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Friday, Aug 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* More Bob

Idiot wind
Blowing through the dust upon our shelves
We’re idiots, babe
It’s a wonder we can even feed ourselves

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Aug 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* 25News Now

President Donald Trump announced his intentions to end mail-in voting and the use of voting machines earlier this week. […]

Election officials in Central Illinois have told 25News many times that mail-in voting is safe and secure. These authorities test voting machines in public to make sure they are in working order before elections.

Addressing claims of widespread fraud, “I have two words: prove it. And it’s never been proved, and we have very few of those complaints anymore,” said McLean County Clerk Kathy Michael, a Republican. She said mail-in voting has increased every year in McLean County.

“I think it would really hurt our veterans overseas, our disabled folks, people in the hospital, that weren’t able to vote before,” Michael said. […]

Michael said she can’t speak for every state, but all Illinois vote-counting machines have a paper trail that can be checked.

* Brian Wojcicki has a nifty 2026 election map


Click here to check it out.

* Gov. JB Pritzker

Building on efforts to bolster reproductive health in Illinois, Governor JB Pritzker signed two bills to protect reproductive rights by safeguarding medical professionals and making contraception and the abortion pill more available across the state. Gov. Pritzker signed an expanded state shield law (HB3637) protecting health care providers from discipline for providing health care services that are lawful in Illinois, and HB3709 which requires public colleges and universities to offer contraception and medication abortion if they have an on-campus pharmacy or student health center. While Trump’s anti-choice agenda has fueled unprecedented attacks on reproductive freedom in states across the nation, Illinois continues to enshrine women’s access to critical care into state law. […]

HB3637 expands upon the state’s existing shield law and safeguards for reproductive healthcare in two areas. First, this bill extends shield law protection to all health care providers. This includes Licensed Certified Professional Midwives and wholesale drug distributors. Second, this bill amends the state’s Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, such that a medication that was previously approved by the FDA whose approval was revoked but is still considered effective by the World Health Organization (WHO), will not be considered in violation of the Act. This means that health care providers will not be violating Illinois law by prescribing drugs that are widely considered safe and effective but have had their FDA approvals revoked for political reasons—as anti-choice politicians have sought for mifepristone, the drug commonly used in medication abortions.

These changes to the state’s Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act are the first of their kind in the nation, with Illinois on the frontlines of protecting and promoting reproductive rights and health care. […]

HB3709 is Governor Pritzker’s initiative for reproductive health care on college campuses and is a direct response to student advocacy and action. This bill requires public universities in Illinois to offer students access to contraception and medication abortion on campus, beginning in the 2025-2026 school year. Amending the Public Higher Education Act, HB3709 mandates that state colleges and universities must offer consultation appointments with health care professionals who can provide and dispense contraception and medication abortion to students. Further, schools with on-campus pharmacies must be able to dispense contraception and the abortion pill to students.

Personal PAC president and CEO Sarah Garza Resnick…

“Today, Governor Pritzker is furthering Illinois’ commitment to equitable access to reproductive health care by expanding birth control and abortion services for college students and increasing protections for abortion providers. 

“At a time when states surrounding Illinois are criminalizing doctors and making abortion inaccessible, Illinois is leading with bold, compassionate policy. We are especially encouraged for our futures by the college student leaders who led HB 3709’s successful passage. We thank Governor Pritzker and the reproductive freedom champions in the general assembly for always recognizing abortion is health care and advancing access to care in our state.”

* Shaw Local

Shaw Media is set to buy four northern Illinois newspapers after their publisher abruptly shut down operations earlier this month. […]

News Media Corp. ended operations Aug. 6, the same day the company notified its employees in an email. The newspapers shut down include the Rochelle News-Leader, Ogle County LIFE, Ashton Gazette, Amboy News, Mendota Reporter, and three other northern Illinois newspapers, as well as newspapers in Arizona, South Dakota, Nebraska and Wyoming. In all, the company owned 34 newspaper offices in nine states, their website said.

Shaw Media is acquiring The Rochelle News-Leader, printed twice a week, and The Mendota Reporter and Ogle County Life, each printed weekly, as well as The Amboy News, Shaw Media’s Chief Administrative Officer & Corporate Secretary Don Bricker said.

*** Statewide ***

* WTTW | Feds Launch New Unit to Prosecute Health Care Fraud Cases in Illinois: U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros announced Friday the creation of a new section within the Northern District of Illinois’s Criminal Division that will be dedicated to the prosecution of health care fraud. “Since becoming U.S. Attorney, my office has charged nearly $2 billion in health care fraud schemes involving alleged criminal conduct that has stretched across the country, and even transnationally,” he said in a statement. “The newly created Healthcare Fraud Section that I’ve launched will bring greater focus, efficiency, and impact to our efforts in this important program area, which often involves the exploitation of patients through unnecessary and/or unsafe medical tests and procedures.”

* River Bender | ICJIA Releases 2025-2029 Statewide Violence Prevention Plan: The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority (ICJIA) today announced the release of the 2025-2029 Statewide Violence Prevention Plan. The 2025-2029 Statewide Violence Prevention Plan serves as a framework for grantmaking that can create more resilient, safe, and thriving communities. The plan supports the Governor’s goals of breaking the cycles of violence caused by years of failed criminal justice policies, overincarceration, and economic disinvestment in minority communities.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | City taps six developers for $39M ‘Missing Middle’ housing push on South Side: The projects comprise the second round of the Chicago Department of Planning & Development’s Missing Middle Housing Initiative, a program meant to address a dearth of multi-unit buildings that fall between single-family homes and mid-rise apartment towers. The initiative is expected to support the construction of more than 750 new homes on the South and West sides, based on available city funding, with more than 100 units now in progress in North Lawndale.

* Crain’s | CME pushes the boundaries of retail trading with FanDuel bet: The Chicago-based derivatives exchange is forming a joint venture with the online gambling company to develop contracts that will allow traders to bet – or take positions in traditional parlance – in the intraday movements of commodities such as gold, cryptocurrencies or oil. Contracts tracking economic indicators such as the consumer product index or gross domestic product also will be offered. The blurring of the line between financial trading and sports gambling raises concerns about attracting customers who are not educated on properly hedging their trades to prevent big losses, said Ferhat Akbas, a professor of finance at University of Illinois Chicago.

