Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Illinois State Fair Event List
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Illinois GOP…
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries will headline the Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association’s annual brunch on Wednesday. * The pro-Raja Krishnamoorthi Impact Fund is out with a new poll…
* Daily Herald…
* Muddy River News | Tracy talks about being deputized for Texas lawmaker case: Her Friday court filing in Adams County Court was not as an elected official. The petition seeks to compel the Texas Democrats to return to their native state after they fled to Illinois last Sunday to avoid a vote on a redistricting map. “Many people think I’m doing it as a state senator. No,” Tracy told Muddy River News at Saturday’s fundraiser dinner for the Adams County Republican Party. “It was a very fast-paced thing,” Senator Tracy divulged. “I was contacted at 11 am, and by 4 o’clock it was filed. But I am not receiving compensation.” * Fox Chicago | Illinois lawmaker, DCFS dispute legality of intern investigators in child abuse cases: State Rep. Jed Davis, R-75th, alleged that DCFS has permitted interns without proper credentials to investigate families, in some cases leading to the removal of children from their homes. He argued the practice violates the Child Protective Investigator and Child Welfare Specialist Certification Act of 1987, which requires certification before any official investigative work, and says it undermines public trust and harms families. … In a statement, the department said every employee conducting an investigation — regardless of their job title — is certified under the law after meeting education, training, and examination requirements. The agency said its Child and Family Services Intern positions are part of a longstanding pipeline program to recruit qualified investigators and keep caseloads manageable. “To be clear, DCFS complies fully with the Certification Act,” the agency said. “DCFS has developed guidelines for education and profession requirements and a curriculum in child protection investigations.” The department also said it attempted to clarify the issue with Davis, including arranging a face-to-face meeting before his press release, which it says he canceled. * Tribune | Top candidates for the US House in Illinois’ 2nd, 7th, 8th and 9th districts for the 2026 election: A South Side native and community organizer, state Sen. Robert Peters of Chicago received an early endorsement from U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont after Peters announced his intent to run for the 2nd Congressional District seat. That gave him an early leg up with progressives in the district. “I have a record and I have a personal narrative that I think really touches on where we’re at right now,” Peters recently told the Tribune. The 40-year-old was born deaf and with a speech impediment, and he was influenced by his adoptive father’s work as a civil rights lawyer. * Pantagraph | Rep. Mary Miller gets a primary challenger: Ryan Tebrugge, a state employee and small business owner from Springfield, is circulating petitions to take on the three-term incumbent, who is one of President Donald Trump’s most ardent and, at times, controversial backers. Much like the three Democrats seeking their party’s nomination in the 15th, Tebrugge did not cast the challenge in a partisan lens. He instead criticized Miller’s constituent services as poor and said that she was neglecting the needs of the district by not taking advantage of opportunities to bring money back for infrastructure projects and programs. * Muddy River News | Supporters and protestors greet Congresswoman Miller in Quincy: Inside, well-wishers far outnumbered the outside detractors and applause awaited the congresswoman. […] Adams County Democratic Party Chair Katherine Daniels says they are especially galled that Miller has never met with them. “We have tried to contact her. We have tried to meet with her. We’ve asked her to have town halls, and she completely fails to respond or have a town hall. And she will only speak to Republicans. She won’t speak to her other constituents.” * The 9th Congressional District, already packed to the gills, now has a mystery candidate squeezing in…
* 25News Now | Rivian autoworker is 3rd Democrat wanting to unseat LaHood: Scott A. Best, 24, is seeking the Democratic nomination for Congress in the 16th District, which covers portions of several Central Illinois counties including Peoria, Tazewell, Woodford, McLean, Bureau, Stark and Marshall. Best is running as a pro-union, anti-establishment candidate who supports universal healthcare and a federal $25 per hour minimum wage. He’s also for guaranteed paid sick leave and stronger union protections to “ensure companies like Rivian can’t take public money while exploiting their workforce,” his release said. * WTTW | Federal Judge Allows Chicago to Join Lawsuit to Stop Trump from Yanking Funding Sanctuary Cities: A federal judge allowed Chicago to join a lawsuit seeking to block the Trump administration from yanking funding from cities and counties across the country because they have laws designed to protect undocumented immigrants by prohibiting state local law enforcement officials from helping federal agents. U.S. District Judge William Orrick agreed Aug. 5 to allow Chicago and 33 other cities and counties, including Los Angeles, Denver, Boston and Baltimore, to join the lawsuit that claimed the Trump administration was unlawfully trying to force local officials to help federal immigration agents conduct deportation efforts. * Crain’s | Johnson, firefighters reach tentative deal after 4-year standoff: Without detailing specifics, Johnson confirmed the annual raises in the proposed contract are similar to those agreed to for the city’s largest police union, which began at 5% the first two years and are tied to inflation in the final two years. “I’ve said from the very beginning that part of the agreement would include, and we budgeted for, back pay, and there are some other elements within the tentative agreement that I believe place us in a stronger position to build a safe and affordable big city,” Johnson said. * WTTW | Lawyers Ask Judge to Expand Lawsuit Accusing CPD of Targeting Black, Latino Chicagoans With Traffic Stops to Include All Black, Latino Drivers: If U.S. District Court Judge Mary Rowland agrees to certify the lawsuit as a class action, it will sharply raise the stakes in the case and increase the pressure on city officials to reach a settlement to reduce the costs to taxpayers. Rowland has already ruled there is enough evidence that the city intentionally discriminated against Black and Latino drivers because of their race, and that the mass traffic stop program unlawfully burdens Black and Latino drivers disproportionately, for the lawsuit to proceed, court records show. * Chalkbeat Chicago | CPS budget won’t include contested city pension payment: Interim Chicago Public Schools CEO Macquline King is planning to propose a $10.2 billion budget to the school board Wednesday that doesn’t include midyear cuts to schools or a reimbursement to the city of Chicago for a highly-debated pension payment covering the retirements of city workers and CPS staff, multiple sources told Chalkbeat.Not including the pension reimbursement — a move that most elected school board members have said they support — would help close the district’s budget deficit, which was estimated at $734 million in June. According to a source with direct knowledge of the budget plan, King’s budget proposal also does not include a plan to take out a short-term, high-interest loan — a strategy to address the budget deficit previously pitched by the mayor’s office, where she worked before she became CEO. * Tribune | Mayor Johnson’s CPS chief resists City Hall borrowing plan, pension payment as budget deadline looms: King is scheduled to have meetings with aldermen and state representatives on Tuesday, discussing her budget plans. Sources told the Tribune she intends to tell them that they won’t make the $175 million pension payment and will avoid borrowing measures. It’s not clear whether the district plans to avoid borrowing altogether or do a smaller amount than previously proposed. * WBEZ | CPS leader, unions brief City Council members on budget plan in rare sign of unity: “Every option that’s available to us we have to actually lean into and have a robust discussion around it, and we’re doing just that,” Mayor Brandon Johnson said at a City Hall news briefing Tuesday morning. Later, when asked what would happen if CPS doesn’t take out a loan to cover part of the deficit, Johnson said: “We’re either gonna cut or invest. Those are our options right now.” * Block Club | The Never-Ending Line For Benefits Is Back, With Some Immigrants Sleeping Outside To Get A Spot: Leda, who is from Afghanistan and has lived in suburban Skokie for more than a year, said she hoped to renew food stamps and medicaid benefits for her, her four children and her husband. After two failed attempts to get benefits at the facility, she went back for a third time at 2 a.m. with a small camping chair and a blanket. * Windy City Times | Chicago protest targets hospital cuts to gender-affirming care for youth: The rally was organized in response to recent rollbacks in health care access for transgender youth, including four major hospitals in Chicago—UI Health, Rush University Medical Center, University of Chicago