Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax      Advertise Here      About     Exclusive Subscriber Content     Updated Posts    Contact Rich Miller
CapitolFax.com
To subscribe to Capitol Fax, click here.
Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated x2)

Tuesday, Jun 17, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski on Tuesday confirmed her name was included in notes left behind by Vance Boelter, the man charged with killing a Minnesota lawmaker and injuring another.

“On Sunday, I was informed by Capitol Police that my name was included in the Minnesota murder suspect’s notes,” Budzinski, D-Ill., wrote on X. “I want to again send my condolences to the family of Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark. I will continue to keep them as well as State Senator John Hoffman and his wife Yvette in my prayers. My deepest sympathies go out to their families, friends, and the entire Minnesota community.

“As I’ve said before, there is absolutely no place in this country for political violence. We must be a nation that values civility and mutual respect — always,” Budzinski said.

She declined further comment.

* United Food and Commercial Workers Local 881…

Local 881 United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) endorsed Robert Peters for Congress in Illinois’ 2nd Congressional District on Tuesday. Local 881 represents 34,000 hard-working members across Illinois, including thousands in the district, in grocery, retail, pharmacy, cannabis, food processing, and other essential industries.

“Robert Peters has always been a champion for working people,” said Local 881 UFCW President Steve Powell. “He understands the challenges our members face, from wages and health care to safe working conditions and dignity on the job. We need his voice fighting for us in Washington.”

As a current Illinois State Senator and longtime organizer, Peters has stood shoulder to shoulder with labor, advocating for fair pay, strong unions, and a people-first economy. His campaign for Congress centers working families, racial and economic justice, health equity, and a bold vision for the future of Illinois and the nation.

“I’m proud to receive the support of Local 881,” said Peters. “Their members—essential workers who keep our communities going—deserve more than lip service. I will continue standing for their right to organize, earn a living wage, and build a better life for their families as we fight back against Trump’s onslaught against working people.”

* The state headquarters building in Chicago experienced a power surge today. This email was sent out by CMS at noon…

555 W. Monroe just experience a power surge. Power has been fully restored to the building; however, we are in the process of manually switching power back on throughout the building. The surge effected the elevators, and we are working to have the power restored quickly. If you need to exit the building during this time, please take the stairs to the ground level. We will keep everyone informed as we work through this situation.

Several employees went home to work remotely, we’re told.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | Illinois governor signs bill, delays implementation for state interchange act: “Credit unions across Illinois applaud Governor Pritzker for his swift action in signing House Bill 742, extending the effective date of the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act,” said Ashley Sharp, senior vice president of state advocacy and legislative Counsel for the Illinois Credit Union League. “While litigation challenging the law proceeds, it is imperative to provide relief to credit unions, local banks, Main Street businesses and consumers throughout the state of Illinois – all who stand to be negatively impacted by this law.”

*** Statewide ***

* WaPo | Maps show the cities about to experience extreme humidity and heat: Chicago: Maximum humidity level: Very high: High humidity will develop Tuesday, becoming very high Wednesday, when strong-to-severe storms are possible. After a brief break Thursday, humidity levels will surge from Friday through next week as a period of dangerous heat arrives. … St. Louis: Maximum humidity level: Extreme: High to extreme humidity levels show no signs of letting up through next week. This will fuel strong-to-severe thunderstorms on Wednesday. A period of excessive heat is forecast to arrive on Saturday.

* Tribune | Photos: Our Route 66 road trip: As the 100th anniversary of Route 66 approaches in 2026, join Pulitzer Prize winners Jonathan Bullington and E. Jason Wambsgans as they spotlight the stops and people who live along America’s highway. Route 66 was created to connect us, a fused chain of existing roadways many unpaved that stretched 2,448 miles across eight states and three time zones, starting steps from Lake Michigan in downtown Chicago and ending near the Pacific Ocean and Santa Monica’s famed fishing pier.

*** Chicago ***

* Injustice Watch | Pilsen tenants followed the law in withholding rent. They were forced to move out anyway.: By the time three Pilsen tenants began writing letters to their landlord requesting repairs in May 2023, water was dripping from the ceiling of a third-floor hallway even on sunny days. “Right outside my unit, there is water leakage from the fourth floor and damage in floorboards due to oversaturation,” wrote Cristina Miranda, one of the tenants, who just months earlier had moved into the four-story building on the southern edge of the trendy Mexican neighborhood. “This water leakage is random and independent from rainy weather,” Miranda wrote.

* Block Club | Chicago Police Have Failed To Solve More Homicides. Could A New Law Help?: The late May passage of the Illinois Homicide Data Transparency Act — which will require law enforcement to track and publish detailed, standardized homicide reports — was welcome news to gun reform advocates in Chicago, a city where many shooting survivors say they distrust police. That distrust exists, in part, because Chicago Police typically solve gun crimes at lower rates than their counterparts in other cities, and they report their clearance rates in a way that tends to inflate their track record.

* WGN | Illinois Congressmen visit immigration facility in South Loop as Trump orders ICE to increase deportation efforts: Two Illinois Congressmen, U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (8th District) and U.S. Rep. Jonathan Jackson (1st District), visited the ISAP (Intensive Supervision Appearance Program) office in the South Loop on Tuesday. The immigration office is run by ICE officials. Several Chicago residents have received text messages to show up there. When they arrived for check-in, they were detained. […] “For ICE and Donald Trump to specifically target Chicago for these types of raids and these types of fraudulent text scams to get people to come in, only to be snatched away, is wrong,” the congressman said.

* The federal legislators entered the ISAP office but were denied access once inside

…Adding… Statement from Krishnamoorthi…

“People in Illinois are confused, scared, and deserve answers,” Congressman Krishnamoorthi said. “It is my responsibility as an elected member of the United States Congress to conduct oversight of this center and get answers for our neighbors and constituents. These raids are not isolated incidents. The facility leadership’s decision to deny me entry into the center is disappointing and outrageous, and I will continue to demand information from ICE personnel to ensure everyone’s rights to due process are being upheld – as is the law.”

On Monday, a man was arrested and detained by ICE agents in Elgin, located in Congressman Krishnamoorthi’s congressional district, despite having no previous criminal record and having lived and worked in Elgin for 12 years.

…Adding… Sun-Times

“We made it through the double doors into the facility. We talked to an ICE officer who refused to identify himself. He was wearing a mask to obscure his identity. We asked for his name. We asked for his badge. He refused,” Krishnamoorthi said. “He then called Chicago Police to evict us from the property as trespassers. This is federally paid property. We should be able to conduct oversight here, and we’re going to insist following this visit on doing just that.”

Jackson said police officers were “gracious and kind,” and he called them “conflicted.”

“What you’re beginning to see is the officers are conflicted. He was calling the police on two members of Congress and said that we were trespassing,” Jackson said. “This is a federal contractor in the 1st District, and there’s been some really slimy and scammy things that have happened with text messages and people being picked up. We came here simply to ask.”

Krishnamoorthi said “several people” from Elgin, in his district, have received texts to show up to an ICE office. Jackson said two constituents have reached out to his office about missing family members.

* Block Club | MAT Asphalt Complaints Continue Even After Mitigation Technology Installed Last April: Over the last year, the Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH) has received more than two dozen air pollution complaints against MAT Asphalt and ticketed the facility for environmental ordinance violations, according to records obtained by Borderless Magazine. In a handful of instances, inspectors have identified odors escaping from the plant and trucks when loaded with asphalt, a petroleum-based material, according to environmental inspection records.

* Tribune | Ald. Jim Gardiner cleared of ethics charge, $20k fine; ethics board chair stepping down: It’s a rare win in a string of other controversies for the alderman. Czosnyka and others won a $157,500 settlement after claiming Gardiner unfairly blocked critics from his official Facebook page, which was paid in part by the alderman and partly with taxpayer dollars. Taxpayers also had to pick up the tab for a separate $100,000 settlement to a man that claimed Gardiner had him wrongfully arrested. Gardiner also publicly apologized for what he described as “offensive” texts using derogatory language against City Council colleagues and women.

* Tribune | Chicago police still seeking suspect in foot chase that led to shooting death of Officer Krystal Rivera: Meanwhile, investigators with the Civilian Office of Police Accountability continue to probe the gunshot that resulted in Rivera’s on-duty death, CPD’s first of 2025. In the moments after the chase, Rivera was shot and killed by her own partner, authorities have said. […] With no time to wait for an ambulance, Rivera was placed into a squad car to be driven to University of Chicago Medical Center. During the trip to the hospital, though, the police vehicle caught fire and Rivera was transferred to a different squad car. She was pronounced dead at the hospital. In the chaos, the suspect who prompted the stop was able to escape. A Police Department spokesperson told the Tribune that they remained at large.

* Crain’s | With latest deal, United Center owners cross $100M in land purchases: A venture controlled by the Reinsdorf and Wirtz families, which co-own the Near West Side venue, paid just more than $12 million late last month for a surface parking lot and brick building at the southeast corner of Washington Boulevard and Damen Avenue, according to Cook County property records. The entity bought the property from an affiliate of Red Top Parking, a longtime operator of parking lots near the United Center that has sold other land nearby to the team owners in recent years.

* Sun-Times | Chicago public pools to open 7 days a week for first time since COVID-19 closings: The outlook this summer is for above-average temperatures and intense humidity, according to Illinois State Climatologist Trent Ford. Chicagoans will get the first taste of extreme heat this weekend when temperatures are forecast above 90 degrees and humidity levels are expected to be oppressive, Ford said. It’s been a cool June so far.

* Sun-Times | Earl Moses, ‘true newsman,’ former Sun-Times editor, dies at 94: Moses, a respected Chicago newspaperman, died May 24 at his home in Torrance, California. He was 94. […] Moses joined the Sun-Times in 1962, rising from reporter to night city editor, then city editor, assistant managing editor, assistant to the personnel director and assistant to the editor before taking early retirement in 1988 after suffering a stroke. “My dad was a true newsman. The Sun-Times was his life,” said Matthew Moses, who remembers his father interacting with colleagues. “Roger Flaherty, Leon Pitt, I remember their confidence. They saw through all the bs going on in the city. It was fun watching them hang out, hearing them swap stories. That made him a superhero in my eyes.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Students complained about Bloom Trail teacher years before sexual assault charges brought, records show: Records obtained from District 206 show Giglio was placed on paid administrative leave for an investigation on the same day the district was served with a lawsuit, May 14, 2024. The school board voted to terminate his employment July 8, 2024. In February 2021, a person stating they were a parent of a Bloom Trail student sent the district an anonymous email listing concerns with Giglio’s behavior. The parent claimed to have contacted Bloom Trail Principal Glynis Keene with concerns in December 2020 and wanted to know why Giglio was still teaching.

* Daily Herald | Hoffman Estates approves $385,000 purchase of TIF-funded land: The redevelopment includes the land on the southeast corner of Barrington road and the Interstate 90 tollway which is adjacent to the village’s public works maintenance garage. Although 11 acres of land were purchased, not all are usable, which resulted in the affordable price, according to village manager Eric Palm.

* Daily Herald | Indivisible Elk Grove Township’s inaugural event draws 6,000: One of the Indivisible Movement’s newest chapters, Indivisible Elk Grove Township, hosted their first event on June 14 in Arlington Heights to join with millions of protesters nationwide who gathered on Flag Day to demand an end to executive overreach and to reclaim a country that is governed according to the Constitution by We the People. Lynne S, the Indivisible Elk Grove Township chapter’s founder, attributes the overwhelming success of this event to many factors. “We had an incredible lineup of speakers headlined by U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi and including state Rep. Mary Beth Canty (54th), state Rep. Nicole Grasse (53rd), County Commissioner Kevin Morrison (15th) and Jesse Rojo (Illinois Veterans for Change) among others.”

* Daily Herald | Ex-chief to get $99,210 from Wheeling in separation deal: Former Wheeling Police Chief Jamie Dunne will receive more than $99,200 from the village when he officially retires in a few weeks. Dunne will get a one-time, lump payment of nearly $86,305 within 14 days of his July 4 retirement, documents indicate. He’ll also receive a $12,905 payment for his employee-sponsored retirement account. Additionally, Dunne is due unspecified payment for earned but unused vacation time and personal time. The payments are part of a separation agreement approved by the village board Monday night. The deal was authorized without public discussion as part of the consent agenda, which is reserved for routine matters.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Bloomington looks to adopt new housing rehabilitation strategy: The proposed Housing Rehabilitation Program, part of a larger neighborhood revitalization effort, was presented publicly for the first time during Monday’s Committee of the Whole meeting. Cordaryl Patrick, the city’s community impact and enhancement director, said estimates indicate Bloomington has about 300-400 properties that are currently vacant and derelict and would be targeted by the initiative.

* Capitol City Now | District 186: Scope makes progress: The rising cost of before- and after-school care in District 186 is a concern administrator Terrance Jordan is feeling. The popular Scope program now must be self-sufficient, after the administration’s attempt to transfer it to the YMCA failed. “Currently, if they don’t receive CCC, which is Community Child Care Connection, that price is $115 per child,” said the district’s Terrance Jordan, “and we have received emails from concerned parents about that increase and how it may be pricing them out.”

* WSIL | T-Mobile grant to enhance safety and access in Carbondale: The City of Carbondale has been awarded a $46,000 Hometown Grant from T-Mobile. This makes Carbondale one of just 25 communities nationwide and one of two in Illinois to receive this grant in the latest funding round. […] The grant will fund the installation of decorative wayfinding signage along the Downtown-Campus Connector and decorative alleyway lighting in three key downtown locations. These improvements will enhance connectivity and safety between Southern Illinois University (SIU) and downtown Carbondale.