* WBEZ | Chicago band Case Oats ‘accidentally’ made one of the standout debuts of 2025: “It’s kind of the joke now. I wanted to write a novel, but I accidentally made an album,” said the 30-year-old during a chat over coffee at the North Side’s Hexe. She has a nonchalant tone like someone might recall when accidentally making a wrong turn or burning a pizza – not making one of the standout albums of 2025. “Last Missouri Exit” has been years in the making and began when the Wildwood, Missouri transplant was enrolled in creative writing and journalism classes at Columbia College Chicago. “I was trying to write a novel that was kind of coming-of-age with the same themes that are in the record,” she said.

* Crain’s | Layoffs at Eater leave a barren Chicago food publication: Eater Chicago’s front page today is still dotted with Ashok Selvam’s byline, but Selvam, one of Chicago’s top food journalists, no longer works at the publication. Vox Media, the parent company of Eater, laid off about a dozen employees earlier this month, including Selvam, who most recently served as the outlet’s Midwest regional editor. He was previously the editor solely of Eater Chicago but moved into the regional role in Vox’s last round of cuts in January, which grouped his coverage with Eater chapters in Detroit and Minneapolis-St. Paul. He had worked at Eater in various other roles for more than a decade.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Citing ‘glaring lack of forensic capability,’ Burke seeks to build staff in first budget fight: During a budget hearing last month, State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke did not mince words when describing her office’s means to stay on top of rapidly developing forensic science and its impact on criminal cases. “I would be remiss,” she told Cook County board members, “not to mention our glaring lack of forensic capability.” In addition to evaluating DNA results and firearms analyses, prosecutors are often wading through hours of surveillance footage and cellphone records when trying cases. Burke even posited that trials could unfold without a single eyeball witness when crimes happen in plain view of cameras.

* Daily Herald | Mount Prospect exploring internal public transit options: Mount Prospect could follow in the footsteps of communities like Niles and Schaumburg and offer its own public transportation options to residents. Consultants from Civiltech Engineering unveiled the results of a study examining the community’s transportation needs at Tuesday’s village board meeting. Among the recommendations floated was a fixed-route shuttle service, one for the northern end of town and another for the southern.

* Daily Herald | Making Des Plaines ‘look good’: City buying former restaurant on Lee Street for redevelopment: The city council on Monday agreed to purchase a vacant restaurant building at 1062 Lee St. and its parking lot for $675,000. The building, just north of Walnut Avenue in the 3rd Ward, has been vacant since Sahil Grill & Lounge closed in August 2023. It previously had been occupied by Five Boroughs Pizza and Giuseppe’s La Cantina. The property has fallen into disrepair, running up thousands of dollars in fines increasing by $200 a day, documents indicate.

* Daily Herald | Anti-bullying scholarship program at Fremd marks 10 years, seeks new funding: The $10,000 monetary goal in 2015 was far exceeded, reaching $15,000. But when Trout’s mother Jeanne died at 94 shortly afterward, she left $50,000 that spared the scholarship from having to raise any more money since then. Olander said the aim has been to provide individual scholarships of $2,500, approximately a semester at Harper College. “I think it’s what it symbolizes that makes it meaningful,” she added. “It’s a way of taking some action against this heinous behavior.”

* Daily Southtown | Tinley Park Chamber cancels this year’s Oktoberfest due to cost: Holt said costs to run and properly secure the event this year became unsustainable for the Chamber’s volunteer organization, despite the event’s popularity. When relaunching the event in 2017, Oktoberfest organizers predicted they would be able to handle continuing the event, even as it was expected to grow. The event had about a 20-year hiatus, they said, after becoming too large. But the Chamber faced multiple deficits in its total income in the past few years, starting in 2020 with a deficit of more than $51,000. The Chamber regained an income surplus in 2021 and 2022, but hit another deficit of more than $97,000 in 2023, which was reduced to $26,327 last year, according to its tax filings.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | DeWitt County, union employees at standstill on contract negotiations: The county says workers are wanting anywhere from 12.5 to 14.5% depending on the job. Union members say this would put them back in line with the rest of the state, which they’re below right now. “The issue really revolves around wages,” said County Board Chair Joe Witte.

* WCIA | ‘Undeliverable’ mail blows throughout Springfield street: USPS: “This mail was UBBM (Undeliverable Bulk Business Mail) that is recycled,” spokesperson Timothy Norman told WCIA. “It blew out of a recycling truck when it left the USPS Mail Processing facility.” Norman said the Postal Inspection Service and Springfield Police Department were notified, and USPS employees are recovering the mail.

* WSIL | Du Quoin State Fair kicks off today: A ribbon-cutting will mark the commencement of the fair at 5:30 p.m. Additional festivities today include the Twilight Parade at 6 p.m., Live Pro Wrestling at 7 p.m., and a performance by Sister Hazel at 9 p.m.

*** National ***

* Apple Insider | Meta accused of inflating ad results & dodging Apple privacy rules: A filing at the Central London Employment Tribunal, reported by The Financial Times, suggests Meta didn’t play by Apple’s rules. Former product manager Samujjal Purkayastha alleges the company used “deterministic matching” to link data across platforms. That means identifiable details, not anonymous signals, were tied together to track behavior without consent. If true, Meta found a a back door through Apple’s privacy wall.

  12 Comments      


Numbers dump! Raja poll claims 20-point lead

Friday, Aug 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Polling memo

In a recent survey of likely voters in next year’s Democratic primary in Illinois, Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi now holds a 20-point lead over his closest opponent in the race for the nomination for U.S. Senate. Raja has expanded his advantage over Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton and Congresswoman Robin Kelly as he continues to introduce himself to voters across the state.

* Chart

* More

Raja’s advantage in this race is broad. He leads among men and women, across the ideological spectrum, and both inside and outside of the Chicago media market.

Among voters who have participated in the last three Democratic primary elections in Illinois, Raja leads by an even wider 47 – 20 percent margin over Stratton, with Kelly taking 12 percent of these voters.

* Methodology

Results are taken from a survey of 800 likely voters in the March 2026 Democratic primary for U.S. Senate in Illinois. Interviews were conducted by live dialers via telephone and through text-to-web responses between August 12-17, 2025. Results carry a margin of error of +/- 3.5 percentage points at a 95 percent confidence interval.