Medicine and Lurie Children’s Hospital—that have suspended gender-affirming surgeries or other care for people under 19. These decisions are part of a national trend in which health care systems are abandoning transgender youth care in the face of political pressure from President Donald Trump’s administration, which has threatened to revoke funding for institutions offering gender-affirming care to minors. * Sun-Times | From Slurpees to Shostakovich, an abandoned 7-Eleven becomes a home for classical music: “It’s pretty unrecognizable,” Boustead said. “The door dings when you walk in, like a 7-Eleven — we left that. Behind the bar, there’s still, where the grease trap used to be, a door that goes down into the floor where they used to dump grease. I found a training poster for their employees, and we’re planning to frame it and put it in the bathroom.” * Lake County News-Sun | Lake County district embraces AI technology in the classroom; ‘We really are on the forefront of … recognizing the importance of this’: D112 launched its pilot partnerships last school year with services Magic School AI and School AI. Magic School offers a variety of tools in its suite, including chatbots that imitate historic figures, authors or characters, image generators, coding assistance, college counseling and even a “joke creator.” The district provided teachers with the pilot’s key objectives, implementation strategies and expected outcomes, all aimed at launching the district into the world of the new technology. * Daily Herald | ‘It’s going to be a game changer’: DuPage’s Crisis Recovery Center opening soon in Wheaton: Expected to open the first week of September, the center will be available around the clock on the county health department campus and serve as an alternative to hospital emergency departments or law enforcement intervention. The goal is to stabilize those in crisis and provide an ongoing care plan — all within less than 24 hours in most cases, particularly in the adult and youth mental health pods. There’s also a separate unit that will provide a range of services for people with substance use issues. * Shaw Local | Appellate court affirms former Joliet inspector general had no power to sue Illinois State Police: Not even the city’s attorneys could have authorized Connolly to file a lawsuit because his office is not a separate unit of government, according to the appellate court. […] Connolly filed his lawsuit in 2023 after Illinois State Police challenged his authority to issue them a subpoena. Connolly’s subpoena requested numerous records of their investigation of involving former Joliet Mayor Bob O’Dekirk and former Joliet City Council member Donald Dickinson. * NBC Chicago | Suburban boil order continues; Medieval Times cancels show after ‘careful consideration’: Schaumburg officials said the boil order, which began Monday morning, would continue for 24 to 36 hours following an emergency water main break in the area. The village confirmed to NBC Chicago the order remained in effect as of 6 a.m. Tuesday. The order led Medieval Times in Schaumburg to cancel its scheduled show Tuesday “out of an abundance of caution.” * Dispatch Argus | Scott County pays $1.3 million to house inmates elsewhere; Rock Island gets $508K for housing 121 from Scott County during fiscal year: Overcrowding, housing logistics and the need to keep some inmates separated caused the Scott County Sheriff to spend more than $1.3 million to house inmates in other county jails in fiscal year 2025, a jump of 91.7% over the previous year. Sheriff Tim Lane reported that in fiscal year 2024, his department spent $681,012 to house Scott County inmates out of county. However, in fiscal year 2025, that jumped to $1,305,419. * WGEM | Quincy Public School officials detail start of school year with superintendent suspended: Quincy Public School officials on Monday released a letter to the community outlining how the new school year will begin in the absence of Superintendent Todd Pettit and two Denman Elementary School teachers. The letter states that the Board of Education has asked the Chief of Business Operations, Ryan Whicker, and Director of Teaching and Learning Kim Dinkheller to provide interim leadership in Pettit’s absence. […] This comes after Pettit reported in early November that QPS received reports from parents reporting concerns over birthday spankings and the use of tape on students. * WGEM | Start of Quincy High School delayed as mold is found in theater: Officials stated they found surface mold in the theatre over the weekend. They also found that three of six air conditioners were not working, increasing the humidity in the theatre. Officials said the theatre has a separate air conditioning system, so the rest of the building has not been impacted. * Muddy River News | Mayor settles dust up about Pride in the Park: Mayor Linda Moore set out to set the record straight about the city council’s recent approval of Pride in the Park, September 21 in Clat Adams Park. “The city council does not have the right to screen content,” the Mayor explained after receiving several calls and various chatter after the vote. “The organizers of Pride in the Park met all the city requirements. The ability to make our own choices is the core of our democracy.” * Muddy River News | Eighth Judicial Circuit Court candidates flex their resumé muscles: Judge Chris Pratt touts his unanimous recommendation from a local selection committee before being appointed to the position by the Illinois Supreme Court in 2024. […] His opponent is longtime prosecutor Tim Bass, whose official announcement was covered by Muddy River News. Bass told his supporters then that his 30 years as a prosecutor make him the most qualified. * WCIA | Central Illinois schools introducing ‘phone-free’ environment: New this year, the Champaign School District said cell phones are not to be used during instructional time. In an email sent to district families, the district said students will need to put phones/electronic devices in pockets or backpacks and phones must be powered off or silenced during instructional time. In both the middle and high schools, electronic devices will be allowed in the cafeteria during lunch. High school students will also be allowed to use their phones during passing period. * WaPo | Pentagon plan would create military ‘reaction force’ for civil unrest: The plan calls for 600 troops to be on standby at all times so they can deploy in as little as one hour, the documents say. They would be split into two groups of 300 and stationed at military bases in Alabama and Arizona, with purview of regions east and west of the Mississippi River, respectively. Cost projections outlined in the documents indicate that such a mission, if the proposal is adopted, could stretch into the hundreds of millions of dollars should military aircraft and aircrews also be required to be ready around-the-clock. Troop transport via commercial airlines would be less expensive, the documents say. * Popular Info | Why you might not know that 2024 was America’s safest year since the 1960s: In the early 1990s, there were over 750 reported violent crimes for every 100,000 Americans. As the population has increased in the last 30 years, the raw number of violent crimes has decreased. In 1992, for example, there were 747,000 more reported violent crimes in America than there were in 2024 — even though America had 84 million fewer people in 1992. Similarly, in 2024, there were 1,760 reported property crimes for every 100,000 Americans. That is the lowest rate of property crimes since 1961. The murder rate also plummeted 14.9 percent in 2024, which is “the fastest drop in murder ever recorded.” * Nieman Lab | Politico’s recent AI experiments shouldn’t be subject to newsroom editorial standards, its editors testify: The allegations revolve around two generative AI-powered tools. One tool, called LETO, generates live summaries of speeches and was used on Politico.com’s homepage during the Democratic National Convention (DNC) and the vice presidential debate last fall. The other tool, Report Builder, lets Politico Pro subscribers create AI-generated write-ups of niche policy subjects using Politico’s archive. The Guild found that both tools generated statements that were false, violated Politico’s style guide, or were taken down without formal corrections or retractions. * ProPublica | The FDA Let Substandard Factories Ship These Medications to the U.S.: All told, ProPublica identified more than 150 exempted products, mostly from factories in India. One factory in China and one factory in Hungary also received exemptions. Several of the factories make ingredients for drugs, which are then sent to the manufacturers that produce pills, capsules, tablets or injectables. * WaPo | Every VA medical center has severe staffing shortages, audit finds: The inspector general’s office released its annual report Tuesday, revealing the extent of staffing shortages that have plagued the department for years and have worsened this year. All of the Veterans Health Administration’s 139 medical center campuses reported lacking workers, and reports of severe shortages increased 50 percent from the previous fiscal year. * AP | New special session could begin Friday if quorum break continues in Texas: Burrows told members the House would attempt to gavel in with a quorum one last time on Friday morning. If it fails to reach a quorum, he said Gov. Greg Abbott will call a second special session, set to begin immediately on Friday.
