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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* New York Times

Stellantis, the company that owns Chrysler and Jeep, said on Wednesday it planned to reopen a factory in Illinois and increase production elsewhere in the United States, a move that is likely to resolve several simmering disputes with the United Automobile Workers union.

The reopening is also likely to help the company in its relations with the Trump administration, and is among the first big changes made by an interim management team that has been running the company since its chief executive, Carlos Tavares, resigned in December.

“These actions are part of our commitment to invest in our U.S. operations to grow our auto production and manufacturing here,” Antonio Filosa, the company’s chief operating officer in North America, said in a statement.

The announcement follows a recent meeting between Stellantis’s chairman, John Elkann, and President Trump, the company said. Mr. Elkann told the president that Stellantis, whose headquarters are in Amsterdam, aimed to strengthen its U.S. manufacturing base and was committed to safeguarding American jobs and to the broader U.S. economy.

* Governor JB Pritzker

“We commend Stellantis on its investment in Belvidere that will put 1,500 Illinoisans back to work in good-paying union jobs and grow the automotive industry in Illinois. This would not be possible without proactive collaboration and coordination between the State of Illinois, Stellantis, UAW, the Biden-Harris Administration, and our champions in Congress, including Senator Durbin, Senator Duckworth, Representative Bill Foster, and Representative Eric Sorensen,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “My administration has worked tirelessly with our partners to secure this investment and we are excited to see it come to fruition. We know there is more work to be done to see this project through and remain committed to expanding economic opportunities for Illinois workers, businesses, and communities to thrive.”

“Growing up in Rockford, just down the road from the Belvidere Assembly Plant, I’ve seen firsthand how layoffs impact our communities. That’s why this announcement of 1,500 jobs coming back is so personal—and so important,” said Representative Eric Sorensen (D-IL). “I’m proud to have fought alongside UAW workers to hold the big auto companies accountable and make this happen. This isn’t just about bringing manufacturing home; It’s about giving Rockford-area families the good-paying jobs they deserve to support their families and thrive.”

* Sun-Times

Prosecutors kicked off closing arguments Wednesday in the trial of former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan, the final opportunity for attorneys to make their case to jurors who will soon begin considering the historic case against the Southwest Side Democrat.

U.S. District Judge John Blakey promised not to put any time limits on the arguments. The lawyers have predicted they’ll last three days, but the trial’s timeline has been difficult to predict since it began in early October.

Jurors will hear first from prosecutors, then from attorneys for Madigan, and then from the team representing his co-defendant, Michael McClain. But prosecutors carry the burden of proof, so they will also make a rebuttal argument, giving them the last word.

The closing arguments follow 11 weeks of testimony, in which jurors heard from more than 60 witnesses. Most notable among them was Madigan himself. He testified for nearly 12 hours over four days earlier this month. McClain opted not to testify.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Crain’s | Reforming Tier 2 pensions could cost the state $30 billion, actuary says: A new Illinois pension reform bill would increase contributions to the state’s three largest retirement systems by a total of nearly $30 billion through fiscal year 2045, according to an actuarial impact study by Segal Group. The study was commissioned by the state Legislature’s Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability as a result of the introduction of a bill in November to close the gap between the pensionable salary cap of state Tier 2 employees and the Social Security wage base.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Allstate to raise Illinois homeowners insurance rates by 14.3%: Allstate is increasing homeowners insurance rates in Illinois by 14.3% beginning Feb. 24, according to a filing with the state last month. The rate hike applies to a “portion” of Illinois customers, with some seeing lesser increases or no changes, an Allstate spokesperson said Monday. “While more frequent, severe weather and higher repair prices have increased insurance claim costs, customers continue to get competitive prices with Allstate and can save money by bundling home and auto,” Allstate said in a statement.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | Lathrop Homes Redevelopment Gets TIF Boost From City Council: The TIF amendment will add almost 13 acres to the district, which is expected to increase its budget from $17.5 million to $60 million to “support planned improvements within the southern portion of the complex” below Diversey Avenue, according to a press release from Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office. The new funding is the latest update in the ongoing redevelopment of the Lathrop Homes, which the Chicago Housing Authority has been converting in recent years from solely public housing into a mix of public, affordable and market-rate units.

* Tribune | Former high-level assessor’s office employee under Berrios charged with taking bribes from lawyer: A former high-ranking director in then-Cook County Assessor Joseph Berrios’ office has been charged with accepting sports tickets, restaurant meals and other bribes from a lawyer in exchange for help with property assessments. Francisco Perez, 50, of Chicago, was charged with one count of bribery conspiracy in a criminal information made public Friday. A court date has not been set, but defendants charged by way of information, rather than by grand jury indictment, typically intend to plead guilty.

* Block Club Chicago | Some Chicagoans Are Afraid To Go To The South And West Sides. In ‘Don’t Go’ Book, Authors Examine Why: In 2018, Johnson founded the acclaimed Folded Map project to connect residents at corresponding addresses on opposite sides of the city and examine how segregation impacts people socially. As part of an expansion of the Folded Map Project, Johnson and Krysan interviewed people to further investigate how they confronted and combatted harmful narratives about the city’s South and West sides. Those interviews, some of which Block Club published in 2021, would eventually lead to “Don’t Go.”

* Sun-Times | Bean There, Plowed That: City announces winning names in third annual snowplow contest: Scoop, There It Is! The nod to the 1993 hit and jock jam staple “(Whoomp!) There It Is” is among the six winning names in Chicago’s third annual snowplow-naming contest. The other winning names, announced by the city’s Department of Streets and Sanitation, include Bozo the Plown, Lollaplowlooza, My Kind of Plow, Snower Wacker and Bean There, Plowed That.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Aurora Beacon-News | After successful pilot, Aurora plans to update business registration process: Almost all businesses within Aurora are required to register with the city annually, but city staff said at meetings recently that the old registration process, which began in 2019, had low participation because it was frustrating and inconvenient. The ongoing pilot approved last April, which lowered the number of questions required to register from over 60 to just 15, along with other changes, brought in more applications last year than ever before, even without a large marketing push, according to Aurora Chief Development Services Officer John Curley.

* Crain’s | Fortune Brands bringing 400 jobs to Deerfield: The home and security company today announced it will expand its presence in Deerfield by consolidating other U.S. offices there and has inked an incentive agreement with the state of Illinois to bring new jobs to the area. FBIN will move its main office to the former Horizon Therapeutics headquarters property at 1 Horizon Way along Interstate 294 from its existing headquarters at the nearby Corporate 500 complex along Lake Cook Road.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | The Pasfield House enters partnership with business expanding cultural engagement: The Culture Experience LLC, or TCE, is focused on spreading Black and Brown culture through the city by hosting events featuring music, dishes and entertainment to help people learn more about underrepresented cultures. As two separately operating businesses under the same roof, the partnership will renew semi-annually with TCE providing online marketing, campaign running and organizing two events per six months for The Pasfield. In return, the LLC is given residency and access to the on-site professional chef and all ties to the LLC will change branding to add the Pasfield name.

* WCIA | City council approves $10,000 Champaign mayoral raise in 2027: An ordinance raising the salary of the Champaign mayor from $35,000 to $45,000 passed Tuesday night. In addition, the ordinance also raises the pay of each of the eight council members from $5,000 to $7,000. The City Council Compensation Task Force recommended the raises in August. Every member voted for it.

* KFVS | Illinois agencies asking for volunteers to help residents affected by ice storm: The Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS)-Serve Illinois is launching a program to help residents needing help in clearing tree limbs downed by the storm. They are asking for volunteers to help with cleanup efforts in Saline, Jackson and Williamson Counties from Friday, Jan. 24 through Friday, February 7. IDHS-Serve Illinois is looking for volunteers 18 years and older who have chainsaws, chainsaw operators and those willing to carry tree limbs and debris.

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Illinois-related Trump coverage roundup

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Illinois

* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker criticizes Trump’s courting of tech CEOs, lack of communication: Pritzker, whose net worth is estimated at $3.7 billion by Forbes, is one of the 1,000 wealthiest people in the world. As one of the richest politicians in U.S. history, he largely self-funded his two campaigns for governor. But on Tuesday, he raised concerns about the prominent appearance of several large tech company CEOs at Trump’s inauguration. […] “These are the wealthiest people in the country who essentially Donald Trump feels better about having them around than having ordinary Americans backing him up or standing with him,” Pritzker said at an unrelated news conference. “And I think it’s just an indication of what this administration is really all about. It isn’t about what he ran on.”

* Pantagraph | ‘Midwestern values’ under siege by Trump, Pritzker says: “It is something that we should have comprehensive immigration reform in this country and not simply have a president who is scaring people, forcing them out of their jobs because they’re afraid to go to work,” Pritzker said, nothing that the typically vibrant business corridor in Chicago’s Little Village neighborhood, long a gateway for Mexican immigrants, has been empty the past few days.

* CBS Chicago | Pritzker slams Trump for trying to end birthright citizenship, demands apology from Musk for gesture compared to Nazi salute: As for Trump’s decision to pardon nearly all of the 1,500 people charged or convicted of crimes in the Jan. 6, 2021 assault on the U.S. Capitol, Pritzker said it reflects an about-face for the Republican party. “What used to be the party of law and order is now the party of chaos and disorder, and that stands against law enforcement. The people who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6 were attacking law enforcement, because that’s who was there guarding the Capitol,” Pritzker said.

