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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Dec 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * We’ve raised less than $700 today. We can do better! We’re still at $28,705 total, and LSSI needs a whole lot more to make sure every foster child gets a Christmas gift this year. Every dollar goes straight to gifts, and the average one costs about $25. So please, if you can give, click here and help turn this day around. We really need to pick it up. Thank you! * Bloomberg…
* Illinois Bankers Association CEO Randy Hultgren is retiring …
* Greg Hinz | Who — and what — do voters want in the Legislature? Here’s a race to watch.: An interesting test of that proposition is shaping on Chicago’s North Side, where four contenders are vying in the March Democratic primary to succeed state Rep. Margaret Croke, a Democrat who is giving up her seat to run for Illinois comptroller. Such vacancies rarely arise in that part of town. Three contenders have more or less conventional political pedigrees, from activity in ward political organizations and local school councils to work in the Barack Obama White House and at City Hall. The fourth has little connection to the district beyond living there but is staked by a ton of family money. And to boot, in his college days a little over a decade ago, he headed Cornell University Students for Mitt Romney. * Sun-Times | CPS Board approves $17.5 million settlement for former student sexually abused at Little Village high school: The Chicago Board of Education on Wednesday approved a $17.5 million settlement for a former student who was sexually abused by a former dean at a Little Village high school. It’s the largest settlement for a school sex abuse case in Illinois history, according to the law firm representing the former student. * ProPublica | Chicago Promoted Two Police Officers After Investigators Found They Engaged in Sexual Misconduct: The officers’ promotions this spring were not due to an oversight. Department officials knew about their disciplinary records, but those records could not be considered as the department evaluated their fitness for promotion. The main qualifying factor was their test scores from a two-part exam That Chicago police officers can rise in the ranks in spite of significant problems in their records reflects a decadeslong failing that the Chicago Police Department has been repeatedly called on to fix, an investigation by the Invisible Institute and ProPublica found. * Tribune | State/Lake ‘L’ station to close Jan. 5 for demolition, construction: Throughout construction, the city said, Brown, Green, Orange, Pink and Purple Line Express trains won’t stop at State/Lake. Riders can use nearby stations at Washington/Wabash and Clark/Lake, the city said, as well as the Lake Red Line subway station, which will remain open. The rebuild will also impact Loop drivers. Starting Dec. 8, eastbound Lake Street between State Street and Wabash Avenue will have intermittent closures during off-peak hours, CDOT said. Starting Jan. 5, Lake St. will be limited to local traffic only between Dearborn Street and Wabash. * Crain’s | Foxtrot is reopening its old Loop location: LaVitola seemed unfazed by downtown foot traffic being down and retail vacancies being up — dynamics that have prompted some business leaders to shy away from the Loop. “The building is doing really well,” he said of Willis Tower. “And the store was really starting to build a loyal following in that part of the Loop prior to everything that happened.” * Crain’s | Coming soon to a screen near you: a documentary tracing Schwinn bike history: Schwinn, founded as Arnold, Schwinn & Co. in Chicago in 1895, served as a classic rags-to-riches-to-bankruptcy story through four generations of family ownership, while signaling the painful post-industrial transition of many Chicago firms hammered by overseas competition in the late 20th century. The book, “No Hands: The Rise and Fall of the Schwinn Bicycle Company, an American Institution,” by former Crain’s staff journalists Judith Crown and Glenn Coleman, was published in 1996. * Block Club | Bucktown, Logan Square UPS Stores Reopening This Month Under New Ownership: A year after the city shut down two UPS Stores in Bucktown and Logan Square over licensing issues, a new franchise owner is reopening them. The UPS Stores at 1658 N. Milwaukee Ave. in Bucktown and 2020 N. California Ave. in Logan Square will reopen this month, a company spokesperson confirmed. The stores have been shuttered since December 2024, when they were ordered closed by the city for operating without business licenses under previous franchise owner The Neely Group. * The Chicago Federation of Labor endorsed Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle for reelection over Ald. Brenden Reilly….
Click here for all of CFL’s endorsements. * Forest Park Review | Hosty, former Forest Park leader, named RF township clerk: Former Forest Park Village Council member Mark Hosty was appointed River Forest Township Clerk on Nov. 18 to replace Margaret Detmer who resigned her post effective at the end of that day. Detmer, who was appointed Township Clerk in 2024 when the previous clerk John Becvar was appointed Township Supervisor. Becvar replaced Carla Sloan who had resigned her post. He was reelected to a full four-year term earlier this year. Detmer said that she resigned because of the time commitment of the part time job and the pressure of being the mother of three small children. * Daily Herald | 178 single-family homes proposed in Crystal Lake where Amazon warehouse was planned: Atlanta-based Pulte Homes is proposing to build 178 single-family homes at 275 S. Main St., where Amazon originally planned to build a 180,000-square-foot distribution center on the 63-acre parcel. Amazon received approval by the city, but the company walked away from the plan in 2022 before it formally purchased the property. The residential plan, called Lakeland Farm, includes a center passive park area with walking paths throughout the development. Developers plan to have three access points off Main Street, Exchange Drive and Commonwealth Drive, said Karen Weber, attorney representing Pulte Homes. * Naperville Sun | Naperville council passes new e-bike age restrictions, fines for parents: The new rules, proposed last month, were unanimously approved. State law already governs the use of such vehicles, but many suburban communities are adopting stricter rules to govern e-bike and e-scooter usage, citing issues with young people in particular not following the rules of the road. Similar to state law, Naperville has three classifications for e-bikes: Class 1 low-speed electric bicycles, which are pedal assist and can reach speeds of up to 20 mph; Class 2 low-speed electric bicycles, which are both pedal assist and throttle and have a maximum speed of up to 20 mph; and Class 3 low-speed electric bicycles, which are pedal assist and can reach speeds of up to 28 mph. * Daily Herald | Geneva committee recommends $59.4 million police station referendum: A group of Geneva alderpersons has recommended that the city place a question on the March ballot that would ask voters to approve a plan to borrow $59.4 million for a new police facility. The alderpersons have also recommended asking voters whether they support the city becoming home rule in a referendum that could appear on a ballot within two years. At Monday’s Geneva Committee of the Whole meeting, alderpersons voted 7-2 in favor of pursuing the police facility question. Third Ward Alderperson Larry Furnish was absent. * WCIA | Hearing on proposed Sangamon Co. data center brings hundreds of supporters, opposers: “We’re going to need every union trade that’s available to us locally. We’ve committed to signing a project labor agreement. It’s not lip service,” said Bradd Hout, CyrusOne’s director of location and power strategy. Union members dressed in orange were the project’s most vocal supporters at Wednesday’s public hearing * Illinois Times | Sober living house for LGBTQ+ in the works: Casey Prather credits a sober living home run by Springfield resident Julie Benson to playing a part in the longest stretch of sobriety he’s experienced in his adult life. Prather calls Benson’s Home Sweet Home Sober Living home, which he began living at almost two-and-a-half years ago, “unlike any other” he’s experienced. Now, the pair are working together to find a new residence to create a sober living space for LGBTQ+ individuals. * BND | Freeburg area farmer vows to resume egg sales after bird flu decimates flock: “I was shocked at how fast it went through,” farmer Joel Funk said Wednesday. “It’s devastating.” Funk noticed some chickens had died last weekend and initially thought the deaths were caused by the cold weather that had moved into the metro-east. By Sunday he suspected the deaths were due to something deadlier than low temperatures. * Reuters | Chicago Fed sees November unemployment rate steady at 4.4% as alternate data shows job losses: The U.S. unemployment rate was unchanged around 4.4% in November, the Chicago Federal Reserve estimated on Thursday, while closely watched data from a private provider added to the evidence that the U.S. labor market is slowly weakening. With official unemployment reports from the Bureau of Labor Statistics still delayed following the government shutdown in October and November, the new reports could add weight to arguments at next week’s Federal Reserve meeting in favor of cutting the benchmark policy rate another quarter of a percentage point. * Bloomberg | Trump’s AI Push May Hinge on Renewable Energy: The Trump administration is moving to fast-track the construction of power-hungry data centers as a matter of national security. At the same time, it’s adding roadblocks for new solar and wind farms. But the two policies could be at odds: Hindering renewable energy projects risks slowing the AI boom — and could exacerbate rising electricity prices, a slew of data suggests. “It’s an all-hands-on-deck moment right now to get the power to supply this,” said Robert Whaley, director of North American power at Wood Mackenzie, an energy consultancy. “In the next 10 years, there’s really nothing to replace renewables.” * Automotive News | Rivian’s next phase hinges on mass-market R2 and advanced autonomy, CEO says: Four years after the California automaker launched its high-end R1T pickup and R1S crossover, Rivian begins a new growth phase focused on the more affordable R2 crossover, an evolving software-defined platform and self-driving. “Right now we’re just completely heads down, focused on the development of our technology platform sets,” Scaringe said in an interview on Dec. 1. “That’s the big tactical focus, and then the big product focus is R2.” The midsize crossover will have a starting price around $45,000 before shipping when it launches in the first half of next year, about half the average selling price of Rivian’s bigger R1 vehicles, Scaringe said.
