Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Crain’s…
You can watch the full livestream here. * WTTW | What Are Pharmacy Benefit Managers? Illinois Lawmakers Target Industry They Say Drives Up Prescription Costs: The industry can secure discounts, and the national association for PBMs describes their efforts as working to achieve savings and access to prescriptions. But critics, including Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who took specific aim at PBMs last month during his state of the state address, describe the industry as focused on self-enrichment and in need of regulation. He said “one of the great ironies of our modern age” is the concurrent breakthroughs that have developed life-saving medicines that end up being so expensive that they’re out of reach. * Naperville Sun | No more discounted golf, free Centennial Beach access, other perks for former Naperville Park Board members: Eliminated benefits include a 20% discount on golf rounds with tee times at Springbrook and Naperbrook courses, free golf for walk-on rounds, free range balls, free admission to Centennial Beach, and discounts on both golf and beach merchandise. Benefits — other than the merchandise discounts — applied to both former commissioners and eligible family members, including spouses or civil union partners and dependent children up to age 21. The change was floated by board President Mary Gibson at the Feb. 27 meeting and voted on Thursday. Gibson, board Vice President Leslie Ruffing and commissioners Rich Janor and Alison Thompson supported the amendment. Commissioners John Risvold and Chris Jacks cast the dissenting votes. Commissioner Rhonda Ansier was absent. * Daily Herald | Des Plaines clerk’s powers cut by city council: In a move that was all but inevitable following a preliminary vote two weeks ago, the Des Plaines City Council on Monday stripped City Clerk Jessica Mastalski of authority over her office’s workers. Mastalski and any future clerks still will work with employees but are forbidden from exercising “administrative direction and control” over them, according to the new rules. Workers will instead be exclusively supervised by the city manager or a designee. * Tribune | Elmhurst alderman races focus on water rates, economic development: Second Ward Ald. Jacob Hill said in his work for a local university he has many opportunities to engage with students and, as a veteran himself, with veterans. But his work as an alderman allows him to be of service to the broader community, he said, and to model public service for young people. […] Regarding the police station, all the aldermanic candidates said they favor replacement. But Hill alone suggested the project could be delayed. “I understand the need…” he said. “But maybe not now. We could hold off for a few years.” * Tribune | Divisions clear in heated Oak Park and River Forest School Board race: There are clear philosophical and ideological distinctions in the heated Oak Park and River Forest High School District 200 School Board race. On one side there is the slate of Nate Mellman and Josh Gertz. They are challenging what some view as the OPRF establishment and are questioning some core beliefs that have been dominant at the school in recent years. Mellman and Gertz are being vehemently opposed by a four candidate coalition that is supportive of the status quo and the school’s current direction. * Sun-Times | Suburban officer donned blackface but was promoted, claims former cop allegedly fired in retaliation: A former Orland Park police officer filed a lawsuit against the village and police department leaders alleging he was fired in retaliation for complaining about being denied a promotion because he’s Hispanic. William Sanchez, who served in the department for nearly 20 years before being fired in March of 2024, claims department leadership “displayed troubling attitudes toward race” that made him feel discriminated against. According to the suit, one white officer was promoted twice by the village, despite being photographed wearing blackface and “making racially charged remarks toward an African American arrestee.” Another white officer had been hired despite a background check that revealed he had made comments about lynching a Black suspect. * Naperville Sun | Construction underway on Eagle Street Gateway improvements along the Naperville Riverwalk: Work on the gateway construction began earlier this month, according to Bill Novack, director of Naperville’s Transportation, Engineering and Development department. It’s being done by Naperville-based Baumgartner Construction Inc. Over the next six years, the city wants to tackle more than a dozen improvements in advance of ringing in the Riverwalk’s 50th birthday. Work is laid out in the 2031 Riverwalk Master Plan, which was endorsed in fall 2020 to guide future development. * Sun-Times | Yes, that’s Miss Huang on campus: Sarah Bock juggles ‘Severance’ role, classes at Northwestern: Inside the sterile walls of Lumon Industries, Sarah Bock is “Miss Huang,” an ambitious, humorless child employee vying for power. Outside, she is a friendly college freshman at Northwestern University, performing in school theater productions, taking midterms and making dinner plans in the city with friends. * Sun-Times | SBA’s Illinois office staying in Chicago as regional office exits the ’sanctuary