 million in bonds backed by sales tax revenue for capital projects, according to a filing.

The state, the lowest-rated among peers, issued on Friday a voluntary notice of the potential sale of so-called Build Illinois Bonds, which are among the main sources of funding for its long-term capital budget — helping to pay for roads, bridges, technology and other infrastructure investments.

The possible deal comes as Gov. JB Pritzker and the state legislature negotiate the details of the roughly $55 billion spending plan he laid out last week. His fiscal 2026 budget includes earmarking $500 million to address a “long overdue capital need” to demolish unused properties and turn them into sites for attracting business and residential developments.

Proceeds from the sale of the bonds would go toward capital expenses and the cost of issuing the debt.

* Click here for some background. CBS

The Supreme Court on Monday turned away two appeals from abortion rights opponents asking the justices to overrule a 25-year-old decision that allowed for buffer zones around abortion clinics, leaving that ruling in place. […]

Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito said they would have granted the requests to hear the cases. In a dissent from the Supreme Court’s denial of the appeal in one of those disputes, involving an ordinance passed by the city council in Carbondale, Illinois, Thomas said the high court should make clear that its 2000 decision “lacks continuing force” and should be explicitly overturned. […]

The ordinance enacted in Carbondale came just six months after the Supreme Court’s conservative majority rolled back the constitutional right to abortion. Known as the “Disorderly Conduct Ordinance,” the restriction was put in place in response to the high court’s ruling, as reproductive health care clinics in the city reported an uptick of threats and acts of intimidation by people protesting abortion access. […]

The ordinance took effect in January 2023 but was repealed several months later. The Carbondale City Council said it had not been enforced against any potential violator.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Cook County moves to change how it offloads delinquent taxes: The bill, backed by county Treasurer Maria Pappas, calls for an open auction after a tax sale, through which a property owner could recoup some of its value. As it stands today, people who buy a home’s unpaid taxes can eventually get the deed simply by paying late property taxes and fees, effectively pocketing the home’s value. Pappas may not have much choice but to seek changes. The Supreme Court recently sided with a Minnesota homeowner who lost her condo because of overdue taxes. Her attorneys successfully argued that systems similar to Cook County’s rob delinquent homeowners of equity. A similar local lawsuit from Cook County property owners is seeking class-action status.

* WTVO | It will soon be easier to get a car loan in Illinois thanks to new electronic lien and title system: Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias made the announcement Monday that Illinois will join 25 other states that have active Electronic Lien and Titling available when purchasing a vehicle from a participating dealer. “An electronic lien and titling program will make the process of buying a car significantly faster, more convenient and more secure than the paper system. What used to take months can be done with a few clicks, dramatically reducing the ‘Time Tax’ customers were forced to pay when titling a vehicle,” said Giannoulias. “Implementing new technology strategically enables our office to create efficiencies and benefit consumers. These investments are crucial to providing convenience, but more importantly security, for our customers and their data.”

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Trump and Musk take aim at Loop’s Kluczynski, Metcalfe buildings: The Trump administration is planning to shed half of the office space it occupies in Chicago and Illinois, with two huge properties, the John C. Kluczynski Federal Building and Ralph H. Metcalfe Federal Building, heading the list of structures on the chopping block. That’s the word from Chicago U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley, a ranking Democratic member of the House Appropriations Committee, whose district is home to thousands of federal workers whose jobs have been or are being eyed for elimination.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Parents Defending Education challenges Chicago district’s Black Student Success Plan as discriminatory: An out-of-state advocacy group filed a federal antidiscrimination complaint challenging Chicago Public Schools’ Black Student Success Plan the day after the district released its long-awaited blueprint. Parents Defending Education, which has challenged race-based initiatives and the teaching of topics involving race and gender in schools, submitted a complaint to the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights, asking it to block the five-year plan’s implementation. It invoked the Constitution’s Equal Protection Clause, a 2023 U.S. Supreme Court decision banning the use of race as a factor in college admissions, and a “Dear Colleague” letter from the Education Department’s Office of Civil Rights late last week warning school districts to halt any race-based initiatives or risk losing federal funding.

* WTTW | City Has $142M Left in Federal COVID-19 Relief Funds After $87M Cuts to Balance 2025 Budget: City officials would have an additional $87 million to spend on a host of programs — including affordable housing, mental health, violence prevention, youth job programs and help for unhoused Chicagoans — but the Chicago City Council used those funds to balance the city’s 2025 budget and avert a property tax hike. That means the City Council reduced the amount of federal money available to the city to fuel a wide variety of social service programs until the end of 2026 by nearly 38% to balance the city’s budget without a single sentence of debate about what those cuts will mean for Chicagoans who have yet to regain the ground they started to lose five years ago.

* Crain’s | United Center owners buy more lots for 1901 Project: A venture led by the Reinsdorf and Wirtz families, which co-own the Near West Side stadium, paid about $11 million late last month for a pair of properties along the elevated Chicago Transit Authority tracks east of the arena, according to Cook County property records. The entity purchased the sites from an affiliate of longtime parking lot operator Peoples Stadium Parking.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Jury selection underway in trial of accused Highland Park parade shooter: It began with Lake County Judge Victoria Rossetti admonishing prospective jurors to “keep an open mind, a mind that is free of any misconceptions” and “resist jumping to conclusions” as questioning began shortly before 11 a.m. […] By 12:15 p.m., three jurors had been selected. Juror selection continues this afternoon. Testimony is expected to begin at 9 a.m. Monday, March 3.

* Daily Herald | Batavia deciding how to spend $200K from single-use bag tax: City council members began reviewing proposals from prospective candidates vying to execute those green initiatives at the Feb. 11 Committee of the Whole meeting. At the meeting, committee members heard from four applicants. Two would conduct energy audits and rebates for residents, and two others would execute a public education campaign and design the city’s branded reusable bags.

* CBS Chicago | Oak Park, Illinois seeks to regulate hemp-derived THC products: Leaders in Oak Park, Illinois, want to crack down on products made from hemp that contain THC. […] Oak Park village trustees will introduce an ordinance next month that would set the minimum age for purchasing hemp-derived products containing THC to 21.

* WGN | Family of young journalist struck, killed by train sues Metra: The suit is seeking damages and family previously said they hope safety changes are made to prevent future incidents. Both Metra and the South Shore Line had no comment, citing pending litigation.

*** Downstate ***

* WSIL | Small number of probationary staff dismissed with Marion VA Health Care System, VA official reports: This coming after 1,000 Department of Veterans Affairs employees were reported to have been dismissed nationwide on February 13. A representative with the VA shared a statement by the VA Press Secretary for the VA facility in Marion. The statement is below… “The Marion VA Health Care System has dismissed a small number of probationary staff. This decision will have no negative effect on Veteran health care, benefits or other services and will allow VA to focus more effectively on its core mission of serving Veterans, families, caregivers, and survivors. We cannot discuss specific personnel matters due to privacy concerns.”

* WJBD | School insurance trust drops $7 million in the red: An insurance trust utilized by 80 school districts in the state, mostly in Southern Illinois, has fallen $7 million in the red due to higher-than-expected medical claims and drug costs. The Salem Grade School District is one of the districts impacted. Superintendent Dr. Leslie Foppe told the school board Thursday night says a lot of school officials are not happy. The trust has come up with a plan to charge an extra assessment to each district, which would amount to $108,000 to the Salem Grade School district.

*** National ***

* AP | Scholarships suspended at NC A&T, other HBCUs for students in agriculture via 1890 Scholars Program: The U.S. Department of Agriculture suspended the 1890 Scholars Program, which provided recipients with full tuition and fees for students studying agriculture, food or natural resource sciences at one of 19 universities, known as the 1890 land grant institutions. It’s not clear exactly when the program was suspended, but some members of Congress first issued statements criticizing the suspension of the program on Thursday.

  2 Comments      


More about 2025 than 2028

Monday, Feb 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Politico today

There was no push-back within Pritzker’s team about comparing the Trump administration and the Nazi era, something that Republicans have criticized. “There was a lot of conversation about it, like ‘How do we do this, and how do we do it the right way?’ But I wouldn’t say that there was any hesitation,” [Anne Caprara, the governor’s chief of staff] said. “This is the moment and the message that we need to deliver and if it gets a lot of attention, we feel like people need to hear it.”

Getting the message across: “We are very careful with the language,” Caprara said. “But I don’t think I’m being hyperbolic when I say that the people around me working in government and others who email me are extremely alarmed [about what’s happening in Washington]. They’re texting and emailing asking ‘What should I be doing and why isn’t somebody saying something about how bad it is?’” […]

Caprara dismissed critics who say the speech was an effort to promote Pritzker’s political stature. Not so, she said. The governor “feels a moral obligation and also he thinks it’s the right thing to do.”

* Gov. Pritzker on Jen Psacki’s podcast

Pritzker: I don’t know if you remember. I think it was in January or February of 2024, Joe Biden gave a big speech at Valley Forge, and it was a speech about democracy.

[Biden recording: America, as we begin this election year, we must be clear: Democracy is on the ballot. Your freedom is on the ballot.]

Pritzker: And even though everything that he said was 100% accurate, and he intended it to be the message of his campaign, but that really doesn’t work. I have to say, you know, if you knock on 100 doors, and I’ve knocked on a lot of doors in my day, probably way more than 100 a lot, a lot. And I can tell you that if you said to people that democracy is challenged, people wouldn’t know what you’re talking about. They know they go to the polls and vote every two years or every four years, and things just keep going no matter who gets elected. And so democracy being challenged or being at risk isn’t something people can even imagine. So in my view, it was a terrible message, even though it clearly was being challenged, and we’re seeing the results of that now. But I don’t think that the average American is thinking that. So that’s one thing. I think a second thing I’ll just point out is, you know, this was, in my view, an election that should have been all about, and we should have singularly focused on affordability. And again, I didn’t make any of the decisions about what the messaging would be.