Potential Mass Deportations

* Sun-Times | Chicago spared immigration raids Tuesday, but Pritzker warns feds may target ‘2,000 people’: Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday said he believes President Donald Trump’s administration is targeting “as many as 2,000 people” in Chicago in its mass deportation plan. Those numbers come from local law enforcement, according to sources with direct knowledge of the discussions. But the Chicago Police Department declined to comment on that total, as did other police sources. It’s unclear whether the number encompasses the people Trump “border czar” Tom Homan is targeting: criminals who lack legal status and immigrants with deportation orders.

* WBEZ | What can CPS schools and parents do in the face of Donald Trump’s mass deportation threat?: “Under no circumstance are we ever going to compromise our children — whether it is this issue around immigration or something else,” Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez said. Students return to class on Wednesday for the first time since Trump was inaugurated. […] If federal agents show up at their school, principals have been told they should not let them engage with anyone, except on the rare occasion that they have a signed criminal arrest warrant, Martinez said. CPS does not allow immigration agents into schools without a warrant. CPS also has three lawyers at the ready to review any warrants or other paperwork and to advise staff, Martinez said.

* Tribune | ‘People are hiding.’ Chicago immigrants stay home from work to avoid potential ICE arrests: When reports surfaced over the weekend that mass deportations could potentially begin in the Chicago area Tuesday, Martin Ramos informed his boss that he was taking time off from work, stocked up on groceries and decided his kids would skip soccer practice this week. Ramos — who emigrated from Guadalajara, Mexico, without the necessary work permits — spent the first full day of Donald Trump’s second presidency hunkered down with his family and trying to avoid being picked up by ICE agents. An arrest, he knows, would destroy everything he and his wife worked for and force their two boys into an uncertain future.

* WGN | Chicago police reminded they can’t cooperate with deportations: The Illinois law that prohibits local police from detaining a person because of their immigration status was actually signed by former Republican governor Bruce Rauner during the first Trump administration. “I asked leaders in law enforcement, ‘Should I veto the bill or sign this bill?’” Rauner said in 2017. “They all said to me, ‘Governor, this is a reasonable compromise and it will help us do our jobs better.’”

* WCIA | ‘A lot of fear among a lot of people’; Champaign Co. immigrants brace for deportations, arrests: About 2.5 hours away from Chicago, places like Champaign County are preparing for potential arrests and deportations, although there are no clear signs the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) will raid the area. […] “It’s creating a lot of fear among a lot of people,” Lucia Maldonado, Urbana School District Latino family liaison, said. “This is going to affect families, this is going to affect the economy, this is going to affect businesses.”

Jan. 6 Pardons

* WBEZ| Trump’s pardons for Jan. 6 riot help more than 50 defendants from Illinois: More than 50 Donald Trump supporters from Illinois will get their federal rap sheets wiped clean after the new president’s Day 1 signing of about 1,500 pardons related to the notorious riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Dozens of Trump’s supporters from the Chicago area and other parts of the state ended up in the dragnet during the U.S. Justice Department’s enormous, four-year investigation into the failed effort to overturn Trump’s defeat in the 2020 election.

* BND | Four from southern Illinois are among those Trump pardoned in Jan. 6 Capitol riots: At least four people from southern Illinois were pardoned by President Donald Trump Monday for their roles in the riots inside and around the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Three of the men had pleaded guilty to felony charges, including assaulting a U.S. Capitol Police officer, while another pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge for entering the Capitol building.

* Shaw Local | 2 from McHenry County, convicted in Jan. 6 actions at U.S. Capitol, among those expected to get Trump pardons: Two McHenry County residents who have pleaded guilty to charges connected to their actions on Jan. 6, 2021, at the U.S. Capitol, have been pardoned for their crimes on the first day of President Donald Trump’s second term in office, along with more than 1,500 others. Robert Giacchetti of Crystal Lake and Nhi Ngoc Mai Le, formerly of Lake in the Hills, previously pleaded guilty to charges.

* Shaw Local | Convicted Will County residents part of Trump Jan. 6 sweeping pardons: In Will County, there are at least five people who’ve pleaded guilty to federal charges connected to the incident, according to a database from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Washington. Those include Crest Hill couple Amy and John Schubert Jr., Lockport couple Kelly Lynn Fontaine and Brian Dula, and Anthony Carollo, of Lockport. Only Fontaine was sentenced to serve jail time. The others received probation.

Birthright Citizenship

* Tribune | Illinois joins in lawsuit challenging President Donald Trump’s order to end birthright citizenship: Illinois joined three Western states on Tuesday in a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of President Donald Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship. […] A separate lawsuit against the order, aimed at the children of non-U.S. citizens, was filed in Massachusetts by 18 other states. Raoul’s office didn’t immediately respond to a question about why he signed onto the lawsuit filed in federal court in Seattle along with the states of Washington, Arizona and Oregon.

Click here for the Illinois suit.

National

* AP | Justice Department directs prosecutors to probe local efforts to obstruct immigration enforcement: It also directs prosecutors to investigate for potential criminal charges cases in which state and local officials obstruct or impede federal functions. As potential avenues for prosecution, the memo cites a conspiracy offense as well as a law prohibiting the harboring of people in the country illegally. “Federal law prohibits state and local actors from resisting, obstructing and otherwise failing to comply with lawful immigration-related commands and requests,” the memo says. “The U.S. Attorney’s Offices and litigating components of the Department of Justice shall investigate incidents involving any such misconduct for potential prosecution.

Click here for the full memo.

* WaPo | Trump officials pause health agencies’ communications, citing review: The instructions were delivered Tuesday to staff at agencies inside the Department of Health and Human Services, including officials at the Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and National Institutes of Health, one day after the new administration took office, according to the people with knowledge, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private conversations. Some people familiar with the matter acknowledged that they expected some review during a presidential transition but said they were confused by the pause’s scope and indeterminate length.

* AP | US throws out policies limiting arrests of migrants at sensitive locations like schools, churches: The move announced Tuesday reverses guidance that for over a decade has restricted two key federal immigration agencies — Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection — from carrying out immigration enforcement in sensitive locations. “This action empowers the brave men and women in CBP and ICE to enforce our immigration laws and catch criminal aliens — including murderers and rapists — who have illegally come into our country. Criminals will no longer be able to hide in America’s schools and churches to avoid arrest,” the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement Tuesday.

* Business Insider | Trump’s mass deportation plan could drain more than $20 billion a year from Social Security: Some researchers are concerned that deportations could further constrict the already dwindling pool of Social Security funds. In 2022, immigrants living in the US illegally paid $25.7 billion in Social Security taxes and $6.4 billion in Medicare taxes, per the left-leaning Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. That same year, the Social Security Administration reported that it doled out benefits totaling over $1 trillion.

* Chalkbeat | Trump executive orders on immigrants, transgender rights could echo in American schools: Many executive orders are expected to facilitate enhanced immigration enforcement. Around the country, schools are sharing messages of support with families who could be caught up in enforcement actions and encouraging parents to make sure their children’s emergency contacts are up to date in case caregivers are detained. Some school systems are also clarifying how they will respond if immigration agents seek entrance to their buildings, with many saying they will consult their attorneys and only allow agents with signed judicial warrants to enter their schools.

Please remember to take some deep breaths before commenting. Thanks.

  8 Comments      


WBEZ announces ‘voluntary separation program’ for Sun-Times staff, WBEZ business staff (Updated)

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

Chicago Public Media is offering Sun-Times and WBEZ staff members buyout offers as the company comes up on the three-year anniversary of its high-profile merger.

Sun-Times staff and WBEZ business teams, but not WBEZ’s newsroom, are being offered a voluntary separation, according to a memo obtained by Crain’s. Employees who opt to leave Chicago Public Media will be offered an incentive package, though details are unclear.

* Excerpt of the WBEZ announcement

Today, we announced a voluntary separation program across parts of our organization, including the Chicago Sun-Times staff and WBEZ business teams; the WBEZ newsroom will not be impacted. We are offering our employees the opportunity to voluntarily leave Chicago Public Media with an incentive package. Our hope is that this action and other efforts will reduce our costs so that we can avoid more significant cost-cutting measures down the road.

This is a proactive decision that allows us to align our organization’s size with our goals while strengthening our most valuable and impactful initiatives and ensuring our financial sustainability. While we’ve made strides in adapting to the rapidly changing media landscape, these efforts haven’t yet translated into the sustainable revenue we need. Making this adjustment now is a necessary step to position us for long-term success and fully realize the transformative potential of our combined organization.

…Adding… The Chicago Sun-Times Guild

We are disappointed by today’s announcement that Chicago Public Media will seek voluntary staff buyouts.

Our union is frustrated that our organization’s management did not secure more revenue in the past three years to avoid staffing cuts and secure our sustainability.

While we understand this move is meant to cut long-term costs, it’s harder to swallow knowing the exorbitant executive salaries and bonuses we’ve seen CPM shell out in the past few years.

We hope everyone at the organization will share in the pain on our path to sustainability.

We have questions about what these labor cuts could mean for our newsrooms. We urge CPM management in the strongest terms possible to focus all efforts on securing the revenue necessary to support our journalism.

We also urge CPM to find savings in areas other than labor so that our newsrooms can continue serving Chicago. We need all hands on deck to produce the quality print, digital, audio and visual reporting that has made the Chicago Sun-Times and WBEZ the institutions that they are.