* WCIA | Vehicle drives into Baskin-Robbins in Springfield; two hospitalized: In a Facebook post Tuesday afternoon, Springfield Fire Fighters Local 37 said they responded to a vehicle impacting the Baskin-Robbins at the intersection of S MacArthur Blvd. and W Laurel St. As a result, two occupants of the vehicle were taken to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries. Additionally, nobody inside of the Baskin-Robbins nor the neighboring business were hurt in this incident, and everyone involved has been accounted for.

* WSIL | Anna, IL to boost accessibility with $2.1M transportation grant: “We’re pleased to receive this money from ITEP and excited to put these dollars to work in our community,” said City Administrator Dori Bigler. “The multi-use path to Walmart will improve accessibility while increasing safety for residents and visitors alike.” The path will extend from the intersection of Springfield Avenue and East Vienna Street to Walmart. Anna is among 66 projects statewide receiving funding, with a total of $139.2 million awarded through the Illinois Department of Transportation.

*** National ***

* Lexis Nexis | Will Genetic Privacy Concerns Raised by 23andMe’s Collapse Last?: In the wake of 23andMe’s bankruptcy announcement, attorneys general in Alabama, Arizona, California, Kentucky, New Hampshire, North Carolina and Texas all issued warnings to their residents about the company’s collapse and encouraged them to delete any genetic data held by the company. In the wake of 23andMe’s bankruptcy announcement, attorneys general in Alabama, Arizona, California, Kentucky, New Hampshire, North Carolina and Texas all issued warnings to their residents about the company’s collapse and encouraged them to delete any genetic data held by the company. […] This month, 27 states and the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit seeking to prevent 23andMe from selling customers’ genetic data without obtaining their “explicit consent” first.

* Nielsen | Streaming Reaches Historic TV Milestone, Eclipses Combined Broadcast and Cable Viewing For First Time: Streaming reached a historic milestone in May as its share of total television usage outpaced the combined share of broadcast and cable for the first time ever, according to Nielsen’s monthly report of The Gauge™. Streaming represented 44.8% of TV viewership in May 2025, its largest share of viewing to date, while broadcast (20.1%) and cable (24.1%) combined to represent 44.2% of TV.

* TPM | Senate Republicans Propose Gutting Medicaid Further To Make Trump Tax Cuts Permanent: Committee Republicans propose steeper cuts to certain programs, including Medicaid and the Child Tax Credit, in order to make President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts permanent. The panel has also proposed a slower phase out on the Biden-era clean energy tax credits, though experts point out the overall effect would still be equal to gutting the clean energy incentives. Many Senate Republicans have vocalized issues with a handful of provisions in the House version of the bill — Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) has warned against a “full-scale repeal” of current energy tax credits; Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MS) has made some noise about cutting Medicaid; Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) goes back-and-forth daily about whether he’s content with the federal spending cuts outlined in the bill.

  24 Comments      


Today’s must-read

Tuesday, Jun 17, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Janelle O’Dea at the Illinois Answers Project

[Cahokia Heights] is among five dozen communities in Southern Illinois and the Metro East that account for a third of sanitary sewer overflows reported to the state of Illinois within the last decade, according to data from the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. Unless authorized by a permit, sewer overflows into U.S. waters are violations of the U.S. Clean Water Act, which the Illinois EPA enforces. […]

As of 2020 when an engineering report on sewer repairs was completed, Cahokia Heights needed to repair or replace at least 800 feet of sewer pipes, six sections of water main, 19 fire hydrants, eight lift stations, and more than 50 pump stations according to grant applications submitted the following year.

The estimated cost: more than $24 million.

A third of the majority-Black population of Cahokia Heights lives below the poverty line. The community’s median household income is $37,975 — less than half of the state’s median.

Infrastructure repairs are just crazy expensive in this country, partly because of the paperwork

When applying for a grant, cities have to provide information about how the money will be spent and preparing those plans isn’t cheap. For example, preliminary engineering on two parts of the sewer system over the last two years cost the city more than $400,000, according to invoices from Hurst-Roche, a Hillsboro-based engineering firm.

* And in this case, they may be throwing good money after bad

The sewer system in Cahokia Heights as a whole is still broken and the overflows happen despite repairs. Attorneys with Equity Legal Services, who represent citizens of Cahokia Heights in multiple lawsuits, said residents report that repairs are made but fail within weeks or months.

Other repairs made flooding worse in some residents’ yards and houses.

Last summer during a storm, Norris’ house was surrounded by water for six weeks, and another resident was without hot water for over two weeks after the flood destroyed her hot water tank, according to the complaint filed by attorneys. Within a week, St. Clair County, where Cahokia Heights is located, was declared a disaster zone by the U.S. government.

Lots, lots more, so go read the rest.

  4 Comments      


Trump official: Chicago is next for militarized immigration crackdown ‘if they go too far’

Tuesday, Jun 17, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Earlier this week, President Trump directed ICE to expand deportations in Chicago, and other Democratic-run cities. Block Club Chicago

Trump’s order comes at an already tense time: Chicago saw tens of thousands of people march against the president and his anti-immigrant policies at Saturday’s No Kings rally, local leaders are bracing for more immigration raids, Mayor Brandon Johnson has called on Chicagoans to “resist” immigration enforcement and local officials question the legality of recent detainments of immigrants.

Trump praised Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents while ordering them to “expand efforts to detain and deport Illegal Aliens in America’s largest cities,” which he called “the core of the Democrat Power Center.” […]

It is unclear just how many people locally have been affected by the Trump administration’s raids and detainments, as ICE has refused to provide accurate data or respond to various records requests.

* Rolling Stone

As President Donald Trump calls on Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to ramp up arrests and deportations in America’s biggest cities, because they are the “Democrat Power Center,” he and his administration are eyeing Illinois for the next militarized crackdown.

“Chicago is next, if they go too far,” a senior Trump administration official tells Rolling Stone. “The second they do, the president is prepared to prove that nobody is above the law.”

Senior administration officials are “closely monitoring” the anti-Trump and anti-ICE protest movement in Chicago, according to two Trump officials and another source familiar with the matter. The administration is reviewing federal intelligence memos and informal law enforcement reports about activities on the ground. Officials say they are also focused on developments since the city’s progressive mayor, Brandon Johnson, told citizens to “rise up” against the president’s immigration crackdowns. […]

Mayor Johnson responded to Rolling Stone questions with a statement defending the “tens of thousands of Chicagoans” who joined last weekend’s peaceful protest of “the authoritarian tactics of the Trump administration.” He insisted that Trump’s “twisted and depraved mandates” to meet “arbitrary” deportation “quotas” have nothing to do with Chicago’s security. “Ripping families apart and disappearing people do not make our cities safer,” Johnson said. “These unconstitutional actions incite fear in our immigrant communities and cause more problems than they solve.” He continued: “Chicagoans know that immigrants are a critical part of the rich social fabric of our city. We will always fight for the rights and dignity of all Chicagoans [and] continue to work with community-based organizations and legal groups to ensure that all Chicagoans know their rights.”

* Alice Yin asked Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson about the threat earlier today

Yin: The senior Trump official in Rolling Stone said Chicago is next if they go too far. How are you interpreting that and what would be your administration’s plan of action if Trump makes good on his threat to send the military here?

Johnson: I’m not going to speculate what someone means. I don’t think that would be responsible. I can only control the things that I have jurisdiction and purview over. Standing up for civil rights in the city of Chicago is a long tradition in history. Just a few feet away from this room, Dr. King and Al Raby looked right into the eyes of Richard J. Daley and challenged him to do more around housing. Protest is something that has allowed for this room to exist, Black, Brown, White, Asian, women. So we have to go as far as necessary to protect our Constitution and our democracy.

And so whatever is necessary, we should all be committed to doing just that, anything short of protecting our democracy would really be a poor display of our appreciation of our ancestors.

As far as what this administration has been allowed to get away with we have put forth lawsuits, of which we’ve seen some success there. We will continue to move policy that protects the interests of working people, and we’ll make sure that the people of this city know their rights.

It’s clear that the Trump administration expects people to behave ignorantly. That’s not who we are, and so whether it’s making sure that our residents know what their constitutional rights are, moving policy or moving at the legal level in the courts, we’ll do whatever is necessary to ensure that the sensibility of our democracy is still intact.

Yin: Last week, your Law Department said the city did hand over some documents to ICE as part of its subpoena on streets and [sanitation] seeking employment eligibility records. Did these records contain any personal information?

Corporation Counsel Mary Richardson-Lowry: We received two requests on that through administrative warrants.

What we said was, with respect to City Key that we decline to provide documentation.

There was another administrative warrant category for streets and [sanitation], where, under federal law, we had an obligation to at least provide a listing, and that information was provided without the kind of detail that you just referenced.

* WGN’s Courtney Spinelli sat down with Sam Olson, field director of Chicago’s ICE field office yesterday

When asked what Chicago ICE officials have been directed to do and what people can expect to see, Olson said officers will be in the streets, seven days a week, working to enforce immigration law.

“We have, unfortunately, a lot of targets to go after. There’s a lot of people who are here, that are here illegally with criminal convictions, here with final orders of removal and our officers are out there daily,” Olson said. […]

Spinelli: “Border czar Tom Homan initially said it was a priority to go after dangerous criminals, but we have seen some examples, like the enforcement and detentions at ISAP check-ins, people who activists claim were not doing anything wrong, that were already under supervision. What’s the response to that, and why now with those folks that may not have a criminal history?”

Olson: “With immigration, like I said, there’s a lot of people that we have the ability to target; our authorities are kind of wide-ranging. While we’re focusing on a lot of the criminals, there are a subset of those who are here illegally that have final orders of removal that were maybe on some type of reporting procedure, but at some point, they’ve already been already ordered removed by a judge, so again, we’re just enforcing that order.” […]

Olson was asked whether people who have no orders of removal need to be worried, especially if they are being notified of ISAP check-ins.

“I can’t tell people how to be worried, the idea is that everybody probably knows what their status is in the U.S.,” Olson said. “If you’re here without status, but you’re going through a process, the issue is we’re not going to remove somebody who is not amendable to removal, right, we have to follow that law, how we do these removals.

* Governor Pritzker was asked about Trump’s order yesterday during a press availability. NBC Chicago

“We do know ICE is coming once again in force to cities across the country, so we expect to see them in Chicago. I don’t know exactly how big the force will be, but I do know he has used other law enforcement along with ICE to carry out his ill-conceived mission to go after people who frankly are paying taxes and they’re law-abiding and they’ve been here for many, many years,” [Pritzker] said.

Despite claims by the Trump administration, enforcement operations have not been focused on those with criminal records. According to data obtained by NBC News, of the more than 51,000 migrants currently in ICE detention, less than 30% had criminal convictions on their records. Roughly half of the individuals deported by the U.S. in the month of February had no criminal charges or convictions, and more than half of individuals currently detained in the U.S. have not been charged or convicted with a crime.

Being in the United States without legal status is a civil infraction, not a criminal one, according to the American Immigration Council.

“Those are the wrong people to be going after,” Pritzker said of detaining those without criminal charges or convictions. “We ought to go after the violent criminals. People who get convicted of violent crimes who are undocumented should be thrown out of this country, and that’s not what they’re doing.”

* If you watch the video, you’ll see at least three FBI special agents were involved in this arrest…


According to news reports, the arrested man’s family claims he had no criminal record.

…Adding… South Side Weekly

In the morning of Wednesday, June 4, immigrants arrived at the Intensive Supervision Appearance Program (ISAP) office in Chicago’s South Loop after they received an unexpected notice to appear for a check-in appointment. Apparently, it was a trap.

These ten people, who had been complying with ICE surveillance, according to advocates and attorneys, were detained on the spot by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) officials in what witnesses described as a chaotic scene. […]

This new enforcement tactic comes as the Trump administration set goals for ICE to make an increasing number of daily arrests. These heightened enforcement actions that include the deployment of the National Guard in California and threats by the administration to deploy them in Illinois, contributed to sparking mass protests across the country demanding an end to deportations and detentions. […]

ICE claimed the ten individuals they detained at ISAP had final orders of removal, meaning an immigration judge has determined a non U.S. citizen must leave the country. However, Xanat Sobrevilla from OCAD said otherwise.

“It’s a lie. The people here are all not in final orders of removal. They are folks that were complying. They are not the people they are trying to paint,” she said.

* Related…

    * ABC Chicago | Video shows federal agents rip Elgin man without criminal record from pickup truck, his partner says: His partner says he is undocumented but has lived and worked in Elgin for 12 years and has no criminal record. Video that has been shared hundreds of times and is circulating on social media shows federal agents ripping a man out of a pickup truck on a residential street in Elgin before putting him in handcuffs and taking him away.

    * WTTW | Chicago to Stop Accepting Online Applications for Municipal IDs After ICE Subpoena, City Clerk Says: Chicago will no longer allow residents to apply online for a municipal identification card after U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials subpoenaed records identifying applicants for the ID, known as the City Key, City Clerk Anna Valencia announced Saturday. “This was a tough decision as this program serves a number of vulnerable populations that rely on the accessibility of City Key, and ultimately, that’s also the reason I’m pausing our online platform,” Valencia said in a statement.

    * WTTW | Chicago Immigrant Advocates Demand End to ‘Deceptive’ ICE Raids, Reminds Communities to Know Their Rights: “As news spreads about militarized ICE teams carrying out Trump’s agenda of hate on the streets of Chicago, so too does the fear among our community members,” ICIRR Executive Director Lawrence Benito said during the Thursday news conference. Mayor Brandon Johnson’s chief of staff Cristina Pacione-Zayas said during a Wednesday news briefing the mayor’s office has received word that federal immigration agents have been told to be ready to deploy, with ICE tactical units expected to target workplaces in Chicago this week.