But I can tell you that if you just go walk down the street and stop 100 people and ask them what’s really bothering them and what they’d like to see it’s, you know, more focus on affordability. I mean going to the grocery store and not being able to buy eggs at a reasonable price. Or now, you know, with the tariffs that Donald Trump is proposing tomatoes and lettuce and, you know, [garbled] prices are going up, and so addressing that, trying to hone in on it. We did it here in Illinois. I eliminated the state grocery tax in Illinois, for example, we went after some of the very costly things, like health care. We’re going to do it again this year that are affecting people’s lives where, you know, the cost of health care and health care premiums keeps going up and up. And I think, if you’re not addressing those kind of kitchen table issues, making it cheaper and easier for kids to go to college and for their parents to be able to afford it, those things are the most important things, I think, to folks out there who were going to the polls in November and Democrats managed not to focus on that. And we need to be really clear, really clear as Democrats focusing on the things that really matter.

The take-away from all this is that Pritzker understands that the stuff he talked about at the end of his speech last week hasn’t been an effective campaign message against Trump. So, why did he do it anyway? As explained above, lots of folks were demanding that somebody stand up and say what they were thinking. I was told much the same last week. From the subscriber section

When I pressed the issue yesterday, I was told that the governor was trying to send as strong a message as possible to timid national Democrats that it is time to wake up to escalating authoritarianism. The address was Pritzker’s most high-profile opportunity to send that message and it therefore had a much better chance of being noticed than if he did it at a lesser event.

In other words, the speech was not so much about 2028, as the Tribune claimed over the weekend. The end of his speech was about February of 2025. Today.

* Even so, I’m still not convinced it was a good idea to use that constitutionally required speech to deliver that message. He could’ve gone to the White House with the National Governors Association and said it and he would’ve gotten a ton more coverage…


  46 Comments      


Former Gov. Jim Edgar reveals cancer diagnosis: ‘We do not underestimate this challenge, but we have confidence in the medical team helping us address it’ (Updated)

Monday, Feb 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* An email from former Gov. Jim Edgar, authorized for publication…

Brenda and I are facing a new, significant challenge.

Doctors at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago have determined I have pancreatic cancer that has spread. They and physicians at Mayo Clinic are coordinating on a treatment regimen that I am following initially in Arizona, where we spend the winter, and later in Springfield when we return. We do not underestimate this challenge, but we have confidence in the medical team helping us address it.

Brenda and I remain hopeful, and we are grateful for the kindness of so many who have offered their prayers and support.

He has done a remarkable job with his bipartisan Edgar Fellows program. I wish him nothing but the best. Hang in there, Jim.

…Adding… House Speaker Chris Welch…

“Governor Jim Edgar is a model of a true statesman, and his commitment to integrity and collaborative leadership continues to guide Illinois. The opportunity I had to learn from him through the Edgar Fellows Program helped me as a new lawmaker, as a committee chair, and still today as Speaker. The fact that so many leaders in our Capitol can tell similar stories is a testament to the amazing scope of Governor Edgar’s impact.

“Governor Edgar and his family are in my prayers as they face this new challenge. As he has worked to bring out the best in others, may our prayers and well wishes bring the best to him.”

  18 Comments      


Poll: Mayor Johnson’s re-elect in crowded field is 8 percent; Just 7 percent view him favorably, 80 percent unfavorably (Updated)

Monday, Feb 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* M3 Strategies is a Republican pollster, but they’ve done pretty good work. The firm’s last poll had President Trump’s favorables right about where the Pritzker campaign did in its most recent release, for example. The poll was paid for by Juan Rangel, who regularly engages in battle with the CTU and the mayor’s people on Twitter.

From the pollster’s latest analysis of its Chicago survey

1. Crime Dominates Voter Concerns

    o 67% say crime is Chicago’s biggest issue, outpacing high taxes (54%) and inflation (41%).
    o Issues like LGBTQ+ rights (3%) and reproductive freedoms (4%) rank among the lowest priorities.

2. Paul Vallas and Alexi Giannoulias Lead Early Mayoral Preferences

    o Vallas (27.4%) and Giannoulias (21.0%) lead the crowded field, while Mayor Brandon Johnson lags at just 8.2%.

3. Brandon Johnson Is Overwhelmingly Unpopular

    o 79.9% of voters disapprove of Johnson, with just 6.6% holding a favorable view—a net favorability of -73.3%.

4. Vallas and Giannoulias Have the Strongest Favorability, While Lesser-Known Candidates Struggle

    o Giannoulias (49% favorable) and Vallas (41%) have the highest name recognition.
    o Buckner and Conway remain relatively unknown, with over 35% of voters saying they’ve never heard of them.

* Methodology

M3 Strategies surveyed 696 likely Chicago voters from February 20-21, 2025. The survey has a margin of error of 3.71%. Respondents were randomly selected from a pool of individuals who are likely to vote. All responses were generated via SMS to web survey.

* On to the toplines. Which of the following would you say are the biggest issues facing Chicago right now?…


Crime is a much bigger issue in Chicago than it is statewide and has been for quite a while.

* If the election for Mayor of Chicago were held today, who would most likely lean toward (if undecided is not an option)?…

* What is your opinion of the following Chicago public figures?…

* Alexi Giannoulias, IL Sec of State…

* Susana Mendoza, IL Comptroller…

* Bill Conway, Alderman…

* Kam Buckner, State Rep…

* Paul Vallas, Former Mayoral Candidate…

* Brandon Johnson, Mayor…

Whew. That’s gotta be some kind of a record.

* In your own words, tell us your opinion of Mayor Brandon Johnson…

* In your own words, tell us your opinion of former mayoral candidate Paul Vallas…

* In your own words, tell us your opinion of IL Comptroller Susana Mendoza…

* In your own words, tell us your opinion of IL Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias…

Haven’t seen those word clouds used in a while. Interesting.

…Adding… I took a quick look at the full crosstabs. Mayor Johnson’s favorable/unfavorable rating among Black voters is 16/67, with 17 percent neutral. Among Latino voters it’s 2/88 (not a typo) with 10 percent neutral. Among White voters it’s 5/84 (also not a typo) with 10 percent neutral.

Johnson receives 18 percent support from Black voters in the horse race question, along with 2 percent Latino, 6 percent White.

  37 Comments      


Dick Durbin wants to put this blog (and others) out of business

Monday, Feb 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release last week from US Sen. Dick Durbin

This week, Durbin will join U.S. Senators Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Josh Hawley (R-MO), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), and Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) to introduce a bill that would sunset Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act in two years. Section 230—and the legal immunity it provides to Big Tech—has been on the books since 1996—long before social media became a part of our daily lives. To the extent this protection was ever needed, its usefulness has long since passed.

The full statute he wants to eliminate is here.

* From a few years ago, when President Trump vetoed a Defense Department appropriations bill because it did not repeal Section 230

Section 230 has two key provisions. One states that an online service provider can’t be treated as the publisher of content created by a third party. The second provision says that a provider can’t be held liable for taking down content it “considers to be obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, excessively violent, harassing, or otherwise objectionable.” The inclusion of “otherwise objectionable” in this list gives online platforms essentially bulletproof protection against lawsuits for removing third-party content.

Trump’s focus on Section 230 seems to be driven by anger that online platforms—especially Twitter—have labeled or removed his posts when they violate their policies. In May, Twitter slapped a warning label on a Trump tweet exaggerating the risks of voter fraud. Soon afterward, Trump signed an executive order asking the FCC to reinterpret Section 230. He’s been tweeting angrily about the law ever since.

* More background from the Electronic Frontier Foundation

For more than 25 years, Section 230 has protected us all: small blogs and websites, big platforms, and individual users.

The free and open internet as we know it couldn’t exist without Section 230. Important court rulings on Section 230 have held that users and services cannot be sued for forwarding email, hosting online reviews, or sharing photos or videos that others find objectionable. It also helps to quickly resolve lawsuits cases that have no legal basis.

Congress knew that the sheer volume of the growing Internet would make it impossible for services to review every users’ speech. When Section 230 was passed in 1996, about 40 million people used the Internet worldwide. By 2019, more than 4 billion people were online, with 3.5 billion of them using social media platforms. In 1996, there were fewer than 300,000 websites; by 2017, there were more than 1.7 billion.

Without Section 230’s protections, many online intermediaries would intensively filter and censor user speech, while others may simply not host user content at all. This legal and policy framework allows countless niche websites, as well as big platforms like Amazon and Yelp to host user reviews. It allows users to share photos and videos on big platforms like Facebook and on the smallest blogs. It allows users to share speech and opinions everywhere, from vast conversational forums like Twitter and Discord, to the comment sections of the smallest newspapers and blogs.

* Why Durbin’s idea is so clueless

The dumbest part: removing Section 230 would actually entrench Big Tech’s power, not diminish it. The giants would survive just fine — most cases against them would still fail on First Amendment grounds. But defending speech under the First Amendment is far more complex and expensive than Section 230’s straightforward protections. Meta, Google, and their ilk have armies of lawyers to handle this. Everyone else? Not so much.

This explains why Mark Zuckerberg has been practically begging Congress to eliminate Section 230. It’s not because he suddenly developed a burning passion for content moderation reform. It’s because he’s looked at the math and realized: “Hey, we can afford buildings full of lawyers. Our competitors can’t.” When Zuckerberg advocates for eliminating Section 230, he’s not confessing his sins — he’s pitching his business plan.

Without Section 230 “Big Tech” would be fine. First of all, in nearly all cases that are filed against websites would still lose, because almost all of these decisions are protected by the First Amendment. But — and this is the important part — having to defend it under the First Amendment is way more expensive. And takes way longer. Which means that smaller defendants, especially, will likely cave in to threats.