city’: The Small Business Administration’s plan to move the regional office, which shares a space with its district operations, won’t affect services but sends a harmful “anti-immigrant” message, said a former SBA regional head. * Tribune | CTU president says CPS refusal to compromise on teachers contract will lead to ‘disruption and chaos’: Stacy Davis Gates, CTU president, sent a letter to two top Chicago Public Schools officials saying the district had refused the union’s final compromises, “precipitating more disruption and chaos for all district stakeholders.” The union president doesn’t threaten a strike, but the possibility of one hangs over the letter. Both sides say they are at an impasse. The teachers union is allowed to call for a strike following a 30-day “cooling-off” period after a third-party fact-finding report is released. * Tribune | New first deputy superintendent has cited need for common ground on police misconduct reviews: More than a year into his tenure as head of the Chicago Police Department, Superintendent Larry Snelling on Monday announced the promotion of Yolanda Talley to the department’s second-in-command. Talley, a 30-year department veteran and most recently chief of the bureau of internal affairs, will be the first Black woman to serve as first deputy superintendent, overseeing much of the department’s day-to-day operations and reporting directly to Snelling. * Block Club | Chicago Church Won’t Plant Trees This Spring As Climate Funds Remain Frozen: Rev. Brian Sauder had good news in January for 58 faith-based organizations across the Midwest: His Chicago environmental nonprofit, Faith in Place, would be giving each of them a grant to fund tree planting in low-income communities and create urban forestry jobs to maintain them. Those additional trees would help mitigate the effects of climate change and air pollution. But the good news didn’t last long. On his first day in office, President Donald Trump signed his “Unleashing American Energy” executive order, which abruptly froze the distribution of funds from the Biden administration’s sweeping climate bill, the Inflation Reduction Act. The move has left critical initiatives in limbo, including urban and community forestry programs like Sauder’s Faith in Place. * Crain’s | NASCAR loses another founding partner of its Chicago Street Race: ABB, an electrical engineering corporation, signed onto the race as a flagship sponsor in June 2024. The company’s logo appeared on marketing materials for the race as recently as Feb. 5 but has since been stripped from the race’s website and list of official partners. The company noted that it still has some pop-up events planned for the 2025 Chicago race despite no longer being a founding partner. * Sun-Times | Lollapalooza 2025 lineup includes Sabrina Carpenter, Tyler, The Creator, Doechii, Olivia Rodrigo and more: Sabrina Carpenter, Olivia Rodrigo, Tyler, The Creator, Doechii and TWICE are among the artists set for Lollapalooza 2025, it was revealed Tuesday morning.. […] The Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestra will be performing at this year’s event, following its partnership with the festival via “teaser” videos on social media celebrating the music of some of the lineup artists. In addition, Kidzapalooza returns featuring free admission (with a ticketed adult) for children eight and under. * BND | Madison County Jail denied man medicine to prevent a fatal blood clot, family alleges: Zareef M. Fawaz, 49, of St. Louis, died May 31, 2024 while in custody. Fawaz repeatedly told his sister LaToya Simmons, of St. Louis, that Madison County Jail officers wouldn’t give him his blood thinners, which were prescribed to take daily, in phone calls before he died, she said during the news conference in front of the courthouse. * WCIA | Decatur approves changes to massage parlors, lift assists, home rehabs: WCIA previously reported that Decatur was looking to explore new requirements and regulations for massage parlors. But, the council’s vote on the ordinance was pushed back to March 17 to receive more input from local massage therapists. After receiving feedback, the city amended the ordinance slightly. City licenses will be good for two years, alternating with the renewal of state licenses. The license application is $50 and licenses will expire on April 30 of each odd year. Decatur also eliminated the requirement that locations needed a bath and a locker room, which helps establishments operated by solo massage therapists. * WAND | Brad Paisley coming to perform at the Illinois State Fair: Brad Paisley is coming to perform at the Illinois State Fair Thursday, Aug. 14. This will be the first time Paisley has performed at the fair since 2017. Brad Paisley has three GRAMMYs, two American Music Awards, 15 Academy of Country Music Awards, and 14 Country Music Association Awards, including an Entertainer of the Year honor and recognition as the most successful CMA Award co-host in history. * WCBU | WTVP’s insurance company sues to recover claim paid out for alleged fraud: In 2023, Lesley Matuszak, a community figure and former leader of the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Peoria, resigned from her position at WTVP. She died a day after her resignation. Later, Peoria County Coroner Jamie Harwood ruled Matuszak died by suicide. A police report obtained by