    * WTVO | Mayor McNamara urges calm amid possible ICE presence in Rockford: In a recorded video posted to the City’s Facebook page, McNamara said, “We’ve reached out to every law enforcement agency that we possibly can. right now, we have no agency confirm that they have been part of the activity that took place this morning in southwest Rockford.”

  19 Comments      


Roundup: Pritzker signs FY26 budget

Tuesday, Jun 17, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois has a solid budget story

Gov. JB Pritzker signed Illinois’ fiscal year 2026 budget into law Monday, taking shots at President Donald Trump’s budget management to defend hard choices state lawmakers were forced to make this year.

The $55.1 billion spending plan set to take effect July 1 is the largest in state history and is supported by $55.3 billion in anticipated revenue, including more than $700 million in new taxes and more than $500 million in one-time revenues. […]

The budget’s passage came after months of discussion about closing an initially projected $3 billion deficit and growing concerns about Trump’s treatment of state funding in Washington. Pritzker, a possible 2028 presidential candidate, used Monday’s budget signing ceremony in Chicago as an opportunity to draw a contrast between his and Trump’s budgets. […]

Pritzker and other Democratic leaders acknowledged that crafting the FY26 budget was challenging but continues to make investments Democrats believe are priorities. Discretionary spending will increase by less than 1% in FY26, Pritzker said. Despite the minimal increase, the FY26 budget still spends about $2 billion more than FY25.

* Sun-Times

Those decisions included some $400 million in cuts to state programs, with wholesale slashing of immigrant health care spending, while squeezing big corporations, online sportsbooks and nicotine users for more tax revenue.

But the state is still managing to increase K-12 education funding by $307 million, go beyond its required pension payment, add to the state’s “rainy day” fund and maintain “core investments for Illinois families, without raising their taxes,” Pritzker said.

“That’s hard to do while balancing the budget, but we did. Not everyone can say that,” Pritzker said before signing the budget package at a West Loop state office. “The Trump administration is spending wildly on tax cuts for their wealthy friends, while the Republicans in Congress are voting to gut health care and food assistance for working parents, for seniors and children.

“The Trump slump is affecting the entire nation,” Pritzker said. “You’re seeing red states and blue states across the country struggle this year, forced to grapple with lagging national economic growth estimates due to high tariffs and bad policy choices in Washington.”

* Some context from the Kaiser Family Foundation on the “Trump slump” Pritzker referenced

Last month House Republicans passed a sweeping legislative package that combined tax cuts with other legislative priorities of President Trump. Known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” the tax and budget bill contains health care provisions which include significant changes to the Medicaid program and the Affordable Care Act (ACA). […]

While the legislation continues to be debated as the debate moves from the House to the Senate, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released their report estimating the legislation would increase the number of adults without health insurance by more than 10 million and reduce federal spending on Medicaid by almost $800 billion. In addition, several Republican Senators have said they oppose the provision in the House-passed legislation that freezes states’ provider taxes at their current rate and prohibits states from establishing new provider taxes because of the negative impact it may have on rural hospitals.

Reflecting these ongoing discussions, public attitudes towards the legislation are dynamic and can shift after hearing some of these details. For example, public support for the legislation drops 14 percentage points to 21% after hearing that the legislation would decrease funding for local hospitals. In addition, three-fourths of the public (74%) have an unfavorable view of the legislation after hearing that the bill would increase the number of people without health insurance by about 10 million.

On the other hand, hearing that the bill would reduce federal spending on Medicaid by more than $700 billion seemingly has no impact on public opinion with two-thirds still holding unfavorable views of the bill after hearing this.

* Crain’s

Illinois would see a decrease in health care spending of $22.2 billion over 10 years under the budget reconciliation measure, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, passed by the U.S. House and now before the Senate, according to an analysis by the Urban Institute and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

In addition to the impact to people on Medicaid and Affordable Care Act policies, the blow to hospital and other provider revenue will be drastic, the analysis predicts.

The Illinois breakdown among health care sectors shows hospitals in the state would see $9.2 billion less in the next decade, physicians would see a $2.2 billion decrease and federal payment for prescriptions would fall $5.2 billion, with another $5.7 billion split among other categories.

Of the $797 billion in reductions in the federal bill over the next decade, the report said, Illinois is one of nine states that would see a drop of more than $20 billion.

* Back to Capitol News Illinois for more on Illinois’ budget

The largest sum of new taxes – $336 million – are on businesses outside of Illinois that lawmakers call “leveling the playing field” and will require businesses to pay more income tax to the state on their profits.

Consumers will face new taxes on specific items, including taxes on tobacco, vaping and other nicotine products, which are increasing to 45% to raise $50 million. An existing telecommunications tax will also rise from 7% to 8.65% and raise $49 million to fund the statewide 988 hotline.

A new tax on sports bets will charge betting sites 25 cents for the first 20 million wagers and 50 cents for each bet following that. It’s projected to raise $36 million. Sports betting sites FanDuel and DraftKings have both announced they will implement 50-cent transaction fees on Illinois customers in response to the tax.

Short-term rentals will have to begin paying the state’s hotel operator’s tax. The charge is already applied to hotels in the state, and Airbnb already pays it voluntarily, but more companies like Vrbo will now be required to pay the tax expected to raise an additional $10 million.

A pair of tax amnesty programs are expected to raise $228 million. Those programs are meant to incentivize taxpayers to pay overdue taxes.

* Tribune

Barring a decision to convene this summer, state lawmakers aren’t scheduled to return to Springfield until their annual fall session, when they could address the transit fiscal cliff. Depending on the outcome of the federal budget currently being negotiated by Republican lawmakers in Washington, Illinois legislators may also need to discuss changes in federal funding to the state or impacts to Illinoisans, such as potential cuts to Medicaid.

The budget package signed by Pritzker after passage by Democratic allies in the legislature included funding for a number of capital projects. Despite the fiscal challenges, the plan includes $8.2 billion in new spending on infrastructure projects, which are separate from the operating budget and funded by dedicated taxes and borrowing.

Republicans, none of whom voted for the budget package, again complained that they received nowhere near the money for large projects accorded their colleagues across the aisle.

* More…

    * NYT | Senate Bill Would Make Deep Cuts to Medicaid, Setting Up Fight With House: Senate Republicans on Monday released legislation that would cut Medicaid far more aggressively than would the House-passed bill to deliver President Trump’s domestic agenda, while also salvaging or slowing the elimination of some clean-energy tax credits, setting up a fight over their party’s marquee policy package. The measure, released by the Senate Finance Committee, contains the core provisions of that chamber’s version of the legislation that Republicans muscled through the House last month and are hoping to speed through the Senate and deliver to Mr. Trump’s desk by July 4. But its differences with that bill are substantial and are all but certain to complicate the measure’s path to enactment, casting doubt on that timetable.

    * Patch | Rep. Spain: Dem Budget Sets Table for More Tax Hikes: “The FY 26 state budget package was passed in the middle of the night after Democrats once again conspired behind closed doors. Their process was so opaque, the Democrats presenting the budget bills couldn’t even answer more than a dozen questions. How are the people of Illinois expected to trust that the government is spending their tax dollars wisely when the process is so lacking in transparency that even the sponsors don’t know critical information?

    * WRAM | Hammond Statement on Gov. Pritzker’s Budget Signing: “The tax-and-spend budget that Governor Pritzker just approved is completely irresponsible. It’s a $55 billion budget that relies on $1 billion in new taxes and fund sweeps and hundreds of millions of dollars in Road Fund diversions. What’s in this budget? Pay raises for politicians. Nearly $250 million in pork projects for Democratic legislators aka the ‘Democratic Majority Slush Fund’ and an additional $100 million slush fund for the Governor.

    * Center Square | Enacting largest IL budget ever with tax increases, Pritzker criticizes Trump: Meeting with the leader of the G7 Monday, President Donald Trump was asked about immigration enforcement and paused to criticize Pritzker. “I look at Chicago and you’ve got a really bad governor in Chicago, and a bad mayor, but the governor is probably the worst in the country, Pritzker,” Trump said.

    * NBC Chicago | As Pritzker signs Illinois budget, here’s what’s in, what’s out and other notes: Pritzker used reduced appropriations in one of the budget bills as a corrective measure, saying that the amounts had been duplicated. That move reduced the amount of spending in the final budget agreement by just over $161 million. The series of bills also called for a deposit of $161 million in the state’s “rainy day” fund, which Pritzker says will contain nearly $2.5 billion by the end of the next fiscal year.

    * Journal Courier | Governor signs next budget, JDC demolition money is included: Among many items in the budget is the inclusion of $300 million that will be split among five dilapidated, state-owned sites, including Jacksonville Developmental Center, which has been abandoned since 2012. Since its closure, the 134-acre property has been host to fires, vandalism and complaints about its appearance.

    * Daily Herald | Illinois’ $55.2 billion budget ‘incomplete,’ Civic Federation president says: “It’s an incomplete budget,” Civic Federation President Joe Ferguson told Capitol News Illinois. “It does not add in any meaningful way to discuss any structural issues the state has. It’s a maintenance budget.” Ferguson said a key reason for that is at least $271 million in fund sweeps used to balance the general revenue fund. Fund sweeps occur when lawmakers dip into lesser-known and underutilized funds outside the main general fund to use as a source of revenue for the fiscal year. This year’s budget also pauses several transfers to keep certain dollars available in the general fund for use this year.

  9 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Jun 17, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Illinois Drivers Alliance

In a historic breakthrough to transform the rideshare industry and to improve the lives of drivers across the state, the Illinois Drivers Alliance – a coalition powered by drivers and anchored by SEIU Local 1 and IAM Local 701 – announced on Monday that it will file legislation that will at last secure bargaining rights for the more than 100,000 estimated rideshare drivers who reside in Illinois. At the same time, the coalition also announced that after years of grassroots pressure and mobilization, including many protests and rallies aimed at the largest companies in the rideshare industry, Uber has now agreed not to oppose bargaining rights for rideshare drivers in Illinois.

For years, rideshare drivers in Illinois have been united in their demand to have the right to form a union and to bargain with rideshare industry giants. Thousands of drivers have attended rallies, protests, and regular events and meetings organized by SEIU Local 1, IAM Local 701, the Chicago Gig Alliance, among others. Many of these demonstrations and protests, some outside Uber headquarters and others at key rideshare locations like the airport, have been focused on demanding that the companies agree to respect the rights of workers to unionize and bargain for better wages and stronger working conditions.

The victory for drivers in winning such a condition from the company follows another major victory for drivers in Massachusetts, where rideshare drivers secured bargaining rights by passing a ballot referendum in November 2024. That referendum was backed by thousands of rideshare drivers who had been organizing with SEIU and the IAM. It drew support not only from a majority of voters but also countless community and religious allies who understood that workers could not wait any longer to gain the right to unionize in the rideshare industry.

The breakthrough is partly the result of years of organizing by the members of the Illinois Drivers Alliance and the Chicago Gig Alliance to advance the Chicago Rideshare Living Wage and Safety Ordinance, which, until now, had been set to face a vote in the City Council this week.

Due to loopholes and restrictions in current federal labor regulations, state-level legislation needs to be passed in order to allow rideshare drivers to bargain to improve pay and working conditions.

“This breakthrough would not have been possible without the courage and efforts of drivers shining the light on their safety and working conditions. The Illinois Drivers Alliance, the Chicago Gig Alliance, and their many allies, along with Workforce Committee Chair Ald. Michael Rodriguez (22) laid the groundwork by pushing the envelope at the city level. That forced the largest rideshare company in Illinois to begin reckoning with the fact that opposing bargaining was an untenable position in our city and our state,” said Illinois Drivers Alliance leader and IAM Midwest Territory Special Representative Ronnie Gonzalez. “Ald. Rodriguez’s dedication to improving the lives of workers was essential in paving the way for this unprecedented agreement and the path to union rights for rideshare drivers.”

“This is a historic day for Illinois rideshare drivers, not just in Chicago but all across Illinois who are leading the fight to unionize, which would improve their working conditions, pay standards, and give them a voice on the job,” said Illinois Drivers Alliance leader and SEIU Local 1 President Genie Kastrup. “With state legislation, we will be able to reach beyond city limits to lift up hundreds of thousands of drivers across Illinois. Real change can only happen when workers have a union and a voice at the table. We’re ready to take this fight to Springfield and win the future of rideshare.” […]

Rideshare drivers with the Illinois Drivers Alliance, the Chicago Gig Alliance and their allies will now work to advance legislation in Springfield that secures union rights for drivers and establishes a statewide framework for bargaining in the rideshare industry.

While the details of the bargaining bill are being finalized, the bill is expected to draw some inspiration from reforms recently passed by ballot referendum in Massachusetts, where drivers won the right to a union in November 2024.

Click here for some background on the Massachusetts ballot referendum.

* Sun-Times

The deal was announced Monday morning, hours before Rodriguez was set to call a vote on an ordinance that would have required drivers to be paid anytime they were logged into the app, and not just when a passenger was in the car.

But the passage of Rodriguez’s bill was not certain. He had delayed a vote on the ordinance last week to allow Council members to ask questions of representatives from Uber, Lyft and the unions.

Some alderpersons supported the ordinance they said would give drivers a living wage. Others opposed it out of fear that the price of trips would rise for hospitality workers downtown. Uber warned that the bill would have pushed the company to lay off 10,000 drivers.

Rodriguez had been negotiating for months with the unions and ride-hailing app companies over language in the ordinance. Those negotiations will now move to Springfield.

* Crain’s

Marc Poulos, executive director for labor management relations with the Local 150, said he helped convince some aldermen to oppose the city ordinance by arguing it was a bad deal.