The end result? Big Tech gets bigger, smaller platforms disappear, and the “monopolies” that Durbin claims to be fighting become actual monopolies — now with congressional approval! It’s like trying to punish Standard Oil by making it illegal for anyone except Standard Oil to sell kerosene.

Durbin’s claim that Section 230’s “usefulness has long since passed” isn’t just wrong — it’s dangerous. The law is more vital now than ever, as demonstrated by countless cases where it’s protected essential online discourse. At a moment when we desperately need more venues for protected speech and democratic dialogue, Durbin is proposing to demolish the very framework that makes such dialogue possible.

The consequences would be predictable and devastating: a cascade of frivolous lawsuits designed to silence critics and suppress inconvenient truths. Without Section 230’s efficient dismissal process, even completely baseless legal threats become effective censorship tools. Think about it: if you’re running a small community forum and someone threatens to sue you because they don’t like a user’s post about their business, what are you going to do? Spend hundreds of thousands of dollars defending your First Amendment rights, or just take down the post? This isn’t theoretical — it’s basic economics.

The end result is that it becomes that much easier to suppress dissent.

No Section 230 means no comments, no live news feeds and very likely no CapitolFax.com at all, while big tech just hires a few more lawyers.

Nice job, Dick.

  44 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Monday, Feb 24, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

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

  Comments Off      


It’s just a bill

Monday, Feb 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Daily Herald

House Bill 2969 would tie any professional sports team’s request for state or local government financing for stadium construction, renovation or maintenance to the team’s on-field performance, requiring at least a .500 record in three out of the last five regular seasons. […]

For the Bears, who haven’t hit that mark since the 2020-21 season, it’s a no. Same for the Sox, who set the Major League Baseball record for most losses in a single season last year. […]

The Cubs and the Sky — who won the WNBA Championship in 2021 — do meet the bill’s eligibility requirements, but seem to have settled in at their homes. The Cubs’ owners were rejected by then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel for help with their $550 million face-lift of Wrigley Field, but now want Mayor Brandon Johnson’s help to tighten security in and around the historic ballpark to host the 2027 All-Star Game. And after departing Rosemont’s Allstate Arena in 2017, the Sky now rent out Wintrust Arena in the South Loop.

The Chicago Stars — of the National Women’s Soccer League — would also be eligible under Morgan’s bill. The team has a lease at SeatGeek Stadium in Bridgeview through this year, but owners — which include Cubs co-owner Laura Ricketts — have asked state lawmakers for a seat at the table in discussions about new publicly funded stadiums.

* Farm Week

The “Good Food Purchasing Bill” is one of [Rep. Sonya Harper’s] priorities as chair of the House Agriculture Committee. The bill, introduced Feb. 18, requires state agencies and state-owned facilities that purchase food, such as colleges and universities, to purchase healthy food sourced from Illinois farmers.

“I’m also interested in collaborating more across the state and coming up with some innovative solutions and some actual SMART goals to eliminate food deserts,” Harper said. “I have legislation around a commission that takes invoices of all the counties and officials at every level because that’s not something that just the state can fix.”

She explained that having meaningful conversations about food access with other levels of government and important decision-makers is necessary to improve quality access to food throughout the entire state.

* Capitol News Illinois

Lawmakers are considering legalizing a controversial medical practice that proponents say could ease suffering for the terminally ill. […]

The measure, contained in Senate Bill 9, is being backed by Sen. Linda Holmes, D-Aurora, who told her Senate colleagues at a hearing Friday that she supports the proposal because of her parents’ deaths. Both her mother and father died after extended battles with cancer.

“You think the toughest thing you go through is watching somebody die, and you know what? It’s not,” Holmes said. “It’s not as tough as watching somebody you love suffer and there’s nothing you can do to ease that suffering. That is the hardest thing I’ve ever gone through.”[…]

Friday’s meeting of the powerful Senate Executive Committee was a “subject matter” hearing, meaning no vote was taken. The bill will need more committee hearings, a vote in both legislative chambers and approval by the governor before becoming law.

* Sen. Lakesia Collins…

To assist community members and homeowners, State Senator Lakesia Collins advanced a measure Wednesday to provide guidance to law enforcement that simplifies the process for removing criminal trespassers from a person’s home.

“For homeowners who have had to deal with squatters and those living on property without permission, this helps clarify the law,” said Collins (D-Chicago). “Oftentimes, law enforcement is unclear about what to do about squatters and so the issue is often left to the eviction process. This legislation clarifies that squatters–who are trespassers–can be removed under the appropriate criminal trespass laws.”

This legislation responds to local squatters who snuck into a home while the owner was away. Law enforcement told the owner that they could not remove the squatters and that the homeowner would need to file an eviction.

Senate Bill 1563 would add a provision to the state’s eviction law that nothing about the eviction process keeps the police from enforcing our criminal laws. As a result, it clarifies that squatters–who are trespassers–can be removed without going through the eviction process.

“Squatters have been a problem my constituents have raised across the district and clarity for law enforcement is essential to avoid an unneeded and lengthy process to return someone’s home to them safely,” Collins said. “Tenants have rights and trespassers do not. This is simple but powerful clarification.”

Senate Bill 1563 passed the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday.

* Center Square

Illinois lawmakers are considering legislation that supporters say aims at enhancing protections for freedom of speech and freedom of the press, but some legislators have expressed concern that the current proposal goes too far.

The Illinois House Judiciary Committee passed House Bill 1077, which is intended to reign in SLAPP, Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation.

State Rep. Daniel Didech, D-Buffalo Grove, the bill’s sponsor, said current law, the Citizen Participation Act, has been rendered almost toothless by judicial decisions. […]

The bill, which would create the Uniform Public Expression Act, passed out of committee by a 12 to 7 vote on Wednesday. State Reps. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz, D-Glenview, and Tracy Katz Muhl, D-Northbrook, joined as co-sponsors of the legislation.

  10 Comments      


Welch on ethics reform, Pritzker, Trump

Monday, Feb 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch didn’t sound all that enthused about passing any new ethics reforms during an interview last week.

In the wake of former House Speaker Michael Madigan’s conviction on 10 felony counts earlier this month, I asked Welch if he believed Madigan’s conviction called out for new reform laws.

“I didn’t get a chance to listen to what every juror who has spoken said, but they looked at the evidence in that case, and they weighed the evidence in that case. And I think I heard one juror say that he didn’t have anything negative to say about Springfield per se. But when they looked at the evidence in that case, they came to the verdict that they came to,” Welch said.

That doesn’t sound like he believes there’s a clarion call for change.

“Are there things that we can do better in Springfield?” Welch asked rhetorically. “Probably are some things that we can do better. I think we need to talk to our members and find out what they think. I think we need to talk to advocates and hear what advocates think.”

Welch said he was “proud” that nobody in his caucus had been accused of corruption since he took over. “We addressed ethics in my first year as speaker. There’s a number of things that we have done that I think really changed the environment and have helped us get to the point that we’re at today.”

Madigan said much the same thing about his caucus after Rod Blagojevich was impeached and removed. It didn’t work out so well. Not saying Welch is a problem, but one never knows what individual caucus members are up to.

Gov. JB Pritzker was clearly angry at Welch during the January lame duck legislative session when the governor’s attempt to pass a bill to regulate intoxicating hemp blew up in his face and Welch refused to call the bill, claiming that the governor didn’t have 60 Democratic votes. Pritzker insisted at the time that he did have the votes and also demanded apologies from House Democrats who yelled insults at members of his administration during a private caucus meeting. Pritzker has since backed off. I asked Welch if things were patched up between them and how that happened.

“First of all, there was nothing to patch up,” Welch declared. “The governor was doing his job, I did my job. The governor and I talk all the time. We talked before lame duck. We’ve talked since lame duck. The governor is an important partner of mine. We’ve gotten big things done in the state of Illinois by working together. From time to time we may disagree on something, but know this, my position is always going to be based on what my caucus’s position is, and I make that clear with the governor or whoever I’m talking to.”

In other words, Welch is gonna stand with his caucus against any outsider, and people, including the governor, need to accept it.

Earlier this month, the House moved three resolutions to the floor that sharply criticized President Donald Trump. The Republicans eventually stormed off the floor in response. My associate Isabel Miller asked Welch if he might be bringing more such resolutions up for a vote.

“I don’t want to talk about our strategy for governing the chamber during the 104th,” Welch said. “But let me say this: I think that it is extremely important that we give our members space to vocalize what this administration’s actions are doing to the people of this state and to the people around this country. I think the President’s actions, his administration’s actions, are directly impacting the people we serve. And we’re going to see as we work to assemble a budget that the administration’s actions are directly impacting our ability to run a responsible state. And so we can’t tell you what Donald Trump’s going to do, but we’re also not going to sit silently while he unilaterally pushes policies that hurt the people that we represent. And if we have to go to the floor and shine a light on those things, we will, because this is not a time to be silent.”

Asked if the debates were effective, Welch said, “I think that they have been extremely effective. I think if you talk to our members and what they’re hearing from their constituents back home, particularly the members who actually spoke on the floor, they will tell you what they’re hearing from their constituents back home.”

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Open thread

Monday, Feb 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* RIP Jerry “Iceman” Butler

What’s up by you?

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Feb 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* We informed subscribers about this earlier this month. ICYMI: What Illinois faces if congressional Republicans slash Medicaid. Crain’s

    - One proposal floated by House Republicans would put an estimated 800,000 Illinoisans at immediate risk of losing benefits. This is a population that receives insurance under the Affordable Care Act’s 2014 Medicaid expansion, which largely covers single adults without children.
    - A reduction in the funding level would be bad enough, but Illinois is among 12 states with a trigger law that would automatically end coverage or require other changes if the federal match drops below 90%.
    - 862,774 Illinois residents could lose their health care coverage.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Subscribers were told about this last week. Daily Herald | The governor wants to put pause on fuel tax shift. What would that mean?: It was just one line item in Gov. JB Pritzker’s budget proposal Wednesday, pausing the final shift of the state’s motor fuel sales taxes to the road fund. But for drivers, road builders and lovers of convoluted Illinois legislative history, it means a lot. Since July 1, 2021, the state has incrementally transferred motor fuel sales taxes from its general fund to the road fund. The change was part of 2019 legislation enabling the Build Illinois capital program.