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Pritzker on medical aid in dying bill: ‘It’s a hard issue… but most of all, it’s about compassion’
Thursday, Dec 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Background is here if you need it. During yesterday’s press conference, Gov. JB Pritzker was asked about the medical aid in dying bill [End-of-Life Options for Terminally Ill Patients Act] that’s sitting on his desk…
* He was also asked if he discussed the bill during his recent meeting with Pope Leo XIV…
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Federal news coverage roundup: O’Hare raid warnings, Feds drop more charges, propaganda suit, hospitals’ safety-net fears
Thursday, Dec 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Click here for some background. Sun-Times federal courts reporter Jon Seidel…
* Tribune…
More from WTTW…
* Sun-Times…
Click here for DHS’ social media video of the South Shore raid and here for the lawsuit. * Crain’s…
* More… * CBS Chicago | Trump administration seeks detailed information on SNAP recipients from democratic states, including Illinois: States, including Illinois, have until Monday, Dec. 8, to formally respond to the federal government. It remains unclear how quickly or if residents or food banks might feel any impact. “The truth is the administration does not have the ability to do this, and I think it’s reprehensible to use food and food insecurity as a weapon to try to effectuate a policy that is completely unrelated to it. The courts have ruled such, and I believe if we have to take them to court again, we will,” Pritzker said. * Block Club Chicago | How The Feds Used Propaganda To Frame Their ‘War’ On Chicago: ‘They’re Lying Constantly’: As Trump’s Operation Midway Blitz swept through Chicago this fall, federal leaders and agencies issued statements and social media posts that contradicted what reporters and witnesses saw on the ground. They’ve attempted to discredit journalists even after a federal judge ruled that Border Patrol chief Gregory Bovino, a face of the operation, lied and the federal government had deceived the public and made false claims. Experts who study propaganda and state media say the pattern goes beyond spin. In press releases and social media posts, the Department of Homeland Security has built a narrative meant to project control and valorize its agents, the experts said. At the same time, it has cast protesters and bystanders as threats or obstacles. * Tribune | Federal funding cuts threaten Chicago Harbor Lock, one of the nation’s busiest: The Army Corps requested $3.85 million for the operation and maintenance of the Chicago Harbor Lock and Dam next year, Corps spokesperson Emily Helton said. But in his proposed fiscal year 2026 budget, President Donald Trump allocated under $300,000 for the harbor, leaving a shortfall of more than $3.5 million, Helton said. In order to try to close the gap, Helton said, the Army Corps will use just over $1 million in leftover operating funds from this year. It will also reallocate some money it had previously planned to use for electrical rehabilitation work at the harbor. * South Side Weekly | Fraudsters target immigrants seeking legal help: Sometimes, notarios defraud people in immigrant communities by trading on the names and reputations of upstanding organizations. The American Bar Association does not represent clients in court. […] Fear, lack of familiarity with the U.S. immigration process, and the acute need for affordable immigration services all make immigrants susceptible to fraud, experts say. And immigration raids by federal agents are likely to exacerbate the problem, as victims may be hesitant to seek help from law enforcement agencies. “With the aggressiveness of ICE and the apprehension that people have to come out and be public—these notarios are bottom feeders, and they make something bad worse,” Wildes said. * WaPo | Illinois can set its own vaccine guidelines, bypassing Trump administration: State lawmakers say the new law is the first of its kind. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) signed it just days before a federal vaccine panel plans to vote on a major change to America’s childhood immunization schedule. Illinois is among several Democratic-led states developing their own systems to assess vaccines, an attempt to address warnings by some public health officials that the Trump administration has politicized vaccine science. * The 21st Show | Breaking down Northwestern University’s $75 million settlement with the Trump administration: Northwestern University has announced an agreement with the Trump administration over a discrimination investigation. The university will pay $75 million to the federal government, and make commitments to comply with Trump preferences in admissions, hiring, campus protests policies, and trans health care. In exchange, the administration is dropping its investigations against the school and restoring federal funding. * Tribune | Enterprise Rent-A-Car license plate revoked after immigration agents illegally swapped it out, records show: The penalties for displaying an unauthorized plate or obscuring or modifying license plates in any way include fines and potential jail time. License plates may also be suspended or revoked by the secretary of state. That’s what happened to an Enterprise vehicle, according to a revocation letter from Giannoulias’ office to the business’ parent company, EAN Holdings LLC, obtained by the Tribune. The company must now request a new plate, under state law. * Tribune | Operation Midway Bliss redefines blitz with gift drive for families affected by immigration enforcement: The gift haul was coined Operation Midway Bliss as a way to reclaim the name from the federal government’s Operation Midway Blitz, which wreaked havoc on the city’s immigrant community. “When I saw those Angel Trees blowing up (on social media),” said McNiff, who lives in the Gold Coast, “an idea sparked of something I can do for my neighbors here in Chicago, aside from just yapping on TikTok or going to a protest, something that can actually have an impact directly.”
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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
Thursday, Dec 4, 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 the Hagers, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.