WCBU in 2024 shows the Peoria Police Department had evidence to support charging Matuszak with forgery and embezzlement prior to her death. All other names in the report were redacted. * WIRED | FTC Removes Posts Critical of Amazon, Microsoft, and AI Companies: On the FTC’s website, the page hosting all of the agency’s business-related blogs and guidance no longer includes any information published during former president Joe Biden’s administration, current and former FTC employees, who spoke under anonymity for fear of retaliation, tell WIRED. These blogs contained advice from the FTC on how big tech companies could avoid violating consumer protection laws. One now deleted blog, titled “Hey, Alexa! What are you doing with my data?” explains how, according to two FTC complaints, Amazon and its Ring security camera products allegedly leveraged sensitive consumer data to train the ecommerce giant’s algorithms. (Amazon disagreed with the FTC’s claims. * Bloomberg | RFK Jr.’s next targets are companies making baby formula: It’s unclear exactly which companies will be represented. Firms that sell infant formula include North Chicago-based Abbott Laboratories, which makes Similac, Enfamil maker Reckitt Benckiser Group Plc, and relative newcomer Bubs Australia Ltd. HHS didn’t respond to a request for comment. Kennedy plans to discuss nutritional standards and shoring up the supply chain, one of the people said. Kennedy posted on social media in May 2024 that he was concerned about toxic metals in formula. He said during his presidential campaign that if he were to be elected, the Food and Drug Administration, a part of HHS that he now oversees, would scrutinize formula ingredients. * NPR | ‘Segregated facilities’ are no longer explicitly banned in federal contracts: After a recent change by the Trump administration, the federal government no longer explicitly prohibits contractors from having segregated restaurants, waiting rooms and drinking fountains. The segregation clause is one of several identified in a public memo issued by the General Services Administration last month, affecting all civil federal agencies. The memo explains that it is making changes prompted by President Trump’s executive order on diversity, equity and inclusion, which repealed an executive order signed by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1965 regarding federal contractors and nondiscrimination. The memo also addresses Trump’s executive order on gender identity.
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What Is A Credit Union?
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department
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Another twist in the Threemil case
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Sun-Times…
From the Jones filing…
The Jones filing on the handwritten notes is here. * From 2022…
Jones never amended the bill that is identified in the above story. * Tribune last month…
The “event” has never been fully described as far as I can tell, and how Sen. Jones was supposed to have allegedly personally profited from that has also never been revealed, nor whether the money was even paid. Jones’ intern was eventually paid $1,800 for six weeks of no work, according to prosecutors.
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Intoxicating Hemp: No safety? No thanks!
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] A federal loophole has led to a booming gray market across Illinois for intoxicating hemp products, which use synthetics to alter the composition of hemp to get consumers high. This is happening outside the structure of the state’s legal cannabis industry. This means intoxicating hemp faces NO quality testing, NO age restrictions, NO packaging requirements, NO potency rules, and NO taxes to fund programs in communities impacted by the War on Drugs. Most intoxicating hemp products aren’t even produced in Illinois. By contrast, Illinois cannabis businesses face extensive rules and regulations to operate, with products tracked from seed to sale. When consumers purchase legal cannabis grown and processed in Illinois, they know their products are safe. Hemp and cannabis come from the same plant. Both products can get users high. Why the different rules? Illinois already has a system in place to regulate hemp – it’s called the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act. It’s time for Illinois to close the intoxicating hemp loophole.
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Despite court rulings, ‘free speech zones’ persist
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Chicago Tribune in 2020…
* The Sun-Times today…
Discuss.
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DCFS hit for failing to file child death/injury reports (Updated)
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller …Adding… From DCFS…
* Peter Nickeas at the Illinois Answers Project…
* From Illinois’ Abuse and Neglected Child Reporting Act…
* Back to Illinois Answers…
Go read the rest.
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It’s just a bill
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * SEIU Healthcare Illinois…
* WGLT…
* Sen. Steve Stadelman…
* The Illinois Primary Health Care Association…
* WAND…
* Prairie Rivers Network, Eco-Justice Collaborative…
* WLDS…
* WAND…
HB2627 passed out of committee on a partisan 5-3 vote.