* Tribune | The hidden world of Chicago ICE arrests: In a system where people can be detained with little public information available, rosters for out-of-state jails that hold many Chicago-area detainees offer one of the only glimpses of people taken into custody amid the heightened fear and uncertainty of the past several weeks. Though they do not represent a complete picture, the jail logs, obtained by the Tribune via public records requests, present a rare, if narrow, window into a byzantine and opaque immigration system, where people can be detained and not go before a judge for weeks, or even months. In contrast, in Illinois’ criminal justice system, arrestees must go before a judge within 48 hours and police must make arrest reports with identifying information available within 72 hours.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Illinois Eagle | State rep calls for equity in funding for HIV in Black community: State Rep. Carol Ammons (D-Urbana) highlighted the disparity in health outcomes for Black Illinois residents. “We cannot afford inaction while Black communities face disproportionately high rates of HIV/AIDS illness and limited access to life-saving resources,” she said at press conference with the Black Leadership Advocacy Coalition for Healthcare Equity (BLACHE) for Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day

* BND | Metro-east state rep settles lawsuit over blocked Facebook comments: Illinois State Rep. Charlie Meier, R-Okawville, has settled a lawsuit alleging he violated the First Amendment free speech rights of four constituents by blocking their “critical” comments on his Facebook page. […] The settlement agreement calls for Meier to reinstate Poettker’s access to his Facebook page and to reinstate comments from Moore, Williams and

* Daily Herald | Milena McConchie, wife of recently resigned state senator Dan McConchie, dies at 51: Dan McConchie posted news of his loss and the life he had shared with her on Facebook Saturday. “Unfortunately, the health troubles that plagued her since Chernobyl were not to be outrun,” he wrote. “She passed away from heart failure due to the cancer, the radiation, and the chemotherapy treatments that we now know cause the heart muscle to harden. Fortunately, she is now free of those troubles and is finally in a place where there is no sickness and there is no death with her Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.”

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | Illinois expanded tax credits for some workers and families but the money isn’t being claimed, experts say: Illinois expanded its earned income tax credit in 2024, giving low- to moderate-income workers a bigger break on their 2023 state income tax filing. But many taxpayers who receive the federal EITC are unaware that the state program exists. Workers who qualify for the federal EITC generally qualify for the Illinois EITC, since the requirements are similar. And some of those filers could see an increase this tax season by also taking advantage of the state’s first-ever Child Tax Credit, which offers relief to parents struggling with rising living costs. Parents with children under 12 who qualify for the Illinois EITC are eligible to claim the CTC.

* Tribune | ‘Whole different level.’ The Illinois-Indiana political divide widens amid Trump 2.0, from immigration to DEI to LGBTQ rights: “What Donald Trump tried to do in the last 24 hours was illegal,” Pritzker said during a press conference that day. “Let’s be clear: This is a demonstration of cruelty against people who depend on us.” Yet just over the border in Indiana, the top state official praised the austerity measure, which was designed to root out progressive agendas, promote efficiency and end “wokeness” through federal spending nationwide.

*** Chicago ***

* Kam Buckner | A city charter is the reform Chicago actually needs, not recall powers : Chicago is the largest city in America without a city charter. No governing document, no foundational rules that define how power is distributed, how decisions are made and what rights the people have in relation to their government. That’s like buying a complex piece of Ikea furniture and tossing the instructions, only to realize years later that you screwed everything in backward and now it barely holds together. Instead of a charter, we rely on a patchwork of century-old state laws, home rule authority and political traditions so entrenched you’d think they were carved into stone tablets. This system works, until it doesn’t.

* Tribune | City touts mission to target employee ties to hate groups; community demands police be the priority: Representatives with the mayor’s office told a roomful of residents and community groups at the West Side gathering that Johnson’s working group would produce recommendations and policies to deal with city employees linked to hate groups. The group was assembled eight months after the city’s Office of the Inspector General recommended in a report last year that the mayor convene a task force.

* The Athletic | Bears boost ticket prices as if they just had playoff season, not a 5-12 disaster: If you go through past numbers to look for context, the 10 percent jump for the 2025 season shouldn’t be a shock. The Bears have been known to raise prices after playoff seasons. Wait, what’s that? The Bears didn’t make the playoffs last year? They went 5-12, lost 10 in a row, fired their coach and offensive coordinator during the season and were the laughingstocks of the NFL from Halloween to New Year’s?

* Crain’s | Chicago billionaire Justin Ishbia to boost stake in White Sox: The deal will allow Ishbia, managing partner of Chicago investment firm Shore Capital Partners, to take control of the team at some point by buying the shares of longtime owner Jerry Reinsdorf and other partners, the Athletic contends, citing unnamed people familiar with the arrangement.

* Sun-Times | Just because Justin Ishbia wants to buy the White Sox doesn’t mean Jerry Reinsdorf is selling: I don’t blame them a bit for getting their hopes up. The Athletic reported that Ishbia, a financier worth $5.1 billion, wants to increase his minority stake in the Sox now that he’s given up his pursuit of buying the Twins. There’s a large segment of the fan base that would want anybody besides Reinsdorf, including a disinterred Stalin, owning the team. But the idea of someone as wealthy as Ishbia stepping in, well, it was enough to make Sox fans swoon on social media the past few days. To be rid of Reinsdorf, who cut the Sox’ payroll after losing a modern-era record 121 games in 2024, and gain a multibillionaire who has a home in Winnetka? Exchange Evergreen Park for Winnetka, and that’s a dream your standard Sox fan has about once a week.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Metra paid a law firm over $1.5M for an internal investigation that it won’t release, raising transparency questions: The investigation stemmed from anonymous complaints made to Metra about the agency’s Police Department, and bills from the attorneys hint at the scope of the work: McGuireWoods undertook analysis related to an “investigation of potential disparate treatment.” Also included among 130 pages of attorneys bills was reference to “EEO” incidents and complaints, according to documents obtained by the Tribune through a Freedom of Information Act request. Still, Metra’s failure to publicize information about the outcome of the investigation — and the agency’s decision to rely on an outside law firm to investigate its Police Department in the first place — raises questions about Metra’s motives, government transparency advocates said.

* Evanston Round Table | Candidates go on ‘speed dates’ with voters: Nearly everyone running for a city office or school board seat in the April 1 consolidated elections was present with a desk, a trifold poster board and any snacks, flyers or other campaign materials they could fit at their station. A steady stream of potential voters arrived over the three-hour event to talk directly to the candidates lined up around the room, with the din of conversation interrupted every 10 minutes by the sound of a tambourine — an encouragement for attendees to wrap up their chats and move on to someone new.

* Daily Herald | Aurora primary Tuesday to narrow the field for mayoral election: Five people are seeking spots on the ballot, including incumbent Mayor Richard Irvin, Alderman-at-Large John Laesch, Alderman Ted Mesiacos, former alderman Judd Lofchie, and Karina Garcia. Jazmine Garcia’s name is still on the primary ballot, but she announced on Tuesday that she had dropped out of the race.

* Tribune | ‘We saw evil that day.’ Highland Park mass shooting survivors hope for justice, resolution as trial begins Monday: More than two years after that horrific holiday, the suspect’s trial is scheduled to begin with jury selection Monday at the Lake County Courthouse. Alleged gunman Robert Crimo III faces more than 100 charges, including 21 counts of first-degree murder — three for each person who lost their life while attending the parade. If convicted of first-degree murder, he could be sentenced to life in prison without parole.

* Sun-Times | Trial set to start Monday for Plainfield landlord charged with killing 6-year-old Palestinian American boy: Joseph Czuba is charged with stabbing his tenant, Hanan Shaheen, and her 6-year-old son, Wadee Al Fayoumi, killing the boy, in an alleged hate crime that drew national attention. His trial is set to begin Monday at the Will County Courthouse in Joliet.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Metro-east teachers fear closing the Department of Education will harm students: According to the Illinois State Board of Education, about 12% of Illinois school districts’ revenues for fiscal year 2023 came from the federal government. Most school funding comes from the state and local taxes. But what that relatively small percentage of funding does is extremely important, said educators at a round table discussion hosted by the Illinois Federation of Teachers and U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski on Monday. The federal government directs money to schools to serve low-income students through Title I funding and to support programs for students with disabilities under the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).

* WICS | Lincoln residents hopeful for redevelopment of former developmental center site: Community members in Lincoln are expressing optimism about the potential redevelopment of the former Lincoln Developmental Center site, which has been closed since 2002. The closure, ordered by then-Governor George Ryan, left many residents concerned about the future of the site and the jobs lost as a result. […] The timeline for demolition or rehabilitation of the site remains uncertain, as it is contingent on decisions by the Illinois General Assembly.

* Tom Kacich | 100 years after merger first floated, Champaign, Urbana happy to be separately together: Former Champaign Mayor Dan McCollum, who said he supported the 1953 merger question as a high school student, recalled that he suggested another merger effort sometime after becoming mayor in 1987. “I approached Jeff Markland (then the mayor of Urbana) about getting the two cities together,” McCollum recalled. “He said that historically it hadn’t been supported by his town, so he couldn’t support it. That was the end of that.”

* WCIA | Therapy dogs drop by Danville library to help kids learn to read: “Fear of pets is one thing, but if we can get away from some of the other children and adults, some children don’t want to try and read in front of adults because they’re afraid of making mistakes,” retired librarian Mary Easterday said. “And when they read to a dog, the dog doesn’t care. The dog loves them. The dog sits there and listens and loves them.” She said the library plans to continue bringing dogs in to mingle with kids — and is also considering doing the same thing at Oakwood Elementary School.