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‘Financial shortfall’ causes Planned Parenthood Illinois to close four medication abortion clinics (Updated)

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m sure more will come out on this. Lots of rumors floating around about the reasons. Also, as you’ll recall, Planned Parenthood of Illinois announced earlier this month that its president and CEO Jennifer Welch was stepping down. Emphasis in this press release was added by me…

PLANNED PARENTHOOD OF ILLINOIS RESTRUCTURES TO ENSURE SUSTAINABILITY FOR THE FUTURE
PPIL Closing Four Health Centers, Downsizing Administrative Staff, Expanding Care at Key Locations and Increasing Patient Care Through Telehealth

Realignment Needed due to Increase Patient Volume + Low Reimbursement Rates from Insurers + Rising Health Care Costs

CHICAGO – Planned Parenthood of Illinois (PPIL) is facing a financial shortfall brought on by rising health care costs for in-person care, increase in patient volume needing financial assistance, uncertain patient care landscape under a new national political administration, and the need to create a sustainable future after the overturning of Roe v Wade. To ensure financial health into the future, PPIL has made the difficult decision to close four health centers; Ottawa, Decatur, and Bloomington in Central Illinois and Englewood in Chicago. None of these health centers provide procedural abortion care. Patients will be welcomed at the 13 other health centers across the state and PPIL is expanding patient care at Champaign, Peoria, Springfield, Roseland and Waukegan and through the PPDirect app to minimize patient disruption. Patients will be welcomed at the 13 other health centers across the state. PPIL is planning on expanding appointment availability and access at the Champaign, Peoria, Springfield, and Roseland health centers as well as expanding virtual options via telehealth appointments and the PPDirect app to minimize patient disruption. [Updated by PPIL]

“Patient care is and will always be our number one priority,” said Interim President and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Illinois Tonya Tucker. “We made plans for the patient surge however rising care costs and lower reimbursement rates from insurers is jeopardizing PPIL’s sustainability. Unfortunately, this is the reality many other Planned Parenthood affiliates are facing in the rapidly evolving health care environment. We are making the difficult decisions today so we can continue providing care tomorrow and well into the future.”

Illinois has seen the highest volume of abortion patients coming from other states. Since Roe was overturned in 2022, PPIL has seen a a 47% increase in overall abortion care patients and an unprecedented number of out-of-state patients traveling from more than 40 other states making up nearly a quarter (25%) of our overall abortion patients (before the Dobbs decision it was 3-5%). However, that increase in patient volume, coupled with low reimbursement rates from insurers and rising costs of providing care has resulted in PPIL needing to realign its health centers and staffing.

Appointments at the four health centers will end in March 2025. Patient appointments at Champaign, Peoria, Springfield, Roseland and Waukegan will expand to meet patient demand as needed.

PPIL is also downsizing its administrative staff proportionally to match the changes in the health centers. Where possible, health center staff being displaced by the closures will be offered comparable positions at other locations or transitioned to telehealth.

To meet patient needs through digital means, beginning in February 2025, PPIL is offering medication abortion through the PPDirect app. Currently, PPIL provides birth control, UTI treatment, at-home STI testing and emergency contraception through PPDirect. Adding medication abortion to the suite of services expands access, reduces wait times at health centers and provides the right care patients need wherever they are.

Patients using PPDirect fill out a questionnaire that is reviewed by a PPIL medical professional. PPIL either mails the medication abortion pills to the qualified patients or works with them to schedule an appointment at a health center. Patients can receive follow up care at a PPIL health center if needed and they can make an appointment through the PPDirect app.

“Offering medication abortion through the PPDirect app allows patients to connect with us through their phone,” said Dr. Virgil Reid, Interim Chief Medical Officer. “This expands access because patients can receive the same great care they associate with Planned Parenthood from the comfort of wherever they are in the state. And we are there to answer any questions or schedule an in-person appointment if needed.”

PPIL has been around for 100 years and is committed to being here for our community’s future generations. The decision to close health centers and downsize staff is difficult but necessary to operate a sustainable organization that can continue to provide our community with essential health care and education. PPIL continues to offer medication and procedural abortion, birth control, gender-affirming care, STI testing and treatment, cancer screenings, at health centers across the state. For more information visit ppil.org.

Fascinating timing considering what’s going on in DC right now.

…Adding… Personal PAC CEO Sarah Garza Resnick…

“Illinois remains a critical access point for reproductive care and family planning for people from all across the country. Illinois independent providers, abortion funds and advocacy organizations are prepared to stand in the breach and make sure everyone seeking care in Illinois can continue to access what they need.”

  17 Comments      


A quick Illinois TRUST Act primer

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m seeing a lot of questions about the Illinois TRUST Act and subsequent laws. Some excerpts from the Illinois attorney general’s guidance manual for law enforcement

No federal law compels law enforcement in Illinois to assist with or participate in any immigration enforcement action. At the state level, Illinois law generally prohibits participation in immigration enforcement by state and local law enforcement. For example, a local law enforcement agency in Illinois cannot: give an immigration agent access to individuals in its custody; detain individuals pursuant to a federal administrative warrant; detain individuals pursuant to an immigration detainer request from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE); or share information about individuals in its custody with federal immigration authorities. Importantly, local law enforcement officers cannot arrest an individual for violation of a federal law without a warrant unless state law has granted them authority to do so, and Illinois law prohibits local law enforcement from stopping, arresting, searching, or detaining an individual based on his or her citizenship or immigration status. […]

The federal government cannot require local law enforcement to enforce federal law. In fact, any authorization from the federal government for local law enforcement to enforce federal immigration law is effective only if it is accompanied by authority under state law. Any requests from federal immigration authorities—such as ICE or U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP)—for assistance from local law enforcement to detain an individual or to provide access to individuals held by local authorities must be viewed as requests, not obligations. State law dictates whether local law enforcement can comply with those requests. […]

Local law enforcement may provide these types of assistance only in two narrow circumstances: when they are presented with a federal criminal warrant; or when they are otherwise required by a specific federal law. […]

Only federal officers have the authority to arrest an individual for a violation of civil immigration law without a criminal warrant.

Go read the rest and bookmark this page.

Police agencies who violate the state law can be sued.

  13 Comments      


Pritzker on Trump, the budget, the Red Line and CTU

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Let’s go back to that Mary Ann Ahern interview with Gov. Pritzker. We’ll start with a look at some of his answers about the new POTUS

MAA: How will your budget be impacted? Because what I understand is some state agencies have already been told, ‘Hey, that federal money that you had last year, you’re not going to get it this year.’

Pritzker: Well, that’s not true yet. We haven’t been notified that things that we were getting last year won’t come. We expect it, however, that there are things that will be under attack. For example, Donald Trump, for many years, has been trying to get rid of the expansion of health care, right?… the Obamacare as you know it, the ACA. And it is truly a challenge for hundreds of 1000s of people that they might have their health care taken away by this new federal administration. So this is a problem, right? It’s not something that the state of Illinois cannot fill in the billions of dollars that come with Medicaid coverage, where 50% of it is covered by the federal government. We just can’t we don’t have those dollars. So if that is something that he does that takes away health care from people in the state of Illinois, it is Donald Trump that is ruining the opportunity for people to live healthy lives in our state.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* You’ll recall that the Biden administration just recently finalized a $2 billion grant for an extension of the CTU’s Red Line

MAA: Might the Red Line Extension be impacted?

Pritzker: We’ll, see. You know that that money was awarded. [President Trump] has announced that he’s freezing the awards that were made. Having said that, those were done under the prior administration. Everything that was necessary to make that happen has been done, and so it’s just a question of whether Donald Trump is going to stand in the way. There will be lawsuits if he does. We certainly know that the federal government owes us that money. Now, and again, Donald Trump may break the law because he’s known to do that, and we’re going to have to take him to court if he does.

* After he again criticized Elon Musk, Pritzker was asked about the CTU and issues of antisemitism

MAA: Have you been as outspoken when members of the CTU have also expressed anti semitic remarks?

Pritzker: Oh, I have spoken out. I mean, they know, and I have spoken directly with members of the CTU whenever there has been something said that was antisemitic. Look, I call out racism, any kind of attack on people, at people’s ethnicity, their background, et cetera. It’s uncalled for, it’s inappropriate. It shouldn’t happen. And as you know, I’m somebody who helped and led the building of a Holocaust museum, so this is something that matters deeply to me, protecting our people from that kind of discrimination. So yes, I’ve called it out, and I always will.

Again, go watch the whole thing.

  9 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WGLT

A Republican state lawmaker from Morton is sponsoring a bill making it illegal for insurance companies to place a time limit on anesthesia payment coverage.

Rep. Bill Hauter, who represents a heavily rural area between Bloomington-Normal, Peoria, Decatur and Springfield, said the bill was a response to Blue Cross attempting to place a time limit on anesthesia in New York, Missouri and Connecticut. That decision was upended by public outcry, but in Missouri, the time limit will go into effect in February. […]

Hauter said as a health care worker, he has seen insurance companies focus too much on profit over the well-being of their patients. […]

The bill was created in collaboration with Rep. Diane Blair-Sherlock, D-Villa Park, who called up Hauter after the Blue Cross announcement. Hauter said he anticipates the bill will have further bipartisan support.