Discuss.

  6 Comments      


President says Chicago is ‘probably next’ after DC (Updated x4)

Friday, Aug 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Some background is here if you need it. Today…


Full quote…

And after we do this, we’ll go to another location, and we’ll make it safe also. We’re going to make our country very safe. We’re going to make our cities very, very safe. Chicago is a mess. You have an incompetent mayor, grossly incompetent. And we’ll straighten that one out, probably next that will be our next one after this, and it won’t even be tough. And the people in Chicago, Mr. Vice President, are screaming for us to come in. They’re wearing red hats, just like this one, but they’re wearing red hats. African American ladies, beautiful ladies, are saying, ‘Please, President Trump, come to Chicago. Please.’ I did great with the Black vote, as you know, and they want something to happen, so I think Chicago will be our next.

He says a lot of things, but there you go.

* Let’s move on to a CBS Chicago report last week

But while speaking to the media, the president turned his attention to Chicago, crime and cash bail.

“Every place in the country you have no cash bail is a disaster,” Mr. Trump said. “That’s what started it in New York and they won’t change it, they don’t want to change it. That’s what started it in Chicago.”

He blamed “bad” politicians, but continued, “That’s where it started, no cash bail. I mean, somebody murders somebody and they’re out on no cash bail before the day is out.” […]

Under the current system in Illinois without cash bail, a judge determines whether to release someone after that person has committed a crime — as opposed to setting a price for the defendant’s pretrial release.

Murder is a detainable offense here.

* Also, the federal court system commonly relies on no cash bail. For some reason, that’s rarely mentioned in news articles about the SAFE-T Act or included in stories that talk about pre-trial release of federal defendants. Sun-Times this week

A judge on Wednesday ordered the release of the man who allegedly caused last month’s lockdown and hourslong standoff at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse, finding that the man had reached “a breaking point” but does not pose the kind of safety risk that requires detention.

U.S. District Judge Mary Rowland acknowledged that the case of 38-year-old Mario Santoyo might be getting “some heightened attention” in the building “because it happened in our home and in our courthouse that we love.”

But looking at the situation “clear-eyed,” she said, “I don’t think that the defendant poses the kind of risk to the community that I’m normally faced with when I’m facing the decision to detain somebody.” […]

Assistant U.S. Attorney Anthony Chmura argued for Santoyo’s detention. Not only did Santoyo allegedly prompt the Dirksen lockdown, but the prosecutor said Santoyo tried to hurt himself later at a hospital and reacted violently when authorities tried to intervene.

More

In court Tuesday, a judge ruled that Santoyo will be released into the custody of his sister, with an ankle monitor.

He’s also being ordered to stay away from any federal buildings, except for court appearances. And he will receive psychiatric assistance.

…Adding… Congressional candidate Willie Preston…

Illinois State Sen. Willie Preston, candidate for the Second Congressional District and Chair of the Illinois Senate Black Legislative Caucus, issued the following statement responding to Donald Trump’s Oval Office comment Friday afternoon that “Chicago will be our next” in the deployment of National Guard troops to American cities.

“If President Trump makes good on his threat to deploy National Guard troops to our city to perform the functions Constitutionally reserved to state and local law enforcement, it would be an unlawful act of terror against our people.

“We can see this rancid use of power against cities like Chicago for what it is, something as old as this nation, the racism we are forced to fight every generation.

“I urge the president to reconsider. And if he doesn’t, I will join all of Chicago in resistance.”

…Adding… Sen. Robert Peters…

Following is a statement from State Sen. Robert Peters, candidate for Congress in Illinois‘ 2nd District, in response to Donald Trump’s threats to send the military into Chicago:

“This is another example of the president spewing racist, nonsensical garbage to distract from his failure to improve the lives of the people of this nation. Chicago does not want or need Trump to send anyone into our city to create chaos and inflame tensions. What we do need is a president who will actually address the issues facing Illinoisans, like lowering costs, expanding access to health care, and growing our economy.

“Instead, Trump is focused on stunts, using people as pawns to keep the press occupied while his approval ratings sink and the Epstein files stay shelved.”

…Adding… Press release…

A coalition of leading advocacy organizations in Illinois, including the Chicago Federation of Labor, Equality Illinois, the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, Personal PAC and Sierra Club Illinois, issued the following statement on Friday in response to President Trump’s rhetoric about sending troops into Chicago:

“Trump’s scare tactics are nothing new and our communities see right through them. As he well knows, our crime numbers have hit a 30-year low in this city, all while he fails to deliver on a single promise that would actually improve the lives of working people. He’s doubling down on a racist gambit to create chaos in cities to distract from his tanking poll numbers and disastrous policy agenda.

“We won’t be cowed. We won’t back down from fighting against his attacks on our fundamental rights, and we are committed to working together to ensure Illinois stays on course to protect our communities and our future.”

…Adding… Gov. Pritzker…

Today, Illinois Governor JB Pritzker released the following statement responding to President Trump’s remarks about targeting Chicago:

“As Donald Trump attempts to create chaos that distracts from his problems, we will call it out for what it is. Trump and Republicans are trying to distract from the pain they are causing working families–from tariffs raising the prices of everyday goods to stripping away healthcare and food from millions of Americans.

“After using Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. as his testing ground for authoritarian overreach, Trump is now openly flirting with the idea of taking over other states and cities. Trump’s goal is to incite fear in our communities and destabilize existing public safety efforts — all to create a justification to further abuse his power. He is playing a game and creating a spectacle for the press to play along with.

“We don’t play those games in Illinois. Our commitment to law and order is delivering real results. Crime rates are improving. Homicides are down by more than 30% in Chicago in the last year alone. ​ Our progress in lowering crime has been made possible with community violence intervention programs that the Trump Administration is defunding.
​
​

“Our state and local law enforcement partners know our neighborhoods and our streets because they live here too. They are not asking for this and we will continue to listen and coordinate with them, as we always do. The safety of the people of Illinois is my highest priority, so we will follow the law and stand up for the sovereignty of our state.”