*** National ***

* NYT | Microsoft Says It Has Created a New State of Matter to Power Quantum Computers: On Wednesday, Microsoft’s scientists said they had built what is known as a “topological qubit” based on this new phase of physical existence, which could be harnessed to solve mathematical, scientific and technological problems. With the development, Microsoft is raising the stakes in what is set to be the next big technological contest, beyond today’s race over artificial intelligence. Scientists have chased the dream of a quantum computer — a machine that could exploit the strange and exceedingly powerful behavior of subatomic particles or very cold objects — since the 1980s.

* WaPo | Weight-loss drugs aren’t just slimming waists. They’re shifting the economy: Ozempic, and its GLP-1 cousins Mounjaro, Wegovy and Zepbound, may not be the lightbulb, jet airplane or internet, but their impact is expected to be so significant that Jan Hatzius, chief economist at Goldman Sachs, predicts that if 60 million people take the medications by 2028, GDP would be boosted by 1 percent — or several trillion dollars. Hatzius’s analysis was based primarily on the idea that healthier people mean a healthier workforce and, in turn, lower health-care costs. But there’s a lot more to it.

* Tribune | Democratic governors balance whether to fight or pacify after Donald Trump threatens one of their own: President Donald Trump’s real-time confrontation with Maine’s governor over transgender athletes captured the conundrum many Democratic governors are facing in the Republican’s second term. Gov. Janet Mills’ vow that she would see Trump in court over his threat to withhold money from the state if it didn’t comply with his executive order delighted Democrats who want more strident pushback. But the dust-up that played out in the open Friday as Trump hosted governors at the White House ticked off a president known to retaliate against people he considers enemies.

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

Monday, Feb 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Feb 24, 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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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Feb 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Feb 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Chicago’s very own Mary Lane will play us out

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Feb 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Daily Herald

Hoping to resolve a legal challenge, a group of suburban Republican leaders on Friday announced it is reopening applications for the vacant 26th Senate District seat.

The maneuver halts Barrington Hills Trustee Darby Hills’ appointment to the post, which was held by Republican Dan McConchie until his Feb. 2 resignation.

Hills and the other three original applicants will be considered for the seat and won’t have to reapply, said Lake County Republican Party Chair Keith Brin, who leads the legislative committee overseeing the appointment process. Any additional applicants will be interviewed before a public vote is taken at 1 p.m. Feb. 28 at Palatine Township Republican Organization headquarters, 765 N. Quentin Road, Palatine.

* Background is here if you need it…

On February 21, 2025, Hon. Victoria Breslan ordered the Will County Clerk’s Office and the Will County State’s Attorney’s Office to keep Democratic Nominee for Joliet Township Supervisor Cesar Guerrero on the ballot in the 2025 Consolidated Municipal Election.

“Voters have the right to a free and fair election. Today, that right was upheld,” said Guerrero, “We’re grateful for Judge Breslan’s decision today which ensures that the people of Joliet Township get to exercise their right to choose at the ballot box. I’m ready to get back to work and focus on the issues that matter to Joliet Township voters: effective government solutions to our community’s needs.”

* Crain’s

Rivian Automotive reported a fourth-quarter net loss of $744 million on mostly flat sales but delivered on its forecast for a modest gross profit, the company said today. In the year-earlier period, Rivian reported a net loss of $1.5 billion.

The automaker also said it expected to sell fewer vehicles this year compared with last year.

Despite the red ink, the electric vehicle maker reported a positive gross profit of $170 million, partly through regulatory credits that it sells to other automakers to help them meet emissions standards.

In the year-earlier quarter, Rivian reported a gross loss of $606 million.

*** Statehouse News ***

* The Triibe | Black and brown veterans call on Gov. Pritzker for pardons to avoid deportations: The group is calling on Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker to act urgently to issue pardons to six veterans who were convicted of crimes that were committed in Illinois. It’s unclear if the six have already served out their prison sentences; the group of veterans did not name the six due to fear of targeting. The six are “in exile,” according to the group, and are currently based in Illinois, Texas, Mexico, Peru, Guatemala and Guyana. Grassroots organizations in attendance at Healthy Hood were Black Deported Veterans of America (BDVA), Common Defense, Centro Sin Fronteras and Illinois LULAC.

* Courthouse News Service | Can the KIND Act help fix Illinois’ foster care system?: tarting in July, the Illinois Department of Family and Child Services will make certified relative caregivers eligible for compensation at the same rates as licensed foster homes. Those who aren’t certified are still eligible to receive “no less” than 90% of that funding. The bill also eases standards for kinship caregivers, so that they’re no more restrictive than what federal law requires.

* Sun-Times | Chicago students share mixed feelings on Pritzker proposal to restrict classroom use of cellphones: Seniors Diego Servin and Esmeralda Orozco say they don’t even bother bringing their phones to school anymore. Orozco, 17, says she doesn’t think the ban is the solution to keeping students engaged. “If someone doesn’t want to do their work, they’re going to find a way not to do it,” she said. “So I don’t think having your cellphone will make a difference.”

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | Illinois tourism office spotlights Black History Month and Black-owned businesses: The Illinois Office of Tourism this month launched a new Black History Month webpage to promote travel to places across the state that celebrate Black culture, as well as to spotlight Black-owned businesses from bakeries to barbecue restaurants. “The goal is to elevate the voices and stories of Black Illinoisans, highlighting how their entrepreneurial efforts and creativity shape the state’s success,” Kristin Richards, director of Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, said in a statement. The department oversees the Illinois Office of Tourism.

* Farm Week | IPT Bull Sale breaks record sale average: The 2025 Illinois Performance Tested (IPT) Bull Sale reached a new record average of $7,096 on 33 lots for a sale total of $234,200. That far surpassed the previous record average of $4,966 on 43 lots in 2024. “This sale continues to be one of the best sources for total performance genetics in the Midwest,” Sale Manager Travis Meteer said of the event held on Feb. 20 during the Illinois Beef Expo in Springfield. “During the past 57 years, the sale has sold 5,030 bulls valued at over $10 million.”

* 25News Now | Illinois students will now be required to take the ACT test instead of the SAT: “It’s going to be good”, Peoria Sylvan Learning Center Director Shawna Stewart said. “I think it’s going to be better just with all the changes that ACT is laying out with giving students more time with less questions. I think it’s good that they’re going to make science a separate score from the reading the English and the math.” A big difference between the two tests is that the ACT includes a science and optional essay section.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Mayor Johnson to Form Task Force to Rid CPD of Extremist Groups, After 8 Month Delay: Johnson’s decision to launch the effort comes nearly eight months after Inspector General Deborah Witzburg urged him to take that step as part of an effort to “implement a comprehensive, whole-of-government approach to preventing, identifying and eliminating extremist and anti-government activities and associations within CPD.” Witzburg told WTTW News Thursday evening that it was “very good news” that Johnson had finally accepted the recommendation her office made in July, after the third investigation of CPD members with ties to right-wing extremist groups since 2022 ended without any of the officers being disciplined.

* Tribune | Chicago Police Board meets for first time without exiting COPA leader: According to data made publicly available by COPA since May 2021, the month Kersten was named interim chief administrator by former mayor Lori Lightfoot, the agency has opened more than 2,400 investigations based on complaints of police misconduct in the years since. Since the start of 2021, COPA has called for CPD to suspend 1,074 officers, though the lengths of those proposed suspensions were not known. Meanwhile, the agency has recommended CPD fire 188 officers in the last four years, according to agency data.

* WBEZ | Anjanette Young, victim of an infamous 2019 wrongful Chicago police raid, marks another year without reform: “Six years since I stood before officers — crying, pleading, afraid — only to be ignored,” Young said at a news conference outside City Hall Friday. “And yet I stand here again, afraid and demanding for justice, accountability, still demanding that those in power would keep their promise.” Young criticized Mayor Brandon Johnson for delays, though she said she doesn’t blame him that “we haven’t gotten it right.”

* Block Club Chicago | ‘Devastating’ Trump Funding Cuts To Disrupt Diabetes, Cancer And HIV Research, UIC Faculty Say: “These are life and death matters,” said Aaron Krall, president of the union representing tenured and nontenured professors at the University of Illinois at Chicago. “We have researchers on this campus right now and across the city who are working to save people’s lives.”

* Crain’s | 179 Chicago jobs cut as Blackstone consolidates home rental business: The 179 job cuts were disclosed in a WARN notice filed with the state Feb. 7 as the company is absorbed into Tricon Residential, another Blackstone subsidiary, in a process that started seven months ago. Blackstone did not comment on whether employees would be able to transfer to other Tricon offices. […] “Rent-to-own has this really sordid history. It’s an area of the housing market that remains under-regulated. That’s part of the attraction for many operators,” David Reiss, research director for the Center for Urban Business Entrepreneurship at Brooklyn Law School, told Business Insider.

* Tribune | Hundreds of vacant lots in Chicago to be sold after landlords’ bankruptcy, opening up opportunities for redevelopment: Community advocates say it’s a chance to get the properties into the hands of fresh owners who can fill the empty spaces with new homes, businesses or affordable apartments. “It’s all up for grabs, and I think everyone in Englewood is following it,” said Felicia Slaton-Young, executive director of the Greater Englewood Chamber of Commerce. “Some of the properties are along commercial corridors, and it’s negatively impacted Englewood because these owners sat on them with no true plan of development. So, there is definitely the opportunity for revitalization.”

* Crain’s | Law firm moving across the street from Google’s future Loop home: It’s one of many moves by downtown office tenants to reduce their footprints as post-pandemic work patterns change the way they use workspace. That space-shedding trend is the main reason downtown office vacancy has hit record highs in each of the last 10 quarters. While that’s frustrating for other landlords to hear, Wilson Elser’s move also shows the positive effect that Google’s redevelopment could have on restoring foot traffic in the heart of the Loop. Other companies that have recently signed leases in buildings near the Thompson Center have cited their high expectation of what the tech giant will bring to the area.