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IPA: SB40 With Energy Storage Will Slash Sky-High Electric Bills
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Consumers across Illinois are seeing massive increases in their bills because of inadequate energy supplies and rising demand. And yet a tool that numerous studies have shown could have averted some of these increases now and in the future, battery energy storage, waits for legislative action. Last session, without evidence, opponents claimed adding energy storage in Illinois would spike ratepayer bills. But no fewer than a half dozen studies in Illinois and across the country from groups like the Illinois Power Agency, Clean Grid Alliance and NRDC have shown that storage saves billions for ratepayers. The Facts:
- ComEd customers would save “from $1.52/month to $2.32/month by 2030 and $7.89/month to $8.52/month by 2035.” The facts don’t lie – consumers are seeing the cost of doing nothing in their spiking electric bills NOW. Adding energy storage to Illinois’s electric grid will save consumers billions. That’s why CUB is asking lawmakers to pass SB40 as the best way “to contain costs for electric customers while managing unprecedented energy demand.” Illinois must follow the facts and enact SB40 this fall to deploy 6 gigawatts of energy storage by 2035. Click here for more information.
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Citing applicable laws, the State Board of Elections refuses to fully comply with federal demand for sensitive voter information
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * First some background from a late July article by Capitol News Illinois…
Click here for the DOJ’s letter. * I’ve been regularly asking the board for updates since then. From the Illinois State Board of Elections today…
* The board explained in its letter why it wasn’t including Social Security numbers, Driver’s License or State ID numbers and dates of birth…
* Back to the DOJ letter…
The board’s response…
* From the above Capitol News Illinois story…
Also, Illinois, like many other states, has no disqualification statute for people “adjudicated incompetent.” And convicted felons who have done their time are eligible to vote here.
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Caption contest!
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * The State of New Illinoisi? By the peole? Hilarious… ![]() * As the Kinks told us…
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SB 328: Protects Working People & Helps Fight Trump’s Predatory MAGA Agenda
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] The same front groups, associations and companies that are backing Trump’s predatory MAGA agenda of raising prices, slashing Medicaid, and gutting the Environmental Protection Agency, Food & Drug Administration, and Occupational Safety and Health Administration are also against SB 328. They wrongly believe our state can’t be pro-worker and pro-business, and want Illinois to turn its back on people who have shared their stories about big corporations that have poisoned them or their loved ones: “Because of my career, I was exposed to a tremendous amount of asbestos coming from various automotive companies. These companies came into our state, sold their products, and now are trying to skirt having to pay for what they did [by] trying to make me file a lawsuit in the state where they are headquartered, or ever worse, in Germany or some other country when all of the asbestos was in Illinois? That doesn’t seem fair.” — Retired union mechanic from Chicago suburbs suffering from asbestos-caused cancer SB 328 is good legislation and another way to show that Illinois will always stand up for working families and the most vulnerable.
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Trump, Sims and Peters on the end of cash bail
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * President Donald Trump yesterday…
* React from two strong supporters of ending cash bail. First up, Sen. Elgie Sims (D-Chicago)…
* Sen. Robert Peters (D-Chicago)…
Discuss.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Pritzker: Taxpayers shouldn’t be ‘propping up’ Bears stadium plan. Daily Herald…
- The Bears are a privately owned business, Gov. Pritzker said, and if its owners want to move the team to its 326-acre property in Arlington Heights, he’ll support it. - Regardless of where the team winds up, Pritzker said Illinois taxpayers shouldn’t be “propping up” a business worth more than $8 billion with public funding for a new stadium, a stance he’s long held. * Related stories…
∙ Rep. Kam Buckner: Springfield should think twice before giving the Bears a property tax break ∙ CBS Chicago: Pritzker unenthused about tax relief bill for Bears stadium in Arlington Heights, Illinois * At 3 pm, Governor Pritzker will sign Sonya Massey’s bill, which requires more thorough background checks in police hiring. Click here to watch. * The Southern | Joe Cervantez launches bid for Illinois Attorney General: In an exclusive interview with The Southern Illinoisan, former Jackson County State’s Attorney Joe Cervantez is making his first statewide run, announcing his candidacy for Illinois Attorney General as a Republican. […] So far, incumbent Democrat Kwame Raoul has filed for reelection, and former Chicago Alderman Bob Fioretti is circulating petitions to appear on the March primary ballot, according to a report in Capitol News Illinois. * Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker again makes Nazi comparisons after President Trump threatens DC-like takeover in Chicago: “You’ve seen that he doesn’t follow the law,” Pritzker said. “I have talked about the fact that the Nazis in Germany in the ’30s tore down a constitutional republic in just 53 days. It does not take much, frankly, and we have a president who seems hell-bent on doing just that.” Pritzker previously made a comparison between Trump’s second term and the rise of the Nazi Party in Germany. During his State of the State speech earlier this year, the governor, who is Jewish, likened the actions of Trump and his administration to the quick rise of Nazism in Germany, adding that he was “watching with a foreboding dread what is happening in our country right now. … The authoritarian playbook is laid bare here.” * WTVO | Illinois plans to swap federal healthcare marketplace for state-funded option: Starting November 1st, all Illinois resident who were enrolled in Medicare or Medicaid through Healthcare.gov will be transitioned to Get Covered Illinois for their 2026 coverage. Last year, Get Covered Illinois launched a $6.5 million grant to create a statewide navigator program to assist residents in enrolling in healthcare coverage. * Inside Climate News | As Climate Change Makes Hail More Destructive, Illinois Residents Pay the Price: The big rate increase continues a statewide trend. Illinois homeowners’ rates have gone up 50 percent over the last three years, more on average than in any other state but Utah, from roughly $2,000 to roughly $3,000, said Abe Scarr, state director for Illinois PIRG, a public-interest advocacy group. * WTTW | Illinois Lawmakers on How to Fix Chicago Public Schools’ Budget Challenges:“Of course the state will have a very critical role in providing funding not just for Chicago Public Schools but for districts throughout the state,” said state Rep. Ann Williams (D-Chicago). “Exactly how that happens really depends on what we see on Wednesday when CPS does release its budget.” * After nearly 20 years with the company, Donovan Pepper is leaving his role as the Senior Director of Government Relations and Civic Engagement for Walgreens…
* Daily Herald | Wheaton city councilwoman running for state House seat: Current Wheaton City Council member Erica Bray-Parker, a Democrat, has launched a campaign to succeed retiring Republican Amy Grant in an Illinois House seat. Bray-Parker, a teacher at Glenbard North High School in Carol Stream, has been on the Wheaton council since 2019. She holds one of the two council at-large positions, which represent all of Wheaton. Bray-Parker has now emerged as a candidate for the 47th state House district seat. * Tribune | State Rep. Stephanie Kifowit joins growing Democratic field running for Illinois comptroller: Kifowit joins a field that includes House colleague, state Rep. Margaret Croke of Chicago, Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim and Champaign County Auditor George Danos. State Sen. Karina Villa of West Chicago is also expected to enter the contest. Croke narrowly won the endorsement of Cook County Democratic slatemakers last month. Kifowit called herself “one of the few fiscal experts in the General Assembly” and said she has been “the voice of fiscal responsibility since that day I got there.” * TSPR | New Illinois law to protect rural auctioneers: State Sen. Mike Halpin, D-Rock Island, introduced Senate Bill 2351. It will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2026, and will require a licensed auctioneer to be involved in any online auctions, estate sales, and estate services in Illinois. “Illinois must guarantee that all auction services are carried out by credible, licensed auction professionals. This law will protect our local auctioneers and give bidders peace of mind when they make their transactions,” Halpin said in a release. * Block Club | City Gives 27th Ward Aldermanic Hopefuls Just A Week To Apply For Ald. Walter Burnett’s Job: The requirements are starkly different than the ones the city listed when former Ald. Carlos Ramirez Rosa’s 35th Ward seat vacated earlier this year, when candidates were required to have “at least five years of experience working in government or public service.” Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office said the requirements are different because each selection committee creates their own requirements for applicants. Mayors have historically had wide discretion in appointing replacements to vacant City Council seats, often selecting candidates recommended by the departing alderperson — frequently a close aide or political ally, Simpson said. * Sun-Times | Trump’s warning on replicating a DC police takeover in Chicago an empty and illegal threat: local officials: Johnson said Trump’s repeated attempts to portray Chicago as a cesspool of violent crime run contrary to the 30% drop in homicides and nearly 40% reduction in shootings over the last year. In an interview with ABC-7, Johnson said a federal takeover of law enforcement in Chicago would “destabilize our city” and be unpopular to boot. “No one in the city of Chicago — residents that I’ve spoken to, the people of this city — no one has ever asked for the National Guard to come to Chicago,” the mayor said. * WTTW | At Least 47% of Jobs Charged With Implementing Court-Ordered Police Reforms Are Empty, Another 226 Are Unaccounted For: Records: Of 439 positions in the Chicago Police Department charged with implementing the court order known as the consent decree, 207 positions, or 47%, were empty seven months into 2025, according to a Freedom of Information Act request filed by WTTW News. CPD officials and representatives of Mayor Brandon Johnson failed to account for another 226 positions that city officials told the federal judge responsible for overseeing the reform effort would be charged with implementing the consent decree designed to reform CPD, which has faced decades of scandals, misconduct and brutality. * Crain’s | Northwestern, UChicago named in price inflation conspiracy lawsuit: A lawsuit seeking class-action certification, filed Friday in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, takes aim at the early decision practice — where students apply early to a college and commit to attending in order to increase their admissions chances — which plaintiffs allege is a violation of antitrust law. […] The complaint argues that students, once selected in the early decision process, are prevented from receiving competitive offers from peer institutions and are subject to changes in tuition prices and financial aid package changes without recourse. * CBS Chicago | Chicago to install 50 flood sensors providing real-time alerts of flash flooding: Many of the flood sensors will be in the Chatham neighborhood, where CBS News Chicago has covered flooding issues for years. “This sonar sensor here? That’s how we track how far away the water is,” Hyfi chief executive officer Brandon Wong said. […] “This device measures the flooding on the ground and then through Verizon’s connectivity, it links up with all the other 50 sensors to help inform where to send of an alert in a given part of a neighborhood,” Wong said. * Sun-Times | Canal that famously reversed the Chicago River deserves a better name, group says: The canal that made it all happen has since been known as the Chicago Ship and Sanitary Canal. It’s an unglamorous name. But maybe not for long. Organizations, including Friends of the Chicago River and Friends of the Forest Preserves, are pushing to change the name of the canal to something more inspired. The current name, supporters of the change say, is too focused on the canal’s past. * Sun-Times | Right-hander Drew Thorpe joins White Sox as he continues recovery from Tommy John surgery: “A lot better than last year, just vibe-wise,” Thorpe said of being around the 2025 Sox. “Everything seems like it’s meshing well. We’re playing a lot better than last year, and I think we’re still very young, so a lot of progress to be made, but I think we’re headed in the right direction.” * Tribune | Oak Park ends contract with license plate reader camera company: “At a time when the federal government is making overreaching attacks on norms, institutions, civil rights and due process and the rule of law, Oak Park should not be spending taxpayer funds on a technology that can easily be abused to advance a universal system of authoritarian style surveillance and control,” said John Slocum, the executive director of Refugee Council USA, in a public comment before the vote. Voting to terminate the Flock contract were village Trustees Jenna Leving Jacobson, Chibuike Enyia, Brian Straw, Derek Eder and a reluctant Village President Vicki Scaman. Village Board members Jim Taglia and Corey Wesley voted against terminating the contract with Flock. Instead Taglia and Wesley supported a motion to turn off the cameras for 90 days to give the village more time to study the issue. That motion was defeated by a vote of 4 to 3 as Scaman joined Taglia and Wesley in supporting the motion. * Daily Herald | Pace paratransit rideshare program is victim of its own success: As regards paratransit funding, the Chicago-based Taxi Access Program (TAP) was created over 20 years ago. It lets certified ADA/paratransit passengers pay the first $2 of any trip. Pace covers the remainder up to $30, with riders paying costs exceeding $30, plus tips and surcharges. In 2024, Pace introduced a similar service, the Rideshare Access Program, for city and suburban paratransit riders using Uber and UZURV. Those combined have resulted in a projected 2.2 million more rides and an estimated $53 million shortfall in 2025, planners said. * Daily Herald | One year later, Mount Prospect says new fourth fire station working according to plan: The $1.75 million station at 1415 E. Algonquin Road addressed a long-standing imbalance in coverage. Prior to Station 11’s opening, more than 50% of calls originated south of the tracks, forcing the engine at Station 13 to cross from the north side more than 1,300 times annually. “We now have two fire suppression vehicles south of the tracks, where well over 50% of our calls had always originated,” Dolan said. * Daily Southtown | Blackface performers at Oak Forest charity picnic draw backlash, distancing efforts: Video posted on social media show at least two performers wearing what appears to be black or very dark-colored makeup or stage paint, one of them dressed as a nun. […] The Archdiocese of Chicago also, after the event, issued a statement saying the picnic was “not sponsored, co-hosted, or affiliated with any parish of the Archdiocese of Chicago.” * Daily Southtown | Orland Square Starbucks workers join union; cite pay and working conditions: Nick Brown, a shift supervisor of five years in Orland Park, agrees and said shifts can be inconsistent. “We deserve consistent schedules, a living wage and a louder voice at work,” said Brown. “I hope that by unionizing we can model for other stores in our community.” Workers at two Chicago Starbucks became the first unionized Starbucks workers in the city in 2022, and similar efforts have increased since. * WAND | Boys and Girls Clubs of Central Illinois scrambling to save after-school programs: * WCIA | Neoga School District provides update on tornado repairs entering 2025-26 school year: The elementary school is ready to welcome students back, as priority repairs have been completed. Remaining repairs such as the exterior walls, roof membrane, metal work and the front entrance will not be complete until the late fall, but officials said they will have minimal impact on the learning environment. […] Junior and senior high school students, however, will continue to see the accommodations that were implemented last year. Renovations continue at their facility and officials said interior demolition and repairs continue and are expected to take 12-24 months. * WCIA | Illinois State Fairgoers jump into action, rescue 3-year-old from Sky Glide: Townsley said she immediately began yelling for the operators to stop the ride. After about a minute, Hailey said the Sky Glide paused, and she held on to her son. A crowd formed, and a group of people eventually lifted a woman in the air, who grabbed onto Townsley’s son and lowered him to the ground. She estimated that she held onto him as he dangled over the edge for about five to six minutes. * WGLT | Ford County Chronicle among 40 newsrooms getting new tax credit to curb Illinois news deserts: With co-publisher Andrew Rosten as the Chronicle’s two reporters, they’ll receive $30,000 in tax credits for the next five years. Brumleve said that’s lot of money for a small operation like the Ford County Chronicle — about 10% of their annual budget. But the overall impact is bigger than that. “If it wasn’t for this tax credit our paper would be closed,” said Brumleve. * WICS | Megan Moroney sets new attendance record at Illinois State Fair: Megan Moroney made history Sunday night at the Illinois State Fair, drawing a record-breaking crowd of 15,532 fans. The audience sang along to her hits, including “Am I Okay?,” “Tennessee Orange,” and her latest single, “6 Months Later.” Moroney’s performance surpassed the previous attendance record of 15,427 set by Lil Wayne last year. Before that, Jason Aldean held the record with 15,329 attendees in 2011, followed by Florida Georgia Line in 2014 with 15,204 tickets sold. Reba McEntire drew 14,823 fans in 2019, and Hootie and the Blowfish rounded out the top five with 13,956 tickets sold in 1995. * WaPo | Trump nominates Bureau of Labor Statistics critic to replace fired agency head: [E.J. Antoni] has a PhD in economics from Northern Illinois University and contributed to Project 2025, a Heritage Foundation policy blueprint that laid out many of the strategies that the Trump administration has followed since taking office. He is a fellow at the Committee to Unleash Prosperity, a conservative economic group helmed in part by informal Trump adviser Stephen Moore. * Study Finds | How Profit-Driven AI Jesus Chatbots Prey On Prayer-Driven Christians: A new study by Anné H. Verhoef, a professor of philosophy at North-West University in South Africa, examines this growing trend, warning that these chatbots pose a new kind of challenge: they don’t just imitate humans made “in God’s image” — they claim to be God. Verhoef analyzed five popular “AI Jesus” platforms: AI Jesus, Virtual Jesus, Jesus AI, Text with Jesus, and Ask Jesus. He found none were created or endorsed by any church. Instead, they are run by for-profit companies with names like SupremeChaos, AllStars Productions LLC, and Catloaf Software. * NPR | Lawyers, judges see a chilling effect from immigrants’ arrests at criminal courthouses: As the Trump administration seeks to scale up deportations, ICE agents have been increasingly seen at immigration courts and criminal courthouses. Defense attorneys, prosecutors and judges say they’re seeing a chilling effect on criminal proceedings, not only on the defendants but on witnesses and victims.