“Some of the drivers would have liked it and some of them wouldn’t — 15% to 20% of the drivers would have been laid off. They would have foreclosed an opportunity to get a lot more things they could have otherwise gotten,” he said.

The Local 150 will also support state legislation allowing drivers to unionize. Poulos said it’s unlikely a bill will move quickly because of the complications of imposing regulations on an industry without strict labor standards.

He also said he’s surprised Lyft has not signed the same deal as Uber, but isn’t worried about the company being able to scuttle the unionization bill.

* Tribune

Because they are classified as independent contractors, gig drivers are excluded from the right to unionize under the National Labor Relations Act, the law that protects the right of private-sector workers in the U.S. to form unions, bargain collectively and organize without retaliation from their employers.

The kind of legislation proposed by the Drivers Alliance would allow the drivers to form a union and engage in collective bargaining, but would not go so far as to classify them as employees. Details were not yet available Monday about exactly how the workers’ union rights would be structured under such a law. […]

“There’s a split in the labor movement over those kinds of deals,” said Gali Racabi, a professor at Cornell’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations. On the one hand, Racabi said, some view the abandonment of the fight for full employee classification — and the benefits that come with it — as an unacceptable concession. […]

However, efforts to reclassify gig drivers as employees have largely failed. To supporters, deals such as the one proposed in Illinois are a recognition that “half a loaf is better than no loaf,” he said.

Thoughts?

  14 Comments      


Unsolicited advice

Tuesday, Jun 17, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is a story an activist who has never been to Springfield would, and did, write. StreetsBlog Chicago

Uber and the road construction lobby just killed Illinois’ transit funding bill, and your lawmakers let them

After months of negotiations, hearings, and community organizing, the most ambitious transit funding and reform bill Illinois has seen in decades was quietly killed. Not by voters, not by public outcry, but by notifications from Uber and Lyft.

It happened like this. Local 150 — the powerful private construction union that benefits from Illinois’ road-building contracts — which said it had “partnered” with the transit unions on funding, insisted that no toll revenue be used to support public transportation. That demand helped stall negotiations for weeks.

On May 31, in the final hours of the spring legislative session, the construction union only came on board after a last-minute addition to the transit funding bill introduced a $1.50 fee on some deliveries and a 10 percent ride-hail tax. These aren’t radical ideas. States across the country are already successfully using similar tools to support their transit systems. The fee didn’t apply to groceries, and most people already paying for delivery probably wouldn’t even notice the extra cost.

But then Uber and other gig economy giants went on the offensive anyway. Uber immediately blasted customers with a fear-mongering push notification: “SECRET tax hike… Act NOW.” [Emphasis added.] In other words, your pizza will cost more! Downstate Illinoisans will subsidize Chicagoland!

Um, no.

* The Senate Democrats were flat-out told by organized labor that a tollway surcharge would never be acceptable, and the SDems did it anyway. The idea was dropped almost immediately and replaced by a tax on deliveries, which StreetsBlog ridiculed…


* Kristine Kavanagh, Communications Director, IUOE Local 150 replied to the StreetsBlog story…

Local 150 is committed to the future of public transportation in our region. We have collaborated with over 30 labor unions and state legislators for nearly a year supporting labor-backed legislation aimed at addressing public transit’s fiscal challenges and ensuring a smarter, safer transit system. Despite reforms being introduced close to the deadline, revenue discussions were lacking, particularly in the House. Local 150 is equally disappointed that the General Assembly failed to pass the legislation. We continue to advocate for better solutions alongside LAPT and emphasize the importance of adhering to the Safe Roads Amendment to prevent critical infrastructure funding diversions. Utilizing road funds in this manner would simply shift the crisis to highways and bridges, resulting in a scenario where we once again confront deteriorating infrastructure characterized by crumbling bridges and pothole-ridden roads.

Furthermore, any attempt at diverting funding from roads and bridges shows a lack of understanding of Illinois’ public transportation system. Nearly 55% of our public transit system operates on roads and bridges rather than rails. The time for Illinois Legislators to act is now, so we can find innovative solutions that ensure a robust public transportation system and maintain the integrity of our state’s infrastructure.

* House Speaker Chris Welch weighed in during a press conference yesterday

From day one, we have said that reforms have to come before funding. The House has been insistent that reforms have to come before funding. And we are close on reforms, but we’re not there yet, and so we don’t want to continue to talk about this in five years, in 10 years and 15 years, because the system continues to be a failing system.

The House didn’t take up the Senate bill because, as Welch previously said, the bill was dead on arrival

“In the House, we have not talked about a way to fund the transit system because we were committed to reforms first,” he said. “The Senate knew the bill they were proposing would be dead on arrival because we haven’t even discussed funding sources in the House.”

The House Democrats took this position despite the fact that organized labor, including Local 150, was fully on board with the Senate bill. And Uber’s astroturf lobbying was just not a factor. It wasn’t moving anyway.

* Gov. Pritzker yesterday

I’d also like just to point out that there are a lot of contributors to the solution here. I know there are people who say, ‘Well, this is the cliff, and here’s the amount of money, and what is the state going to do to fill that gap?’ And the answer is not that the state is solely responsible for filling that gap. There are lots of sources right, the counties where their residents were affected, the City of Chicago, Cook County, too, and the riders themselves, as well as the efficiencies that need to be brought to the system.

And you have to put all of that together and determine how much money that the state should be putting forward. And I think that, you know, I just want to point out that everybody’s focusing only on the state, when actually there’s a whole lot to put together here.

Unsolicited advice: If you’re an activist, get your best deal on reform and then take the revenue that’s offered.

  43 Comments      


Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?

Tuesday, Jun 17, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Across Illinois, big hospital systems and PBMs are abusing the 340B drug discount program – making massive profits while patients drown in medical bills. One whistleblower called it “laundering money.”

Here’s how the scam works: big hospitals buy discounted 340B drugs, bill patients full price, then split the difference with for-profit pharmacies and PBMs.

340B was meant to help Illinois communities in need. But there are no rules requiring hospitals and PBMs to pass savings on to patients. No transparency. No oversight. Just higher costs for working families, small businesses, and taxpayers.

Meanwhile, tax-exempt hospitals cash in – and PBMs get a cut too.

  Comments Off      


Open thread

Tuesday, Jun 17, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* AP

The Rolling Stones’ Mick Jagger sings in swaggering French. Louisiana native Lucinda Williams delivers a slow, slinky, swamp pop sound. Steve Earle, Taj Mahal, Jimmie Vaughan, Charley Crockett and more energize Creole classics from accordionist and pioneer Clifton Chenier, the late King of Zydeco.

Chenier, who died in 1987 due to diabetes-related kidney disease, would’ve turned 100 on June 25. To celebrate his centennial, Valcour Records founder Joel Savoy and Los Lobos’ Steve Berlin teamed up with executive producer John Leopold to produce “A Tribute to the King,” out June 27.

Savoy’s primary role was to assemble the local backing band to support these artists — and to spotlight “the Zydeco legacy families,” he said. “My job was to help create a house band paired with the best accordion players representing Clifton’s style and the appropriate people for this project.”

* The Atlantic

As Landry remembers it, he first met Jagger at a Los Angeles house party following a Philip Glass Ensemble performance at the Whisky a Go Go. The next night, as luck would have it, he saw Jagger again, this time out at a restaurant, and they got to talking. At some point in the conversation, “Jagger goes, ‘Your accent. Where are you from?’ I said, ‘I’m from South Louisiana.’ He blurts out, ‘Clifton Chenier, the best band I ever heard, and I’d like to hear him again.’ ”

“Dude, you’re in luck,” he told Jagger. Chenier was playing a show at a high school in Watts the following night. […]

As the final addition to the album lineup, the Stones were the last to choose which of Chenier’s songs to record. Looking at the track listing, Jagger noticed that “Zydeco Sont Pas Salé” hadn’t been taken. “Isn’t that, like, the one?” Adcock recalls him saying. “The one the whole genre is named after? If the Stones are gonna do one, shouldn’t we do the one ?” […]

The Stones’ version of “Zydeco Sont Pas Salé” opens with St. Julien, Chenier’s longtime drummer, playing a backbeat with brushes. He’s 77 now, no longer the young man Jagger saw in Watts in 1978. “I quit playing music about 10 years ago, to tell the truth,” he said when we spoke this spring, but you wouldn’t know it by how he sounds on the track. Keith Richards’s guitar part, guttural and revving, meets St. Julien in the intro and builds steadily. The melody is introduced by the accordionist Steve Riley, of the Mamou Playboys, who told me he’d tried to “play it like Clifton—you know, free-form, just from feel.”

It’s strange that it doesn’t feel stranger when Jagger breaks into his vocal, sung in Creole French. His imitation of Chenier is at once spot-on yet unmistakably Jagger.

* The original Zydeco Sont Pas Salé

Stay tuned.

  6 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jun 17, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Gov. JB Pritzker signs budget amid federal funding uncertainty, unaddressed transit issues. Tribune

    - The spending plan Pritzker signed Pritzker signed includes nearly $400M in additional cuts beyond his February proposal, budget negotiators said last month.
    -It raises over $800M through tax hikes on tobacco, sports betting, and corporate income, plus one-time revenues.
    - Legislators ended session without passing a transit plan, and Pritzker on Monday did his best to deflect responsibility for the problem, saying transit is “not a state budget issue… It’s really a separate matter entirely.”
    - Rep. Kam Buckner, a lead budget negotiator in the House who has also been a leader in discussions on the transit issue, said lawmakers may return this summer if federal cuts hit the budget — and could address transit then.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Daily Herald | Mount Prospect chief meeting with legislators amid license-plate reader controversy: Eterno told village officials at Saturday’s Coffee With Council he has spoken with State Rep. Nicolle Grasse, a Democrat from Arlington Heights. Grasse also spoke with officials in Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect and Rolling Meadows, she said. She and Eterno are meeting this week with state Sen. Mark Walker, also an Arlington Heights Democrat. Mount Prospect was at the center of the issue when Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias announced last week that 46 out-of-state agencies were blocked from accessing Flock Safety’s Automated License Plate Reader (ALPR) system after reports they had been used in searches related to abortion and immigration.

* Crain’s | Chicago Fire, Related Midwest reveal details of South Loop stadium plan: Renderings and site plan documents showcase more details of the $650 million stadium set to be bankrolled privately by billionaire Fire owner Joe Mansueto, as well as new and tweaked public infrastructure projects Related Midwest would finance and be reimbursed for with future property tax revenue generated by the project. Among other soccer-facing revelations: The stadium in the north central portion of the long-fallow, 62-acre site would feature 50 suites, 500 “Loge seats” and 3,500 “Club seats” — including some with access to exclusive clubs, the team said — as well as a dedicated supporter section with a capacity for about 2,000 die-hard fans.

*** Statehouse News ***

* NBC Chicago | Pritzker discusses Trump’s decision to send National Guard into Los Angeles: Immigration protests have remained largely peaceful in Chicago, with just one arrest reported during a “No Kings” march on Saturday, but Pritzker was asked whether he believed Trump would activate the Illinois National Guard to support law enforcement in Chicago. “I do not believe he will call out the National Guard. He has seen this has not gone well for him politically, and he’s all about the politics,” Pritzker said during a press conference Monday. “What he’s done in California has really hurt him politically, so I don’t think he’ll do that in other places.”

* WCIA | Changes coming to Illinois after Pritzker signs multiple bills: Governor Pritzker signed HB742 on Monday. According to his office, this will delay the date the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act would be enforced until July 1, 2026. The Interchange Fee Prohibition Act would ban banks or credit card companies from charging businesses a fee for the tipped or taxed portion of a transaction.

* WMBD | On the Record: Breaking down the $55 billion budget with state Senators Koehler, Arellano: “Overall, I think its a fair budget,” said state Sen. Dave Koehler (D-Peoria). “But you can look through the budget and you’ll find areas where things made you satisfied or things didn’t make you satisfied. But that’s what the budget process is.” […] On the other side, state Sen. Li Arellano took issue with the budget saying it was unduly burdensome on taxpayers. He voted against the “reckless” budget plan, he said.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Fiscal watchdog says state financial oversight for CPS is worth exploring: With Chicago Public Schools grappling with a $529 million deficit and no clear way to balance its budget for the fall, the state might want to take over the school district’s finances — a move that could open up new revenue opportunities, but also force CPS to make cuts that school board members and the mayor oppose. That’s according to a new report by the nonpartisan financial watchdog group, the Civic Federation.

* Tribune | Maps show neighborhoods where environmental justice zoning ordinance would benefit residents most: As communities are urging their representatives to support an environmental ordinance introduced in April to the City Council, a neighborhood group released maps showing large swaths of land across the city are currently zoned for commercial warehouses and industrial manufacturing that don’t require public notice or city approval to be developed. Wards with the most land where this kind of use is permitted include the 10th Ward on the city’s Southeast Side, the 11th and 12th Wards on the South Side, the 25th Ward on the Lower West Side, and the 27th Ward on the Northwest Side.

* WTTW | Ald. Jim Gardiner Won’t Have to Pay $20K Fine After He Is Cleared of Violating Ethics Ordinance: After an appeal by the two-term Far Northwest Side alderperson, an administrative hearing officer overturned the Chicago Board of Ethics’ October 2023 determination that Gardiner committed 10 total violations of Chicago’s Governmental Ethics Ordinance, five violations of his fiduciary duty to the city and five violations for unauthorized use of city property after a probe by Inspector General Deborah Witzburg. The Chicago Board of Ethics voted unanimously Monday evening to clear Gardiner of those violations.