* In 2021, an Earlville police officer suffered two fractured vertebrae in his neck during a police chase. The woman involved was sentenced to 30 months of felony probation and 180 days in county jail. The injured officer denounced the probation, saying she should have gone to prison. Sen. Sue Rezin filed SB112 last week

Amends the Illinois Vehicle Code. Provides that any person convicted of the offense of aggravated fleeing or attempting to elude a peace officer commits: a Class 3 felony if the convicted person causes bodily injury to any bystander or member of the public; a Class 2 felony if the convicted person causes bodily injury to the pursuing peace officer; and a Class 1 felony if the convicted person causes great bodily injury or disablement to the pursuing peace officer.

* HB1569 from Rep. Dave Vella

Creates the Access to Medically Necessary Vaccinations Act. Provides that any health care provider in this State must provide a vaccination to a patient if: the patient has requested the specific vaccination to be administered; the health care provider has determined that the vaccination is medically necessary; and the health care provider has a stock of one or more doses of the vaccination that have not been reserved for another patient. Prohibits a health care provider from preventing a medically necessary vaccination from being administered to a patient by keeping separate stocks of the vaccination for patients with private insurance and stocks of the vaccination for patients with Medicaid.

* Sen. Craig Wilcox filed SB140 last week

Amends the Illinois Income Tax Act. Creates an income tax deduction for gratuities that are included in the taxpayer’s federal adjusted gross income. Effective immediately.

* Rep. Jaime Andrade filed HB1565

Creates the Anti-Click Gambling Data Analytics Collection Act. Provides that no entity that operates a remote gambling platform or a subsidiary of the entity shall collect data from a participant with the intent to predict how the participant will gamble in a particular gambling or betting scenario. Effective immediately.

Business Insider

Just as Netflix uses machine learning and data science to tailor each user’s feed to what they’re most likely to binge, the startup Future Anthem uses similar tools to keep users hooked on casino websites. The UK-based software provider builds a personalized, dynamic homepage, presenting the exact right game — bingo, slots, poker — to cater to a player’s desires at the exact right moment, offering bonuses if the player is getting dejected and keeping them betting for longer. […]

In a research paper published last May, the consultancy giant Deloitte’s Global Lottery and Gambling Centre of Excellence predicted a future where every game could be personalized in real time to appeal to individual gamblers. Generative AI, the authors wrote, could “allow the games themselves to generate content based on the explicit or even implicit actions of players, from instantly generated new items and playing levels to in-game characters that can have lifelike discussions.”

The technology, they continued, could create “individually themed online slot games that can respond to a player’s voice and even generate novel content in response to a player’s behavior and game history.” Generative AI chatbots the players could talk to, games with themes automatically tailored to their preference — the ultimate filter bubble. Social media’s endlessly personalized carousel of content is already notoriously addictive, and the damaging parasocial relationships that can be formed with AI chatbots are currently under a microscope following reports of suicide and self-harm linked to a popular provider. Adding these elements to the famously powerful money-extraction machine that is online gambling is a potent combination.

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MAA interview shows that Gov. Pritzker is still clearly peeved about Mayor Johnson

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Sun-Times recently reported: “The day before Donald Trump’s inauguration, Mayor Brandon Johnson — in DC for a mayor’s conference — and Gov. JB Pritzker — marking his 60th birthday — huddled in a phone call on Sunday morning to compare notes about the city and state responses for what may be an unprecedented rocky road ahead. …The mayor also told me he “had a great conversation with the governor this morning … about a number of things, but more specifically around holding our firm position on being a sanctuary as a state and as a city.”

NBC 5’s Mary Ann Ahern asked Pritzker about that claim

MAA: Have you and the mayor spoken about the possibility of ICE raids, and how did that conversation go?

Pritzker: We really haven’t. I mean, he called me on my birthday, which was very nice, and wished me a happy birthday. And I, you know, of course, mentioned that I knew that we were preparing, that he was preparing. But I’ve spoken directly with law enforcement in the state of Illinois, not just the Illinois State Police, but also the Chicago Police Department, to make sure that everybody is operating properly in an environment in which Donald Trump is trying to scare our communities.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* On to the failed hemp bill

MAA: So your relationship with the mayor hasn’t had a huge fallout over the hemp legislation?

Pritzker: Well, I’ve told the mayor that he mishandled it, that whenever you’re going to come to my house, come to Springfield, and you want to lobby against a piece of legislation which, by the way, was the wrong position to take, because we’re trying to protect children. Whenever you do that, you should call me ahead of time. We can have a conversation about what should we change, what is it that you’d like to see. Maybe we’ll end up disagreeing, in which case you know he has every right to go talk to people, but don’t come into my house and talk to the people that I work with. I don’t do that. And can try to convince them to work against something. It’s a priority for me. I didn’t do that when the mayor was trying to pass a budget for the city of Chicago, which I didn’t think was the right budget. I didn’t like many of the provisions, but I didn’t go lobby the members of the the City Council against the mayor, and I certainly didn’t make public my opposition. I expressed, nevertheless, to people in his administration, what my opinions were.

MAA: Did the mayor and perhaps Speaker Welch and others, did they put their donors above the [hemp] legislation?

Pritzker: Look, I think that all I can say is that there are a lot of people who accept contributions from special interests and are swayed by them. I can’t tell you whether that’s something that the - I don’t think that that’s what the Speaker was doing. I can tell you that when organizations spread money around in Springfield, it’s because they want to get their way. And so there are people who, of course, are on their side. Intoxicating hemp is dangerous for children and adults. It needs to be regulated. And that organization, the hemp association, is working against the safety of the people of Illinois. I will stand against them every time, if that’s what they’re for.

MAA: So as the mayor has said he needs more state money to help his financial crisis with the schools. If I were the mayor, what would you say to him now about those financial needs?

Pritzker: Well, don’t try to get it with hemp, with intoxicating hemp. That’s the one thing I’d say. If you need resources, you should, of course, talk to people in Springfield. He doesn’t do that enough. He doesn’t. His relationships are not very close with people. And even when he came down last spring to talk to us, did not ask for anything while he was there. Look, we want what he wants, which is to make sure that our schools are well-funded across the state of Illinois. We share that in common. We don’t always have all the resources that are necessary to get that done. But every year that I’ve been in office, I’ve increased funding for education. More than $2 billion more is going into our public education system because of the work that I’ve done. And so do we need more? Of course, we do. We have, in fact, a law in on the books that has us increasing state funding every single year we’re doing it. So for them to claim, for people who want us to increase funding, to claim that we owe a billion dollars is kind of disingenuous. They know that we’re all trying very hard to get the resources that we need to put them into schools.

“My house”?

Go watch the rest. MAA did good, as usual.

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Open thread

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker signs bill to phase out subminimum wage for disabled workers. Capitol News Illinois

    - The governor signed House Bill 793, which, beginning in 2030, will prohibit businesses and other residential facilities in Illinois from claiming an exemption allowing them to pay workers with disabilities less than minimum wage.
    - Illinois is the 19th state to eliminate the subminimum wage for workers with disabilities.
    - Money for the transition program would come from the Illinois Department of Human Services’ line item for transforming the state’s developmental and intellectual disability system.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Closing arguments in landmark trial of ex-speaker Michael Madigan expected Wednesday: After jurors return Wednesday morning, U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey will read them their lengthy instructions — they are likely to run more than 100 pages — before prosecutors begin their closing arguments. In total, the arguments are expected to last through the end of the week. Jurors are scheduled to begin deliberations Monday.

* Pantagraph | McLean County’s Juvenile Detention Center among the state facilities not passing inspections. Here’s how they hope to improve.: Gabel, House majority leader, emphasized most children held in juvenile detention centers have not been convicted of a crime, but are in holding until their cases are adjudicated. “My view is that there are better ways to take care of these children until their court date. Putting them in the JDC, in which 10 of the 14 are always underperforming, never getting passing grades — it’s detrimental to children’s lives,” Gabel said.

* Crain’s | Doctors and police top list of highest-paid state employees in Illinois: Physicians dominate Crain’s newest list of highest-paid state employees in Illinois, according to data from the Illinois Comptroller’s Office. The list ranks 25 workers on the Comptroller’s payroll, which excludes university employees, by 2024 total compensation. On average, the 11 doctors on the list earned about $357,369 last year.

*** Statehouse News ***

* An Alliance of consumer and public interest groups launched a nearly $1 million ad campaign to oppose Peoples Gas’ $13 billion pipe replacement program today. The ICC is expected to rule on the project next month. Click here for more info.

* WTWO | Illinois Chamber of Commerce expands Legislative Affairs Team: The Illinois Chamber of Commerce has announced it is expanding its Legislative Affairs Team, as Ramiro Hernandez is joining the team as the new Executive Director of the Tax Institute and Municipal and County Affairs, according to the chamber of commerce. The Illinois Chamber of Commerce said Hernandez brings over 10 years of experience in legislative, public policy, and communications across the state of Illinois.

*** Statewide ***

* Press Release | IDPH Launches New Data Dashboard on Violent Deaths and Firearm Injuries: It is intended to provide detailed information at the county level about these incidents, including the types of incidents (e.g., homicide, suicide, etc.), weapon type and where victims reside, broken down by county. The goal of the dashboard is to inform data-driven prevention and intervention efforts to reduce violent deaths and firearm injuries in Illinois.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Bally’s faces tough City Council battle over property tax break: Caught in the middle is local Ald. Walter Burnett, 27th, who doubles as Johnson’s vice mayor and triples as the pro-development chairman of the Zoning Committee. Burnett so far is siding with Johnson, who he said is “darned if he do, darned if he don’t” because the mayor wants to be pro-development but is unwilling to dispense a corporate handout.