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Open thread
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Last night on Lake Springfield… ![]() What’s happening by you?
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Crain’s…
* Governor Pritzker was asked about the President’s during an unrelated news conference…
* President Trump also criticized the SAFE-T Act. The Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice responded…
* House Speaker Chris Welch announced endorsements in his race against Senate President Don Harmon for the 7th District State Central Committee. Press release…
* Capitol News Illinois | Which Republicans are seeking statewide office in 2026? So far, hardly any: Thus far, just two lesser-known Republicans have expressed interest in challenging Pritzker in 2026. A similar group of lesser-known candidates is considering a U.S. Senate run, but there has been no news about anyone running for comptroller, treasurer or secretary of state. It’s still early in the election cycle — the petition gathering period began last week and runs through October — and Salvi said she expects there will be a Republican candidate in November for each statewide office. * Tribune | ‘The small engine that can’: Chicago Survivors group faces funding strain as it works in the aftermath of violence: This year, Illinois lawmakers gave the organization $1 million in the recently passed budget in a year when expiring federal funds and a projected budget shortfall led to reductions for many other groups as well. About $500,000 in American Rescue Plan funding, given out through the city, is also set to expire Dec. 31. Hill said there were promising options for the future, if the organization can make it through the next year. Cook County officials late last month announced $25 million in grant funding for gun violence prevention, of which $5 million is earmarked for survivors of gun violence victims. For now, the group is being forced to lay off staffers a handful at a time. As of Friday, they’d eliminated jobs for three crisis responders, three family support workers and an advocate who worked out of the Leighton Criminal Court Building. Hill said they expect to cut three more jobs later in August. * Crain’s | Government job cuts take a bite out of Chicago’s economy: The federal government is the largest employer in the Chicago area, although at nearly 48,000 it’s a modest slice of a 5 million-strong area workforce. At the start of the year, the federal workforce nationwide was 3 million and 82,000 in Illinois. […] Of the federal workforce, 18.6% are Black, while Black people account for 13.7% of the U.S. population. And Black workers are an even bigger presence — 20% or more — at a number of departments including the Postal Service, Education Department, Department of Housing & Urban Development, Treasury Department and Department of Veterans Affairs — all of which have been hit with job cuts since President Donald Trump returned to the White House in January. * Block Club | As CHA’s Plan For Transformation Turns 25, Advocates Worry It Could Take 40 More Years To Complete: Hertz’s group is urging leaders at the CHA, the city and the state to prioritize redeveloping vacant CHA land and buildings within 10 years. They could do that through incentives such as reducing property taxes on developments that include public housing units or offering rental subsidies to developers who partner with the CHA. The CHA and the city could also purchase existing buildings that can be “entirely or partially converted to public housing,” the report suggests. * Block Club | Will Trump Tower’s Riverfront Retail Space Ever Get A Tenant?: The Trump Organization has tapped Newmark real estate brokers in Chicago, New York City and London to search for retail tenants with the funds to build out the space and the stomach to operate underneath a 20-foot-tall “Trump” sign in a city the president has bemoaned as a “total disaster.” The double-decker retail space at the base of Trump Tower, 401 N. Wabash Ave., has sat empty for 16 years — except for a hairdresser near the hotel lobby and a tour boat company docked near the building’s plaza. The 70,000-square-foot space holds the record for the longest-running Downtown retail vacancy over 5,000 square feet. * Sun-Times | A year later, first tower at former Chicago Spire site takes shape: The project is being developed in two phases. Phase one is the 72-story tower at the waterfront, sitting on the site’s northern end. The phase will also includes a plaza with retail space, public art and three levels of underground parking. The first tower will have 635 units, including 127 affordable apartments. Units will range from studios to three-bedroom penthouses with views of Lake Michigan, the Chicago River and the city’s skyline. The first units are expected to be complete in the first quarter of 2027. Pre-leasing is expected to start next fall, according to Related. * Aurora Beacon-News | West Aurora School District eyes tax credit for solar project: The school board recently authorized the district’s administration to execute documents and invest $250,000 as a “downpayment” to lock-in the availability of tax credits for a proposed solar panel canopy project at the facility. The Federal Investment Tax Credit for solar projects has a “safe harbor” provision that permits school districts to secure tax credits by showing “continuous progress” toward the completion of a project. The proposal is to install a canopy with solar panels at the school district’s transportation facility in North Aurora, officials said. * Aurora Beacon-News | CyrusOne warns residents near Aurora data center of upcoming generator use: During similar repairs in April, the use of backup generators for multiple days straight caused consistently loud noise in the surrounding area, which some residents told The Beacon-News was “unlivable” and “horrible.” CyrusOne has since put in place a temporary sound wall blocking the site’s generators, with a permanent sound wall currently under construction. The latest round of repairs, set to take place on Tuesday, Aug. 12, from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m., was announced Friday on an official webpage set up by CyrusOne to communicate with residents about the ongoing sound issues surrounding the facility, which is located at the corner of Eola and Diehl roads on Aurora’s far East Side near Interstate 88. * Daily Herald | ‘Development friendly and ready’: Bartlett to pay $3 million for Lake Street site: The village expects to pay about $3 million for the land at 651 W. Lake St., which sits just east of Route 59 and within the town’s Lake Street Tax Increment Financing District. Once the land is in the village’s hands, officials would seek public input on what should be built there and solicit proposals from developers. Village President Dan Gunsteen said the development could serve as a catalyst for bringing other projects to that part of town. * WCBU | Peoria County considering $2.65M loan to help Liberty Steel & Wire bring headquarters to region: Sorrel said the company also is seeking tax credits through the state’s Economic Development for a Growing Economy [EDGE] program. However, requirements of this funding include maintaining the company headquarters in Illinois. Sorrel said other requirements include employing a minimum of 700 full-time equivalent workers and making a minimum capital investment of $40 million. “So that they can comply with those new EDGE tax credit requirements from the state, they’re proposing to relocate their corporate headquarters from the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area to the Peoria area,” said Sorrel, adding that Liberty is the region’s second-largest manufacturing employer behind Caterpillar. “But they don’t have anywhere near the number of employees,” he said. “Realistically, I don’t have the exact numbers, but we’re probably talking less than 20 individuals relocating.” * Muddy River News | DCFS back in Quincy to interview Denman students, investigation into spankings/tapings reopening: A parent of two Denman Elementary students said she received a call from the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) Wednesday morning who said an investigator would be arriving at her home that afternoon to interview her, her husband and her children. They told her the purpose of the visit was that the state’s department in charge of child protective services was reopening its investigation into the multiple incidents of two Denman Elementary physical education teachers giving birthday spankings and taping their mouths shut for punishment when talking. * WAND | Danville City Council approves security camera system for city’s parks: Danville City Council approved the purchase of a security camera system for its parks Tuesday night. The estimated cost for the system is $200,000. The decision comes after the death of 18-year-old Aniyah Davis at Winter Park in June. The cameras will be installed at all 10 of Danville’s parks, including the Douglas Discovery Garden. * WGLT | Normal’s public works director explains temporary traffic fixes coming to ISU campus: Eight locations will see temporary measures implemented starting Sept. 3. These measures could help to calm traffic, improve crossing safety and limit accidents across the 1,180 acres that make up the ISU campus. “We hope to have another big chunk of information come out for the campus community the last week in August before Labor Day,” said Ryan Otto, the town’s engineering and public works chief. “And so we’ll have details on exactly what’s going to happen at each intersection as well as the exact timing.” * WAND | Up close with nature: Macon County Conservation District hosts annual Hummingbird Festival: The Macon County Conservation District is hosting its annual Hummingbird Festival on Thursday, August 21, from 3-6 pm at Rock Springs Conservation Area. Attendees can learn about hummingbirds, watch as they are caught, banded, and released, and have the opportunity to help with releases and enter a prize drawing. * WIRED | Ford’s Answer to China: A Completely New Way of Making Cars: Ford calls its new way of making EVs the “Ford Universal EV Production System,” and will spend $2 billion to set it up at the company’s Louisville assembly plant. Ford says the new method will be 40 percent faster than the existing process there, and have a comparable reduction in workstations. Parts needed to make Ford’s new EVs will be cut by 20 percent. “It has 30 percent less fasteners,” says Farley, referring to the bolts, nuts, screws, rivets, clips, and clamps used to put vehicles together securely. The wiring harness in a coming midsize truck will be nearly a mile (1.3 km) shorter and 10 kilograms lighter. The savings go on. * Politico | Teamsters pour money into GOP, shifting away from Dems: The group hasn’t forsaken Democrats — it still gives them more, including $15,000 to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee in April. A DCCC spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment. But the GOP donations signify a marked shift in the pivotal labor union’s strategy since 2024, when Teamsters General President Sean O’Brien delivered a historic address at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee and his outfit began more seriously supporting Republicans. * Bond Buyer | State tax trouble could have muni implications, analysts say: Out of date taxing plans could be holding back state economies, and the methods of addressing tax codes could be important to those in and accessing the municipal bond market, analysts said.