* Crain’s | American Bar Association sues Trump over alleged ‘intimidation’ of law firms: “The result of the Law Firm Intimidation Policy has been a pervasive fear within the legal community and the justice system at large,” the complaint reads. “Many attorneys are no longer willing to take on representations that would require suing the federal government because doing so poses a serious risk of becoming the next target of the administration’s devastating sanctions.” The ABA is represented in the complaint by Susman Godfrey, one of four law firms, along with Chicago-based Jenner & Block, that opted to fight the administration in court rather than reach a deal to avoid an executive order targeting its operations. Jenner won a ruling last month permanently blocking the order.

* Crain’s | Chicago garners two wins at the Beard Awards, the Oscars of the restaurant biz: First up was the West Loop Japanese bar Kumiko, which won in the Outstanding Bar category. Created by Julia Momosé, Kumiko is both a bar and dining experience, combing the two in a very intimate setting at 630 W. Lake St. The restaurant calls itself a “a dining bar” where “food and drink are expertly intertwined” with an emphasis on Japanese ingredients, craft cocktails and saké. Diners can grab a snack with their cocktail or enjoy a tasting menu.

* Chicago Mag | Peering Inside Chicago’s Original Art Colony: Graff was beginning to understand why the Chicago Tribune originally described it as a “magnificent palace” when the edifice first opened in 1885. Designed by Solon Spencer Beman, it served as the showroom for the Studebaker Carriage Company before the business moved. After a renovation that expanded the structure from eight floors to 10, it reopened in 1898 as “the first art colony of Chicago.” Among the many music teachers, theater companies, and literary groups, the storied list of artists-in-residence includes architect Frank Lloyd Wright, sculptor Lorado Taft, and illustrators W. W. Denslow (The Wonderful Wizard of Oz) and J.C. Leyendecker (The Saturday Evening Post cover artist).

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Aurora Beacon-News | With $771 million budget gap for transit looming, suburban officials and activists still waiting on reform: In Kane County, the failure to pass the Senate funding proposal was met with some optimism from local officials seeking greater suburban influence over the transit agencies. At a county board meeting on June 4, Kane County Board Chair Corinne Pierog reiterated interest in greater oversight for the collar counties on the region’s transit agencies. “That was our big fight, and we were able to, altogether, with our senators … postpone this for another day, and a much more thoughtful, I hope, less rushed conversation,” Pierog said.

* Shaw Local | Residents express opposition to proposed day care center near Downers Grove: “I am not against day care,” said Ozzello, a working mom who in the past struggled to find day care for her children. “I understand the need for reliable and affordable, trustworthy childcare. I am all for building another day care in another location that makes sense.” But not on a residential lot, she said.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora considers water rate increase: Aurora is considering raising the water and sewer rate by 6% each of the next two years, which city staff members say would mean about a $3.30 monthly increase for the average residential water user each year. If the city were to keep rates the same, it would face a roughly $2.8 million budget deficit in the Water and Sewer Fund. That’s according to Jason Bauer, the interim director of Public Works, who gave a presentation to the Aurora City Council’s Committee of the Whole about the proposed increase earlier this month and then formally proposed the increase at a City Council Finance Committee meeting last week.

* Shaw Local | Which northern Illinois towns have enacted a 1% grocery tax? Check our list: Illinois communities that want to keep a 1% grocery tax after the state’s tax expires have to act soon to put their own laws on the books. More than 200 communities in the state already have chosen to do so, with many more considering it.

* NBC Chicago | Residents, activists blame ‘festering’ antisemitism for Highland Park incident: A Highland Park family is speaking out after receiving a threatening, antisemitic letter at their home — a disturbing incident that has drawn swift condemnation from the community and prompted an investigation involving local police, the FBI, and a hazardous materials team. The letter, which targeted the family for displaying pro-Israel signage in their yard, included antisemitic rhetoric and a reference to a toxic substance. The material was ultimately found to be non-toxic, but the threat was taken seriously.

* Daily Southtown | Federal court filing seeks to bar Dolton from buying pope’s boyhood home: A former Dolton village employee is trying to block the village from using taxpayer money to acquire the childhood home of Robert Prevost, now Pope Leo XIV. Lavell Redmond, who has an ongoing lawsuit against Dolton alleging wrongful termination in 2022, is asking a federal judge for a temporary restraining order. The motion, filed Sunday, alleges the village, in seeking to buy the home, is engaging in an “endeavor with substantial cost to taxpayers with no compelling governmental necessity.”

* Daily Herald | Fire departments are handling more false alarms, so why isn’t there more concern?: “I’d rather the system let us know something’s wrong accidentally than it not work at all when we need it to,” said Arlington Heights Fire Chief Lance Harris. “Usually it’s letting the building owner know something needs fixing.” The vast majority of false alarms aren’t malicious or pranks, but rather a warning that maintenance is required on the building’s alert or suppression system, fire officials said.

*** Downstate ***

* Illinois Answers | Wasted Waters: How Southern Illinois is Coping with Decades of Sewage Flooding… and Why it Still Isn’t Solved.: Five dozen communities in Southern Illinois account for a third of the reported sanitary sewer overflows in the state in the last decade. But with low revenues, population declines, and bureaucratic delays, solutions are hard to come by. Meanwhile, residents face property damage flooded yards and basements and governments that still haven’t fixed the problem.

* WCIA | Herff Jones expanding corporations in Arcola, leaving Champaign: The Herff Jones Plant in Champaign will be closing down but expanding operations in Douglas County. The company will be phasing out of Champaign over the next few months and transitioning employees to Arcola and Indianapolis to work. Management said an estimated 90 jobs will be impacted like supervisor and distribution roles. Executive Vice President Andy Penca said the Champaign building has lasted for a half a century, and leaving the city they love is disappointing.

* WGLT | Contacts to statewide domestic violence hotline rose 26% last year — with sharpest increase in Central Illinois: A new report says contacts to the Illinois Domestic Violence Hotline rose 26% compared to 2023, with the greatest change registered in Central Illinois. According to data compiled by the statewide domestic violence advocacy group The Network, the hotline received 16 contacts [via phone, text or chat] from Logan County, up 81% from 2023. Livingston County contacts increased from 23 to 30 [77%]. And there were two contacts from Piatt County, compared with none the previous year.

*** National ***

* Axios | Scoop: Colorado pauses campaign finance database after Minnesota shootings: The state’s Transparency in Contribution and Expenditure Reporting database, known as TRACER, posts candidate filings that often include home addresses and personal phone numbers. Elsewhere in the system, it lists campaign contribution data that requires donors — including lawmakers — to list their names, full addresses and occupations. Secretary of State Jena Griswold ordered the removal after consultation with state and legislative leadership, a spokesperson said.

* WaPo | Trump officials reverse guidance exempting farms, hotels from immigration raids: Officials from Immigration and Customs Enforcement, including its Homeland Security Investigations division, told agency leaders in a call Monday that agents must continue conducting immigration raids at agricultural businesses, hotels and restaurants, according to two people familiar with the call. The new instructions were shared in an 11 a.m. call to representatives from 30 field offices across the country.

* NYT | Inside DOGE’s Chaotic Takeover of Social Security: So far the agency’s core functions — like sending monthly checks to 74 million Americans — have remained largely intact. But under pressure from Mr. Musk’s team, nearly half of the Social Security Administration’s 140 senior executives, and thousands of employees overall, have taken buyouts or retired. As many as 12 percent of staff members, out of a bureaucracy that numbered around 57,000 people, are expected to depart their jobs as part of DOGE’s cost-cutting plan.

* NPR | Press group sues L.A., alleging police abuse of reporters at ICE rallies: Press advocates say such episodes have been common at the often charged and sometimes violent protests that have played out in Los Angeles over the past 10 days. They say law enforcement officials at the protests have not always demonstrated restraint or distinguished between people who pose a threat and others who are reporting on developments. On Monday, the Los Angeles Press Club and the investigative reporting site Status Coup filed a lawsuit against the city of Los Angeles and the chief of the Los Angeles Police Department in federal court, alleging that officers at the demonstrations are routinely violating journalists’ rights.

  9 Comments      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Jun 17, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Jun 17, 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.

  Comment      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

A heated push to boost pay for Chicago’s rideshare drivers has been shelved — but in its place, Uber has agreed to support a statewide effort allowing drivers to unionize in Illinois, a major shift in the gig economy labor fight.

Legislation will be filed in Springfield to give rideshare drivers the right to unionize in the state. Uber has agreed to support the effort and the city ordinance will be scrapped. The ride-hailing giant will also stay neutral as the influential Service Employees International Union Local 1 and the Automobile Mechanics’ Local 701 seek to organize their drivers.

The deal came together after it became clear the city ordinance was on thin ice amid an onslaught of opposition from the business community and public silence from Mayor Brandon Johnson. After being delayed last week, a rescheduled vote on the measure set for this afternoon will now be canceled.

While approval of the measure was no sure bet, Uber now avoids having to sweat it out to learn whether members of the City Council who expressed hesitance to support it would buckle under the pressure of the SEIU, one of Chicago’s most influential unions.

* Gov. JB Pritzker reduced the appropriations bill by $161 million due to a couple of drafting errors

The bill, among other things, appropriates money for grants to finance certain capital projects for State fiscal year 2026. Certain new appropriations included in Article 129 of Senate Bill 2510 appear to have been intended to replace portions of other appropriations and reappropriations in Articles 129 and 181 of the bill, which were not reduced by a corresponding amount.

It is evident that these appropriations were included at their current amounts in error and that the General Assembly intended for the amount of new appropriations from the Build Illinois Bond Fund to not exceed the total amount of Build Illinois bond authorization reflected in House Bill 3374.

*** Statewide ***

* WICS | Illinois State Treasurer’s Office to auction unclaimed treasures online: The auction will feature a diverse array of collectibles, including a rookie baseball card of Chicago Cubs legend Ryne Sandberg, “Star Wars” comic books, a Yoda Pez dispenser, Elvis Presley coins, and a 1995W $50 Gold Eagle coin. Stamp collections and other sports collectible cards of iconic players such as Ernie Banks, Bob Gibson, Johnny Bench, Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Wayne Gretzky, and Gordie Howe will also be available.

* Journal Courier | Illinois Department of Natural Resources seeking wild turkey sightings: Biologists with the state are trying to track turkey populations in Illinois to see their reproductive success according to the department. Summer is when young turkeys are hatching, so the Illinois Department of Natural Resources said it’s a good time to track them. From 2019 to 2024, data showed the success rate of a turkey’s brood has about doubled. The rate went from 1.62 poults, or young turkeys, per hen to three poults per hen. The data also showed the male-to-female turkey population stayed about the same, suggesting male populations stay stable even after spring hunting season.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Trump directs ICE to expand deportations in Chicago, other Democratic-run cities: In a social media posting, Trump called on ICE officials “to do all in their power to achieve the very important goal of delivering the single largest Mass Deportation Program in History.” He added that to reach the goal officials ”must expand efforts to detain and deport Illegal Aliens in America’s largest Cities, such as Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York, where Millions upon Millions of Illegal Aliens reside.”

* WTTW | CPD Officers Shot and Killed as Many People in First 5 Months of 2025 as They Did in All of 2024: Data: All but two of the police shootings took place on the South and West sides. Mayor Brandon Johnson has said there is evidence that officers have engaged in an “egregious form of policing” in neighborhoods that are home to a majority of Black and Latino Chicagoans. A spokesperson for Johnson said each shooting should be investigated “based on the unique circumstances of the incident.”

* Block Club | Chicago Mom Arrested By ICE Faces ‘Inhumane’ Conditions In Kentucky Jail, Organizers Say: Gladis Yolanda Chavez Pineda, an organizer with Organized Communities Against Deportations, was among the at least 10 people arrested June 4. Through phone calls to her young daughter and lawyers, Chavez Pineda has described the conditions of three facilities where she has been held since getting detained, said Antonio Gutierrez, leader of Organized Communities Against Deportations. Chavez Pineda and other immigrants detained last week at check-ins under a monitoring program in the South Loop are being held at the Kentucky jail, Gutierrez said. “People are sleeping on concrete floors. Last Sunday, one mattress was given to a group of 20 mothers to share. No blankets are given, no hygiene products,” he said. “There is no privacy. In one of the facilities, only one bathroom is given to 20 or more individuals, with no partitions and privacy.”

* Crain’s | McDonald’s settles Byron Allen’s $10B ad discrimination lawsuit: Allen, who owns properties such as The Weather Channel and Justice Central, filed a lawsuit against McDonald’s in 2021 alleging the Chicago-based chain discriminated against his company through racial stereotyping and refusals to contract. Two years later, Allen escalated by buying a full-page ad in the Chicago Tribune soliciting activist investor Carl Icahn to join the legal fight and suing again, alleging McDonald’s was not on track to meet a 2021 commitment to spend more of its advertising budget with Black-owned media companies. That complaint was dismissed in 2024.

* Sun-Times | Night Out In The Parks event in Little Village canceled: The family event at La Villita Park, 2800 S. Sacramento Ave., was postponed “out of an abundance of caution taking into account multiple contributing factors and a range of concerns raised in connection to a few recent situations,” Adler Planetarium said. Officials did not say when the event would be rescheduled.

* Crain’s | City ups financial incentives for developers to rehab derelict homes: In its Rebuild 2.0 program, which will focus on properties in the Roseland and Englewood neighborhoods, the city is taking over two elements of a developer’s cost to bring a run-down property up to current homeownership standards. The city will pay the developer’s cost of acquiring a property from the Cook County Land Bank Authority — often in the $35,000 range — and cover the difference between the total investment in the rehab and the market price for the home, so the developer isn’t selling at a loss.