* CBS Chicago | Chicago man says accountability has been lacking after off-duty CPD officer shot, killed his dog: Speaking to CBS News Chicago for the first time, the dog’s owner, Kent Maynard, said there has been no accountability in the months since. He also said his case was treated differently from the start. Maynard said the case was essentially a “one-interview investigation.” He said that despite video evidence and eyewitnesses being present on the scene, the initial report and investigation by police were heavily biased in favor of their coworker.

* Sun-Times | Chicago weed exec, golf buddies charged with insider trading surrounding $413 million acquisition: Anthony Marsico was executive vice president of Verano when he used confidential information about a blockbuster plan to take over Minneapolis-based Goodness Growth in order to enrich himself and manipulate Verano’s stock value, according to the indictment filed in federal court in Chicago on Jan. 16.

* Sun-Times | Biden commutes life sentence of former Gangster Disciples co-chairman Gregory Shell: Shell was second-in-command to Larry Hoover, who’s serving a life sentence in a maximum-security prison in Colorado. Shell, 67, is serving a life prison term there, too. “This is a positive first step toward correcting the draconian sentence imposed on Mr. Shell three decades ago,” his lawyer, Andréa Gambino, said Tuesday.

* Sun-Times | What happens when it’s so cold in Chicago that CTA rails crack?: The CTA relies on its “protectors of the railroad” — hundreds of workers ready to repair any rail cracks caused by subzero cold. “Without them, [trains] wouldn’t be able to run,” said Lenny Romano, the CTA’s vice president of infrastructure maintenance. “You don’t see them, but they’re out there.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* ABC Chicago | So-called Elgin tent city for homeless being cleared out after $2.5M contract approved: The city and social service staffers are working to move residents to the nearby Lexington Hotel for the next month while they get help looking for more permanent housing. “These are people that don’t have anywhere to live and this is an opportunity to get out of the elements and get the help they need to get back on their feet,” Knox said.

* ABC Chicago | Thornton Township board fills interim trustee position; Supervisor Tiffany Henyard skips meeting: Stephanie Wiedeman received the majority vote to fill a vacant Thornton Township trustee position, effective immediately. Wiedeman beat out two other nominees during Tuesday night’s special meeting. She had served under Thornton Township’s previous administration since 2003, but Henyard fired her when she took office three years ago.

* Daily Herald | Former Arlington Heights pastor accused of earlier sexual abuse of a minor : The St. James Parish congregation was informed in a letter from Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich over the weekend. The abuse accusations were said to have occurred during an earlier period when Foley was associate pastor of St. Agatha in Chicago’s North Lawndale neighborhood. “In keeping with our child protection policies, Father Foley has been asked to step away from ministry during the investigation,” Cupich wrote. “While he strenuously denies this allegation, he has agreed to cooperate with this directive.”

* SRP | Pekau disputes video criticizing deal with Orland insurance carrier : The video says that Pekau and the board are costing the village more than $1 million a year by choosing Horton over another insurance broker – the Intergovernmental Personnel Benefit Cooperative — because Horton is a top campaign donor. “Keith Pekau claims to work for the taxpayers, but his actions tell a different story,” the narrator says.

*** Downstate ***

* Effingham Daily News | Problem Solving Court helps people regain control of their lives: According to [Effingham County Probation Officer Chris Winters], the three graduates saved taxpayers $270,000 by completing the program instead of possibly being imprisoned. Durbin began the Problem Solving Court on Aug. 16, 2023 because he was tired of damaging his relationships with his family and loved ones. People were getting “tired of me,” he said. When he was picked up by officers, he reached his tipping point, or rock bottom, and wanted to change.

* BND | Assisted living facility in Collinsville is sold, displacing its residents: Addington Place managers announced this month that the facility is closing in April because the owner of the building sold the property, and the new owner does not want to use it for assisted living. They said only that the new owner wants to “repurpose” the property, declining to answer the Belleville News-Democrat’s questions about how many residents and employees are affected by the closure and who the new and old property owners are.

* STLPR | Interstate 255 will be closed for six months in St. Clair County. Here’s what we know: Interstate 255 will be shut down for six months beginning Feb. 1 so crews can repair 3.5 miles of the highway from Illinois 157 to Illinois 15 in St. Clair County, the Illinois Department of Transportation said Friday. The project, which was announced last year, is expected to be completed by July 31.

* Rock River Current | Slot Revenue Rose 3% In Rockford In 2024 To The Second-Highest Total On Record: Net revenue from video gaming was $41.2 million in Rockford last year, up from $40 million in 2023, according to data from the Illinois Gaming Board. That’s the second highest total after $47.4 million in 2021. Those figures don’t include casino gambling. That increase comes despite the Aug. 29 debut of Hard Rock Casino Rockford, which reaped in $97.6 million in 2024.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. 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)

Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Jan 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ProPublica

Sixty percent of rural Americans live in child care deserts — regions with too few licensed slots for children. In rural Illinois, that number rises to nearly 70%. […]

But opening new facilities is hard, and the government itself makes things harder. Here are five reasons it’s difficult to open and operate new child care centers in Illinois: […]

Rebuild Illinois is a $45 billion, multiyear capital improvement plan that was passed in 2019, the state’s first such plan in nearly a decade. Through it, the state allocated $100 million for early childhood facilities. But in the first round of funding, only eight programs out of 238 applicants received a combined $55 million in January 2023, with most grants awarded in Chicago and suburban areas. No providers in the southern half of the state received funding. A second $45 million round is planned, but no timeline has been announced.

The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, which oversees child care licensing, is grappling with a staffing crisis. The agency has a 20% vacancy rate for licensing staff and 45% for supervisors, who must review and approve all applications for child care providers.

* Sun-Times

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and three other attorneys general are suing President Donald Trump over the constitutionality of his Inauguration Day executive order that would end birthright citizenship for the children of immigrants without legal status.

Attorneys general in 18 other states also filed a similar lawsuit Tuesday in federal district court in Massachusetts.

The Illinois suit was filed in the Western District of Washington, along with attorneys general from Arizona, Oregon and Washington.

The suit claims Trump’s executive order violates the 14th Amendment and the Immigration and Nationality Act, which specifies that the law does not empower the president to determine who should or should not be granted U.S. citizenship at birth.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Crain’s | Activist mounts legal challenge to another Illinois diversity law: Activist Edward Blum is targeting another diversity effort in Illinois, this time suing over a new state law that requires many nonprofit organizations to publicly disclose aggregate data about the race, gender and other demographics of their board members and officers. Blum’s Austin, Texas-based American Alliance for Equal Rights has recently sued Illinois over a minority scholarship program for aspiring teachers and Chicago-based McDonald’s over a nationwide college scholarship program for Hispanic or Latino high school students.

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | Trump’s pardons for Jan. 6 riot help more than 50 defendants from Illinois: A phone number associated with Kevin J. Lyons — who received one of the longest prison sentences among the Illinois defendants, at 51 months — replied to a request for comment from a reporter Monday evening with a profanity. Lyons, of Chicago, wrongly entered the Capitol and took a photo of a plaque outside then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office, according to court records. He was found guilty of all the charges lodged against him, although a judge later tossed a count of obstruction of an official proceeding after the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Fischer v. United States.

*** Chicago ***

* Daily Herald | Threat of immigration raids turns Chicago’s ‘Little Village’ into ghost town: Foot traffic at the 2-mile stretch of 26th Street in the Little Village neighborhood plunged — by some measures, the decline had hit the 50%-mark, according to Jennifer Aguilar, who heads the local chamber of commerce and spoke to a number of the 400 or so businesses in the area. “It’s going to be disastrous,” Aguilar said in an interview. “If raids happen and people are too afraid to go out, it’s going to be an impact that’s going to last for years.”

* Chicago Eater | Chicago Restaurants Brace For Trump Immigration Raids as Misinformation Flourishes: The restaurant industry will collapse without undocumented workers, says Sanchez, a past chairman of the Illinois Restaurant Association who made national headlines for admitting he voted for Trump, something few admit in Chicago, a stronghold for Democrats. Sanchez says a shift was needed as he predicted that the GOP would gain control of Congress, the Supreme Court, and the Executive branches. He believes a bipartisan effort is necessary to solve the issue.

* Block Club | Judge Who Faced Backlash After Domestic Violence Rulings Moved To Traffic Court: By his own request, Judge Thomas E. Nowinski will now preside over misdemeanor and traffic-related cases, according to a statement from Cook County Chief Judge Timothy C. Evans. […] Amanda Pyron, president of The Network, a coalition of domestic violence advocacy organizations, said in a statement Thursday night they “agree” with Nowinski’s transfer.

* Crain’s | Longtime investigative reporter Chuck Goudie exits ABC7 Chicago: Some of the notable stories he covered included being the first Chicago reporter on the air from New York’s ground zero after the 9/11 attacks and ongoing coverage of the Chicago mob. The reason for Goudie’s departure from the station is unclear. “Chuck was a valued member of our ABC7 team for many years and we thank him for his groundbreaking contributions. We wish him only the best in his next chapter,” company spokesperson Jayme Nicholas told Crain’s.

* Sun-Times | Rich Hein, a Sun-Times photo editor whose theatrical work was art, died Sunday: Rich Hein looked through the lens of his camera into the hearts of people. He shot the city for nearly half a century, taking thousands of images that captured the human condition, first for suburban newspapers, then for 40 years on staff at the Chicago Sun Times, rising to become its photo editor. “Rich was a tough but fair boss,” said Alex Wroblewski, pausing from shooting the inauguration of President Donald Trump in Washington on Monday for Agence France-Presse. “I wouldn’t be where I am today without him. He opened the door for me. A sweet and gracious man.”