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Consumers Are Getting Slammed With Higher Electric Rates – Don’t Add Fuel To The Fire With ROFR
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Illinois consumers are feeling the heat, both from triple-digit temperatures and soaring electricity bills. Ameren customers are seeing 18–22% rate hikes. ComEd has customers paying as much as triple-digit increases. And it’s going to get worse. In July, the PJM Capacity Auction hit another record high - a 22% increase on top of the record highs everyone just started paying. This will already lead to further rate increases next year! As frustration heats up, lawmakers must choose: support competition that drives prices down or fan the flames of electricity inflation with “Right of First Refusal” (ROFR) legislation. ROFR kills competition and boosts prices by giving incumbent utilities exclusive rights to build transmission lines. It’s so anti-competitive that both presidents - Biden and Trump - opposed it in 2020 and 2023. As the ICC has said, “The Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) believes that competition among transmission developers spurs innovative results and helps control costs.” ![]() ROFR would send electricity prices even higher. Springfield should focus on long-term strategies to lower electricity bills, not raise them. As ROFR may resurface this fall, legislators should reject it and stand up for cost-cutting competition that benefits consumers.
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More like this, please (Updated)
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Speaking from personal family experience, these sorts of informational events could be invaluable to a lot of people…
…Adding… From the Illinois Department on Aging…
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Former McCook Mayor, County Commissioner Jeff Tobolski sentenced to four years in prison
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Tribune in 2020…
* Fast forward to the present. Jason Meisner at the Tribune…
* More from Sun-Times federal court reporter Jon Seidel…
* Jon Seidel reporting from the courtroom…
* Tobolski addressed the court before his sentencing…
* Judge Virginia Kendall…
* Tobolski’s sentence…
Tobolski is due in prison November 3.
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Unclear on the concept
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Rep. Hoan Huynh, speaking Friday at a rally outside the now-closed Weiss Memorial Hospital…
Um, Medicare and Medicaid are not interchangeable. Yes, older adults on Medicare might feel a ripple effect from Medicaid cuts, but tossing around “trillion dollars in Medicare cuts” is a surefire way to send grandma into a panic for no reason. Anyway, if you need a quick refresher on the difference, Kiplinger has a good one.
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Rate Raley’s campaign slogan
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Riverbender…
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Tariffs Impact Everyone
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] The increased costs associated with tariffs impact all of us, affecting millions of people. Retailers like Luckeyia Murry, owner of Luckeyia’s Balloons & Distribution in Homewood, are faced with challenging business decisions because of escalating tariffs. Luckeyia has seen rising prices for balloons, helium tanks, and nearly every other item needed for her business. Despite these obstacles, she, like many small retailer owners, remains committed to her community and her business. The Illinois Retail Merchants Association has found that while retailers are trying to hold-off on price increases, it’s impossible to absorb the extra expenses for numerous business owners who function on very small margins – which forces consumers to pay more. Retailers like Luckeyia Murry enrich our economy and strengthen our communities, even during the uncertainty of increased tariff expenses. IRMA is showcasing some of the many retailers who continue to make Illinois work.
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Pritzker makes news on MTP
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * From NBC Universal…
Discuss. * More… * Fox Chicago | Gov. JB Pritzker doesn’t rule out presidential run in 2028: ‘Can’t rule anything out’: Since at least late June, when he officially announced his reelection bid, Pritzker has avoided saying whether he’d serve a full four-year term if he won in 2026. The timing could be awkward since the primary season for 2028 is expected to begin in earnest right after the 2026 midterms. * Sun-Times | Gov. JB Pritzker, on ‘Meet the Press,’ says he won’t rule out 2028 presidential run: “I’m a Democrat because I believe that we’ve got to stand up for our democracy and against the MAGA Republicans who are literally trying to take away people’s rights all across this country. So it does not matter what your income level is. What matters is what your values are, and that’s what makes me a Democrat.” The Democratic governor took a different approach on Tuesday’s “Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” instead making light of his wealth and trading barbs about Illinois’ congressional maps. Pritzker told Colbert he was “OK” with being a billionaire when Colbert offered that being a billionaire is “not a very popular thing to be right now.” * Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker won’t rule out presidential bid in 2028, attacks Republican remap effort in Texas: Illinois Republicans have routinely seized on Pritzker’s presidential aspirations, accusing him of putting his political ambitions ahead of the more parochial concerns of the state’s voters. But more than a month after Pritzker announced his bid for a rare third term, the state GOP has so far failed to field a big-name challenger to the billionaire Democratic governor or any of the other statewide Democratic officeholders ahead of their marquee event of Republican Day at the Illinois State Fair this week. * Crain’s | Pritzker won’t rule out a presidential run: First Pritzker has to get re-elected to a job that’s only going to get tougher. Even before the national economy started to show signs of strain, it was clear that the strong revenue growth Illinois has enjoyed in recent years was approaching a plateau. Not only has pandemic-era federal relief come to an end, but cuts to Medicaid and other programs are looming. Meanwhile, the state will have to come up with at least some funding for Chicago-area transit systems that were on shaky ground even before the pandemic upended commuting patterns and ridership. And Pritzker will have to come up with a long-term fix for the state pension system for workers hired after 2011, which is at risk of running afoul of federal retirement regulations. * Rolling Stone | Pritzker: Trump Is ‘Cheating Americans Out of Their Votes’ With Gerrymandering Plans: Eric Holder, who served as attorney general under former President Barack Obama and now leads the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, said even if Democrats do redistrict their states, it would be “responsive” and “temporary.” “When Barack Obama was president, when Joe Biden was president, did either of those presidents call a governor of a state or a state legislature and tell them to gerrymander to find five seats for them? No,” Holder said. “So we’re doing something now that is responsive to what is going on with this White House.”