* AG Raoul…

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul issued the following statement in response to comments President Trump made today threatening to deploy federal law enforcement to perform civilian law enforcement duties in the city of Chicago.

“Throughout my tenure, I have successfully collaborated with federal law enforcement partners, such as the FBI, DEA, ATF, Secret Service and Homeland Security – Investigations, to investigate and prosecute crime in Illinois, as have other local and state law enforcement partners around the state of Illinois. I appreciate the federal government’s contribution of their expertise, technology and manpower toward those efforts. In fact, violent crimes have decreased in the city of Chicago over the last year. But instead of dedicating more resources to that work, the president is focused on turning our military on American citizens in his ongoing attempts to move our nation toward authoritarianism. His actions are not just un-American. They are unwise strategically. Our cities are not made safer by deploying the nation’s service members for civilian law enforcement duties when they do not have the appropriate training.

“To be clear: We have made no such request for the type of federal intervention we have seen in Los Angeles or Washington D.C. There is no emergency in the state of Illinois.

“In fact, even as the president publicly laments the rampant crime he claims is taking over our cities, his Justice Department is threatening to withhold critical Victims of Crimes Act funding. If the president was serious about supporting victims of crime, my office would not have had to file suit this week to stop him from placing unlawful immigration conditions on completely unrelated funding that supports critical services for victims of sexual assault, domestic violence, human trafficking, child abuse and other violent crimes.”

  28 Comments      


Maybe it’s time the state did something about this problem

Friday, Aug 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Stephanie Zimmermann at the Sun-Times

Customers of ComEd and Ameren Illinois have lost more than $2 billion over the past 10 years to alternative electricity suppliers — businesses known for ringing people’s doorbells and promising great deals, according to an analysis of state data by the nonprofit Citizens Utility Board.

CUB Executive Director Sarah Moskowitz called Illinois “a buyer-beware market.”

The offers are legal, but often they don’t deliver long-term savings, according to the consumer watchdog, which is calling for better consumer protections.

In the past year, consumers who used alternative suppliers for electricity overpaid by $258 million, the analysis found.

A Sun-Times investigation last year found that decades after Illinois deregulated electricity and natural gas markets, consumers continue to complain about alternative suppliers. Some said they didn’t realize their accounts had been switched until their bills shot up. Other consumers willingly signed up for an alternative supplier’s deal but complained that their bills rose higher than expected after the introductory rate ended.

* From CUB…

While ComEd and Ameren bill customers for delivering electricity over the power lines they own, under Illinois law those customers can choose another company—an alternative supplier—to supply the actual electricity. The Illinois Commerce Commission’s Office of Retail Market Development (ORMD) recently released its 2025 annual report, covering June 1, 2024 through May 31, 2025. Some findings:

    ● As of May 2025, about 1.18 million Illinois households were with an alternative supplier—about a 14 percent decrease from the year before. About 20 percent of ComEd residential customers and about 43 percent of Ameren customers were with an alternative supplier.
    ● ComEd customers who were with an alternative supplier on average paid about 2.74¢ per kilowatt-hour (kWh) more, compared with ComEd’s supply price. Ameren customers who were with an alternative supplier on average paid about 1.78¢ per kWh more, compared with Ameren’s supply rate.
    ● The highest alternative supplier rates the ICC found were a 39¢ per kWh variable rate (a rate that can change monthly) in ComEd territory, and a 29¢ per kWh variable rate in Ameren territory. Both prices were about four to six times the utility supply prices at the time.
    ● In the early days of competition—2011 to 2014—Illinoisans often saved money with alternative suppliers, mainly because utilities were locked into higher-priced electricity contracts. But after those contracts ended, suppliers had a harder time beating utility prices, according to CUB’s review of ORMD reports.

* I asked a CUB spokesperson why we have to have all of these alternative suppliers? Jim Chilsen’s reply…

Supply choice exists because Illinois is a deregulated state. In some communities leaders have negotiated decent deals with alternative suppliers through municipal aggregation (”community power deals”).

But that’s different from sales reps doing in-person marketing, sending you mailers or calling you on the phone. Nobody can guarantee savings–and in fact the market has been rife with rip-offs and scams.

We tell people: It’s a buyer beware market, your best bet is likely the utility. That’s why we’re pushing for more consumer protections–HB 1284. That would be another step in the right direction.

* From HB 1284’s synopsis

Prohibits alternative retail electric and gas suppliers from paying incentive-based compensation to people engaged in in-person solicitation or telemarketing. Provides that certain tariffs may be filed by an electric utility with respect to electric utilities providing supply service through an electric aggregation program. Provides that an alternative retail electric utility supplier or alternative gas supplier shall not automatically renew a consumer’s enrollment after the current term of the contract expires when the renewed contract provides that the consumer will be charged a rate higher than the current contract rate unless: (i) the alternative retail electric supplier or alternative gas supplier complies with specified notice and disclosure requirements; and (ii) the customer expressly consents to the contract renewal in writing or by electronic signature at least 30 days, but no more than 60 days, before the contract expires.

Everybody talks about affordability, but not enough people want to actually do something about it.

  13 Comments      


Roundup: RTA shifts $74M from Metra, Pace to CTA to buy time before transit cliff

Friday, Aug 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune transportation reporter Talia Soglin

Regional transportation officials agreed Thursday to transfer $74 million from Pace and Metra to the CTA in an effort to delay catastrophic transit cuts in Chicago next year.

After an at-times lively discussion, Regional Transportation Authority board members unanimously approved the measure, which is a bid to buy more time as they hope state lawmakers will pass long-term funding for public transit during a legislative veto session in October.

The Chicago region’s transit agencies are facing a budget shortfall in the hundreds of millions next year as federal pandemic aid runs out. If lawmakers — who failed to pass transit funding during their spring legislative session — don’t come to their rescue, the CTA, Metra and Pace will be forced to cut service up to 40%. But the CTA was expected to run out of federal dollars first, months before Metra and Pace.

The decision to shift funds around means the CTA is now expected to hit its fiscal cliff in the middle of 2026. Metra is expected to hit its cliff mid-to-late 2026, with Pace’s cliff not expected until 2027, according to the RTA.

* Daily Herald

Director Brian Sager, who represents McHenry County, worried about the “vagueness” of the recommendation and lack of guarantees it would only be a one-time diversion.