* Block Club | Remembering Tuyet Le, A Champion Of Civil Rights, Community Empowerment — And Laughter: “Folks probably don’t know that she is the reason there is a progressive Asian American political movement in Illinois,” said Nebula Li, one of her many proteges at Advancing Justice, who’s now a program officer for the Lawyers Trust Fund of Illinois, a nonprofit foundation.

* WGN | Celebrating 120 years of the Chicago Defender: Ethan Michaeli, author of “The Defender: How Chicago’s Legendary Black Newspaper Changed America,” discusses the history of The Chicago Defender newspaper and the legacy of the paper’s founder, Robert S. Abbott.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Jerry Butler dead at 85; singer known as ‘Iceman’ also had a long career in Cook County politics: The Bronzeville resident went on to a 32-year political career as a member of the Cook County Board, helped by backing from Mayor Harold Washington. Mr. Butler, whose voice was stilled by Parkinson’s disease, died Thursday night at home, according to a family friend. “He’s one of the great voices of our time,” said Motown legend Smokey Robinson, who said he’d admired Mr. Butler since Robinson was a young singer and heard The Impressions’ “For Your Precious Love” for the first time. “It sweeped through ‘the hood.’ I have known Jerry Butler way back, since the Miracles and I first got started, around 1958. He’s a great person, and I love him.”

* Sun-Times | Embattled Dolton Tiffany Henyard faces election challenge from one of her ‘Dream Team’ members: Trustee Jason House was part of Henyard’s “Dream Team” ticket in 2021, when she succeeded in her bid for mayor. At the time, she touted his experience as a bank manager and his service on the south suburb’s finance committee. Now he’s trying to oust from her post.

* Daily Herald | How the Batman-esque ‘Grappler’ is ending police chases in Kane County: The Grappler takes aim at what’s been described as a post-pandemic epidemic of drivers fleeing from police. The sheriff’s office is the first police agency in Illinois to put it into action. “It’s exciting,” David Wolf, chief of operations for the sheriff’s office, told us this week. “We can stop a pursuit before it really starts.” The Grappler operates like its name implies — by grabbing hold of a fleeing vehicle and stopping it in its tracks.

* Trains.com | Metra donates F40C locomotive to Illinois Railway Museum: Metra has donated F40C No. 614, one of just two such surviving locomotives, to the Illinois Railway Museum. IRM says in a press release that it hopes to restore the locomotive to operating condition. It had seen some cannibalization for parts during its final years in storage at Metra, and is missing components including its turbocharger, aftercoolers, radiators and ducts.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Furnace malfunctions at Belleville school, leaving students to rely on portable heaters: The school used portable heaters in the affected areas on Tuesday. Thursday, students, teachers and staff relocated to warmer parts of the school, Belleville District 118 Superintendent Ryan Boike said. He said temperatures in the affected classrooms were around 60 degrees on Thursday. Illinois Department of Public Health’s website says classrooms should between 68 and 75 degrees during the winter.

* PJ Star | ‘Piece of garbage’: Campaign mailers heat up Peoria mayoral race as primary nears: In particular, a campaign mailer sent out by Kelly struck the wrong tone with his opponents, who both claim the mailer features inaccuracies about their positions, calling things Kelly wrote about them in the mailer “erroneous” and “desperate.”Each candidate sent out multiple campaign mailers, but only Kelly’s mailer — which is the largest and most information-dense of the three — mentioned the other candidates by name.

* WCIA | USPS announces reversal of plans to Champaign facility, operations and jobs staying put: The plans were opposed by community members, local politicians, postal workers and their union, and two congresswomen who represent Central Illinois. In an act of bipartisanship, Democrat Nikki Budzinski (IL-13) and Republican Mary Miller (IL-15) jointly penned a letter to Postmaster General Louis DeJoy to explain the downsides of this plan. On Friday, the USPS announced that it was backing down on these plans. Officials said the decision to reverse course was made possible by a proposed operational strategy that could save the USPS $3 billion a year nationwide. This would allow the USPS to absorb the cost of continuing to provide local cancellation service in Champaign.

* Smile Politely | Nick Offerman returns to the University of Illinois for Japan House fundraiser: From woodshop sage to Parks & Rec icon, Nick Offerman is bringing his signature blend of wit and wisdom home his alma mater this March. Catch him first at Krannert Center for the Performing Arts on Friday, March 7, for a book signing of his latest book, Where the Deer and the Antelope Play (leave your Ron Swanson fanart at home, folks – it’s strictly the new book at this shindig).

*** National ***

* Press Release | NCSL Joins Others in Expressing Concerns Over Federal Medicaid Proposals: Medicaid accounts for over half of all federal funds to states and is the largest source of federal funding for state budgets, making it essential to states’ ability to design and administer healthcare programs that meet the unique needs of their populations. Preserving state flexibility and preventing significant funding cuts are both critical to ensuring Medicaid can be tailored to local priorities, as such cuts would severely limit this ability, forcing states to reduce services, restrict eligibility, or shift costs to local governments. These reductions would jeopardize access to affordable healthcare and long-term services and place an unsustainable financial burden on states and counties, which often serve as payers of last resort.

* CNN | US consumer sentiment plunges over tariff and inflation fears: The University of Michigan’s latest survey, released Friday, showed that US consumer sentiment declined in February for the second consecutive month, according to a final reading, down by a steep 10% from January. That was double the decline initially reported earlier this month. It’s a stunning about-face after American consumers and businesses grew hopeful (briefly) about the economy’s future following Trump’s election in November. The latest decline in consumer sentiment was driven by worries over Trump’s tariffs potentially jacking up prices.

* MediaIte | New WaPo Poll Reveals 83% of American Disapprove of Trump’s Jan. 6th Pardons for Violent Rioters: The poll found that this decision by Trump was his most unpopular move since retaking the White House. More than 8 in 10, 0r 83%, oppose the pardons for violent criminal offenders, while 55% of Americans oppose the pardons for those rioters convicted of nonviolent crimes. Only 14% of those surveyed in the poll agreed with Trump’s decision to pardon violent criminals and three percent had no opinion or refused to answer the poll’s question.

* WTTW | ‘Bird Flu’ Has Been Confirmed in Rats for the First Time: USDA: The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) confirmed the presence of the “bird flu” virus in four rats submitted for testing. All of the rats were found in Riverside, California. In the last month alone, APHIS has confirmed bird flu in a number of wild and domesticated animals. In addition to the rats, numerous house cats, a harbor seal and a pair of bottlenose dolphins tested positive for HPAI.

  4 Comments      


Pritzker’s proposed homeless program cuts criticized

Friday, Feb 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This statement from the Housing Action Illinois and the Illinois Shelter Alliance kinda fell through the cracks on Wednesday, but I wanted you to see it…

Governor Pritzker’s fiscal year 2026 budget proposal, announced today, includes $282.7 million for the HOME Illinois line item, a 2.6% percent reduction compared to the current year funding of $290.3 million.

The proposal also allocates $72.4 million in additional funding for these programs: Emergency and Transitional Housing, Homelessness Prevention, Homeless Youth, and Supportive Housing. These are flat-funded compared to the current year budget. The HOME Illinois line item provides additional funding for the programs listed above, as well as many other programs, such as court-based rent assistance, shelter diversion, and rapid rehousing.

Governor Pritzker and the General Assembly have made significant new investments over the last two years to support the HOME Illinois plan, which reversed a long history of state budgets with no or only very minimal budget increases from year to year.

Unfortunately, the proposed FY26 budget does not build on that progress; instead, it has a decrease. We understand the State of Illinois’ budget challenges and we appreciate efforts by the governor’s office and state agencies to use existing resources as effectively as possible by increasing some specific uses for HOME Illinois while decreasing others.

However, it is critical to continue increasing overall funding each year, particularly for emergency shelters, which serve people with absolutely no place else to go. It will take many years of consistent, significant investments to meet the plan’s goals of reaching functional zero homelessness, where instances of people not having a home are rare and brief.

All HOME Illinois programs, including funds that go to homeless shelters, rely on a strong network of nonprofit agencies around the state to implement the programs working with people in crisis. In addition to the benefits to the families and individuals being served, these agencies provide jobs and contribute to Illinois’ economy.

The State’s two-year HOME Illinois plan, released near the end of 2024, estimated a shelter bed deficit of 5,379 beds statewide, based on 10,044 being available. There is also a deficit of 10,972 permanent supportive housing units and other rental housing necessary to end homelessness.

Based on the shortage of shelter beds, more than 5,000 people at a time—many of them children—will continue to struggle for daily survival. As the Illinois Shelter Alliance and 250+ organizational partners stated in our December 23 letter to Governor Pritzker requesting a $100 million budget increase for HOME Illinois, including $40 million for shelter: every shelter bed that does not exist represents a person, often a child, who has literally no place to call home.

The lack of emergency shelter often forces people to live outside, in a car and/or a place where their physical safety and life is at risk. For the most vulnerable, including people who are victims of domestic violence and people with mental illness, having access to emergency shelter makes the difference between life and death.

Last year, the Illinois Department of Public Health completed a five-year Homeless Morbidity and Mortality Report. Based on the findings, the average life expectancy for someone experiencing homelessness is nearly 20 years lessthan someone not experiencing homelessness. In addition, people experiencing homelessness had $16 billion in emergency medical costs over five years.

We support the Governor’s focus on fiscal responsibility. However, under-funding shelter and housing is shortsighted and ultimately results in higher healthcare spending.

We urge the Governor and legislature to address this imbalance by funding additional shelter and affordable rental housing, including permanent supportive housing, in the final fiscal year 2026 budget.