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Question of the day: 2025 Golden Horseshoe Awards
Thursday, Dec 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2025 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best House Democratic Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager goes to Liz Moody…
Honorable mention goes to Mike Wasielewski, who emerged as a late favorite. * The 2025 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best House Republican Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager is a tie: Amanda Daley and Brandy Loftus…
All of those folks above are top-notch. Congrats! * On to today’s categories…
* Best Democratic State Senate Staff Member Nominees can come from the government and campaign sides. Bill Schneider won last year and is not eligible. Mary Hanahan was the other winner, but she’s now with a law firm. As always, please explain your nominations or they won’t count. This is more about intensity than numbers. Also, do your very best to nominate in both categories. If you can’t, you can’t, but please tell us why. * After you’ve entered your nominations, please click here to contribute to our annual Christmas toy fundraiser for foster kids. We raised more than $6,000 yesterday, but Lutheran Social Services of Illinois has more than 2,500 foster kids in its care and they must raise more than $62,000 to buy all of them modest presents. As I write this, we’ve raised $28,455. That’s not bad, but it’s way below the threshold. Those kids count on us, so, please do your best to chip in whatever you can. Let’s help spread some genuine Christmas joy as widely as we possibly can.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Dec 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Illinois unveils plans to celebrate 250 years of American independence. Capitol News Illinois…
- A $300,000 investment from the Illinois Arts Council will provide $15,000 grants to 20 public art installations across the state. - Some of the focus will be on recognizing tribal histories and contributions that predate the Declaration. That effort will be led in part by commission member Dorene Wiese, a member of the White Earth Ojibwe Nation and chief executive officer of the American Indian Association of Illinois. * Related stories… Sponsored by PhRMA
* At 11 am Gov. Pritzker will attend an event to celebrate the 119th birthday of American Postal Workers Union Local 1. * Investigate Midwest | Pesticide drift is catching schools off guard. Lawmakers want to require notice before spraying.: House Bill 1596 would require certified pesticide applicators to provide written notice, 24 to 72 hours before spraying, to private and public schools, daycares, and public parks and playgrounds within a half mile of the application site. The notification requirement would apply only to large-scale operations over five acres that use boom sprayers, tractor-mounted sprayers and airplanes to apply weed killers — not residential applications. Violators would face a $250 fine, which increases to $500 for a second violation and $1,000 for additional infractions. Bill sponsor Rep. Laura Faver Dias, a Grayslake Democrat, said the bill could change during the next legislative session, which begins in January. * Tribune | Federal funding cuts threaten Chicago Harbor Lock, one of the nation’s busiest: The harbor lock is one of the nation’s busiest for both commercial and recreational use; more than 900,000 passengers and 80,000 vessels traveled through it last year. But looming federal funding cuts have become a source of worry for boaters who rely on the lock. […] The Army Corps requested $3.85 million for the operation and maintenance of the Chicago Harbor Lock and Dam next year, Corps spokesperson Emily Helton said. But in his proposed fiscal year 2026 budget, President Donald Trump allocated under $300,000 for the harbor, leaving a shortfall of more than $3.5 million, Helton said. * Chalkbeat Chicago | Illinois State Board of Education extends timeline for public comment on school accountability overhaul: Sanders wrote in a weekly message on Tuesday that the Illinois State Board of Education will keep the current public comment window open until Jan. 7, instead of Dec. 7. There will also be opportunities for the public to weigh in on the proposal’s drafts between January and April. Under the new timeline, state board members would discuss the final plan during the March board meeting and vote on new accountability metrics in April, instead of discussing the plan in December and voting in January. * Former Sen. Roland Burris has endorsed Rep. Margaret Croke for comptroller. Press Release…
* Sun-Times | Illinois secretary of state bolsters REAL ID services to help residents avoid new TSA fee: State officials are partnering with Cook County Clerk Monica Gordon’s office to streamline processes to obtain birth certificates, marriage licenses and the other additional personal documents needed to get a REAL ID. Clerk’s offices will have designated cashiers for REAL ID-related requests, as well as a new appointment system. * Rep. La Shawn Ford | I survived prostate cancer. Without ACA tax credits, other Americans may not be as lucky: Black men are nearly twice as likely to die from prostate cancer as white men. In neighborhoods like Austin, Englewood, West Garfield Park and North Lawndale — where poverty, food insecurity and limited access to specialists already shorten life expectancy — this kind of policy failure isn’t just immoral. It’s lethal. I was lucky. I had insurance. I had a health care team that moved quickly. But I also had fear, and I some sleepless nights. I had to tell my daughter that I had cancer. And I had to fight — not just for my health, but for my peace of mind. No one should have to fight for access to health care on top of fighting for their life. * Crain’s | Council bloc urges Johnson not to brush off budget overhaul: A day after a bare majority of the City Council signed on to a letter outlining $441 million in potential alternatives to Mayor Brandon Johnson’s $16.6 billion budget, it’s unclear if the defiant move will force the mayor back to the table. The alternative proposal stripped out Johnson’s proposed corporate head tax, reduced borrowing costs and increased an advance pension payment through a grab bag of increased garbage, rideshare and liquor taxes and $90 million in spending cuts that the mayor has argued are not feasible in 2026. * Crain’s | Hospital CEOs warn health care safety net will begin unraveling next year: Endeavor’s O’Grady criticized OBBA, saying the legislation is anything but beautiful for hospitals. He said as emergency rooms fill with sicker, uninsured patients who have delayed care, all patients will face longer wait times and other disruptions. Hospital finances will take a hit from rising levels of charity care and bad debt, especially in Illinois where medical debt cannot damage a person’s credit rating, O’Grady noted. * Tribune | Sweeping ban on hemp products in Chicago advances in City Council: Proponents argue the proposed ban would make Chicago safer by speeding up a pending congressional prohibition on the products that get users high. But Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration has urged aldermen to rework the ordinance with narrower regulations. Hanging in the balance are dozens of small businesses like Rubina Mirza’s Ukrainian Village shop, Kizmah CBD. “This proposed ban on these products will put me out overnight and destroy all the hard work I spent with my family building a small business,” Mirza told aldermen as the meeting started in a room packed with hemp supporters. * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools finds buyers for three vacant schools: The district is seeking the Chicago Board of Education’s approval at its next meeting on Dec. 18 to sell the old Bontemps Elementary in Englewood on the South Side for $75,000, the old Henson Elementary in North Lawndale on the West Side for $25,000, and the former Shedd Elementary, which last served as a satellite building for Bennett Elementary, in Roseland on the Far South Side for $25,000. All three buildings closed in 2013. The proposed sales come after CPS put 20 properties on the market in May. Stephen Stults, the district’s director of real estate, said they got bids for 12 properties. * Sun-Times | Business concerns stall plan to let Chicagoans flag crosswalk, bus and bike lane parking scofflaws: Everyday Chicagoans will have to wait for the right to use their cellphones to provide recorded evidence of bus, bike lane and crosswalk parking violations, thanks to concerns raised Wednesday by business groups. First Ward Ald. Daniel La Spata initially proposed a measure that would allow citizens to report parking violations by both commercial and passenger vehicles. * WTTW | Feds Drop Charges Against Laugh Factory Manager Accused of Assaulting Immigration Agent in Lakeview: Nathan Griffin, 24, is now the latest person to have been charged during what the federal government called “Operation Midway Blitz” in a blaze of publicity only to have prosecutors quietly dismiss the case after failing to get an indictment or determining that there was not enough evidence to go forward. Griffin was charged with