“What will Metra and Pace be sacrificing?” he asked. […]

Sager argued the fiscal cliff “is here today and by taking this action we are continuing to postpone … that agony. Why isn’t it better to force our legislators right now to see the reality of where we are today with CTA?”

The transit system is intertwined and major cuts to one agency impact the whole, RTA Chairman Kirk Dillard of Hinsdale noted.

“If you have a Pace bus show up at a Metra station and there’s no Metra train, that’s a problem,” he said. “We’re one region — all three service boards (need) to be working as one system, more today than ever.”

* The RTA directors also discussed fare increases and caps on a popular but over-budget rideshare program. Streetsblog Chicago

As Chicagoland faces a $771 million transit fiscal cliff, the disability community could be particularly hard-hit by service cuts. And already the Regional Transportation Authority is trying to address an ADA Paratransit budget shortfall for the 2025 fiscal year. Today the agency’s board of directors voted to fund this year’s shortfall. “2025 ADA ridership will exceed budget by 1.3 million to 1.8 million rides, producing a potential shortfall of $35 million to $65 million in the absence of mitigating actions,” the agency explained in a blog post today.

RTA says it has developed an ADA Paratransit Action Plan with the goal of mitigating, “the continued, unsustainable growth in RAP and TAP ridership and costs.” These are Pace’s Taxi Access Program and Rideshare Access Program, which subsidize these modes as an alternative to traditional transit and Paratransit. The action plan called for the following changes, which were approved by the RTA board in June as part of the plan (their language):

    • “Pace establishing a 30 ride per month cap for both RAP and TAP”

    • “Restoring the current $2 RAP and TAP fares to match traditional ADA at $3.25″

    • “Offering free rides on all system-wide fixed route service to ADA-certified riders, which is currently offered only on Pace fixed routes”

These changes, discussed at six July community meetings, will go into effect on October 1.

* Evanston Now

[Marla Davis, who has two adult sons with intellectual disabilities], and about 15 other riders or their relatives urged the RTA not to limit the number of trips. […]

RTA board members were sympathetic, but said only about 5% of the system’s nearly 300,00 RAP/TAP riders take more than 30 monthly trips, and subsidizing more than that could jeopardize the entire service.

RTA chair Kirk Dillard told the advocates that “we have to make adjustments so the program remains sustainable.” […]

Originally, the idea a few years ago was to get paratransit users out of the more expensive fixed-route vans, and into taxis and rideshare vehicles.

But about a third of RAP/TAP users turned out to be new riders, not those switching from fixed route vans. So the savings never materialized, and the expenses went up, to $2.3 million per month just for the additional third.

Thoughts?

* More…

    * ABC Chicago | Illinois lawmakers call for special session to address $771M public transit shortfall: [W]hile some lawmakers would like to see the governor call a special session before the end of the month, that is considered unlikely. “We talk to state legislators every day. They know the importance of mass transit. They know there’s a fiscal cliff. They’ve had a lot of pressures on them, but I’m confident they’re going to come up with a solution that’s workable and viable,” Dillard said.

    * Tribune | As CTA tax district rakes in huge amount of taxpayer money, decision looms over what to do with it: The district has already taken in just under $400 million since 2017. It is on track to pay off a major facelift of four Chicago Transit Authority stations and the century-old infrastructure connecting them way ahead of schedule and estimated to bring in just shy of $100 million annually by 2031. The billion-dollar question is whether the CTA will keep receiving cash infusions from the district to help pay for future projects once the first phase is paid off, or if the money will instead be recouped by the city and other taxing bodies that are facing their own looming budget catastrophes.

  19 Comments      


Catching up with the federal candidates (Updated)

Friday, Aug 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Forest Park mayor Rory Hoskins joins the race for US Rep. Danny Davis’ seat



* I think this is the 17th candidate to jump into the 9th Congressional District Democratic primary


* WICS

Ryan D. Tebrugge, a business owner and public servant with 13 years of experience, has announced his candidacy for the United States House of Representatives in Illinois’ 15th Congressional District. […]

Tebrugge, a former correctional officer and educator, aims to bring “honest leadership and practical solutions” to Congress. He stressed the importance of building bridges rather than barriers and working across the aisle for bipartisan solutions. […]

Tebrugge criticized Representative Miller for her lack of engagement with district residents, stating, “Ms. Miller may be a respected mother, grandmother, community member, and farmer, but she is not doing her job as a Representative. She often fails to get involved with her constituents.” […]

Key pillars of Tebrugge’s campaign include focusing on people over politics, fiscal conservatism, secure data protection and privacy, affordable high-speed internet access, and exploring sustainable energy options.

* The 21st Show’s Brian Mackey spoke with US Rep. Robin Kelly on her bid for Senate. Interview highlights from IPM Newsroom

On winning back young voters who drifted towards Republicans in 2024:

“People have to feel that we care about them and that we’re listening to them, and that they have a voice, and that there is economic opportunity … and we we just have to, you know, keep communicating in every way that we can. We learned that lesson in November … I just spoke to a young person that goes to [The University of Illinois], and he told me, ‘I don’t even have cable, and a lot of my friends get their news from other friends, and what other friends post or TikTok or Instagram,’ so we have to be in all those spaces.

On the impact of President Trump’s crackdown on immigrants without legal status:

“President Trump and his cronies have pushed so much fear, so much, you know, ‘it’s just about America, forget everybody else.’ And they’re coming to get your jobs, you know, [he] make comments. ‘He’s coming to get, like, your black jobs,’ you know, and things like that. So I think that he’s pushed division and people that follow him, you know, agree with that.”

On supporting universal healthcare:

“There’s no reason in the richest country in the history of the world that everyone doesn’t have quality health care. And if other countries can do it, we need to figure it out.”

On whether the U.S. has an interest in a free Ukraine:

“What’s going to stop [Putin] from going to the other countries? And of course, some of those other countries are NATO countries. So, you know, we have a decision: do we pay with money, or do we pay with our military? Do we … pay with blood?”