The vast majority of the state budget supports basic human needs, like K-12 public education, and the proposed state budget rightly included funding increases for certain high priorities. We also ask Governor Pritzker and the General Assembly to ensure that the State of Illinois also has adequate revenue to keep making progress towards meeting all our high priorities, including making sure everyone has access to shelter if they need it, as well as an affordable place to call home.

* Excerpt from the Chicago Coalition to end Homelessness press release…

After multiple years of increased funding for HOME Illinois, the proposed $7.3 million decrease is disheartening, as we know more funding is sorely needed to address homelessness. CCH has traditionally advocated for funding for specific line items, which allows us to better understand how funds are utilized and assess when and how underspending occurs. This is especially pertinent when there are delays in contracting and payment from the state.

We applaud the $2 million increase to supportive housing funding, but flat funding the traditional housing line items (Homelessness Prevention, Homeless Youth, and Emergency and Transitional Housing) means fewer people experiencing homelessness in Illinois will get the housing and services they need.

As the cost of living rises annually due to inflation and COVID housing protections expire, eligible households need the amount of assistance to rise as well. As the Governor noted in his budget address, “One of the biggest affordability challenges people are facing is housing.”

A statement from the Supportive Housing Providers Association is here.

  9 Comments      


ILGOP calls out Jewish governor for ‘vile, antisemitic attacks” (Updated)

Friday, Feb 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Actually, you may want to read it again to refresh your memory because you’re not seeing many actual quotes in responses like the one below. Also, calling a Jewish person who helped found a Holocaust museum an antisemite may be a first…

ILGOP Responds To Pritzker’s Vile, Antisemitic Attacks

CHICAGO — Lost in the shuffle of the grandstanding and hypocrisy from Governor Pritzker’s budget speech was the dangerous, divisive rhetoric he used – comparing President Trump and the Republican Party to Nazi’s.
During Wednesday’s budget speech, Pritzker referred to Nazi’s six times, painting an inaccurate and dangerously partisan picture of the Republican Party. As Pritzker continues to prepare for his 2028 run for President, ILGOP Chair Kathy Salvi released the following statement:

“JB Pritzker stoops to a new low and needs to be condemned by both Democrats and Republicans. His disgusting and repulsive attack on Republicans and this administration comes at a time when President Trump and Republicans are supporting Israel and the Jewish people as they defend themselves from barbaric terrorists. Meanwhile, JB Pritzker is standing with criminal illegals and further dividing our great nation. At the Illinois Republican Party, we continue to fight with the Trump Administration to combat an unprecedented wave of antisemitism and will always call out Pritzker’s repulsive language.”

Bottom Line: In their effort to combat vile, antisemitic attacks like those by Governor Pritzker on Wednesday, President Trump and Republicans are fighting antisemitism in the United States.

* Pritzker was asked about this on Wednesday after his speech

Q: How is it not an insult to half the American public who voted for Trump when you’re talking about Trump being a Nazi?

Pritzker: Those words never came out of my mouth. That is not true what you just said.

Here is what I would say. I think it was important to talk about the destruction of a constitutional republic. I gave my own experience with it. I think something that’s actually unique to a little that we, that famous, the most famous case, went to the Supreme Court around an issue like the challenge of Nazis in America or in the world. And so I talked about that. I mean, we had a whole Holocaust Museum that was built because of that. I feel very passionately that we always need to be on guard about the future of our democracy, and there was a lot of discussion about it in the 2024 campaign. I never thought that that was something that voters would pay lots of close attention to, because people don’t know what that means.

What does it mean to say that democracy is challenged? Some people understand. Many people don’t. What they do understand is that prices are going up. They do understand that their livelihoods are challenged and they were promised certain things that are now not being delivered, and indeed, they’re getting worse because of the policies of the Trump administration. So I was just trying to bring all those things together to address what I think is a gathering storm in this country, and to recognize that what happened in Europe in the last century is something that could happen really anywhere.

The topic was also debated on the House floor on Thursday. From Rep. Dan Didech’s comments

As a Jewish American, as a Jewish member of the General Assembly who represents one of the largest Jewish communities in the entire state of Illinois, I have spent the last year and a half with my life dominated by the rise of antisemitism. Among the most pernicious forms of antisemitism is conflating the actions of the government of Israel with Jewish Americans. Jewish Americans are diverse. We have a range of opinions about the state of Israel. I count myself as a supporter of the state of Israel. But when you say on the floor, you support Israel, and that makes you ‘Team Jew,’ you are engaging in among the most pernicious forms of antisemitism that exists.

I’ve asked the Pritzker campaign for a response.

…Adding… From the Pritzker campaign…

He said what he said.

  56 Comments      


RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois

Friday, Feb 21, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail creates more jobs in Illinois than any other private sector employer, with one out of every four workers employed by the retail sector. Importantly, retail is an industry in which everyone, regardless of credentials, can find a viable career path.

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

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It’s just a bill

Friday, Feb 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Illinois End-of-Life Options Coalition…

A Lombard woman dying of a rare and aggressive form of cancer, a mom whose only son died peacefully after using a medical aid in dying law in California and health experts will join members of the Illinois Senate Executive Committee during the first hearing on the End of Life Options for Terminally Ill Patients Act (SB9) on Friday at 10 a.m.

The compassionate bill would allow mentally capable, terminally ill adults with six months or less to live the option to request a prescription for medication that they could decide to take to die peacefully.

WHY: Seven out of 10 Illinois likely voters (71%) want the Illinois legislature to pass medical aid-in-dying legislation, according to a February 2023 Impact Research poll. This majority spans the demographic, political, racial, and religious spectrums, including 87% of Democratic voters, 86% of Latino voters, 73% of voters living with disabilities, 69% of Independent, African American/Black, White, and Catholic voters, 58% of non-Catholic Christians and 50% of Republican voters. In contrast, fewer than one in five Illinois voters (17%) oppose medical aid in dying.

WHO: Lead sponsor Senator Linda Holmes, other sponsors and legislators

Illinoisans who will testify about the legislation include: Deb Robertson, a 66-year-old Lombard woman living with a rare, aggressive and terminal cancer, and a member of the Illinois End-of-Life Options Coalition; Suzy Flack, a Chicago mom, whose only son, Andrew ‘Drew’ Flack, died peacefully from cancer after using the End of Life Option Act in California; Diana Barnard MD, a family practice Vermont physician who prescribes medical aid in dying medication to dying Vermonters; Khadine Bennett, Director of Advocacy and Intergovernmental Affairs, ACLU of Illinois; Callie Riley, Regional Advocacy Director, Compassion & Choices

WHEN: Friday, February 21, 2025, 10AM

WHERE: Michael A. Bilandic Building, Room C600, 160 N LaSalle St, Chicago, IL

* Crain’s

A state senator has filed a bill to establish a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in Illinois, arguing financial consumers need a watchdog after President Donald Trump gutted the federal agency in the early days of his administration.

“When they close the doors it begs the question, ‘What will happen now?’,” said Illinois Sen. Mark Walker, D-Arlington Heights. “I think that to have people that specialize in financial services to investigate these kinds of crimes as essential.”

Walker, a Democrat representing the northwest suburbs, filed the bill Feb. 4 to establish the Consumer Financial Protection Law, which calls for expanding the authority of the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. The proposal, which if passed would take effect at the beginning of next year, comes as Trump’s efforts to weaken the agency through widespread layoffs are tied up in the federal courts. […]

The Illinois banking industry claims the move to create a state-level version of the CFPB would just add another layer, creating confusion about how financial firms can operate, particularly ones with a presence in multiple states and countries. California already has its own version—the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation—created in 2020.

* 25News Now

Many Central Illinois communities face housing shortages. Local lawmakers are sponsoring a bipartisan bill hoping to add more housing through tax credits.

Lawmakers hope that the Build Illinois Homes Act will pass this year, after several attempts in the past.

If passed, the tax credit will not have an immediate financial impact. It will only cost the state money after people live in newly built affordable housing, which will be years down the road. […]

According to co-sponsor Rep. Ryan Spain, a Republican from Peoria, this would be a relatively small tax credit at only $20 million annually.

“Really, it’s seeking to address the problem of affordable housing. We need much more of it throughout the state, especially in Peoria. We need to have people that can afford to live downtown, in the warehouse district,” Spain said.

* HB3858 from Rep. Tony McCombie

Amends the Wildlife Code. Abolishes any Chronic Wasting Disease programs established within or conducted by the Department of Natural Resources. Makes conforming changes in the Code.

* High Speed Rail Alliance

Because of its political heft and Chicago’s role as the nation’s rail hub, a growing and dynamic railway program in Illinois will transform the national conversation.

Three newly introduced pieces of legislation offer a roadmap to realize this vision. We would like to thank Senator Terri Bryant (R- Murphysboro), Senator Mike Porfirio (D-Burbank), Senator Steve Stadelman (D-Rockford), Representative Matt Hanson (D-Batavia), and Representative Martin Moylan (D-Des Plaines), for their leadership on this effort.

    - SB1901 (Stadelman) and HB3285 (Hanson) Funding a growing and dynamic State Railway Program
    - SB1863 (Bryant) and HB2938 (Moylan) Initial design and engineering for high-speed and regional rail
    - SB2284 (Porfirio) and HB3166 (Moylan)
    Creating an intercity bus program within IDOT’s Bureau of Railroads

  24 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Feb 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  13 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Feb 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: State regulators order Peoples Gas to finish pipeline replacement by 2035. Tribune

    - State regulators Thursday gave Peoples Gas the green light to resume its long-running, multibillion-dollar pipeline replacement program, but with a narrowed focus, accelerated timeline and greater accountability.
    - The order directs the utility to retire the remaining 1,000 miles of aging leak-prone cast iron and ductile pipes running under Chicago by 2035.
    - A safety monitor will oversee and report on Peoples’ progress annually beginning in 2027, with the threat of civil penalties if the company “fails to comply with the completion deadline.”