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Open thread
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…
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Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] A last-minute provision called the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act (IFPA) was snuck into the budget process last May and will create chaos for small businesses and consumers across Illinois if it takes effect on July 1, 2025. The IFPA gives corporate mega-stores like Walmart and Home Depot — who pushed for this backroom deal — millions more in profits, while small business owners get new expenses and accounting headaches. What’s more, consumers could be forced to pay for parts of their transactions in cash if this law moves forward. A recent court ruling in the litigation challenging the law suggests IFPA is likely pre-empted by federal law for national banks and will only apply to credit unions and local Illinois banks, putting local banks at a disadvantage against their national competitors. Illinois lawmakers should repeal the IFPA and focus on protecting small businesses and consumers across the state — not lining the pockets of corporate mega-stores. Stop the countdown to chaos by supporting a repeal of this misguided and flawed policy. Learn more at https://guardyourcard.com/illinois/ ![]()
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: State moves to revoke license of Chicago Heights crematory accused of improperly storing bodies. Sun-Times…
- Heights Crematory has been closed since the state’s investigation began Feb. 19, when investigators told the facility’s owners that it couldn’t accept any new cases until existing ones are completed. But operators allegedly continued to take in additional remains. - In the ensuing investigation, officials have also found many of the remains lacked one or more of the documents necessary for cremation, such as a signed death certificate, a signed cremation authorization from next of kin or a cremation permit. * Related stories…
∙ NBC Chicago: Suburban crematory accused of improperly storing 100 bodies in trailer under investigation * BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here. * Capitol News Illinois | Prisoner Review Board sued for negligence a year after released prisoner killed Chicago boy: Jayden Perkins, an accomplished young dancer, was stabbed to death last March while his mother, Laterria Smith, sustained “multiple life-threatening stab wounds to her neck, back, and chest while desperately trying to protect her children,” according to one of the lawsuits she filed last week. Smith was pregnant at the time, while her then-5-year-old son witnessed the stabbing. Ahead of the one-year anniversary of the attack last week, Smith filed a pair of complaints — one against the PRB in the Illinois Court of Claims and another in Cook County Circuit Court. The latter lawsuit names not only the PRB, but also its former chair and another member who resigned after the murder, plus an executive director appointed in the aftermath. * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois’ community colleges see nearly 9% spike in spring enrollment: In a report released Tuesday, the ICCB said 40 of the state’s 45 community colleges reported enrollment growth this spring. There was significant growth in several enrollment categories, including a nearly 20% increase in students enrolled in dual credit programs, which allow high school students to earn college credits. But there was an even greater increase, 23.4%, in students seeking general associate’s degree programs. * Harvey World Herald | As state cracks down on delinquent audits, Mayor Chris Clark addresses financial reporting concerns: According to state records, Harvey has not completed its state-mandated audits for its three recent fiscal years. Last fall, the city submitted a remediation plan to the state, which rejected it. Now, Harvey’s undergoing forced audits. According to state law, the city has to pay for it. * Center Square | Gambling insider says Illinois’ internet gambling legislation likely doomed: The Illinois Gaming Machine Operators Association is opposed to the idea, and Christopher Altruda, a writer and contributor to CasinoReports.com, said he is not surprised the Illinois Gaming Board is not on board as well. “Taking on an expanded vertical like this as you’re still settling the expansion of what you had for brick-and-mortar casinos and online sports betting, it’s a very tall ask of this state agency,” said Altruda. * Tribune | Cook County’s Democratic incumbents plant flags for 2026 re-election bids: Preckwinkle, who turned 78 Monday, announced her re-election bid to once again lead the board in an interview with Politico. Dart is hosting a re-election campaign kickoff and fundraiser next week. Kaegi sunk $500,000 into his campaign coffers earlier this month — filing a “self-funding” notice for next year’s primary — a reminder to any potential challengers of his deep pockets. Pappas didn’t release a re-election announcement but simply told the Tribune, “I’m in.” * Sun-Times | Suburban Chicago family pleads for ICE to release father, local business owner: “All that I ask is for my husband’s release,” Orozco said in Spanish. “Is it a crime to work? Because