* Yesterday, US Rep. Kelly said she’ll sign onto US Rep. Delia Ramirez’s “Block the Bombs” Act. Press release…

Congresswoman Robin Kelly, a candidate for U.S. Senate, today issued the following statement confirming that she will sign the Block the Bombs Act, which will prevent the unchecked transfer of offensive weapons to Israel:

“As Israel prepares the first stages of its military offensive on Gaza City and calls up 60,000 army reservists to fight a war that will only cause further death and destruction on both sides, we have to act. Tomorrow, I will sign on to the “Block the Bombs” bill, which will prevent the unchecked transfer of offensive weapons to Israel.

I will always support the Iron Dome and defensive weapon systems that have saved countless lives. This bill affirms a secure Israel, which I continue to support, but I cannot stand by silently as children starve to death. We need to achieve a two-state solution where all Palestinians and Israelis can live in peace and with dignity.

Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu has turned a blind eye to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, allowing starvation and famine to spread. President Trump must act urgently to save lives and stop the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. We’ve reached a critical point where Congress needs to act.

As Senator, I will support essential security aid to Israel. But in this moment, we cannot allow the transfer of the deadliest offensive weapons without taking definitive action to prevent the loss of civilian life.”

* Raja Krishnamoorthi is on the second leg of his state-wide tour. WNIJ

On Wednesday, U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, IL-8, stopped by the Rockford Public Library’s East Branch as part of his summer listening tour.

The Democrat declared his bid for a U.S. Senate seat in May, a few weeks after current Illinois U.S. Senator Dick Durbin announced his retirement. […]

“My number one priority,” he said, “is addressing those economic pain points that people feel every day in their lives, regardless of whether they’re working, poor, middle class or growing a business. They feel it in a way that they have never felt it before.” […]

During the stop, he said he hopes to pass legislation to unmask ICE agents, ban mid-decade redistricting, and re-establish the rules of presidential pardons.

…Adding… Daily Herald

The Republican challenging U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood for her seat in Congress supported President Donald Trump’s call to end mail-in voting this week by calling the centuries-old practice “a scam” that is “ripe for fraud.”

“If you can’t find your polling place on Election day or at an early voting site, perhaps you shouldn’t be voting,” Oswego’s James Marter wrote Monday in a lengthy Facebook post. […]

When asked to clarify some of his remarks, Marter stressed he supports services that would bring people to voting booths and establishing polling places at assisted living communities.

He opposed any type of mail-in voting that wouldn’t be witnessed by election authorities, even for military personnel or people with disabilities.

“The key to me is voter verification,” Marter said.

* Daily Herald reporter Russell Lissau asked Marter on the app formerly known as Twitter for clarification on mail in voting for active-duty military


..Adding… Evanston Mayor and 9th CD candidate Daniel Biss


  25 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Aug 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Health insurers propose double-digit price increases for Affordable Care Act exchange plans in Illinois. Tribune

    - Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois, which covers 238,000 residents, is seeking a 27% average hike on its individual exchange plans, while UnitedHealthcare of Illinois, with about 32,000 enrollees, is proposing nearly a 21% increase. Celtic Insurance Co., which covers 111,000 residents is seeking the steepest hike at nearly 39% on average.
    - In filings with the state, insurance companies blamed the price increases on growing health care costs and increasing use of health care services. They also assumed in their calculations that enhanced tax credits that many people now use to help lower their monthly premiums for exchange plans will expire at the end of this year.
    - The Illinois Department of Insurance placed the blame for the higher rates squarely on President Donald Trump, “Trump’s harmful policies will result in more uninsured Americans, which drives up costs up for everyone.”

* Related stories…

* Gov. Pritzker will sign reproductive health bills in Champaign at 11 am, join a rural healthcare roundtable in Du Quoin at 3 pm, and cut the ribbon to open the DuQuoin State Fair at 5:30 pm. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | New Illinois law gives media better ability to curb retaliatory lawsuits: The new law is an attempt to bolster efforts to combat what are known as “strategic lawsuits against public participation” or “SLAPPs” used by political figures as acts of intimidation that use the courts to try to forestall criticism of their governmental actions. In a statement accompanying his signing of the bill, Pritzker, a potential 2028 presidential aspirant, cited President Donald Trump’s efforts to try to weaken the work of journalists investigating his presidency and administration.

* WBEZ | CPS Kindergartener’s first day ends in ER after long, hot bus ride: “She kept saying, `It is too hot on the bus. It is extremely hot,’” Fernandez said. Fernandez was outraged. Why wasn’t there air conditioning? Why were Zoe and other children sitting on the bus so long? Were her daughter and others even offered water? Fernandez was shocked by what Chicago Public Schools officials told her: To ensure a spot on an air conditioned bus, Fernandez needed to get her daughter’s individualized education plan changed. That requires getting a doctor’s note and calling a meeting of school staff.

* Sun-Times | Alternative energy suppliers have cost Illinois consumers more than $2 billion, watchdog group says: Customers of ComEd and Ameren Illinois have lost more than $2 billion over the past 10 years to alternative electricity suppliers — businesses known for ringing people’s doorbells and promising great deals, according to an analysis of state data by the nonprofit Citizens Utility Board. CUB Executive Director Sarah Moskowitz called Illinois “a buyer-beware market.”

*** Statewide ***

* IDES | Unemployment Down in All 12 Metro Areas for July: For the second month in-a-row, the unemployment rate decreased in all twelve metro areas for the year ending July 2025, according to data released today by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and the Illinois Department of Employment Security (DES). Over-the-year, total nonfarm jobs increased in five metropolitan areas, leading to consecutive months with year-over-year growth: Champaign (6 consecutive months); Chicago (13 consecutive months); Springfield (21 consecutive months).

*** Statehouse News ***

* Center Square | Illinois’ FY23 financial audit released amid criticism of tardy reports: Illinois taxpayers can now look at how the state spent their money in the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2023, but they’re still waiting for the report for the fiscal year that ended over a year ago. […] Mendoza said she’s working with the auditor general and the governor’s office to speed up the auditing process. “And I think we’re finally there, hopefully [for the fiscal year 2025 report], fingers crossed, we’ll have that,” she said. “First year, there might be a few hiccups, but moving forward it should be smooth sailing.”