one count of forcibly assaulting and interfering with a federal agent in the performance of his official duties in connection with a melee that occurred on Oct. 24, hours before a team of masked immigration agents tear gassed a crowd in Lakeview. * Sun-Times | Museum of Science and Industry workers ratify first union contract: The contract with the Hyde Park museum covers roughly 120 employees, and includes an average 8% pay raise and 3% annual increase over the next two years, according to a Wednesday statement from the Museum of Science and Industry Workers United. The contract also adds holiday pay for part-time employees, policy changes on remote work, just cause for discipline, a grievance procedure and a joint committee on paid parental leave. * Sun-Times | Killings of Black Panthers dedicated with plaque in Chicago 56 years later: It’s the latest of 12 plaques to be placed around Chicago, as well as another in Peoria, as part of the Black Panther Heritage Trail that denotes historic sites in Illinois. “We have to remember the people who stood up and gave their lives,” Nefahito said. “We see where we’re at now. … We can’t be complacent, we can’t take the liberties and rights we have for granted. We have to fight, work and be kind to each other. We always have to help others and look for opportunities to get involved.” * Press Release | CTA and Chance the Rapper Team Up to Launch New “Enjoy the Ride” Campaign: “I think this partnership is so important because I grew up taking the Red Line train from 79th,” said Chance. “All of the train lines create a pathway to connection and an opportunity for people to build community, and that’s what STAR LINE is about. It’s about us forming together to fight anything that’s going against us. This is an important time in the city for people to stand up, be brave and protective of each other.” * Crain’s | Ken Griffin’s last remaining Chicago condo lands a buyer: The last piece of Citadel chief Ken Griffin’s portfolio of Chicago condos went under contract to a buyer today, nearly two and a half years after he began selling his units in various downtown towers after moving his business empire and family to Florida. The condo, on the 67th floor of the Park Tower on North Michigan Avenue, was Griffin’s longest-held property in Chicago. He bought it in 2000, when the building was new, for $6.9 million, according to the Cook County clerk. That’s the equivalent of paying $12.98 million in 2025 dollars. * Daily Herald | Will 2026 be the year for this stalled downtown Arlington Heights apartment project?: Facing rising interest rates, difficulty in raising equity capital and higher construction costs, a developer’s plan for a six-story, 135-unit apartment building with a ground-floor restaurant in Arlington Heights remains in limbo two years after receiving zoning approvals. But Joe Taylor of Barrington-based Compasspoint Development expressed confidence that 2026 will be the year to get shovels in the ground and transform the long-vacant office building site on the edge of the village’s downtown. * Aurora Beacon-News | Geneva considering bond referendum in March for new police station, mulls vote on home rule by 2028: The possibility of selling bonds to construct new public safety facilities is not new in Geneva — the city had initially planned to put the question to voters last April, but pulled it from the ballot in January after discovering a calculation error that would have doubled the projected property tax payment. Now, the Geneva City Council is again considering a referendum — with a particular emphasis on constructing a new police station for the city. * Daily Herald | ‘Vendors, volunteers and vibes’: Why Arlington Heights Farmers Market is ranked top in the state: The competition of 1,263 farmers markets nationwide tallied more than 60,000 votes by the public.“That is really something to be proud of, because I know a lot of people enjoy it, and it doesn’t happen easy,” said Mayor Jim Tinaglia, who recognized farmers market committee members at this week’s village board meeting. “These are people who work really hard to make it happen.” * WICS | Sonya Massey’s family breaks silence following Sean Grayson’s request for new trial: Sonya Massey’s cousin, Sontae Massey, told me his family is not surprised that Grayson’s lawyers are filing for a new trial. Sontae said his family doesn’t want to make a big deal out of Grayson’s defense team trying to accomplish certain procedures at the last minute. He said Grayson is guilty and everyone saw the crime he committed through the body camera footage. Sontae said Grayson is now a convicted felon and he got the conviction he deserved. * News-Gazette | Champaign council unanimously rejects ban on public camping: The city council unanimously voted down a proposed ban on public camping after hearing two hours of public comment on the ordinance, which Cunningham Township Supervisor Danielle Chynoweth called “draconian and regressive.” Chynoweth, who also chairs the Champaign County Continuum of Service Providers to the Homeless, said that the city broke trust by not communicating with its partners in the continuum about the proposal. “This is a reactive and uncollaborative approach,” she said at Tuesday’s lengthy Champaign City Council meeting. “That may seem an unfair accusation, but I looked up how many times I have met with staff members on your senior team and a council member in the last three weeks. Seven meetings, 10 hours of meeting with your staff members, and I did not know about this till I woke up this morning.” * WGEM | SAFE-T Act, conservatism debated in race for 8th Judicial Circuit judge’s position: Over the years, Pratt has advocated for the change on the basis that it doesn’t let people without a large bank account sit in jail while only the wealthy walk free. […] Under the SAFE-T Act, judges are allowed the discretion on whether to allow a defendant in a case to be jailed or to be granted pretrial release. During a pretrial hearing, a defense attorney and a prosecutor can both make the case on why a defendant should or shouldn’t be detained. […] Bass voiced his displeasure with the SAFE-T Act. * WAND | Sangamon Co. residents voice concerns over proposed $500 million data center: “We don’t know the effect that it’s going to have on our utility bills, but we do know that everywhere these things have been built. Utility bills have gone way, not just a little,” said community member Don Hanrahan. The county is partnering with a company called CyrusOne. The project includes six data centers on one large campus, which could take six to 10 years to complete. Illinois has multiple data centers. These facilities represent more than $1.2 billion in infrastructure investment. Many people are concerned their electric bill will skyrocket, but the rural electric cooperative says rates will not increase. * PJ Star | What to know about East Peoria emergency alert system breach: The data taken from Crisis24’s systems includes people’s names, addresses, email addresses, phone numbers and passwords used to create their profile for CodeRED, which notifies people about emergencies such as boil orders, weather-related closures and police and fire events. The city said that the CodeRED system was immediately decommissioned, with a new platform being created through Crisis24 using backed-up data. Any resident signed up for CodeRED through March 31 was immediately transferred over to the new platform. * WAND | Free skating returns to downtown Springfield: The rink, located in Union Square Park, opens for the season on Wednesday with a special grand-opening celebration featuring historic re-enactors portraying Abraham and Mary Lincoln. The event begins Dec. 3 at 4:30 p.m. and will include ALPLM leaders and special guests. According to the ALPLM unlike traditional ice rinks, this skating surface is made of artificial material, giving visitors an ice-like experience even in above-freezing temperatures. Guests can bring their own skates or borrow a pair at Union Station at no cost. * SJ-R | Residents spent millions on these gaming machines in Springfield: 833 video gaming terminals live in Springfield, spread across 151 establishments. What establishments are most popular, and which pay out the most? Gamblers in Springfield wagered $596.4 million in 2024, according to data from the Illinois Gaming Board. The capital city wagered more than any other Illinois city in that year, winning $544.3 million. * AP | Steve Cropper, guitarist and member of Stax Records’ Booker T and the M.G.’s, has died at age 84: AP) — Steve Cropper, the lean, soulful guitarist and songwriter who helped anchor the celebrated Memphis backing band Booker T. and the M.G.’s at Stax Records and co-wrote the classics “Green Onions,” “(Sittin’ on) the Dock of the Bay” and “In the Midnight Hour,” has died. He was 84. […] Cropper’s very name was immortalized in the 1967 smash “Soul Man,” recorded by Sam & Dave. Midway, singer Sam Moore calls out “Play it, Steve!” as Cropper pulls off a tight, ringing riff, a slide sound that Cropper used a Zippo lighter to create. The exchange was reenacted in the late 1970s when Cropper joined the John Belushi-Dan Aykroyd act “The Blues Brothers” and played on their hit cover of “Soul Man.”