* Block Club | Chicago Is Colder Than Antarctica Right Now — But Things Will Warm Up (A Little) Tomorrow: “It’s the coldest stretch of weather since January of last year,” said Jake Petr, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. “Limit the time you spend outside.” Temperatures that feel as low as -15 to -25 degrees will “hold steady” until the cold snap breaks after midnight, Petr said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Mount Prospect pedestrian bridge still faces funding gap: Mount Prospect trustees have approved substantial engineering work and landed on a design for the pedestrian bridge linking Meadows and Melas parks. But the village still needs to bridge an approximately $1.6 million funding gap before it’s built. […] Still, the village also reported more than $43.7 million in reserve in 2023.

* Aurora Beacon News | Some Kendall County offices moving temporarily to courthouse: Due to a $9.9 million building upgrade at the Kendall County Office Building in Yorkville, several of the county’s administrative offices at the Fox Street facility will move and temporarily operate in the Kendall County Courthouse in the city pending completion of the renovation project, county officials said.

*** Downstate ***

* NPR Illinois | County is short millions for supportive housing: An estimated $3 million is what it would take to put Sangamon County’s unhoused population in homes. That’s according to Josh Sabo, executive director of Heartland HOUSED, an agency that oversees county efforts on homelessness. He says state and federal funding falls short. […] There 341 people in the county on a waiting list for those types of housing.

* WSIL | Read S.I. celebrates successful partnership with the Dolly Parton Imagination Library: So far, more than 7,300 children are enrolled in the Read S.I. program, which is double what organizers were expecting. More than 30,000 books have been put in the hands of children in our region, that might not have otherwise had the opportunity. While the program is very affordable and based on donation, it’s not entirely free. The breakdown comes to about $16 to sponsor a child for a year. Eligible children fall between the ages of birth to 5-years-old and reside in the southern 18 counties in Illinois.

* WCIA | Ford County Chronicle fights for tax credit meant to save local journalism: It turns out, the Ford County Chronicle does not qualify for the credit because of how Brumleve filed taxes for the business. In order to get the credit, the Ford County Chronicle needed employees, but Brumleve and Rosten were co-owners, so they weren’t paid as employees. Brumleve already worked with an accountant to file his taxes as an S corporation, which will allow him to qualify for the credit next year, but he intends to keep fighting this year.

* WSIL | Foreigner to headline 2025 Gibson City Summer Bash: Foreigner will play the bash, which is scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 16. Gibson City Area Hospital and Health Services officials announced the lineup on WCIA 3’s The Morning Show Tuesday. […] English rock singer John Waite will open for the band. General admission tickets for the 5th annual bash cost $10. Party Pit tickets will allow attendees to see the band closer to the stage. Tickets go on sale Friday at 8 a.m.

*** National ***

* AP | Garth Hudson, master instrumentalist and last surviving member of The Band, dies at 87: A rustic figure with an expansive forehead and sprawling beard, Hudson was a classically trained performer and self-educated Greek chorus who spoke through piano, synthesizers, horns and his favored Lowrey organ. No matter the song, Hudson summoned just the right feeling or shading, whether the tipsy clavinet and wah-wah pedal on “Up on Cripple Creek,” the galloping piano on “Rag Mama Rag” or the melancholy saxophone on “It Makes No Difference.”


* AP | President Donald Trump signed an order to end birthright citizenship. What is it and what does that mean?: The 14th Amendment was born in the aftermath of the Civil War and ratified in 1868. It says: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” Trump’s order excludes the following people from automatic citizenship: those whose mothers were not legally in the United States and whose fathers were not U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents; people whose mothers were in the country legally but on a temporary basis and whose fathers were not citizens or legal permanent residents.

* Tribune | What’s next for EVs under President Trump?: Trump’s order said he would “eliminate the electric vehicle (EV) mandate” and promote true consumer choice, which is essential for economic growth and innovation, by removing regulatory barriers to motor vehicle access; by ensuring a level regulatory playing field for consumer choice in vehicles.” While there is no Biden “mandate” to force the purchase of EVs, the Democratic president’s policies were aimed at encouraging Americans to buy them and car companies to shift from gas-powered vehicles to electric cars.

* Utility Drive | Trump executive orders halt wind development, declare energy emergency: President Donald Trump began his second term Monday with a bevy of executive orders, including one that temporarily withdraws all federal waters from consideration for offshore wind leasing, and pauses permitting, approvals and loans for all onshore and offshore wind projects. The administration’s pick for Secretary of the Interior, former North Dakota governor Doug Burgum, will lead a comprehensive assessment of federal wind leasing and permitting practices, the order said.

* AP | Musk’s straight-arm gesture embraced by right-wing extremists regardless of what he meant: Musk’s representative in Italy, Andrea Stroppa, published the photo on X with the words: “Roman Empire is back, starting with the Roman salute,” according to the news agency ANSA. He later deleted the post, writing that Musk “is autistic,” and was expressing his emotions but denying he was emulating fascism.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition

Tuesday, Jan 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Pritzker talks about Trump’s first day, deportation rumors, etc.

Tuesday, Jan 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Governor Pritzker was asked today if he has received any communications from President Donald Trump’s administration about mass deportations in Chicago at an unrelated news conference

Pritzker: None. And I think that’s just more evidence of the chaos and confusion that they’re trying to sow. And it’s very disappointing.

Yesterday, as you may have heard, there was an executive order issued that would suggest that President Trump is trying to get rid of birthright citizenship in this country. That’s unconstitutional what he issued, the executive order. We will not follow an unconstitutional executive order. We will follow the law in this state.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* Pritzker’s reaction to rumors about ICE enforcement in Chicago

Governor Pritzker: Look, I don’t know. They’ve not communicated with us, so we don’t know when exactly those enforcement actions might take place. We have heard that they are targeting as many as 2,000 people initially, in the city of Chicago alone. I don’t know whether they’ll effectuate that or how.

Rich checked on that claim and was told the 2,000 number came from local law enforcement.

* Back to Pritzker

I want to be clear about what my position is and what the law is. If there are violent criminals who have been convicted of violent crimes, who are undocumented, they are supposed to be deported. That is the law of the United States, and has been for quite a long time. I don’t want them in my state. I don’t want them in the country. If you’re going to commit crimes and you’re undocumented, you don’t deserve to stay in this country.

Now, as for undocumented people and residents of the state of Illinois, by the way, there are people who are discriminating against documented immigrants in the process of all this, but we’re talking about people who are paying taxes. Who are not getting any services for those taxes. When they’re undocumented, they can’t show themselves to get the services that other people who pay taxes would get.

And these are people who have raised families in the United States, who are law abiding, and often are the anchors of their communities. And I think we should think very carefully about what immigration means to this country. It is what we were founded upon. It is something that we should have comprehensive immigration reform in this country, and not simply have a president who is scaring people, forcing them out of their jobs because they’re afraid to go to work.

Go to 26th, go to Little Village, go to Pilsen. I was there yesterday. I was in businesses yesterday that were relatively empty because people are afraid to show up. Because even documented immigrants, even citizens who are from another country, but now are citizens of the United States have relatives who are undocumented. They’re afraid. That is what this President is doing, and it’s wrong.

* On the President’s executive orders

Reporter: Governor, there’s a notion that the Trump administration is sort of trying to issue this flood of orders to cause either chaos and perhaps lack of focus. Is there a particular area that you are directing the state’s attention? […] That you’re really trying to focus in on?

Pritzker: Let me begin by saying, I’m continuing to do my job, and that’s to protect the people of the state of Illinois, to lift people up, to make sure that we’re passing and signing a Dignity in Pay Act, for example.

Importantly, to make life more affordable for people we got rid of the grocery tax in the state of Illinois.

You know, that was something that President Trump talked about. He said, not that the grocery tax, but just lowering prices at grocery stores. And yet, in the flood of all the proposals that he made yesterday, there was nothing that would lower costs. In fact, he proposed tariffs on goods coming into this country from Canada and Mexico, and is proposing having an entire department that’s dedicated to tariffs. Well, guess who is going to pay for tariffs?

So he is raising costs for people across this country, not lowering them. We’re doing our job here to make life better for people in the state of Illinois.

* A reporter asked the governor if the president has succeeded in his promise to be a “dictator” on his first day in office

Pritzker: What I know is that people across the United States are having their rights taken away. What I know is that vulnerable people across the country, are under attack as a result of this new administration.

And I think it’s frightening that right there at the inauguration in the front row were a bunch of what some people have called them oligarchs. These are the wealthiest people in the country who essentially Donald Trump, well feels better about having them around than having ordinary Americans backing him up or standing with him.

And I think it’s just an indication of what this administration is really all about. It isn’t about what he ran on. It isn’t. And you’re going to see over and over and over again what I think we saw when I was governor when he was last president, which is he makes promises that sound good and doesn’t deliver on the promises that are good for people. And then instead, is actually effectuating policies that are either good for him personally and enrich him personally or his family, or are good for his friends and allies, but bad for anyone else in the country.

When you are a leader in this country, you’re a governor of a state, President of the United States, you have an obligation in office to fight for everybody that you represent, everybody.