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The stakes are real, the tactics are symbolic
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
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Rep. Stephanie Kifowit announces bid for Comptroller
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers have known for weeks that Rep. Stephanie Kifowit (D-Oswego) was signaling interest in a comptroller bid. This morning, she made it official. From her campaign website…
Rep. Kifowit is the third Democrat to enter the comptroller race. Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim recently announced her bid and Rep. Margaret Croke (D-Chicago) has already launched her campaign and won the Cook County Democratic Party’s endorsement. * Video…
Rating?
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Bears president tells lawmakers Arlington Heights stadium won’t happen without tax break bill. Daily Herald…
- Warren said the NFL club won’t be able to move forward with a domed stadium in Arlington Heights unless lawmakers approve its long-sought request for a long-term property tax break on the former Arlington Park racetrack property. - The so-called megaproject legislation would allow the Bears to negotiate with local taxing authorities like school districts over the amount of taxes that should be paid on the site for up to 40 years. * Something to keep in mind…
* Related stories…
∙ ABC Chicago: New Chicago Bears stadium in Arlington Heights is ‘the plan,’ Kevin Warren says ∙ NBC Chicago: Bears president and CEO gives update on new stadium plans and timing * Governor Pritzker will be in Wheeling at 1 pm to encourage back-to-school vaccinations. Click here to watch. * Sun-Times | Madigan’s bid to remain free during appeal rejected by judge who handed him hefty sentence: Legal experts had predicted that Blakey would reject Madigan’s request. However, the former speaker can now turn to the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. An attorney for Madigan could not immediately be reached after Blakey’s ruling Friday. * Illinois Times | When beer was banned at the Illinois State Fair: “People don’t want a state fair that smells like the back end of a tavern,” Stratton’s agriculture director, Stillman J. Stanard, said when the ban was proposed. Union representatives speaking on behalf of bartenders, hotel and restaurant workers and teamsters came out against the ban owing to the potential loss of revenue for their workers and for the state. Their protests, however, went nowhere. The beer ban was initially enforced by a police unit assigned to the fairgrounds to keep an eye out for what were called “beerleggers.” * WAND | Hundreds of Illinois Extension jobs lost after federal funding cuts: “With 360,000 Illinois residents now at risk of losing SNAP benefits under the new legislation, they’re not just losing the support they rely on to afford food, they’re also losing tools that helped them use that food wisely and stretch it further to feed their families,” said College of ACES Dean German Bollero. Illinois SNAP-Ed staff also helped launch IL-EATS, a statewide initiative that connects local food producers with hunger relief organizations. The college says that program will also end in the coming year. * Sun-Times | Fabric portraits of people in Illinois prisons to form one big activism quilt: Clark’s nephew is locked up at Western Illinois Correctional Center in downstate Mount Sterling. He was incarcerated when he was 15 years old. He’s now 43. Her quilt square features a collection of meaningful words that Darnell provided for the project: “Faith,” “Endurance,” and “Family Love.” Plus, an additional word chosen by Clark. “I put ‘FREEDOM.’ Because that’s what I’m looking for, freedom,” she said. * Herald-Review | Doris Turner pledges ‘all gas, no brakes’ in Illinois Senate reelection bid: Turner, 72, who’s served in the upper chamber since 2021, touted the “millions of dollars in infrastructure projects” that have taken place across the district during her tenure along with a lengthy legislative record. But she said there’s more to do. […] Senate Republicans, who only hold 19 of the chamber’s 59 seats, face a brutal map this cycle. Four suburban Chicago districts currently held by Republicans were carried by Harris in 2024. No Democrats represent Trump-won districts. This means that Turner’s seat is Republicans’ best, and perhaps only, shot of taking back a seat. But Turner said she isn’t sweating another tough race. * Daily Herald | ‘What more could the governor do?’: Illinois lawmakers doubt state’s districts could be more gerrymandered: Democratic state Sen. Laura Murphy of Des Plaines expects Illinois’ congressional map will be redrawn in six years as scheduled — not before. “Our maps were redrawn four years ago and will be again after the next census,” she said. * WCIA | New law requires Illinois libraries to supply overdose medication: House Bill 1910 was signed into law by Governor JB Pritzker on Aug. 1. It requires that all public libraries in the state have a supply of opioid antagonists in an accessible location. Opioid antagonists, like naloxone, are medications that can block or reverse the effects of an opioid overdose. * Daily Herald | Illinois is joining a multi-state effort to crack down on intrusive and illegal robocalls: linois is joining a multi-state effort to crack down on “intrusive and illegal” robocalls nationwide. On Thursday, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced the launch of Operation Robocall Roundup, a multi-state effort by the Anti-Robocall Litigation Task Force. * Block Club | Weiss Hospital Owner Defends Actions Amid Closure, Criticism Of His Tenure: ‘We’ve Had To Fight And Figure It Out’: Without the ability to bill the federal health programs for services rendered, the hospital had no choice but to close, said Dr. Manoj Prasad, whose Resilience Healthcare owns Weiss. Prasad said he is working with legislators to reopen the hospital and save West Suburban Medical Center, which he also own. But some critics — including Uptown area elected officials — say Weiss’ closure is because of Prasad’s cost-cutting style of management, amid other criticisms. * Sun-Times | Bud Billiken Parade marks the start of the back-to-school season: Griffin says she’s glad the parade has lived on for 96 years. “It speaks to the longevity of the African American family and the support systems that the communities provide for these families,” Griffin said. “As a resident of Bronzeville, it just really warms my heart to be here to watch this year after year.” * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools reaches historic tentative bargaining agreement with its principals: The historic contract, which the district and union tentatively reached Friday, needs to be approved by the union’s members and the school board. It includes a retroactive 4% cost-of-living increase for the 2024-25 school year and more due process protections for principals who face discipline, said Kia Banks, the president of the Chicago Principals and Administrators Association. It also includes cost-of-living and baseline pay increases for the coming school year, but the union is waiting to share information about them with its members before publicizing the amounts. * Tribune | Chicago storefront sign restriction efforts a ‘quality of life’ issue for some, but others worry about overreach: So, in a move she describes as a “quality of life” issue, Harris, 8th, is spearheading a citywide effort to rein in businesses’ use of large signage on windows as part of an ordinance that would allow generally untapped, preexisting city rules restricting retail displays to be more easily enforced. The ordinance would also block businesses from using non-reflective window tints and LED lights bordering their windows. * Tribune | How Chicago Sky aim to ‘take the power back’ against online abuse and harassment with new cybersecurity measures: The Sky front office could feel a change coming to the league even before the 2024 draft brought high-profile stars such as Clark and Reese and new levels of popularity. The team bolstered its security and contracted law enforcement to patrol practices. But that wasn’t enough to give Rawlinson confidence that the Sky could anticipate future incidents. “We’re vigilant,” she said. “But there have still been a few incidents that we’ve handled ourselves that have given us concern. Overall, there’s just a high level of vigilance around this team.” * Sun-Times | South Side rodeo brings resources, support to veterans: ‘This is really needed’: The inaugural National Veteran Rodeo & Resource Fair was hosted by the nonprofit Leave No Veteran Behind and hoped to enroll 1,000 veterans in vital services while providing Chicagoans a taste of a sport rarely seen in these parts. * Sun-Times | Chicago’s K-beauty shops feeling pinched as South Korea products hit with 15% tariffs: Owner Johnny Shin said after the baseline 10% tariffs on most countries, including South Korea, were enacted in April, vendor prices started going up. Beauty of Joseon’s sunscreen — a viral product and Over N Over bestseller — was available wholesale for $8 each. After April, Shin said its vendor is now charging them $11. But the retailer hasn’t increased its prices, and it doesn’t plan to. “There’s so much competition going on, so we try to keep it as low as we can,” Shin said. * Sun-Times | Will Agora