he doesn’t drink, he doesn’t have vices, he doesn’t do drugs. All he does is go to work. Is that what it means to be a criminal — to wake up early and go to work and look after your family?” Her husband was one of 22 people — including a U.S. citizen — detained in the Chicago area in recent weeks by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement since President Donald Trump started his second term. Attorneys from the National Immigrant Justice Center and ACLU of Illinois say the arrests are in violation of a 2022 federal court settlement that required ICE to adopt a nationwide policy on the arrests of people without warrants. * AP | ICE violated rights of a US citizen and 21 others during arrests, Chicago activists allege: The arrests allegedly violate a 2022 agreement between Chicago groups and the federal government detailing how U.S. Immigration Customs and Enforcement officers can make “ collateral arrests,” where agents detain others besides those being targeted. The agreement, following a lawsuit over 2018 immigration sweeps, covers Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri, Kentucky and Wisconsin, which are under the ICE office in Chicago. “Every time you hear from this administration about how they’re rounding up gang members, terrorists, the worst of the worst, you need to take a dose of reality,” said Mark Fleming, an attorney with the National Immigrant Justice Center, said at a news conference. “You need to dig deeper to understand who exactly they are arresting.” * Harvey World Herald | County commissioner paid over $30,000 as consultant at Harvey library where husband serves as board president: Still, Kisha McCaskill, appointed to the county board’s 5th district seat representing the south suburbs and several neighborhoods on Chicago’s South Side in January, performs and receives payments for work for the library district, which has included providing recommendations for full-time hires, liaising for accounts payable, and reviewing proposals for security-related contracts. She’s requested to be paid $30,450 for administrative work and reimbursed $5,164.57 for expenses she incurred between November 2023 and February 2025, according to invoices and bills lists reviewed by the HWH. * Daily Herald | Don’t look over your shoulder, but are more Pace express buses coming on I-290?: After success establishing express buses that defy traffic by switching to shoulder lanes on Interstate 55 and the Jane Addams Tollway, Pace is considering a three-peat along a route that would include parts of I-290 and I-88. The suburban agency recently launched a I-290/I-88 Express Bus Study and survey. Planners will review the feasibility of putting buses on the corridors connecting the CTA Forest Park Blue Line station with destinations such as Oakbrook Center in Oak Brook and the Woodfield Mall area in Schaumburg. * Daily Herald | ‘End of an era’: Oak Brook Polo Club to close after more than 100 years: “After years of proudly hosting world-class polo matches and fostering a vibrant community of polo enthusiasts, the Oak Brook Polo Club announces that it will be closing its doors under its current leadership,” the statement reads. “This decision marks the end of an era for one of the most storied polo clubs in the United States.” * WGLT | Five years later, the losses from COVID-19 still loom large for some in McLean County: Heidi Lovell and Sandy Colbs, both of McLean County, lost their mothers at the height of the pandemic. The death of a parent changes a person forever in normal circumstances. The death of a parent during a viral pandemic — who could be prepared for that? “Unless you know somebody that specifically died of COVID … you just kind of forget that people were dying, people were in the hospital, sick, people were having a hard time with other problems too,” Lovell said in an interview. “I don’t need people to be like, ‘Oh, I’m so sorry your mom died during COVID,’ but like, life still happened, is what I’m saying.” * BND | Metro-east high school’s backpack policy causes stir. Are students safer or inconvenienced?: On a recent Wednesday, senior Shaylee Messersmith grabbed a bucket, loaded it with her belongings and set off for Dupo High School. One student hauled their supplies in a traffic cone, another in a shopping cart. Messersmith and her friends donned these unorthodox accessories in protest of the school’s backpack policy, which Messersmith said became stricter this week with little warning. Roughly a dozen more teenagers also participated in this student-led “anything but a backpack” demonstration, Messersmith said, and were told to put their makeshift backpacks in their cars or leave them in the office. * WGLT | After inaction on housing, Normal mayoral candidates outline a shift in strategy: Instead of waiting for the market to organically redevelop its downtown district, Normal leaders poured in millions of dollars of public money to create Uptown Normal. Instead of waiting for a company to buy and demolish the former Mitsubishi plant, the town dangled incentives in front of Rivian to get them to come here and revitalize it. Yet with the housing shortage, the Normal Town Council has done little to address it, essentially waiting for a daunting list of macroeconomic forces to ease. Rents and