* WTTW | Downtown Road Closures for 2025 NASCAR Chicago Street Race to Begin Thursday: The Office of Emergency Management and Communications on Monday released the full list of closures as the city preps for the third annual street race through Grant Park and several highly trafficked areas on July 5-6. Beginning at 12:01 a.m. Thursday, Balbo Drive will become fully closed from Columbus Drive to DuSable Lake Shore Drive, while “No Parking” restrictions will be put in place along Columbus Drive in both north and southbound lanes between Jackson and Balbo drives.

* Crain’s | Lou Malnati’s hires new CEO: Julie Younglove-Webb arrives on the scene with over a decade of experience overseeing corporate and restaurant operations, including Auntie Anne’s, a GoTo Foods brand. She has also led operations at Domino’s and Potbelly. Her operational leadership with more than 450 locations helped generate nearly $500 million in revenue, according to her LinkedIn profile.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Carmel Catholic High withdraws plan for international student dorm: Last year, council members approved a deal with Aurora telecom company Scientel Solutions to add 55 new cameras to public areas downtown and key city-owned facilities. The cameras are slated to be online and recording by the first week of July. However, the rules about who can watch from the other side, when and why are still being decided. City and police department officials worked to draft a policy identifying who would have access to which cameras and how that access would be tracked and managed.

* Daily Herald | Fox River Grove gets OK to demolish ‘monstrously ugly’ half-built apartments: Almost a dozen companies are suing The Grove Residences LLC and Branko Tupanjac of Lake Forest, who is identified as its manager, in a lawsuit filed in 2022 in McHenry County court. Village Administrator Derek Soderholm said the town is soliciting proposals from qualified contractors for the demolition. Once a contractor is selected, the village will proceed with the necessary steps to complete the demolition, he said.

* Daily Herald | Former Rosemont village hall to be torn down for new restaurant campus near Rivers Casino: Rosemont officials are in talks with developer Jeff Bernstein of Bradford Allen and Braden Real Estate Chairman/CEO Marc Offit, who serves as the village’s commercial real estate broker, over a redevelopment deal that would put as many as three eateries on the site of the eight-story building at 9501 W. Devon Ave. Fencing has been installed around the 1960s-era office building, which housed Rosemont’s government offices and public safety department from the 1980s until last year. Demolition was to have begun by Memorial Day but has been delayed while crews complete teardown of an old parks building across town.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Batavia salutes Flag Day with a nod to its special connection to the holiday: Like Rufo, Callahan admitted Batavia has a Flag Day celebration unlike any other in the country given Cigrand’s connection to the city. “We always get questions about this but Cigrand is recognized as the father of Flag Day as he lived in Batavia at the time of President Wilson’s first official 1916 proclamation for Flag Day,” he said. “That is why – here locally – that one man, it kind of gives us that bit of recognition. The only other place that can say that is Waubeka, Wisconsin, where he was born. They celebrate where he came from … but they don’t have anything on this scale.”

* Tribune | One year in, Wayfair’s first brick and mortar is win-win for store, Wilmette: The company is not disclosing specific sales results of the Wayfair store, but in a statement they listed some accomplishments including over 720,000 visitors since its opening, the creation of more than 120 local jobs and 50% of the store’s customers being new to the Wayfair brand. “So we are introducing ourselves to a bunch of people that we weren’t accessing before. So the store itself is a giant billboard for the brand,” Lefkowski said.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora Juneteenth celebration about history, culture and community: Juneteenth – officially celebrated on June 19 – commemorates the end of slavery in the U.S. While President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation in January 1863, it wasn’t until June 19, 1865, that the last enslaved African Americans were freed in Texas after the end of the Civil War. Aurora’s new communication manager Jon Zaghloul said while the city does not organize the annual celebration at the park, “it is truly an amazing event.”

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Paris school district looking to find nearly $750K of ‘missing money’: Exactly two years after their former superintendent’s home was raided by the FBI, an Edgar County school district is trying to retrace the county’s steps after more than $700,000 went missing. The current Paris Union School District 95 superintendent said they have been getting shortchanged for the last six years, and now they’re working to find out why. Superintendent Mary Morgan Ryan said the district makes a request for money to the county every year. The number they give is what they use for budgets, and what they send to the state to get funding from them.

* WGLT | Federal funding for these ag research labs ended. Now the search is on for new support: Work at the University of Illinois’ Soybean Innovation Lab has resumed, although on a reduced scale. Lab director Peter Goldsmith said that’s thanks to a $1 million anonymous private donation. “They reached out back at the end of February, and they liked our story,” said Goldsmith. “They liked what we were proposing to do and they put things in position.”

* WCIA | Truck carrying liquid nitrogen crashes in Shelby Co.; ‘no threat to the public’: ISP: The crash happened north of Windsor near the intersection with County Road 1800 N. Officials with the Illinois State Police said the driver was hurt and was transported to an area hospital. There is no word on their condition. State Police said the liquid nitrogen does not pose a threat to the public. However, Route 32 is closed as responders try to upright the semi-truck.

* BND | Roadwork on closed down I-255 in St. Clair County to finish ahead of schedule: The reopening of 3.5 miles of I-255 from Illinois 15 to Illinois 157 will be about six weeks ahead of the previously anticipated finish date of July 31, the Illinois Department of Transportation announced Friday. This section of the highway was closed on Feb. 1.

*** National ***

* NYT | How Amy Coney Barrett Is Confounding the Right and the Left: But she rarely abandons the other Republican appointees in the most significant cases. “It’s a mistake by ignorant conservatives and wishful liberals to believe she’s moderating,” said Noah Feldman, a Harvard law professor who befriended her when they clerked at the court. Like others who know her, he said that both the right and the left had misread her. “She’s exactly the person I met 25 years ago: principled, absolutely conservative, not interested in shifting.”

* NYT | Slain Minnesota Lawmaker Remembered as Pragmatic Problem Solver: Colleagues remembered Ms. Hortman, who was fatally shot early Saturday in what officials described as a political assassination, as a hardworking, problem-solving leader who managed to negotiate her way through impasses, even within her own party, over two decades in the Legislature. “We have a huge division of values, thoughts and beliefs,” said Representative Leigh Finke, a Democrat from St. Paul. “But she held us together.”

* STAT | Hundreds of NIH grant terminations are ‘void and illegal,’ federal judge rules: The decision comes after Judge William G. Young heard arguments for over two hours at the U.S. District Court in two suits filed against the administration over the termination of hundreds of research grants by the National Institutes of Health. The decision, which can be appealed, hands a temporary victory to researchers across the country, reeling from unprecedented changes at the world’s largest public funder of biomedical research. One suit was led by the American Public Health Association, along with several other organizations and researchers whose grants were terminated. One study estimated terminated grants amounted to $1.8 billion, but one database of terminated grants puts the figure much higher. The other was filed by a group of 16 states.

* Politico | Trump’s FAA pick has claimed ‘commercial’ pilot license he doesn’t have: President Donald Trump’s nominee to head the Federal Aviation Administration long described himself in his official biography as being certified to fly aircraft commercially — but records examined by POLITICO show that he does not hold any commercial license. … Questions about Bedford’s credentials do not appear to threaten his prospects for heading the FAA, an agency trying to recover from years of high-level leadership shake-ups, failures of key aviation technology, a spate of near-misses in the skies and January’s 67-fatality crash near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.

  1 Comment      


Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division files amicus brief in Illinois assault weapons case (Updated)

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Capitol News Illinois earlier this month

Gun rights advocates once again are asking a federal appeals court in Chicago to overturn Illinois’ ban on assault-style firearms and large-capacity magazines in a case that may be destined for the U.S. Supreme Court.

In briefs filed Friday with the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, attorneys representing plaintiffs challenging the law urged the court to uphold the decision of a lower court judge in East St. Louis who said the law violates the Second Amendment because it bans weapons that are commonly used for lawful purposes like self-defense.

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office is appealing that decision, arguing that the weapons banned under the law such as the AK-47, AR-15 and other similar firearms are primarily military in nature and therefore are not protected by the Second Amendment.

The state has until June 27 to file a response to the gun industry’s brief. The court is then expected to set a date for oral arguments, possibly later this year.

* Assistant United States Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division…


* Breitbart provides some excerpts from the DOJ’s brief

The amicus brief’s introduction points to Bruen (2022) and says in part:

    Three years ago, the Supreme Court issued a landmark decision meant to break a habit developed by some States of treating the Second Amendment as “a second-class right, subject to an entirely different body of rules than the other” constitutional rights. …[Bruen] (2022).

    Regrettably, not every State got the message. Just a few months after Bruen, Illinois outlawed some of the most commonly used rifles and magazines in America via a so-called “assault weapons” ban. In doing so, Illinois violated the Supreme Court’s clear directive that States cannot prohibit arms that are “in common use” by law-abiding citizens for lawful purposes. …[Heller] (2008).

The Civil Rights Division’s brief centers on two issues:

    1. Whether the Act violates the Second Amendment to the extent that it bans the possession of firearms that are in common use by law-abiding citizens for lawful reasons.

    2. Whether the Act violates the Second Amendment to the extent that it bans the possession of magazines and other firearm attachments that are in common use by law-abiding citizens for lawful reasons.

The brief then notes that the AR-15 is among the “arms” protected by the Second Amendment, and that those protections also include the magazines necessary to feed ammunition to the rifles.

* Todd Vandermyde provides more context

* Gov. JB Pritzker addressed the filing today

Q: The DOJ has now joined a lawsuit over the assault weapons ban and whatnot. Can you comment on that? And why are they wrong in getting involved with this?

Pritzker: Look, change of administration. They obviously don’t understand the damage that’s being done across the country where there are no assault weapons bans. And they have paid zero attention to the fact that in the 90s, when there was a national assault weapons ban, the number of killings went down significantly. They’re wrong-headed on so many things, but this is yet another of those.

…Adding… Illinois State Rifle Association…

Late Friday, the U.S. Justice Department filed an amicus brief with the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in support of our challenge to the Illinois ban on commonly owned firearms. The Department of Justice argues that such bans violate the Second Amendment — a position we’ve consistently maintained since this unconstitutional legislation was first introduced several years ago.

“This historic and unprecedented move is welcomed news,” said ISRA Executive Director Richard Pearson. “The ISRA remains on the front lines and continues to stand up to Gov. Pritzker and anti-gun legislators in Springfield on behalf of 2.5 million law-abiding, responsible firearms owners in Illinois – and this latest development proves it.

The ISRA has been working diligently behind the scenes to ensure that the Trump administration — particularly the Justice Department — holds Illinois’ anti-Second Amendment leaders accountable for their unconstitutional actions.

In a social media post over the weekend, Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon wrote, “The Second Amendment is not a second-class right. See you in Court, Illinois.”

The ISRA is presently leading the charge as a named plaintiff on two cases and playing a supporting role in an additional five more – totaling 7 cases dealing with constitutional issues and on behalf of law-abiding gun owners in Illinois.

  23 Comments      


War of words heating up between Illinois House leaders

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* While answering a question about the $40 million he put into the budget for a new sports complex at Proviso West High School, House Speaker Chris Welch said this

And for those that are saying that their communities are overlooked, let me respond to that this way. My new chief of staff, Clayton Harris III, is here with me this morning. One of the things that we’re proud of doing is that we took the Minority Leader and her chief of staff to dinner. And I turned to her and I said, ‘Leader, how can I help you? How can I help your members?’

And her response to me was, ‘Don’t expect us to vote for the budget. Don’t expect us to get primaried.’

* From House Republican Leader Tony McCombie…

Let’s be clear: the dinner wasn’t about the budget — it was an attempt, suggested by his new Chief of Staff, to mend a fractured relationship. Instead, Speaker Welch twisted a gesture of goodwill into a weak justification for throwing $40 million at a stadium while pretending this was a ‘tough’ budget year. That kind of spin is exactly why Illinois continues to fall behind our neighbors. The Speaker doesn’t miss a chance to be petty, partisan, and divisive — and Illinois families are the ones left picking up the tab.

  11 Comments      


Pritzker acknowledges budget’s hit to hospitals, but doesn’t have a solution

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From today’s press conference

Isabel: As of today, the only elected officials who have successfully kicked Illinoisans off health care coverage during 2025 are you and the Democrats who voted for the budget bill via the elimination of [the Health Benefits for Immigrant Adults program]. You’ve rightly said forcing people off Medicaid would simply shift costs to hospitals who can’t afford it. How do you intend to mitigate this particular financial damage?

Pritzker: I just would happen to have been in Minnesota. They also had a program that they eliminated. So we’re not the only state. Lots of states have faced the challenge of budgeting and balancing their budgets this year. This was part of the challenge that we had to address, it was a program that had been growing significantly in cost. I do believe that everybody should have health care. I also know that we have to live within our means in the state of Illinois, and particularly because of all the mismanagement that’s occurred over so many years. So we’ve got to rein it in and make sure that we’re actually balancing the budget, and that was part of the decision that was made with regard to that program. As you know, we kept the program that’s focused on seniors who are the most vulnerable.

And it’s true that when people don’t have health insurance, that they often end up in an emergency room, and that can cost taxpayers more than the coverage that we might otherwise provide. We’ve got to work out how we’re going to cover everybody in the state of Illinois, and that’s something that I believe significantly is the job of state government, and something that we will continue to look at.

Isabel: Is it a priority to bring back that funding later next year, if revenues allow it?

Pritzker: Again, the focus here is, how do we expand health care for everybody in the state of Illinois? So it’s not specific to that program. It’s really more about, and as you know, I’ve added hundreds of 1000s of people who are who are US citizens or long time residents of the state through the roles of Medicaid when they’re eligible, and so I’ll continue to do that work.