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson criticizes ethics reform recommended by inspector general: Mayor Brandon Johnson Thursday ripped a proposal Chicago’s top independent watchdog recommended as a way to prevent him and future mayors from impeding investigations by her office. […] The legislation matched recommendations Inspector General Deborah Witzburg made in a recent letter to aldermen as she criticized the mayor-controlled Law Department for hindering investigations that “may result in embarrassment or political consequences to City leaders.”

* WBEZ | Transgender teens and their parents speak out after Lurie Children’s pauses surgeries: In the two weeks since Lurie paused surgeries for transgender youth, WBEZ has spoken with 10 patients or their parents about what it means for their lives. They described their disappointment, their loss of hope for one day having a procedure, and their anger that this is coming now, after they already feel threatened and marginalized by hateful rhetoric around the country.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Illinois Department of Human Services lines up leader for consolidated mental health, substance abuse division: David Albert, head of DHS’ Division of Mental Health, will lead the new Division of Behavioral Health and Recovery. Rafael Rivera, interim head of the Division of Substance Use Prevention and Recovery, will be assistant director of the combined department, the IDHS spokesperson said.

* Illinois Times | Don Tracy clears his name: A six-year legal battle recently came to an end with longtime GOP powerbroker Don Tracy claiming victory. In 2019, the Illinois executive inspector general found the Springfield lawyer engaged in a prohibited political activity by making a $1,000 campaign contribution to a legislative candidate while serving as chair of the Illinois Gaming Board. But Tracy said that was nonsense because the contribution made to Republican Seth McMillan, who was challenging then-Sen. Andy Manar, a Democrat, was made not by him but by his wife, Wanda, from their joint checking account.

*** Statewide ***

* NBC Chicago | Not everyone needs a Real ID at May deadline — or possibly ever. Here’s who does: “There has been a lot of confusion and misinformation when it comes to Real IDs. So let me try to clarify. As of May 7, if you have a current valid standard driver’s license, you do not need a real I.D. to legally drive a vehicle,” Giannoulias said in a press conference Thursday. “You do not need a Real ID to show identification. You do not need a Real ID for proof of citizenship. As of May 7, you will need a Real ID-compliant driver’s license or state ID if you are over the age of 18 and intend to fly a commercial airline or visit certain federal facilities. But let me be very clear: you can still fly if you have a valid U.S. passport.”

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Alderman introduces plan to punish Chicago city employees and officers for having extremist ties: The Chicago Police Department and Mayor Brandon Johnson have faced growing calls to fire police officers with ties to hate and extremist groups. With those concerns in mind, Ald. Matt Martin, 47th Ward and chair of the City Council’s Committee on Ethics and Government Oversight, said the city needs to quickly investigate allegations and cease employment for those actively participating in extremism groups.

* Sun-Times | Andrea Kersten headed COPA, the agency that investigates Chicago police misconduct. Here’s what happened before she quit.: The backstage drama days before she resigned included a threatened no-confidence vote by a city oversight panel that could have led to Kersten being fired as chief administrator of the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, sources told the Chicago Sun-Times.

* Sun-Times | Amid heated debate, city agency endorses ‘framework’ to change zoning on Broadway: Called a “land use framework,” the proposal recommends that the city replace a quilt of zoning rules for property along Broadway mostly with a category that critics said could allow for the densest development outside of downtown. The proposal sets “clear expectations” for growth, said Katharyn Hurd of the city’s Department of Planning and Development. But it doesn’t authorize any project or zoning change, matters that would require City Council approval.

* Sun-Times | Everything Cubs, White Sox fans need to know about spring-training TV, radio broadcasts: How great was it to see a Major League Baseball game Thursday on TV? MLB Network’s broadcast of the Cubs-Dodgers spring-training game warmed my heart amid the bitter cold outside. It didn’t matter that it was SportsNet LA’s broadcasters and not Marquee Sports Network’s crew. It could’ve been a Marlins-Rays game, for all I cared. It was baseball.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WTTW | City of Aurora Staff Aided Development of Privately Owned Tourism App at No Cost to App’s Owner, a Mayoral Ally: For the last several months, the city of Aurora has been proudly promoting a new mobile app aimed at drawing more visitors to its downtown attractions. […] But it’s not Aurora that owns the app — it was developed by a company whose owner’s firms have received multiple lucrative contracts and incentives from the city, and who has supported the campaign funds of Irvin and his allies.

* Sun-Times | In Cicero’s primary, longtime Town President Larry Dominick faces a stiff challenge from Esteban Rodriguez: Dominick — who has served as town president since May 2005 and last ran uncontested in 2021 — has focused his policies largely on public safety. Rodriguez stepped down in January as executive director of Corazón Community Services, a Cicero-based nonprofit.

* Daily Southtown | Will County judge to decide if one of four candidates removed by clerk should be reinstated: Burt Odelson, an attorney for Joliet Township supervisor candidate Cesar Guerrero, said Guerrero has paid back $6,550 in penalties from the Illinois State Board of Elections, and is no longer on the ballot forfeiture list. Odelson said Democratic precinct committee persons have nominated Guerrero to fill the vacancy caused when he was removed from the ballot, but Parker has not accepted that nomination.

* Daily Northwestern | University President Michael Schill provides update after Education Department gives universities two weeks to eliminate race-based programs: In a letter sent to universities late last Friday, the Education Department threatened federal funding if universities fail to comply with guidance against considering race in scholarship or hiring decisions or acknowledging race in “all other aspects of student, academic and campus life” within fourteen days. This update comes after a Jan. 21 executive order entitled “Ending Illegal Discrimination and Restoring Merit-Based Opportunity,” which forbids federal funding for organizations that are found to be discriminating based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin.

* Shaw Local | Manteno uses PR firm to answer questions: When the village of Manteno was inundated with calls, questions and information requests several months ago, it turned to a public relations firm for help. It was the beginning of a contentious time for the village back in the fall of 2023, when the proposed Gotion lithium battery plant was seeking a change of zoning from light to heavy industrial at the 333 S. Spruce St. site. The village turned to Jasculca Terman Strategic Communications in Chicago to handle public relations for all the planning and board meetings surrounding the zoning change.

* Daily Herald | What’s in store for Lisle’s French market; food trucks to roll into downtown: Lisle trustees next month will consider a revised agreement with the organizer of the village’s French market that will keep it in town through October 2027. Bensidoun USA, the operator of more sprawling markets in downtown Wheaton and Geneva, has proposed moving Lisle’s to a commuter parking lot along Burlington Avenue to accommodate a larger market for the 2026 season and beyond. The lot could support as many as 36 to 40 vendors.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Opponents question timing of Belleville city clerk candidate’s decision to run: Why would someone launch a campaign for Belleville city clerk within days of their election as a St. Clair County official? That’s one of the questions being asked by Irma Golliday’s opponents and others in local political circles. Some also wonder why she would delve into Belleville politics after decades of community involvement in East St. Louis. “It doesn’t make any sense,” said Brian Triska, who lost his bid to replace Golliday on the St. Clair County Board of Review in November.

* Freedom From Religion Foundation | FFRF stops staff favoritism toward Christian club in Illinois school district: The Freedom From Religion Foundation has made certain that Geneseo Community Unit School District #228 employees do not help put together a Christian club’s activities in district schools. The state/church watchdog was informed that staff members regularly organized events for Geneseo Middle School’s Fellowship of Christian Athletes club. For instance, on Dec. 4 last year, a teacher sent out an email to parents organizing an end-of-the-year event for the club that took place on Dec. 10.

* WCIA | Danville superintendent is out: What’s coming next?: On Wednesday, the Danville School Board voted to place Geddis on paid administrative leave and have John Hart, assistant superintendent, take over for now. And on Thursday, WCIA dug deeper into the details of the deal… and the steps to finding a replacement. Board member reactions were a bit of a mixed bag. They were nearly split on the type of search firm to hire to find a replacement. But, they were all able to agree on one thing: it was time for a change.

*** National ***

* WTTW | More Americans Identify as LGBTQ+ Than Ever Before, Poll Finds: The proportion of American adults who identify as LGBTQ+ has risen to 9.3% of the population, according to a Gallup Poll released Thursday. The finding represents an increase of more than 1 percentage point from 2023’s estimate. The proportion of the population identifying as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or non-heterosexual has nearly doubled since 2020 and has jumped from 3.5% since 2012, when it was first measured by Gallup, an analytics and advisory company based in Washington, D.C.

* Fortune | Amid worst U.S. flu season in decades, RFK Jr.–led CDC pulls vaccine campaign: es, seasonal flu shots are still available, and no, it’s not too late to get yours. But you’d be forgiven for being confused, because the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has halted one of its educational flu vaccine campaigns. The agency’s Wild to Mild initiative, launched at the start of the 2023–24 flu season, aimed to inform the public that while getting immunized against the flu doesn’t guarantee you won’t catch an influenza virus, it can protect you from severe illness, hospitalization, and death.

* Bloomberg | Bird Flu Kills Dairy Workers’ Cats, Suggesting a Viral Change: Two house cats died after contracting bird flu in the homes of dairy workers, a troubling sign that the virus may be moving between species and becoming more widespread. The cats’ owners lived in separate households in Michigan and developed symptoms of H5N1 last May, according to a report released Thursday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Both worked on farms that had cases of bird flu and displayed symptoms before the cats fell ill, but declined testing.

  14 Comments      


Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois

Friday, Feb 21, 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/

  Comments Off      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, Feb 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Friday, Feb 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Feb 21, 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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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Feb 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Big Beautiful Bill roundup: Pritzker says special session may not be needed, warns 330,000 Illinoisans could lose Medicaid; Planned Parenthood of Illinois pledges to continue care despite cuts
* RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois
* 'The Chosen One' tones himself down
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
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* Selected react to budget reconciliation bill passage (Updated x3 - Comments open)
* Yesterday's stories

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