home prices have spiked. * Tribune | Stricter truck pollution rule would prevent 500 deaths a year in Chicago region, study shows: The Northwestern study, accepted for publication in the journal Frontiers of Earth Science, looked at the health impact of California’s Advanced Clean Trucks rule, which is currently under consideration by the Illinois Pollution Control Board. The Clean Trucks rule would require that manufacturers of medium and heavy-duty trucks slowly ramp up the number of zero-emissions vehicles sold to 40% to 75% (depending on the category) in 2035. * Crain’s | WBEZ being investigated by federal regulators over on-air sponsorships: Public broadcasting stations are prohibited from running commercials. Instead, they air what are considered corporate underwriting spots, which are supposed to be non-promotional announcements acknowledging financial support. WBEZ, an NPR affiliate, received a letter from the federal agency asking for its underwriting announcements and is cooperating with the request, the station confirmed today. * CBS Chicago | Possible federal cuts to bike lane expansion could have big impact in Chicago: The federal money for bike lanes already under construction is allocated, but U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy is ready to put a stop to any future dollars and keep bike lanes in cities, including Chicago, from expanding. […] CBS News Chicago reached out to the Chicago Department of Transportation to see how many future projects would be impacted. The department had not returned the request for comment late Thursday. * Sun-Times | CTA announces schedule changes ahead of anticipated spring ridership rush: Starting April 20, the Blue Line O’Hare Branch will have two extra trips added each weekday, six extra trips added on Saturdays and five extra trips on Sundays, while the Blue Line Forest Park Branch will see even more: 30 additional trips each weekday, 17 additional trips on Saturdays and two additional trips on Sundays. Red and Yellow Line trains are having their early morning schedules shifted to better align with each other, the agency said, as the first northbound Yellow Line train will depart Howard at 4:40 a.m., with southbound service from Dempster-Skokie starting at 4:55 a.m. * Crain’s | Blackstone facing $346 million foreclosure at River North office building: A venture controlled by the private-equity giant has been in default on its $310 million mortgage backed by the office portion of the building at 350 N. Orleans St. since it matured in 2023, according to a foreclosure lawsuit filed late last month in Cook County Circuit Court. In a long-delayed action, a trustee representing bondholders in the loan filed the complaint in a bid to take control of the 1.3 million-square-foot property. * Tribune | Decades before Irish were Chicago political royalty, they lived in a ramshackle slum called Kilgubbin: In the 1850s and 1860s, Kilgubbin was often mentioned in the pages of the Tribune and other Chicago newspapers. The name became symbolic of slums where poor Irish immigrants lived in ramshackle shanties, squatting on property they didn’t own. In an era when the Irish faced widespread prejudice, “Kilgubbin” was used as an insult. Of course, Kilgubbin wasn’t the only place where Irish people lived in Chicago during the city’s early decades. In the 1830s, Irish laborers dug the Illinois & Michigan Canal, settling in a spot once called Hardscrabble, which became the South Side’s Bridgeport neighborhood. And when the Great Famine devastated Ireland in the 1840s, Chicago was a destination for thousands of Irish people fleeing starvation. By 1850, 1 out of every 5 Chicagoans was an Irish immigrant. * WGN | Why was everyone carrying milk jugs around Chicago during St. Patrick’s Day Weekend?: After scouring the internet (which included a few trips down the Reddit rabbit hole), those drinks people were carrying were most likely “Borgs” or Blackout Rage Gallons. […] The drinks are usually made in a plastic jug and generally contain water, vodka, flavored drink mix (such as Kool-Aid or MiO) and sometimes electrolyte mix like Pedialyte. * Bloomberg | Darker Than a Dark Pool? Welcome to Wall Street’s ‘Private Rooms’: A decade after being engulfed by a controversy that culminated in multiple enforcement actions and a regulator clampdown, these off-exchange trading platforms are touting a way to buy and sell stocks that’s even more opaque. They’re offering what are dubbed private rooms, gated venues that take the core benefit of a dark pool — the ability to hide big equity deals so they won’t impact prices — and add exclusivity, specifying exactly who can partake in any trade. * WaPo | Amid ‘DEI’ purge, Pentagon removes webpage on Iwo Jima flag-raiser: Multiple articles about the Navajo code talkers, who were critical to America’s victory at Iwo Jima and the wider Pacific theater of the Second World War, were also removed, along with a profile of a Tonawanda Seneca officer who drafted the terms of the Confederacy’s surrender at Appomattox toward the end of the Civil War.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Mar 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Mar 18, 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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