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Good morning!
Thursday, Dec 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Keb’ Mo’… Lift up your voice and sing * We raised about $12,000 on Monday to buy Christmas presents for foster kids cared for by Lutheran Social Services of Illinois. We raised about $10,000 on Tuesday. On Wednesday, we raised less than $6,500. Let’s be clear, these are not horrible numbers. But we’re at $28K and the total needed to buy presents for more than 2,500 foster kids is $62,500. People, please, click here and dig deep. Thanks! * Anyway, this is an open thread.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, Dec 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Thursday, Dec 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Dec 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller We’ve raised $4,000 so far today. Thank you! But that’s not enough. Lutheran Social Services of Illinois needs a lot more to make sure every foster child in its care receives a Christmas gift this year. All the money goes directly to gifts, and the average gift costs about $25. So this is the moment to step up. If you can give, please click here and help us close that big gap. Every dollar truly counts. Thanks!!! * AP…
Governor JB Pritzker was asked about the threat to withhold SNAP benefits at an unrelated news conference today…
* Volts | How Illinois passed its third big clean-energy bill in a decade: David Roberts, Kady McFadden and John Delurey talk about the state’s decision to empower its utility commission to directly procure clean energy. We discuss why capacity markets are too slow for the current environment and their strategy of aggressively framing renewables and storage not just as green, but as the only “fast and cheap” way to protect ratepayers from price spikes. * Sen. Robert Peters | Our IVF experience heightened awareness of threats to access: Somehow, the Republicans didn’t anticipate the tidal wave of national outrage that their attacks on IVF would create. The dream of starting or expanding a family isn’t a partisan issue, and access to IVF is extremely popular across both parties. In 2023, nearly 96,000 babies were born from IVF, up from the year before, accounting for almost 3% of all births in the U.S. Yet Republicans continue blocking a bill sponsored by Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., that would protect IVF nationwide. * Chicago Reader | Righting systemic wrongs of Illinois prisons: Even though Illinois abolished the death penalty in 2011, we allow for “death by incarceration.” Most incarcerated people over 20 in Illinois have no opportunity to earn parole or early release, since the state abolished discretionary parole in 1978. In 1998, the state passed the so-called “truth-in-sentencing” laws, which have restricted most people from earning time off their sentences. This means those with life sentences without parole or de facto life sentences will likely never see life outside of prison again. * Tribune | SEIU looks to beef up CPS ranks amid dispute with teachers union: The Service Employees International Union is looking to beef up its ranks within Chicago Public Schools, a development with significant implications for the workers it is looking to organize — and for city politics. SEIU Local 73 filed a petition to add about 1,600 school-based CPS workers to its ranks with the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board on Nov. 10. But the union’s one-time ally, the Chicago Teachers Union, contends that some of those workers rightfully belong to CTU. The dispute is the latest development in a feud between the two progressive labor unions that has its roots in a turf war over other jobs within the school district. * Legal Newsline | CTU can’t sue group for campaigning in union elections: At issue is the federal Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act, a 1959 law that bars a union or an employer from spending money promoting candidates for union office. CTU and member Moselean Parker accused a rival group, Educators 4 Excellence, of violating that law by recruiting and promoting candidates during a May 2022 CTU election cycle. After U.S. District Judge Edmond Chang dismissed the complaint, CTU took the issue to the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. Judge Michael Brennan wrote the panel’s opinion, filed Nov. 19; Judges Joshua Kolar and Nancy Maldonado concurred, with Maldonado writing a brief special concurrence. * WBEZ | Trump administration sued for South Shore raid footage that fed propaganda videos: Democracy Forward, a Washington D.C.-based legal organization that has challenged the Trump administration, state and local governments and right-wing movements over the past decade, filed a public records request for all original footage from the raid in the South Shore neighborhood. That request has gone unfulfilled, the group said, so it filed a seven-page federal complaint in the U.S. District court in D.C. late last month. The suit seeks to compel the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to search for and release any available footage. * Block Club | Little Village Chamber Leader Thanked Border Patrol As Agents Arrested Neighbors, Video Shows: The staffer, Olman Chaheine, was the chamber’s director of outreach and community development, tasked with connecting and supporting Little Village businesses and the Latino-majority community. Little Village — a famed enclave for Mexican Americans and Latino immigrants — has been hit hard in recent months as federal agents targeted the area during Operation Midway Blitz, taking employees as they worked inside local restaurants and snatching people off the streets. Businesses have struggled as workers and would-be customers stayed home out of fear. … In an emailed statement Tuesday night, the Little Village Chamber of Commerce leaders said they strongly condemn the statements made “by a former staff member.” * Block Club | South Side’s 1st Youth Crisis Center Opens At Renovated Englewood Community Service Facility: The $3 million overhaul includes a new mental wellness clinic, a family resource hub and a “Golden Years Program” for seniors with intellectual and developmental disabilities. The mental wellness clinic hosts the first Youth Crisis Stabilization Center on the South Side, McKinley Community Services CEO Jamal Malone said. The Sophia Cafe, an addition to the Englewood center named in honor of the nonprofit’s founder, will provide healthy food options to the community while employing people with disabilities when it opens to the public in the spring, Malone said. Food served at the cafe will be sourced from the nonprofit’s outdoor urban farm on 18th Street and Wabash Avenue, Malone said. * Sun-Times | Chicago torture victim imprisoned 33 years for double murder now in line for $15 million settlement: Smith was released from prison in 2020 after spending 33 years behind bars, and has since been granted a certificate of innocence. The settlement amount being weighed by the Council pales in comparison to the $66 million that he sought in his lawsuit filed in 2021 in federal court in Chicago. Smith was 39 when he was arrested in September 1987 for the murder of his wife’s mother and her grandmother. According to his lawsuit, officers placed Smith “in a small windowless interrogation room and handcuffed him to a ring on a wall” before they “beat him in the chest, threatened and choked him.” * Sun-Times | Illinois Medical District getting its first park in 80 years: The park would occupy a triangle of land bounded by Ogden Avenue, Polk Street and Damen Avenue. The project’s officials and architects said the park would act as a place of activity and rest, despite its busy locale. And it will be the site of the previously announced permanent memorial to COVID-19 victims and workers — one of the nation’s first. * Tribune | Bruce Dold, former Chicago Tribune editor and ‘consummate newspaperman,’ dies at 70: Bruce Dold, who rose from suburban reporter to editor and publisher during his prodigious four-decade career at the Chicago Tribune, had only a handful of bylines after his name took its place on the masthead. But the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist left an indelible mark on the newspaper and the city, tackling the issues of the day, promoting civil discourse and influencing public policy. From clearheaded editorials that found common ground to the groundbreaking endorsement of Chicago’s own Barack Obama for president, Dold led the Tribune into the new millennium with a reverence for the newspaper’s storied history, and an open mind