* I asked the governor what he thinks about billionaires “making nice” with President Trump

Pritzker: Why are these people making nice? They hope to become greater than billionaires. They hope to double what they already have. That is why they’re making nice. That’s all I can imagine. I mean, maybe some of them have delusions of becoming dictators themselves.

So I can’t read between the lines on what it is exactly, but that’s what I can imagine. And I was frankly disgusted when I saw yesterday at a presidential rally, not a campaign rally. This is a rally of the President of the United States, Elon Musk, standing up and giving a Sieg Heil and then excusing himself for it by saying, well, he was just putting his heart out to people. I think it’s disgusting. It should be called out. The president should call it out. And Elon Musk owes an apology to the Americans.

* On Trump pardoning January 6 rioters

Reporter: Trump promised to pardon January 6 rioters. Yesterday he went through with blanket pardons. What does this say, I guess to law enforcement? What does it say to the rule of law and the lawmakers who were there?

Pritzker: What used to be the party of law and order is now the party of chaos and disorder, and that stands against law enforcement. The people who attacked the Capitol on January 6 were attacking law enforcement, because that’s who was there guarding the Capitol.

And there are so many pictures and videos. If you don’t know it, go look, because there were people who died, who died as a result of the attack by those January 6 rioters and he fomented that.

I was at the White House not very long ago with President Biden. And there’s a room behind the Oval Office, which is the dining room when you don’t have lunch or dinner in a private setting. People don’t usually see this room. It’s the room that that the President Trump sat in for three and a half hours watching TV as the January 6 rioters, that he incurred, attacking the Capitol sat there doing nothing, doing nothing. One of the most important institutions of our nation was under attack, and President Trump, who had the ability to stop it, did nothing for three and a half hours, and people died.

Deeeeeeeeeep breaths.

  43 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Tuesday, Jan 21, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small.

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Jeff, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Always check the rollcall, always read the bill and do a simple Google search

Tuesday, Jan 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Tribune throws Sen. Castro under the bus with the other opponents

Hemp business owners sent a flurry of campaign contributions to key Illinois lawmakers this fall to ward off a feared shutdown of their industry, though it paled in comparison to the money that licensed cannabis companies have given over the years, state records show. […]

Charles Wu, owner of Chicago-based Chi’tiva and lobbyist for the Illinois Hemp Business Association, made contributions totaling $21,831 in the past two years, the state Board of Elections reported.

That includes reported campaign contributions of $9,000 to Welch’s main fund in 2024, $3,500 to state Rep. LaShawn Ford, who sponsored legislation for looser regulations than the governor supported, $1,250 to Rep. Teresa Mah, who appeared with Ford at a news conference supporting the bill, $1,500 to a fund for state Sen. Cristina Castro and $2,500 to Neighbors for state Rep. Hoan Huynh, all Democrats.

Um, not only did Castro vote for the bill, she was the legislation’s chief Senate co-sponsor.

C’mon. “Follow the money” doesn’t explain everything.

* Meanwhile, the Post-Tribune almost had it

Indiana legislators would like to redraw the Indiana-Illinois border to absorb parts of Illinois, but the proposed action would face roadblocks on the Illinois side, which would prevent a border shift, political officials and experts said.

Indiana House Bill 1008, authored by Speaker Todd Huston, would establish an Indiana-Illinois boundary adjustment commission to research the possibility of adjusting the boundaries between the two states. The commission would include five members appointed by the Indiana governor and five members appointed under Illinois law. […]

For the boundary to change, the U.S. Constitution dictates that the Indiana legislature, the Illinois legislature and then Congress would have to approve the measure, Helmke said.

The article quotes an expert, but doesn’t actually quote the proposed bill. I warned subscribers about this silly legislation last week. From HB1008

The commission consists of the following members: (1) Five (5) individuals who are not members of the general assembly appointed by the [Indiana] governor. […]

Five (5) individuals from the State of Illinois appointed under Illinois law. […]

A quorum of the commission consists of:

    (1) at least three (3) Indiana members; and
    (2) at least three (3) members appointed from the State of Illinois.

In other words, the goofy commission can’t even meet if the Illinois governor and the General Assembly don’t cooperate.

C’mon.

* Last one

Newly inaugurated state Rep. Amy “Murri” Briel, D-Ottawa, introduced her first bill, which she said aims to investigate the challenges facing rural health care.

“Rural hospitals are closing at alarming rates, leaving handfuls of its patients and their families scrambling to find out-of-town options,” Briel said in a news release. “These closures leave people traveling for hours for the most basic care, or worse, without care at all. My bill aims to investigate why these closures are happening in the first place and allow us to identify solutions to expand and maintain care in rural communities.”

Rural hospitals in Illinois have faced multiple challenges, including financial pressures and staff shortages, Briel said. Briel introduced House Bill 1301, which creates The Rural Hospital Task Force within the Illinois Department of Public Health to: investigate the current state of rural hospitals in Illinois, provide actionable recommendations to prevent further closures and explore ways to expand and improve healthcare services for rural residents.

The task force will deliver its findings and recommendations to the General Assembly by January 2027 to ensure accountability and progress measures are in place, Briel said.

*Deep sigh*

* Legislators blithely create these commissions on the regular for a nice press pop back home. But, a ton of research has been done on this topic already

The Center for Rural Health was formed in 1989 on the recommendation of the Governor’s Rural Health Task Force. The goal of the center is to improve access to primary health care in rural and underserved areas of Illinois and to encourage community involvement in health issues. The center also serves as an information clearinghouse on rural health issues.

Maybe call them?

* Also, there was this thing called the Illinois Rural Health Summit and they covered this topic pretty well. More here.

The Illinois Hospital Association is also a good resource.

There’s also a study of of 28 Illinois rural hospitals called “Rural Illinois hospital chief executive officers’ perceptions of provider shortages and issues in rural recruitment and retention.”

And then there’s the Google. You can also Google some stuff that has already been accomplished by clicking here.

I’m not trying to pick on a freshman. I saw the press release come through and then noticed the news story and it bugged me. This merely gives me an opportunity to say that if members want to do something, then they should first read the studies that are gathering dust on countless shelves and then put together actual legislation to address the problem. Another study just kicks the can further down the road and gives everyone an excuse to do nothing and spends taxpayer money that could be spent on, you know, rural hospitals.

And, needless to say, local news outlets ought to stop falling for this.

  23 Comments      


Too late for regrets

Tuesday, Jan 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan’s longtime law firm partner Vincent “Bud” Getzendanner testified in Madigan’s defense against numerous federal charges last week.

One of the main themes of Getzendanner’s testimony was the property tax firm’s process of weeding out clients and potential clients who could pose a conflict of interest to Madigan.

Getzendanner testified “there would be a meeting once or twice a year involving Madigan’s statehouse legal staff regarding Madigan & Getzendanner clients,” Sun-Times reporter Jon Seidel reported from the courtroom.

Getzendanner would also periodically send the firm’s client list to some of Madigan’s Statehouse staffers so that they could check it against legislation that was currently before the Illinois House, Seidel noted.

The jury was also shown emails from Madigan’s legislative staffers to Getzendanner regarding inquiries about the firm’s clients, or whether some entities with issues before the legislature were clients.

“There was a constant back and forth between Mike’s legislative staff and the law office,” Getzendanner told jurors, according to Dave Byrnes with Courthouse News.

Getzendanner also testified that he had the final say about whether to bring in clients.

As an example, in a memo shown to jurors from Getzendanner to Madigan, Getzendanner wrote, “No file is accepted and opened until I do a review to determine if the firm’s representation would constitute a conflict, or the appearance of a conflict, with your legislative duties,” reported the Tribune’s Jason Meisner.

Jurors were shown a chart of Madigan clients with notations from various folks about potential conflicts. “Most entries on the chart say, ‘no conflict,’” reported Seidel. Madigan attorney Dan Collins highlighted one email that read, “possible appearance of conflict; principal owner of Walton is Neil Bluhm who is principal owner of Rivers Casino. Very thin connection, but err on side of caution.”

This thorough and nearly constant vetting process is why the people who thought they knew Madigan well firmly believed that he understood where the legal lines were and that he had never crossed them. Some still believe that’s true today.

Clients with land-transfer issues would definitely be screened out, Getzendanner testified, according to Seidel. “That’s a category where you absolutely could not take on a client.”

And yet, the prosecution has shown jurors evidence that Madigan did, indeed, work on legislation to help a real estate investor by trying to move a Chinatown land transfer bill through the House. The feds also presented evidence that allege a successful transfer would’ve resulted in legal business for Madigan & Getzendanner from that developer.

The deal was being put together by then-Chicago Ald. Danny Solis (25th), who became a mole for the FBI after being confronted with his own lawbreaking. As I’ve told you before, Madigan instructed Solis to reach out to Michael McClain to see if he could help. McClain was Madigan’s top advisor and the trial’s Madigan co-defendant.

Madigan later told Solis that he was considering approaching the Illinois Department of Transportation about the transfer, because the agency was an important part of the process. He then told Solis, “I’m trying to figure out a way to approach it,” suggesting that he was trying to help with the transfer while avoiding leaving his fingerprints.

Madigan suggested at one point that McClain talk to a senator, then received a briefing from McClain about legislators who were opposing the bill.

At one point, Solis told Madigan that if the House Speaker could “take care” of that Chinatown transfer by the end of spring session, “I’m confident they’ll appreciate it and … sign you up on after May,” as their property tax attorney.