take a walk? Grant Park’s iron sculptures might have to relocate in 2026: That’s when the Chicago Park District’s 20-year installation and maintenance agreement expires. The agreement allows Agora to occupy its Hutchinson Field location. The expiration doesn’t make the artwork’s relocation a certainty, but one of the proposals in the park district’s new Grant Park Framework Plan includes refashioning Hutchinson Field into a “neighborhood-oriented amenity” — and it doesn’t mention Agora sticking around. * Sun-Times | Ravinia unveils the first of its renovated venues ahead of grand reopening in 2026: The transformed pavilion won’t be unveiled until 2026, but a few performances are scheduled to take place this year in the theater at the newly renovated Audrey, which was completed this spring. Some of the new amenities include wider, cushioned seats, and the Audrey is the first venue on-site to have cupholders, according to Haydon. * WGN | Texas Democrats find support at St. Sabina Church amid redistricting battle: “They are today’s freedom fighters. They are teaching, I believe, the country a civic lesson right now. Don’t say you love democracy and not fight for it,” Father Michael Pfleger, the longtime pastor of St. Sabina Church, said. […] “As soon as this is over, I’m going to call another one, then another one and another one. If they show back up in the state of Texas, they will be arrested and taken into the capitol,” Abbott said. * Daily Herald | Powering down: School districts adopt new procedures to limit cellphone distractions: In St. Charles Unit District 303, for example, a district-wide procedure will help clarify expectations. High School students will be asked to silence their smartphones and place them in phone caddies at the start of each class. Middle school students will be told to power down smartphones and other devices, such as smartwatches, and put them in their lockers for the day. Elementary school students will power down all devices and keep them in their backpacks. * Crain’s | Torrent of bogus papers threatens to drown legit science, Northwestern researchers warn: According to a statistical analysis of scientific research, the bogus content being churned out by “paper mills” is doubling every year and a half, said Northwestern’s Luís A. N. Amaral, senior author of a study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. “This was so scary, that we wanted to understand how it could grow so fast,” he said in an interview. “There are all these systems in place to allow it and people have not been able to see how it works. We tried to connect the dots.” * ABC Chicago | New Hollywood Casino in Joliet opening Monday, featuring restaurants from celebrity chefs: At nearly 200,000 square feet, it’s packed with games. The new casino boasts a thousand slot machines, 43 live gaming tables, an ESPN sportsbook, restaurants from top chefs including Stephanie Izard’s first-ever casino spot. Executive Chef Matt Cappellini showed off one of the specialties at the new ESPN BET Sportsbook restaurant. The objective is to draw customers to hang out for a while, place a few bets and have a good time. Food and beverage have become a big draw for casinos. * PJ Star | Peoria has spent more than $100K in its pursuit of a land-based casino: he city of Peoria has spent more than $100,000 on attorneys and consultants in its pursuit to lure a land-based casino to its side of the Illinois River. Invoices obtained by the Journal Star via the Freedom of Information Act show that Peoria has paid out approximately $106,903.08 in fees to the law firm Elias, Meginnes and Seghetti and the consulting firm Innovation Capital between December and July. Peoria hired a law firm and consulting firm in December after a unanimous vote by the Peoria City Council to do so signaled that the full council was firmly behind Mayor Rita Ali’s effort to bring the Par-A-Dice Casino’s replacement facility to Peoria. * Shaw Local | Man featured in Netflix’s ‘I Am a Stalker’ pleads not guilty to stalking, harassment in new Ogle County case: John R. Anderson III, 42, was sentenced to six years in prison for aggravated stalking in DeKalb County in 2019. The Netflix series included an installment that focuses on that case, Anderson’s relationship with the woman who fled to Illinois to get away from him, and his pending release from prison. […] “We submit he poses a specific danger,” [Assistant Ogle County State’s Attorney Matthew Leisten] said. “The defendant has prior convictions in Ogle, Winnebago [and] DeKalb counties, and there is also a pending case in Arkansas. There are no set of conditions that can mitigate the risk to her. We don’t believe he can abide any conditions … based on his history.” [Ogle County Judge Anthony Peska] agreed and remanded Anderson to the Ogle County Jail. * Tribune | In the Quad Cities, a proposed development near a bald eagle habitat divides a community: Soon, local developers could bring another test to the wetlands’ ability to withstand human activity. Rock Island is poised to sell a 10-acre plot at the edge of the Milan Bottoms to A Hana Illowa LLC, a development company owned by local construction moguls Matt Stern and Jeff Hughbanks. The pair are planning to build a gas station and marijuana dispensary on the site, dubbed Casino West. Supporters and opponents of the development alike share an admiration of the Milan Bottoms, and the unique ecosystem that it’s grown into over the years. At the same time, city officials say developing near the wetland could bring much-needed revenue. Rock Island’s poverty rate of about 21% is nearly double the overall poverty rate of the metro area, as reported by the Quad Cities Chamber of Commerce in 2022. While neighboring cities in Iowa can expand into surrounding farmland, Rock Island is bordered by rivers and has struggled to find places to develop. * WAND | Illinois State Fair honors veterans and keeps memories alive: Crystal Womack has been the gold star liaison for 9 years, and she said her main goal is keeping the soldiers’ memories alive. “It is truly my honor to work with these families,” Womack said. Womack said gold star has been around since World War II. When officers were deployed, the families placed a Blue Star flag on their door to let them know that their loved one was deployed at that time. * The Atlantic | How the Texas Standoff Will (Probably) End: Right now, the Texas Democrats’ quorum-break project appears to have two goals, one much more easily accomplished than the other. The first is to send a message; the gerrymandering attempt in Texas is a chance for Democrats nationwide to accuse Republicans of cheating, and to demonstrate a bit of the gumption their voters have been clamoring for. Because the party is effectively leaderless, now is a perfect moment for wannabe standard-bearers to soak up some of the limelight. Illinois Governor J. B. Pritzker, for example, has made a lot of speeches and trolled Republicans; so has New York Governor Kathy Hochul. And tonight, California Governor Gavin Newsom will host Hinojosa and other Texas Democrats in Sacramento for a press conference. * WIRED | What Does Palantir Actually Do?: Palantir has tried to correct the record itself in a series of blog posts with titles like “Palantir Is Not a Data Company” and “Palantir Is Still Not a Data Company.” In the latter, Palantir explains that “misconceptions can arise because our products are complicated,” but nonetheless, “it is absolutely possible” to accurately describe them to “people who are curious.” The problem, however, is that even ex-employees struggle to provide a clear description of the company. “It’s really hard to explain what Palantir works on or what it does,” says Linda Xia, who was an engineer at Palantir from 2022 to 2024. “Even as someone who worked there, it’s hard to figure out, how do you give a cohesive explanation?” * SF Chronicle | Trump asks SCOTUS to allow profiling in California ICE raids: The Trump administration is asking the Supreme Court to allow officers to arrest suspected undocumented immigrants in Southern California because of how they look, what language they’re speaking and what kind of work they’re doing, factors that federal judges have found to be baseless and discriminatory. * The Guardian | A ‘bias monitor’ for CBS News is a bad idea. Here’s why: The new job “seems designed to ensure little critical is aired about the current administration”, said Glenn Kessler, the longtime Washington Post journalist and editor of the Fact Checker, who is now writing a Substack newsletter. Kessler also noted that the Trump-appointed FCC chair, Brendan Carr, in commenting on the new position, compared it to the creation of an ombudsman decades ago when General Electric bought NBC. But that regulator was designed to ensure NBC’s editorial independence and to guard against interference from the new owner, a business conglomerate.
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Open thread
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller My harmonica’s got a busted reed RWH is playing at the Twisted Tree Music Hall in Jacksonville on September 14th. * Tell us some news from your part of the state.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Monday, Aug 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Monday, Aug 11, 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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