* WAND | Pritzker signs bill allowing immigrants to become driving instructors: In 2013, Illinois led the country as one of the first states to issue temporary visitor driver’s licenses to help drivers who passed road tests regardless of immigration status. The 2024 law allowed undocumented immigrants to receive standard IDs without the large purple mark stating not valid for identification. House Bill 3125 will allow anyone with a TVDL for at least two years to teach driving courses. Sponsors said this change will help expand the people eligible to become driving instructors without reducing qualifications for the job.

* WAND | New Illinois law requires transparency on how contraband enters prisons: The legislation requires the Illinois Department of Corrections to document the contraband, where it was found and any method of entrance to the facility. That includes employee and visitor entrances, vendor entrances, mail delivery and attorney visits. Rep. Gregg Johnson (D-East Moline) said this law can provide transparency around emergency medical responses, hospitalizations and drug overdoses. “Getting this data is very important with all of the things we’ve been hearing over the last couple years in the department,” Johnson said. “So, we were very open to moving it out and giving them sufficient time to compile and report the data.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | New Chicago police oversight boss has been wiping out recommendations to fire cops: Chicago’s new police oversight chief has repeatedly wiped out or dramatically scaled back recommendations to fire officers following pushback from the city’s top cop, the Chicago Sun-Times and WBEZ have found. The reversals by the city’s Civilian Office of Police Accountability follow acrimony and infighting that roiled the agency, culminating in the resignation of its chief administrator, Andrea Kersten, after a tenure marked by internal accusations of mismanagement and anti-police bias.

* Sun-Times | Chicago police told state officials Officer Krystal Rivera was shot by an ‘armed suspect,’ not her partner: The Chicago Police Department told state safety regulators that a barricaded suspect shot Officer Krystal Rivera when she’d actually been killed by her partner despite police investigators having viewed body-worn camera footage the night of the shooting. More than two months later, the police department hasn’t corrected that report with the Illinois Department of Labor, the state agency that investigates public-sector workplace deaths. Police departments are required to report work-related deaths to the state within eight hours.

* Crain’s | Developers reveal new Foundry Park details at former Lincoln Yards site: The proposal for the recently rebranded “Foundry Park” development along the North Branch of the Chicago River between Lincoln Park and Bucktown would cover nearly 28 acres and include a mix of single-family homes and townhouses near the river and high-rise residential buildings. Specifics of the plan were revealed in a recent letter — a copy of which was obtained by Crain’s — from the city’s Department of Planning & Development providing feedback to an initial pitch last month by a joint venture of Chicago-based JDL Development and Boca Raton, Fla.-based Kayne Anderson Real Estate.

* Sun-Times | Chicago came together to find Bam Bam, now the dachshund and his owner have a long way to go: Almost two days after being reunited, Santiago, 58, of Logan Square, is none the wiser on who took him and what they were after. Sitting in his living room with an alert and gentle Bam Bam, Santiago said the dachshund is not back to his old self just yet. While he is happy that Bam Bam is back, Santiago wants answers. He is keen to find out who was behind it all. “We’re getting there,” Santiago said Thursday afternoon. “It’s hard for him to sleep at night. He has really bad anxiety issues. I only take him out on his leash in the back because he’s skittish to go outside.” 


* Sun-Times | Proposed 26-story hotel near Obama Presidential Center gets first city approval: The Chicago Plan Commission gave the first round of approvals for a 26-story hotel that would be near the Obama Presidential Center, despite concerns from neighbors. Aquinnah Investment Trust, headed by veteran real estate developer and lawyer Allison Davis, said the hotel would include up to 250 rooms. It would also have retail and office space, as well as amenities like a pool, outdoor terraces and conference center.

* NBC Chicago | First Chicago city official meets pope and entrepreneur brings special gift: In an NBC 5 Exclusive, Mary Ann Ahern spoke to Chicago Ald. Bill Conway, who visited the Vatican on Wednesday. He is now back in the United States, but before he left he presented the pontiff with a proclamation honoring the first American-born pope. “The pope came over and I said ‘I’m Bill Conway, an alderman from the city of Chicago, and this is a proclamation we passed for you and he looked at it (and) expressed gratitude,” he said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Naperville Unit District 203 teachers set strike date as contract talks resume: The Naperville Unit Education Association announced late Thursday that it has set its official strike date for Tuesday, Aug. 26. The announcement came after a third day of negotiations with a federal mediator this week. Union officials said the district’s latest proposal “represents a major step backwards.” “We have always said a strike is our last resort,” said Ross Berkley, president of the Naperville Unit Education Association, in a written statement. “However, after months of bargaining, overwhelming community support and the board’s refusal to make meaningful progress, we have reached a point where we may have no other choice.”

* Daily Southtown | Tinley Park District 146 teachers union declares impasse over contract negotiations: While most of the contract’s provisions are settled, the Tinley Council Teachers 146 of Local 604 is fighting for higher wage increases and improved retirement benefits than the district is offering. Negotiations began in February, and the most recently approved contract expired July 31. The district’s most recent offer includes wage increases of 6% for each of the next two school years and 5% for the 2027-2028 school year.

* Daily Southtown | Will County Executive Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant boasts of successes, presents $791 million budget: In November, the County Board approved a $832 million budget for Fiscal 2025, with $273 million in the corporate fund, which is used for county operations, and about $558 million in special revenue funds which are restricted in their use. Bertino-Tarrant touted that Will County has been the number one job creator in Illinois since 2019 and has created 15,000 jobs. This includes 1,900 manufacturing jobs despite a nationwide reduction in that sector, she said.

* Daily Southtown | Tinley Park Village Board pause new business and zoning licenses: The Tinley Park Village Board voted Tuesday to put a six-month moratorium on certain business licenses and zoning permits in an effort to align development with an upcoming comprehensive development plan. For the next six months, the village will not issue new businesses licenses for 13 different types of establishments including grocery stores, coffee shops, gas stations, salons, dry cleaning and hotels.