  5 Comments      


Pritzker says no Illinoisans were on Minnesota assassin’s ‘hit list’

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* During the press conference announcing the arrest of alleged assassin Vance Boelter, Minnesota’s Superintendent of the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension Drew Evans told reporters that Illinoisans were on the list compiled by the alleged Minnesota assassin. When asked if others in states beyond Minnesota were on the list

I don’t want to say it, because it won’t be exhaustive, but Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, some others that were on there. There was a variety in Nebraska, Iowa.

* Gov. JB Pritzker said this today in response to a question about Evans’ comment. Rush transcript

Let me begin by saying that, no, there is not a hit list that has Illinois politicians on it. There was a list, as you may recall, that was in the car that was recovered before they arrested the perpetrator. And that list was referred to as a hit list. It has Minnesota politicians, as I understand it, on it, about 70 of them.

Later, as the FBI and the Minnesota police were going to the various locations that this man lived, they recovered devices and other papers that had on them 600 names, more than 600 names, more of a hodgepodge. It wasn’t a list of 600. It was literally like a few people here, a few people there, websites that he had visited, etc.

And they put all that together, and I think out of a desire to be responsive to the media and to other inquiries, the FBI decided to put out the list, or at least the the information about the list, again, a hodgepodge of names that were put together, but not, as I have been told, a ‘hit list’ of any sort. And… the people who were among that very large list were not targeted in any way.

There are Illinois folks, like Iowa and others, but very few, and the again, no one, the FBI specifically said to me that these people are not targets, and they certainly, now that he has been apprehended, are they’re not concerned about those people being targeted in any way whatsoever.

Pritzker also said, “As I understand, I was not on that list.”

…Adding… CNN

The suspect in the killing of a Minnesota lawmaker and her husband in addition to the shooting of another lawmaker and his wife also visited two more politicians’ homes, according to authorities.

“In the early-morning hours of June 14, Boelter went to the homes of four Minnesota state politicians with the intent to kill them,” Joseph H. Thompson, the acting US attorney for the District of Minnesota, said at a news conference Monday.

  12 Comments      


Federal government plans to ‘liberate’ Chicago

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I submit my weekly syndicated newspaper column shortly after 4 o’clock every Friday. This is what I sent out Friday

As I write this, multiple news outlets have reported the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is preparing to deploy its Special Response Teams to five major cities, including Chicago, in the very near future.

Mayor Brandon Johnson’s chief of staff Cristina Pacione-Zayas told reporters last week: “There will be tactical teams, mini-tanks, other tools they use in which they plan to do raids, as we saw in Los Angeles.”

Last Thursday, U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem explained to reporters in Los Angeles the reasoning behind the massive federal response to sporadic violent protests against ICE in that city: “We are not going away,” Noem said. “We are staying here to liberate the city from the socialists and the burdensome leadership that this governor and that this mayor have placed on this country and what they have tried to insert into the city.”

In other words, according to Noem, the federal government intends to “liberate” those Americans from their own duly elected state and local governments.

Immediately after Noem said that, U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., was forcibly dragged out of Noem’s media event by federal police and handcuffed when he identified himself and attempted to address Noem.

This “liberation” argument will undoubtedly be front and center in Chicago and Illinois if and/or when Noem’s ICE fully deploys into the city.

Thursday night, a three-judge federal appeals panel put on hold an order by a district court judge hours earlier that would’ve forced the federal government to relinquish control over 4,000 National Guard troops deployed to Los Angeles.

Federal law (10 USC 12406) allows the president to federalize state national guards whenever he is “unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States.”

A hearing was scheduled on the lower court ruling, but it’s possible, perhaps even probable that we can expect the same attempt at federalizing our Illinois National Guard troops.

Gov. JB Pritzker said during a congressional committee hearing last Thursday he would “stand in the way” of Trump border adviser Tom Homan, “going after people who don’t deserve to be frightened in their communities, who don’t deserve to be threatened, terrorized. I would rather that he came and arrested me than do that to the people of my state.”

But there may not be a whole lot the governor can do when push literally comes to shove.

And not just this governor.

Because of ICE’s heightened presence in California, the National Guard issue and even the deployment of U.S. Marines, Gov. Gavin Newsom is the first line of defense for sanctuary states like Illinois, New York, etc.

Newsom filed the lawsuit to stop the federalizing of National Guard troops in his state. The governor and the Los Angeles mayor have both said sending in the National Guard has inflamed the local situation. But if President Donald Trump can maneuver himself into anything that he can convince himself is a “win,” then this tactic will surely continue.

“They don’t get [that governing is] not like the black and white of campaigning” said one person close to Pritzker about the Trump White House. “They are living on election night. And now they are creating a whole lot of chaos and lighting themselves on fire on an issue they had an advantage on.”

But holding out hope Newsom will be an effective firewall against this expansion of traditional presidential powers has its perils.

Political writers love writing about the guy, probably because he’s good-looking and a bit of a showboating goofball. Newsom makes for great copy and visuals, but his methods aren’t always sound.

Earlier this month, Newsom suggested via social media the state could withhold $80 billion in federal payments — equal to the difference between what the state receives from the federal government and what its taxpayers send to D.C. It’s a great soundbite, but it simply can’t be done. State governments don’t give money to the feds, taxpayers do.

“Tweeting is not policy,” explained a Newsom spokesperson two years ago when his governor tweeted the state was “done” doing business with Walgreens after the pharmacy chain announced it wouldn’t distribute an abortion pill to customers in states that were trying to block it. Newsom was forced to back away in the face of reality.

This is the same Democratic governor who fawned over Trump after the devastating southern California fires only to be denied federal help.

He’s the same guy who Trump said ought to be arrested last week.

That’s some firewall.

* CBS News on Saturday

The Trump administration has directed Immigration and Customs Enforcement to halt arrests at farms, restaurants and hotels amid concerns that the president’s crackdown on illegal immigration is hurting key industries, two sources familiar with the abrupt policy change told CBS News.

The pause on worksite immigration enforcement operations applies to the agricultural, hospitality and restaurant industries, which rely in large part on labor from immigrants, many of whom are in the U.S. unlawfully, the sources said, requesting anonymity to discuss internal actions.

The scaling back of some ICE operations reflects increased concern among industry leaders that the Trump administration’s aggressive and government-wide immigration crackdown was hindering their businesses and the broader U.S. economy by spooking their workforce.

It also marks a significant pivot for the Trump administration, which has vowed to deport millions of immigrants living in the country without legal status, regardless of whether they have criminal histories.

* President Donald Trump on Sunday

Our Nation’s ICE Officers have shown incredible strength, determination, and courage as they facilitate a very important mission, the largest Mass Deportation Operation of Illegal Aliens in History. Every day, the Brave Men and Women of ICE are subjected to violence, harassment, and even threats from Radical Democrat Politicians, but nothing will stop us from executing our mission, and fulfilling our Mandate to the American People. ICE Officers are herewith ordered, by notice of this TRUTH, to do all in their power to achieve the very important goal of delivering the single largest Mass Deportation Program in History.

In order to achieve this, we must expand efforts to detain and deport Illegal Aliens in America’s largest Cities, such as Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York, where Millions upon Millions of Illegal Aliens reside. These, and other such Cities, are the core of the Democrat Power Center, where they use Illegal Aliens to expand their Voter Base, cheat in Elections, and grow the Welfare State, robbing good paying Jobs and Benefits from Hardworking American Citizens. These Radical Left Democrats are sick of mind, hate our Country, and actually want to destroy our Inner Cities — And they are doing a good job of it! There is something wrong with them. That is why they believe in Open Borders, Transgender for Everybody, and Men playing in Women’s Sports — And that is why I want ICE, Border Patrol, and our Great and Patriotic Law Enforcement Officers, to FOCUS on our crime ridden and deadly Inner Cities, and those places where Sanctuary Cities play such a big role. You don’t hear about Sanctuary Cities in our Heartland!

I want our Brave ICE Officers to know that REAL Americans are cheering you on every day. The American People want our Cities, Schools, and Communities to be SAFE and FREE from Illegal Alien Crime, Conflict, and Chaos. That’s why I have directed my entire Administration to put every resource possible behind this effort, and reverse the tide of Mass Destruction Migration that has turned once Idyllic Towns into scenes of Third World Dystopia. Our Federal Government will continue to be focused on the REMIGRATION of Aliens to the places from where they came, and preventing the admission of ANYONE who undermines the domestic tranquility of the United States.

To ICE, FBI, DEA, ATF, the Patriots at Pentagon and the State Department, you have my unwavering support. Now go, GET THE JOB DONE! DJT

Discuss.

  19 Comments      


How is this legal?

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It’s pretty obvious that this is legal under Illinois state law

Since President Donald Trump returned to the White House in January, federal immigration authorities leading his mass deportation push have repeatedly asked the Chicago Police Department for the arrest records of immigrants.

In almost every case, records obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times show, the police department has handed over documents that include the names, addresses and country of origin of those targeted by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection. […]

But, as the records obtained by the Sun-Times show, there are limits even in Chicago, a self-declared sanctuary city, on what information can be withheld. The police department’s disclosures to DHS, ICE and CBP show that, in releasing records such as arrest reports, it can provide information that’s useful to immigration enforcement agencies.

Between November 2022 and late this past March, those three federal agencies obtained the arrest reports for at least a dozen men under Illinois’ Freedom of Information Act. Some of them haven’t been convicted of a crime in Cook County. Others have lengthy arrest records that include serious charges.

State law is pretty clear on this topic. The feds used FOIA, which means the information is available to the public, and according to state law, that can be shared

Unless presented with a federal criminal warrant, or otherwise required by federal law, a law enforcement agency or official may not: […]

permit immigration agents use of agency facilities or equipment, including any agency electronic databases not available to the public, for investigative interviews or other investigative or immigration enforcement purpose;

Unless lawmakers want to try and carve out ICE from FOIA, this is a non-story.

* However, the law also says this

Unless presented with a federal criminal warrant, or otherwise required by federal law, a law enforcement agency or official may not: […]

enter into or maintain any agreement regarding direct access to any electronic database or other data-sharing platform maintained by any law enforcement agency, or otherwise provide such direct access to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, United States Customs and Border Protection or any other federal entity enforcing civil immigration violations;

* I’m coming late to this story, but it’s difficult to see how this agreement falls within the law

Despite an Illinois law prohibiting data sharing agreements between state law enforcement agencies and federal immigration authorities, the Illinois State Police makes available the names and information of individuals who they deem to be gang members to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. […]

A 2017 state law, the TRUST ACT, explicitly prohibits Illinois law enforcement agencies from entering into or maintaining agreements that would provide federal immigration authorities direct access to electronic databases. There is an exception if the agency is presented with a federal criminal warrant or if it’s otherwise required by federal law.

But according to agreements obtained by WTTW News, the Illinois State Police has shared data with ICE through a statewide computer system, the Law Enforcement Agencies Data System (LEADS), since 2008, including criminal history data and its gang member file, which could contain citizenship information, according to the LEADS manual.

* There are real problems with these government gang databases

The Illinois State Police’s gang file has avoided the high level of scrutiny that Chicago’s own gang database received, which was discontinued in 2023 after investigators found that it disproportionately targeted Black and Latino Chicagoans, and contained numerous errors.

From 2009 through 2018, federal immigration agencies searched the Chicago Police Department’s gang database at least 32,000 times, according to a report from the city’s Office of Inspector General. While Chicago’s now-defunct gang database was active, it caused immigration officials to keep a man wrongly accused as a gang member for 10 months in detention.

* Good point

The potential for federal immigration enforcement agencies to use noted gang affiliation as justification for deportation action has civil liberty groups concerned.

“They could be swept up off the street and disappeared, that’s the harm,” Ed Yohnka, communications director for the ACLU of Illinois, said of individuals who may be listed in Illinois State Police’s gang file. “And the harm could be based on nothing more than a third-party assertion.”

Obviously, if they’re truly gang members and they’re undocumented, they need to be kicked out of this country ASAP. But police gang databases are notoriously unreliable.

* Back to the story

“All our agreements with law enforcement agencies are a standard criminal justice information sharing agreement. LEADS is not designed to collect immigration status information. Any agency, including ICE, using LEADS for purposes in violation of state or federal law would be violating the terms of our standard LEADS agreement. The Pritzker administration’s operation of LEADS is fully in compliance with state and federal law,” said Alex Gough, Pritzker’s press secretary.

Discuss.

  12 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

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

  Comments Off      


Today’s number: $5 million GRF for NASCAR operating expenses (Updated with Pritzker response)

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the appropriations bill which will be signed into law today...

The amount of $5,000,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, is appropriated from the General Revenue Fund to the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity for a grant to NASCAR events and Entertainment LLC for costs associated with operating expenses.

This is a reduction from the current fiscal year, which provided $7 million to NASCAR ($2 million for operating expenses and $5 million for “capital improvements, including prior year costs.”

There are a ton of very worthwhile programs which desperately needed $5 million GRF this year.

* If we won’t give money to the Bears and the White Sox, why are we appropriating $5 million in “operating expenses” (of all things) to NASCAR?

…Adding… Isabel just asked Gov. Pritzker about the NASCAR appropriation. His response

I can’t speak to the specific reason for that, I can tell you that our tourism budget in the state of Illinois has increased over the last six and a half years since I became governor. Very importantly, it has brought enormous benefit to the state. Specifically, the investment in tourism yields revenue for the state that is vastly more than the investment that gets made by our tourism office. And so I’m proud of the work that we’ve done, and we’re going to continue to make investments there.

  33 Comments      


Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Across Illinois, big hospital systems and PBMs are abusing the 340B drug discount program – making massive profits while patients drown in medical bills. One whistleblower called it “laundering money.”

Here’s how the scam works: big hospitals buy discounted 340B drugs, bill patients full price, then split the difference with for-profit pharmacies and PBMs.