OK, wait a second. Didn’t Getzendanner testify under oath that he had the final say in taking on new clients and that there was no way a client with a land transfer bill would ever be accepted? And wasn’t there a massive and ongoing client vetting process?

It doesn’t matter to the feds. Policies can be changed, after all. And they have enough recordings to suggest Madigan was pushing the bill and was being told he’d get a new client out of it.

“One of my regrets is that I had any time spent with Danny Solis,” Madigan told jurors, according to the Sun-Times.

The trial is wrapping up as I write this. But whatever happens, Madigan should’ve known better than to have ever worked with Solis. He brought all this on himself.

  10 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jan 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Mayor Brandon Johnson, Gov. JB Pritzker in phone call compare notes, brace for the Trump era ahead. Sun-Times

    - As for meeting with Trump, Johnson told the Sun-Times, “We’re going to work hard to make sure that that happens.”
    - The mayor said he “had a great conversation with the governor this morning … about a number of things, but more specifically around holding our firm position on being a sanctuary as a state and as a city.
    - On Sunday, the governor said in a post, “Let there be no doubt we will stand up for all of our children and families. We will follow our state laws that protect the immigrant communities that live, work and thrive in Illinois.”

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | DCFS has made small steps in improving child placement but troubling issues persist: Last week, DCFS Director Heidi Mueller said the agency has done better in placing children in proper settings and shared new findings showing fewer kids are sleeping in government offices, a key subject of complaints from watchdogs. But data released at the end of last year indicates that while there were pockets of improvement during her initial months in office, troubling issues persist and the agency is far from solving its child placement problem.

* Center Square | Judge to confer with attorneys ahead of closing arguments at Madigan trial: Judge John Robert “Jack” Blakey said he planned to work on jury instructions over the weekend before meeting with prosecutors and defense attorneys. With jurors not scheduled to return until Wednesday, the judge told attorneys he would review the instructions with them Tuesday afternoon at the Everett McKinley Dirksen U.S. Courthouse.

* Sun-Times | Undercover sting exposes rampant housing discrimination across Chicago area, watchdog group says: The Housing Rights Initiative filed a slew of complaints with the Illinois Department of Human Rights, claiming that real estate agents, brokerage firms and landlords discriminated against prospective renters who sought to use vouchers provided through the federal rental assistance program known as Section 8.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WCIA | Sen. Rose refiles bill to keep carbon storage projects away from the Mahomet Aquifer: The senators worry carbon dioxide storage projects can contaminate the source of water for hundreds of thousands. “Clean water is not negotiable,” Rose said. “The Mahomet Aquifer is a lifeline for central Illinois, and we cannot keep ignoring the risks posed by CO2 storage beneath it.”

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Illinois affected by a record number of billion-dollar climate disasters in 2024, mostly severe storms: In 2024, Illinois was affected by the most billion-dollar weather and climate disasters in the state since recordkeeping began in 1980, making it the fourth-costliest year after 2012, 1993 and 2023, according to an annual report released last week by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Twelve events that touched multiple states cost Illinois a total of nearly $4 billion in damages — nine of those were severe storms with tornadoes, hail and high winds.

* Illinois News Bureau | Schools need to boost entry-level salaries to better compete for novice teachers, study says: In the study, published in the Labor Studies Journal, Bruno found that when teacher salaries in districts increased by 1%, adjacent districts increased their own pay scales by just .15% to .25%. And the ratios of increases were no bigger for novice teachers’ salaries than for more experienced educators.

* Peter Steinmeyer | New laws Illinois employers need to know in 2025: The Illinois Personnel Record Review Act, which applies to Illinois employers with five or more employees, requires employers to permit employees, including former employees terminated within the preceding year, to review, copy or obtain copies of records twice per calendar year. The law was amended to not only expand the list of documents employers must provide but also clarify which documents need not be disclosed and revise the procedures for requesting and obtaining the records.

* Judith Ruiz-Branch | How IL’s grid plans will focus on underserved communities: Illinois plans to spend $1.5 billion through 2027 in significant grid investments to help meet the state’s ambitious clean-energy goals, with nearly half of funds going toward addressing environmental disparities. The Climate and Equity Jobs Act requires at least 40% of state grid investments to benefit underserved and low-income communities. Brad Klein, managing attorney with the Environmental Law and Policy Center, said fulfilling it means first learning more about existing issues.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Man banned from Chicago Park District jobs after scandal now working for alderman: A November 2021 investigation cited Alonzo Williams, then the Park District’s chief programs officer, and other district executives for mishandling allegations of abuse and sexual harassment in the lifeguard program. Williams resigned when the report came out and was designated “do not rehire” by the agency. But Williams quickly found contracting work in the City Council. And now, despite the still-in-place label from the sister city agency, South Side Ald. Greg Mitchell has hired Williams, city payroll records show.

* Block Club | With Chicago Reader At ‘Imminent Risk Of Closure,’ Alt-Weekly Staff Works To Cut Costs, Find Donors: Six non-union staffers were laid off, the paper announced Tuesday. To stay afloat, the Reader is trying to increase donor outreach and crowdfunding, and some staff have offered pay cuts or deferred compensation.

* ABC Chicago | Amtrak announces cancellations, delays amid extremely cold temps: Amtrak announced dozens of cancellations and delays as an arctic blast plunged temperatures to subfreezing. ABC7 Accuweather meteorologist Tracy Butler said wind chills are forecast to get between -15 to -35 Tuesday. Wednesday morning is also forecast to have below-zero wind chills.

* Sun-Times | Bears to hire Lions OC Ben Johnson as coach; next step is assembling staff: Johnson is widely regarded as one of the smartest offensive minds in football and has turned down multiple NFL teams over the last three hiring cycles while waiting for an ideal situation to become a head coach. He saw that at Halas Hall, where the Bears have a promising quarterback in Caleb Williams, along with other young talent, a bevy of salary-cap space and draft capital.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Park Forest Mayor Joe Woods, businessman won’t seek criminal charges for August confrontation: Both Park Forest Mayor Joe Woods and local businessman Antiwone Hardy have agreed not to seek criminal charges against each other in the wake of a confrontation between the two men and Hardy’s wife, Shalonda, in August. […] Woods told police Oct. 18 that he wondered aloud why the daughter was treating that way, using a vile name for how he thought he was being treated. Woods said the Hardys misconstrued his words and that Shalonda became irate, believing Woods was calling the daughter that vile name, the report states. But the Hardys insist Woods called their 15-year-old daughter the name, according to the report.

* Daily Herald | Huntley District 158 to buy electric buses, but switches supplier after company suspends Joliet operations: District 158 officials worked with the school district’s attorney and requested the cancellation of the Lion Electric contract. The district cited Lion’s “inability” to meet district needs, “which includes meeting the initial promised delivery date” of July 31, according to district documents. The district instead is getting four buses manufactured by Blue Bird through a contract with Central States Bus Sales, Inc. The school district has previously purchased four Blue Bird electric buses and is pleased with their performance, officials stated on Thursday.

* Daily Herald | League of Women Voters to host mayor and city council candidate forums for Tri-Cities: All three forums will be live, in-person, and open to the public. They also will be livestreamed and available for later viewing on the websites of the League of Women Voters of Central Kane County (lwvckcil.com) and the Illinois Voter Guide (illinoisvoterguide.org).

*** Downstate ***

* WSIL | Ameren Illinois line workers finish repairs on large power line in Jackson County: One particular major power line was damaged in Jackson County. Electric crews temporarily redirected power with a different line to turn the lights back on in the area. In the meantime, crews have finished rebuilding the major power line to get customers permanently switched back from the temporary line.

* WICS | More brutal cold gripping central Illinois: Frigid Arctic air continues to grip central Illinois creating dangerously cold wind chills. Through Tuesday night and into Wednesday morning, wind chills will range from 10 BELOW TO 20 BELOW ZERO, AND AT TIMES, APPROACH 25 BELOW ZERO.

* WCIA | Central Illinois warming centers open this season: Winter weather is here and warming centers in Central Illinois are available to ensure that no one is left out in the cold. The City of Champaign has a list of resources available on their website. They have shelters for adults and for families and children.

*** National ***

* AP | Ohio State defeats Notre Dame 34-23 in college football championship game: When that teardrop of a throw from Buckeyes quarterback Will Howard on third-and-11 finally landed, light as a feather, in the hands of receiver Jeremiah Smith late in the fourth quarter Monday, Ohio State had locked up what would be a 34-23 victory over Notre Dame for its sixth national title and first in a decade. It was that 56-yard gain that snuffed out a feverish Notre Dame comeback and made the Buckeyes the champion of the sport’s first 12-team playoff, just as they were champions of its first four-team tournament a decade ago.

* DOL Study | Registered Apprenticeships Expand Access to Living Wages for Millions of U.S. Workers : A new study commissioned by the United States Department of Labor has revealed that registered apprenticeship programs—career training alternatives to college in which enrollment has doubled over the past decade—dramatically increases the ability of participants to afford basic needs in their communities, with union-affiliated programs delivering the biggest gains across all occupational sectors. The research was performed by Economist Frank Manzo IV of the Illinois Economic Policy Institute (ILEPI) and Professor Robert Bruno of the Project for Middle Class Renewal (PMCR) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

  7 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, Jan 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Tuesday, Jan 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Jan 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)

Tuesday, Jan 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)
* Live coverage
* Selected react to budget reconciliation bill passage (Updated x3 - Comments open)
* Yesterday's stories

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