for the future. * Daily Southtown | Federation of Labor backs Pat Hynes over Fritz Kaegi for Cook County assessor: The umbrella organization for Chicago unions is backing Pat Hynes for Cook County assessor against incumbent Fritz Kaegi in the March Democratic primary and taking sides in various contested county board races. The Chicago Federation of Labor announced its endorsement of Hynes and other Cook County candidates in a Wednesday morning release, saying the Lyons Township Assessor and a former employee of the assessor’s office “knows how to get the job done.” * Progressive Railroading | New panel to study passenger rail along Wisconsin-Illinois lakeshore: The meeting will focus on establishing the commission’s organizational structure and beginning the early coordination necessary to explore the feasibility of future passenger-rail service in southeastern Wisconsin, connecting the downtowns of Kenosha, Racine and Milwaukee to Chicago and communities along the northern shore of Lake Michigan, according to a press release issued by Racine city officials. * Daily Southtown | ‘Extremely dangerous for the citizens’: Harvey Fire Department staffing down to 40% after new layoffs: Before the city announced a financial emergency and began mass layoffs, the Fire Department had 37 staff, said Keith Freeman, secretary of Harvey Firemen’s Association Local 471. Now, they’re down to just 15, and have gone from three active fire stations to just one. “This is very potentially going to cost injury or the lives of the citizens,” Freeman said. “The manpower that we have in the city, we agreed upon because it’s the required manpower to do the best we can for the citizens, to keep the citizens safe. That’s our top priority.” * Daily Herald | Wheeling special census postponed due to government shutdown: The historic federal government shutdown that cost millions of Americans paychecks and financial aid before ending in mid-November had another casualty — Wheeling’s long-planned special census. The census was supposed to begin in October. It was commissioned by the village board to prove Wheeling has grown since the 2020 federal census put the town at 39,137 people. * Daily Herald | Des Plaines, Buffalo Grove set restrictions for e-bikes and e-scooters: In Des Plaines, e-bikes, e-scooters and similar vehicles that are capable of exceeding 28 mph are forbidden on public streets, public sidewalks and in public parking lots. Riding through a city parking lot to reach a destination is OK, however, officials clarified before Monday’s unanimous vote. Among other rules, anyone under 16 years old is prohibited from operating less-powerful e-bikes or similar vehicles on public streets or public sidewalks and in public parking lots. Motorized vehicles that are considered toys for young children and can’t go more than 10 mph may only be operated on sidewalks, within crosswalks or on private property. * Daily Herald | Neighbors helping neighbors: Des Plaines area volunteers cook, deliver 700 Thanksgiving dinners: The Des Plaines Community Foundation, Sysco Chicago and Sunrise Grill all worked together to provide and deliver Thanksgiving Day dinners. As a result, more than 700 recipients, including homebound seniors and people with disabilities, had a very happy Thanksgiving. “This is our 15th year making the meals and delivering the turkey dinners, and 700 is the highest number of meals to date,” said Dina Argus, executive director of the DPCF. “It’s a group effort. Turkey dinners were delivered to those in wheelchairs, on oxygen and the blind — all those who have difficulty leaving their homes. * Shaw Local | Joliet renews prison lease amid questions from residents: The City Council approved a lease extension on the Joliet Correctional Center property on Tuesday but not without facing questions from the public. City officials said they are willing to work with the Forest Preserve District of Will County, which is interested in buying 135 acres of open land on the site. * Crain’s | Lakefront homes lose millions in value from Winnetka bluff protections, lawsuit claims: Of the four examples, the steepest drop in value, 64%, is for Barbara Irwin’s blufftop home on Taylorsport Lane. The pre-ordinance value was $7.54 million, but under the ordinance it dropped to $2.69 million, according to Cohn Reznick’s analysis. It’s because the ordinance renders about 17,700 square feet of her 44,600-square-foot lot unbuildable. * WAND | EMS workers accused of killing Earl Moore Jr. will be tried separately: Attorneys for Cadigan and Finley said there are too many differences between the actions of the two EMS workers, and a jury would have a hard time convicting one defendant for the other’s actions. The judge ultimately agreed to separate the cases. The state now has to decide which case to bring to trial first. The first trial will start in May, and the judge wants the second to follow soon after. * WICS | Illinois State Police highlight Scott’s Law after snowplow crash on US Highway 36: Monday afternoon on U.S. Highway 36, near the Moultrie and Piatt County line, a driver hit an IDOT snowplow from behind. The driver of the car was rushed to a local hospital with injuries. […] ISP says the crash is being investigated as a Scott’s Law violation. * Sun-Times | Fenwick shocks East St. Louis to win the 6A state title: Tuesday in the Class 6A state championship game, Fenwick junior Jake Thies put his name into Fenwick history right next to the former Notre Dame great. Thies’ two big plays, a 74-yard TD run in the third quarter and an interception in the final minutes of the fourth quarter, were the key moments in the Friars’ 38-28 win against heavily favored East St. Louis at ISU’s Hancock Stadium. * NYT | Private Employers Cut Jobs in November, the Latest Sign of a Slowdown: Private employment fell by 32,000 jobs last month, the payroll processing company ADP said on Wednesday. It was the third decline in four months and, taken at face value, would be a clear sign that the labor market, after months of cooling, had entered a new, more worrying phase. * NPR | The use and misuse of the word ‘ideology’: Today, “ideology has essentially become a form of name-calling,” said Jason Blakely, a political scientist at Pepperdine University and author of Lost in Ideology. He argues conservatives often deploy the term to describe what they view as faddish beliefs that threaten traditional moral orders, while liberals use it to criticize inherited hierarchies they see as limiting human flourishing.
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Kinda looks like magic money
Wednesday, Dec 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * As you probably know, a group of Chicago alderpersons proposed a competing budget idea to Mayor Brandon Johnson’s fiscal plan yesterday. Click here for the synopsis. The proposal makes $441.4 million in adjustments including eliminating the mayor’s $100 million corporate “head tax,” restoring $139.9 million in advance pension payments and funding $166 million in firefighter back pay without borrowing. The council proposal includes $441.4 million in revenue sources. The greatest single amount, $150 million - about a third of the entire proposal - is an undefined “Improved Debt Collections” line. * It’s not at all clear how the city is supposed to do that. It has had real trouble for decades collecting debt, much of which is deemed uncollectible. The idea was mentioned briefly and mostly down deep in some news stories. Tribune…
WTTW…
Discuss.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Another supplement to today’s edition
Wednesday, Dec 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Pritzker says he has no regrets about wearing bullet-proof vest on Jimmy Kimmel show to mock Trump’s statements on Chicago crime
Wednesday, Dec 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * I’ve always said that politicians should leave the comedy to comedians. This advice comes from watching decades of “jokes” backfire badly on some of them. I’ve also made it clear that I really don’t like this whole idea of responding to criticism of Chicago crime by going downtown and posting pretty pictures and videos. Yes, it’s a gorgeous city. A great city. But Chicago has problems that can’t be whitewashed with how spectacular downtown is. You may disagree, but that’s just what I believe. * Anyway, the two warnings came together last month during the Thanksgiving break…
Ted is being overly dramatic, of course, but that’s the job of a candidate. So don’t get too hung up on him. He’s being used here mainly to illustrate the context. * From today’s presser…
Thoughts?