340B was meant to help Illinois communities in need. But there are no rules requiring hospitals and PBMs to pass savings on to patients. No transparency. No oversight. Just higher costs for working families, small businesses, and taxpayers.

Meanwhile, tax-exempt hospitals cash in – and PBMs get a cut too.

  Comments Off      


Open thread

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  7 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. ICYMI: Pritzker reacts to Minnesota lawmakers shot, 1 killed: “A horrifying day”. CBS Chicago

    - Illinois Gov. Pritzker expressed sadness and horror after Minnesota state Rep. Melissa Hortman, 55, and her husband were killed, and state Sen. John Hoffman, 60, and his wife were wounded in what is being called “politically motivated shootings” early Saturday morning.
    - “Political violence is always unacceptable. This is a horrifying day for Minnesota, and a sad day for America. What has occurred is a direct attack on our American values and democracy,” Pritzker said in a statement.
    - The gunman had a notebook listing about 70 possible targets, including some from nearby states, according to The New York Times. NBC News reported that some of those names were Illinois-based politicians.

* Related stories…

* At 11 am Governor Pritzker will sign Illinois’ $55.2 billion budget. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Following ICE subpoena, Chicago city clerk suspending online municipal ID program portal: Clerk Anna Valencia announced Friday that her office would take the CityKey online portal offline Friday night, a week after the Tribune reported that ICE subpoenaed her office for the personal information of applicants to the program that is often used by noncitizens. The clerk said that while CityKey’s in-person events — which do not leave behind a written trail that identifies applicants — will not be affected, her office decided to halt online applications after other elected officials and community groups expressed concern.

* Inside Climate | As Data Centers Proliferate Across Illinois, Communities Grapple with How to Supply the Necessary Water: Once they’re online, data centers require a lot of electricity, which is helping drive rates up around the country and grabbing headlines. What gets less attention is how much water they need, both to generate that electricity and dissipate the heat from the servers powering cloud computing, storage and artificial intelligence. A high-volume “hyperscale” data center uses the same amount of water in a year as 12,000 to 60,000 people, said Helena Volzer, a senior source water policy manager for the environmental nonprofit Alliance for the Great Lakes.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Lack of middleman between Illinois farmers and consumers limits market for fruits and vegetables: But as climate change causes increasingly severe droughts and extreme heat in regions that have historically grown lots of fruits and vegetables such as the American Southwest, California and Central America, experts say it’s important that Illinois strengthen its food system. There may even come a time when others look to Illinois — which has a relatively mild climate and ample water supply — to grow what they no longer can. “Either we have to move water to where the agriculture is or move the agriculture to where the water is,” said Jay Famiglietti, a hydrologist, engineer and director at the Arizona Water Innovation Institute. He attributes the water scarcity in the Southwest to climate change.

* Illinois Farmer Today | Amid trend toward consolidation, farmers find no ‘one size fits all’: Missouri has the second-most farms of any state, with 87,887 and 27.03 million total acres of farmland. Illinois has 71,123 farms spanning 26.29 million acres, and Iowa has 86,911 farms and 29.98 million acres of farmland. While the smallest acreages can pull the averages down, the numbers still provide a snapshot. Missouri’s average farming operation is 307.6 acres, Iowa’s average farm size is 345 acres, and Illinois’ average is 369.6 acres.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Ex-Speaker Madigan sentenced to 7 ½ years in prison for bribery, corruption: The sentence, which also includes three years’ probation after his prison term and a $2.5 million fine, follows a jury’s split verdict in February. After a marathon two weeks of deliberation, jurors convicted him on 10 of 23 corruption charges, including bribery, but acquitted him on seven and deadlocked over another six.

* Herald & Review | Decatur racino developers plan to ‘work through the summer’ to win support for proposal: “We feel good about it,” Conor Lucas, the vice president of government affairs for Revolutionary Racing, told the Herald & Review. “I think our team has done an amazing job and I think the legislature too has done an amazing job of understanding the issue more than ever.”The proposed legislation would direct the Illinois Racing Board to award a horse racing license to a track in Macon County. This would clear the path for the company to develop a 200-acre parcel at the northwest corner of U.S. 36 and Wyckles Road into a one-mile harness race track that would include a casino with 900 gaming positions.

* Tribune | Measure before Gov. JB Pritzker would streamline firearms ID process for low-level gun offenders: The legislation applies to participants in diversion programs that serve as alternatives to prosecution. Cook County’s Democratic state’s attorney, Eileen O’Neill Burke, pushed legislators to expand the programs to include a more streamlined opportunity for their participants to obtain a firearm owner’s identification, or FOID, card — the form required by the Illinois State Police for state residents to be allowed to legally own guns. The legislation would apply to people eligible for placement in the diversion programs and charged with gun crimes designated as Class 4 felonies, offenses that can carry one-to-three-year prison sentences but are the least severe level of felonies.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Two people detained on Father’s Day at Broadview immigration center: Manuel was detained with a woman, also from Colombia, according to an immigration attorney who was with them during their appointment. On Friday, dozens of families in immigration proceedings received a text message from the federal government instructing them to report on Sunday to the Broadview center for a check-in appointment. Most left their appointment wearing ankle monitors and were given instructions to report to an office downtown that houses the Intensive Supervision Appearance Program, an alternative to detention through check-ins or other forms of supervision, such as ankle monitors.

* Tribune | ‘I am a product of this system’: Pedro Martinez reflects on his tenure as CPS chief: Martinez is leaving the district on Wednesday. In an interview with the Tribune on Thursday, he emotionally recounted his passion for Chicago Public Schools and for the city where he found a home as the child of Mexican immigrants. He urged the next leader of the district to practice empathy in order to set an example for the more than 320,000 kids they will oversee.

* Crain’s | LGBTQ+ clinic in South Shore plans Juneteenth opening: “This clinic is more than just a medical facility — it’s a sanctuary for healing, affirmation and empowerment,” Green said in the release. “We’re creating a space where every person, no matter their background or identity, can feel seen, supported and cared for.” Currently there is no LGBTQ-focused clinic in South Shore, an Onyx spokesperson said in a separate statement, despite disproportionate mental health, HIV and chronic illness rates in the neighborhood.

* Crain’s | The success of ‘The Bear,’ measured by the Chicago tour bus load: Chicago Food & City Tours launched “Yes Chef! Chicago: A Bear-Inspired Food Tour” after requests came flying in for a tour based on the hit TV show following its premiere in 2022. Now on its third year — and ahead of the much-anticipated fourth season, which releases on Hulu on June 25 — demand remains high, the operator says. “It’s become our buzziest and one of the most popular tours that we offer,” says Brian Tuttle, director of team development at the tour operator. “And with the new season approaching, everyone is excited and buses are filled.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WSJ | How Trump Blew Up Northwestern’s Business Model: Through the spring, Northwestern used university money to pay bills previously covered by NIH grants, spending tens of millions of dollars monthly to keep labs and trials running without a break. Researchers and administrators now worry this stopgap can’t last. “The university is totally keeping us on life support,” said Dr. Daniela Matei, a Northwestern oncologist. “The big question is for how long they can do this.” For decades, Northwestern celebrated—and relied on—its growing pot of government funding. Now it’s a liability.

* Sun-Times | ‘Kindness isn’t a weakness,’ Steve Carell tells Northwestern grads at commencement: Carell’s speech also blended fun with sincerity. He sent off the graduates with some advice on how to deal with their fears and anxieties as they leave college for the wider world. “Remember the little things, like being kind and that you’re not alone,” Carell said. “Take care of one another. Remember to laugh when you have the opportunity and to cry when necessary.”

* Daily Herald | St. Charles considers restrictions, tax on short-term rentals: Colby said the inventory of short-term rentals has more than tripled in the past five years, with at least 47 active listings in St. Charles, more than half of which are operated out of single-family homes. While the city has received few complaints about short-term rental units, the recommended measures would give the city power to enforce violations, which they currently cannot, he added.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville council to consider instituting 1% local grocery tax: A proposed 1% local grocery tax will be discussed by the Naperville City Council for the first time Tuesday as the January expiration date for the Illinois grocery tax inches closer. For more than a year, city staff have warned that Naperville stands to lose millions of dollars in annual revenue when the state tax sunsets, necessitating a replacement revenue stream to avoid slashing staff and making service reductions.

* Daily Southtown | Drinking water warning lifted in University Park, elsewhere, utility says after testing: Residents were warned last weekend the drinking water had been contaminated due to high nitrate levels and shouldn’t be consumed by infants under 6 months. Aqua Illinois said Friday, following consultation with the Illinois Environmental Protection Administration and additional testing, that nitrate levels had fallen below the warning level.

* Lake County News-Sun | Thousands attend ‘No Kings’ events in Lake County: Holding a sign that read, “fought for freedom not for a throne” was U.S. Army veteran John McCullough of Grayslake who said he spent six years in the military, including tours of duty during the first Gulf War and on the Demilitarized Zone separating South and North Korea. “I watched a dictator from a distance,” McCullough said at a rally in Gurnee, referring to the ruler of North Korea. “We don’t need a king whose father paid for him to be a draft dodger. That’s not what my brothers and sisters bled and died for.”

* Sun-Times | Dads of newborns in need find support from each other in Northwestern University program: Garfield started the NICU Dads’ Group six years ago. Those who join often downplay their experiences and feelings. He and Boyd say the support group helps them process what they are going through. It’s important, they say, to offer this support because the training that doctors receive and the entire prenatal process centers around mother and baby and that, when there is a problem at birth, the attention understandably focuses on the mother and child but often no one is really there for the non-birthing parent.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Scam alert of people posing as Macon Co. Sheriff’s Office members: Along with the Central Illinois Regional Dispatch Center, the Macon County Sheriff’s Office has recently received numerous calls of individuals identifying themselves as members of the Macon County Sheriff’s Office, specifically as Lt. Belcher. These scammers are checking the Macon County Circuit Clerk’s website and identifying real people who have had actual warrants issued for their arrests concerning missed court dates. They are then calling the victims by impersonating the sheriff’s office phone number, so that it seems it’s the real office calling them.

* WCIA | Not sure if it’s really the police? Urbana PD shares what to look for:: “While there is no known threat in Urbana, we believe it’s important to know how to identify a legitimate Urbana Police officer,” the Urbana Police Department wrote in a post on Facebook. The police department said their officers wear official uniforms with Urbana patches and badges. The officials shirts will also include a visible name tag. Even in the rain, officers will be clearly marked, the police department said. All vehicles are also clearly marked, or can be verified through the dispatch center. Look for Urbana decals, and check out the license plate if you are unsure.

* WICS | Fire engulfs horse barn at Illinois State Fairgrounds, no injuries reported: Fire crews responded to a structure fire at the Illinois State Fairgrounds around 6 p.m. on Sunday. According to the fire chief, Horse Barn 39 caught fire, prompting a swift evacuation of the horses housed inside by workers before the arrival of emergency responders. Upon arrival, crews encountered heavy smoke and flames engulfing the barn. Fortunately, no injuries to animals or people have been reported.

* SJ-R’s Steven Spearie was on the scene

*** National ***

* NYT | Big Cheers for No. 14, Pope Leo, at the Ballpark: “We want to celebrate that he’s not only from America, but he’s from Chicago, and he’s from the South Side,” said Rose Carlson, 42, as she filed into the ballpark with her husband, Eric. The couple saw Leo’s election as a good omen for their team, noting that he was photographed days earlier sporting the team’s black-and-white cap with his white papal cassock. With his election, “the White Sox went worldwide,” Ms. Carlson said. “Now they’re higher than the Cubs.” They were both wearing Sox jerseys with “LEO 14” on the back.

* The Atlantic | The Rolling Stones play zydeco: Chenier was born in 1925 in Opelousas, Louisiana, the son of a sharecropper and accordion player named Joseph Chenier, who taught his son the basics of the instrument. Clifton’s older brother, Cleveland, played the washboard and later the rubboard. Clifton had commissioned an early prototype of the rubboard in the 1940s from a metalworker in Port Arthur, Texas, where he illustrated his vision by drawing the design in the dirt, creating one of a handful of instruments native to the United States and forever changing the percussive sound of Creole music.

* The Atlantic | The Most Extreme Voice on RFK Jr.’s New Vaccine Committee: Robert Malone has a history of arguing against the data. He has called for an end to the use of mRNA vaccines for COVID despite the well-established fact that they reduce mortality and severe illness. He has promoted discredited COVID treatments such as ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, dismissing studies that show they are ineffective against the coronavirus. Recently, he called reports about two girls in West Texas dying from the measles “misinformation,” even though the doctors who treated the girls were unequivocal in their conclusion.

  3 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated)

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

  Comments Off      


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

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Jun 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Monday, Jun 16, 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.

  Comment      


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

Support CapitolFax.com
Visit our advertisers...

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............


Loading


Main Menu
Home
Illinois
YouTube
Pundit rankings
Obama
Subscriber Content
Durbin
Burris
Blagojevich Trial
Advertising
Updated Posts
Polls

Archives
July 2025
June 2025
May 2025
April 2025
March 2025
February 2025
January 2025
December 2024
November 2024
October 2024
September 2024
August 2024
July 2024
June 2024
May 2024
April 2024
March 2024
February 2024
January 2024
December 2023
November 2023
October 2023
September 2023
August 2023
July 2023
June 2023
May 2023
April 2023
March 2023
February 2023
January 2023
December 2022
November 2022
October 2022
September 2022
August 2022
July 2022
June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004

Blog*Spot Archives
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005

Syndication

RSS Feed 2.0
Comments RSS 2.0




Hosted by MCS SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax Advertise Here Mobile Version Contact Rich Miller