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Catching up with the federal candidates (Updated)
Wednesday, Dec 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * NBC…
According to the State Board of Elections, Marías and Sigcho-Lopez would need 10,816 valid signatures to run as Independents. They could collect up to 17,304 signatures. *** UPDATE *** Very important list…
* Politico…
* US Senate Candidate Juliana Stratton…
GOP US Senate candidate Don Tracy’s response…
* More…
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Question of the day: 2025 Golden Horseshoe Awards
Wednesday, Dec 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2025 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Senate Republican Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager is a tie. Tara Horn…
And Tracy Weiters…
* The 2025 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Senate Democratic Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager goes to Trisha Ray…
Honorable mention goes to Emily Ozier. Congratulations! * OK, let’s move on to today’s categories…
Best House Democratic Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager Remember to explain your nominations or they won’t count. This is about intensity, not numbers. Also, do your very best to nominate in both categories. Breeann Steinacher and Caitlin Anderson won last year and are not eligible this year. * After you’ve made your nominations, please click here and help us buy Christmas presents for more than 2,500 foster kids in the care of Lutheran Social Services of Illinois. They count on us every year, and we just cannot let them down. Thanks!
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Dec 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: After ominous signs from 7th Circuit, attorneys abruptly move to dismiss lawsuit restricting use of force by immigration agents. Tribune…
- In the request, lawyers representing a consortium of media outlets and other plaintiffs noted that the immigration enforcement surge “has ended” in Chicago — at least for now — and that “counsel has not received a single report of unconstitutional behavior that necessitated this case” since Nov. 8. - In a statement Tuesday, the board for the Chicago Headline Club, the lead plaintiff in the case, claimed victory, saying that Border Patrol Cmdr. Gregory Bovino and his team of agents left town soon after Ellis’ injunction was entered. * Related stories… Sponsored by PhRMA
* Governor JB Pritzker will be at Navy Pier at 10:30 am to “highlight Illinois’ plans to celebrate America’s 250th Anniversary.” Click here to watch. * Capitol News Illinois | Appeals court weighs release of immigration detainees to electronic monitoring: The judge ruled in response to immigration and civil rights lawyers’ allegations that Trump’s Department of Homeland Security has repeatedly violated a 2022 federal consent decree restricting the use of warrantless arrests for undocumented immigrants. But the Trump administration appealed, and on Tuesday argued to the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals that the judge overstepped his authority by modifying the consent decree. At least one of the three judges on the panel — Trump appointee Thomas Kirsch II — seemed to agree. He criticized Cummings’ November order to release detainees along with his Oct. 7 order extending the consent decree until February. Cummings was appointed by President Joe Biden. * NBC | Illinois officials warn rental car companies that it is illegal for immigration agents to swap license plates: The office’s review of more than 600 public complaints alleging the practice has so far led to one license plate revocation, according to another letter obtained via the FOIA. That revocation was of a license plate belonging to a 2026 Chevy Tahoe that had been rented by immigration agents, according to a statement from the Illinois secretary of state. The rental company targeted in the Nov. 10 letter, EAN Holdings LLC., which is the parent company of Enterprise Rent-A-Car and other brands, can request a hearing to challenge the decision. A company representative did not respond to a request for comment. * Tribune | Ray LaHood, former GOP congressman and Obama’s transportation secretary, named head of Edgar Fellows program: He was named distinguished director of the program by the nonprofit board Wednesday and will take on a larger role in outreach and civic engagement as well as in supporting the financial sustainability of the organization’s initiatives. “Edgar Fellows is Jim’s living legacy to the State of Illinois,” former Illinois first lady Brenda Edgar said in a statement. “The entire Edgar family is pleased that longtime friend and respected Illinoisian Ray LaHood will be joining the organization in this important role. * CNI | Pritzker signs bill allowing Illinois to issue state-specific vaccine guidelines: IDPH will now be able to form guidelines using a combination of the CDC’s guidance, recommendations from the World Health Organization and other medical and scientific disease prevention experts — and require that immunizations recommended by the state be covered by state-regulated insurance plans. House bill sponsor Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield, emphasized the timeliness of the issue, referencing breaking news from Tuesday morning that indicated the CDC vaccine advisory committee planned to discuss child immunization schedules and the efficacy of Hepatitis B vaccines when it meets on Dec. 4 and Dec. 5. * WTVO | Illinois extends financial aid to undocumented students starting January 1st, 2026: Beginning January 1st, 2026, undocumented students living in Illinois will become eligible for state and local financial aid under a new law signed by Gov. JB Pritzker in August. House Bill 460 extends eligibility for grants, scholarships, stipends, and other state funded student aid to all Illinois residents regardless of immigration status. Bill sponsor Celina Villanueva (D-Chicago) said, “If you live in Illinois and are pursuing higher education, you should have access to the same opportunities as your peers.” * Tribune | First, ICE raided their Chicago apartment building. Now, they’re being forced to vacate it: The Circuit Court of Cook County granted an order on Nov. 24 from Wells Fargo Bank to have residents at 7500 S. Shore Drive to vacate by Dec. 5 for those with valid leases and all other occupants were instructed to leave by Dec. 12 of this year. The South Shore Tenants Union, supported by the Metropolitan Tenants Organization and Southside Together, said they were blindsided by the court order, which was granted without tenant input and leaves members “scrambling to find housing in bitterly cold weather.” “This is my community and I should not be forced out especially at a time like this when it’s literally freezing outside,” said Travaris Ivy. * Sun-Times | Mayor Brandon Johnson makes emotional plea for embattled corporate head tax proposal: Johnson began his weekly City Hall news conference with defiance, but ended it emotionally as he talked about his father, now fighting Alzheimer’s, who taught him the work ethic and drive to protect everyday people, something that has guided the mayor through this second straight budget stalemate. “There are lines of Chicagoans, right now, of people who do not have food. … And if you’ve never gone hungry, you wouldn’t know why I have that urgency — if you’ve never opened up your refrigerator and there’s nothing in it. Poverty sucks,” the mayor said. * Block Club | Mayor Johnson Doubles Down On Corporate Head Tax As Majority Of Alders Pitch Alternative Budget Plan: “Corporations are making a killing right now, and we have alders that are more interested in defending these big corporations than families like mine who went without food and electricity and could not afford rent and mortgage,” Johnson said. “The vast majority of the people in this city are struggling every single day just to make the ends meet. And we have alders that are playing games with those families.” * Crain’s | Breakaway aldermen offer counter-budget that kills head tax: The plan, presented in a letter to be sent to Johnson and provided to Crain’s, accounts for hundreds of millions in changes to Johnson’s $16.6 billion plan and includes new or increased taxes on rideshare trips, garbage collection, liquor sales — with an exemption for bars and restaurants — and an additional $90 million in potential savings the mayor has previously said would not be feasible in 2026. * WBEZ | As cold weather settles over Chicago, advocates call out Trump’s new homelessness policies: Last month, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development announced plans to shift $3.9 billion in long-term housing to transitional housing requiring work and addiction treatment. More than 7,500 Illinoisans could be at risk of losing housing. * Crain’s | Illinois EPA signs off on revamp of old South Works site to quantum campus: The site had previously received a letter from the IEPA requiring no further remediation at the vacant former U.S. Steel South Works, but the developers voluntarily enrolled in the state’s site-remediation program. […] The IEPA’s approval clears the way for construction to begin at the quantum park, which takes up 128 acres of the site south of 87th Street. Work on a facility for PsiQuantum, which plans to build one of the world’s first commercial-scale quantum computers on the site, will begin this month, along with remediation work. Clayco is building PsiQuantum’s facility. * Higher Ed Dive | University of Chicago nearly halves its budget deficit to $160M: The University of Chicago cut its fiscal 2025 budget deficit by about 44% to $160 million after years of belt-tightening measures amid financial headwinds, it announced last week. The private nonprofit’s operating loss fell by over half to $86.4 million, per its latest financials. * Daily Herald | O’Hare ‘conundrum’ could upend when Global Terminal, new concourses are built: The challenging logistics are why Chicago might revise a hard-won 2024 deal with United and American airlines that prioritized building a Global Terminal and a new satellite “Concourse D.” A second, satellite “Concourse E,” would come last. Instead, the city might construct both satellite concourses first and put the Global Terminal, which replaces Terminal 2, on temporary hold. “O’Hare planners face a conundrum,” DePaul Professor Joseph Schwieterman and analyst Samantha Rouzan wrote in “O’Hare’s Traffic Trajectory,” a study released Wednesday. * Sun-Times | DuSable Black History Museum, CEO misused public funds, whistleblower alleges: The lawsuit is the latest in an ongoing whistleblower campaign by Kim Dulaney, a retired Chicago State University professor who joined the South Side museum in 2021 as director of education and programs. She later became the vice president of the same department. Dulaney alleges in her suit, filed Monday in Cook County Circuit Court, that she was retaliated against after “questioning DuSable’s irregular fiscal practices.” Dulaney claims in the suit that she was excluded from meetings, harassed and ultimately terminated in October. The lawsuit brings the claims forward under the Illinois Whistleblower Act. * Block Club | Should Christkindlmarket Move? Mayor Floats Idea, But Vendors And Organizers Not So Sure: Johnson did not share details about where the popular market could go. “We want to make sure that we have a safe mechanism in which people can enjoy Downtown, and so that may include looking at a much larger space,” he said. “And that’s a good thing for our economy.” * Sun-Times | Cook County’s top prosecutor touts increase in pretrial detention, urges electronic monitoring reform: Since taking office, judges have granted detention in 80% of violent crime cases, 85% of aggravated domestic battery and 76% of machine gun cases, all higher than under the previous state’s attorney, Kim Foxx, according to the state’s attorney’s office. “We are not asking for detention on every case,” Burke said. “We are asking for detention when someone presents a danger to the community, and we will continue to do that on each and every case when someone is a danger.” * Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi released his first video ad of his reelection campaign…
* Daily Herald | Hanover Park police officer detained by ICE returns to active duty: Department leaders previously stated that Bojovic’s hire in January was made in full compliance with federal and state law. Officials said Bojovic presented the village with a valid Work Authorization Card issued by the federal government’s U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. Additionally, both FBI and Illinois State Police background checks revealed no criminal history, officials said. Bojovic returned to active duty Monday, and village will provide him back pay for the time he was on administrative leave. * Tribune | Lake Bluff trustees closer to a vote on policies on possible federal agents’ immigration actions in the village: At their Nov. 24 meeting, trustees unanimously approved the first reading of an ordinance outlining village procedures in light of Operation Midway Blitz, a controversial federal immigration crackdown in which officers have detained numerous people, including some in nearby communities. * Daily Herald | DuPagePads receives historic $5 million grant from Jeff Bezos, Lauren Sánchez Bezos: The 40-year-old organization plans to use the $5 million over the next five years to expand outreach, create a year-round family overflow shelter and accelerate rapid rehousing for families, officials said in a grant announcement. The funds will also sustain educational and transportation supports for children experiencing homelessness. * Illinois Times | Grayson’s attorneys ask for new trial: Former Sangamon County sheriff’s deputy Sean Grayson’s lawyers say he deserves a new trial for the 2024 murder of Sonya Massey because the presiding judge erred when allowing the jury to hear Grayson’s disparaging remarks about Massey after the fatal shooting. “As a result, the events following the shooting had no relevance to the issues in the case,” attorneys Daniel Fultz and Mark Wykoff wrote in their Nov. 26 motion for a new trial. “The only purpose served by the introduction of that evidence was to improperly inflame the passions of the jury – which was substantially prejudicial to the defendant.” * WGLT | Connect Transit awarded $5 million grant for planned Bloomington transfer center: Officials have said the project has been targeted for a late 2026 opening. Transit officials were unavailable for comment Tuesday. “This funding is a welcome addition to the resources we are investing in our new Downtown Bloomington Transit Center, which is a major step forward,” Connect Transit Board Chair Julie Hile said in a statement. “We are eager to deliver on its modernized infrastructure, expanded access, and improved efficiency and safety as a member of the downtown business community. We are grateful for the federal support that makes this possible.” * WCIA | U of I researchers get $1M FDA grant to study foodborne illness: In a news release, the College of Agricultural, Consumer & Environmental Sciences announced that a U of I research team will use the grant money they received to monitor meat products for resistant bacteria. “These pathogens can cause disease, and they can transfer their antimicrobial resistance properties to other pathogens. We risk being surrounded by ‘superbugs’ which are difficult to kill by using traditional, anti-microbial drugs,” said principal investigator Pratik Banerjee, associate professor in the Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition. * NYT | 5 Years After His Death, John Prine Gets a Cinematic Send-Off: For someone so close to his family, friends and community, John Prine’s funeral was an uncharacteristically distant affair. The memorial service for the singer-songwriter, who died from complications of Covid-19 in April 2020 at 73, had been made strange by the pandemic. “We had to beg for the opportunity for the immediate family to even gather at the funeral home here in Nashville,” recalled his wife, Fiona Whelan Prine. “We were literally sitting eight feet apart. There was no hugging. There was no commiserating.”
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Good morning!
Wednesday, Dec 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller Carve the turkey, turn the ball game on * Good news: We raised almost $10,000 yesterday to buy Christmas presents for foster kids, putting our total at $21,675. Bad news: Lutheran Social Services of Illinois has 2,500 foster children in its care. At $25 per gift, that means the need this year is $62,500. Bottom line: We have a long way to go, campers. Please click here and make a foster kid happy at Christmas. Thanks!!! * This is an open thread.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and some additional news
Wednesday, Dec 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Dec 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Dec 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Dec 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…
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