* Aurora Beacon-News | CyrusOne in Aurora again warns of upcoming generator use for repairs Friday: CyrusOne is warning those who live near its data center in Aurora that it will be doing another round of emergency repairs on Friday, and that those repairs will again require the use of backup generators which have in the past significantly impacted nearby residents. During similar repairs in April, the use of backup generators for multiple days straight caused consistently loud noise in the surrounding area, which some residents previously called “unlivable” and “horrible.” CyrusOne has since put in place a temporary sound wall blocking the site’s generators, with a permanent sound wall currently under construction.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Job cuts ahead at Bridgestone tire plant in Normal: “We will be implementing a workforce reduction to align capacity with demand in response to challenging conditions and market changes in the off-the-road tire markets. The premium market is shifting towards radial products. After a thorough review and analysis, the decision has been made to exit production of unprofitable tires,” said a Bridgestone Americas statement. The transition from bias to radial tires has been ongoing over the last half-century across all makers. Radial tires cost more to make but have much greater durability. Steelworkers local 787 President Jason Beckett estimated only 20-25% of tire production in Normal is still of bias tires.

* WIFR | How Davis Park redevelopment could grow Rockford’s entertainment district: Entertainment board leaders said they’re hopeful park renovations will increase this number. RAVE General Manager Gretchen Gilmore said the board’s overseen the most shows in the last five years and credits their success to its ability to adapt and serve the community. “We did lose a lot of shows this year due to other competition in the market. We had to expand our show offerings and have more diverse programming,” said Gilmore.

*** National ***

* ABC | 750 HHS employees send signed letter to RFK Jr. asking him to stop spreading misinformation: More than 750 employees across the Department of Health and Human Services sent a signed letter to members of Congress and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Wednesday morning, calling on the secretary to stop spreading misinformation. The letter states the deadly shooting that occurred at the Atlanta headquarters of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Aug. 8 was “not random” and was driven by “politicized rhetoric.”

* Cory Franklin, Robert Weinstein | 2025 will be the year of measles in North America. Why? : While there is a cyclical component to measles every several years, declining vaccination rates are by far the largest factor in this increase. According to Johns Hopkins University, the average county-level vaccination rate in the U.S. for measles, mumps and rubella declined from 93.9% pre-pandemic to 91.3% post-pandemic, moving further away from the 95% herd immunity threshold necessary to limit the spread of measles. (There are actually far more people vaccinated in the U.S. than there were in 2000, when measles was “eliminated” but the U.S. population has risen by 20% since then, and the number of unvaccinated has outpaced the population rise.)

* ProPublica | How Deeply Trump Has Cut Federal Health Agencies: Some labs have been unable to purchase the sterile eggs needed to replicate viruses or the mice needed to test vaccines. And less than five years after a pandemic killed more than a million Americans, scientists who study infectious diseases are struggling to pay for saline solution, gloves and blood to feed lab mosquitos.

* Courthouse News Service | Supreme Court lets Trump gut $800 million in health grants : Chief Justice John Roberts was joined by the three liberal justices in dissent. The George W. Bush appointee said that the administration’s directives and the grant terminations were inseparable. “If the district court had jurisdiction to vacate the directives, it also had jurisdiction to vacate the ‘resulting grant terminations,’” Roberts wrote. Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a Trump appointee, was the only justice to vote for the mixed ruling, breaking the tie between her conservative colleagues and Roberts and the liberal justices.

  19 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Aug 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Bob

Well, the deputy walks on hard nails and the preacher rides a mount
But nothing really matters much, it’s doom alone that counts
And the one-eyed undertaker, he blows a futile horn
Come in, she said
I’ll give ya shelter from the storm

What’s up?

  6 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - More news

Friday, Aug 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Friday, Aug 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Aug 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Friday, Aug 22, 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

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. WTTW

CPS is facing a $734 million shortfall with a deadline to pass a balanced budget coming next Friday, but the options facing CPS board members and the interim CEO appear to be narrowing.

On Wednesday, Gov. JB Pritzker reiterated to reporters that the district should not be relying on more money from Springfield, saying there wasn’t money “just lying around.”

“At the local level every school is going to have to do whatever is required in order to protect those students, and I will stand with them in that endeavor,” Pritzker said. “But there is not extra money lying around in Springfield. What CTU and the mayor are talking about — which is providing another $1 billion or $1.6 billion for Chicago Public Schools — that’s just not gonna happen. And it’s not because we shouldn’t. We should, we should try to find the money, but we don’t have those resources today.”

WBEZ

At a South Side school Thursday, CTU President Stacy Davis Gates seized on the governor’s message of financial sparsity, asking incredulously whether Pritzker really meant to deny more state resources for CPS.

“We heard our governor say ‘no’ to paying what they owe to the schools like Fort Dearborn,” she told reporters outside Fort Dearborn Elementary School in the Brainerd neighborhood. “Because I am a teacher, I know that sometimes people have the wrong answer to the right question, and the wrong answer yesterday was ‘no.’

“I don’t think he means ‘no,’” she said of Pritzker. “I think he means we’re going to have to get together, create [a] coalition and put the pressure on billionaires to pay their fair share in this state.”

Davis Gates said CPS teachers have had to dip into their household budgets to bring toilet paper and paper towels to their classrooms to make up for resources missing from their school buildings because of “the failures of our governor and our super-majority Democratic Illinois General Assembly.”

“Ask him again today: Did he really mean ‘no’?” she said of the governor. “Ask him again: How can he refuse these beautiful Black children in this neighborhood the resources that they deserve? Ask him again if he’s serious about not paying his debt.”

* WTTW

[Menard Correctional Center] has been on lockdown nearly every day since September 2023, according to data from the Illinois Department of Corrections. Lockdowns, according to officials, are largely the result of short staffing. On average, Menard has only been able to staff 44% of the prison so far this year, according to emails.

Menard, the largest maximum-security prison for men in the state, isn’t the only facility facing heightened lockdowns — Illinois is currently experiencing the highest amount of prison lockdowns in the state since 2020. […]

The record high is in large part due to staffing shortages, according to IDOC data. For example, in May, 86% of lockdowns were due to a lack of staff, data shows. […]

To understand the impact of lockdowns, WTTW News sent a list of questions to those incarcerated at three prisons in Illinois with particularly high lockdown numbers: Menard, Pinckneyville, a medium-security prison for men, and Logan, a facility for women north of Springfield.

Go read the rest.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Crain’s | A make-or-break veto session looms for Chicago transit: Gov. JB Pritzker sounded an optimistic note that a mass transit rescue will be ready for the General Assembly’s fall veto session, confidence that was echoed by a key legislative leader. “There is a bill that’s being developed and resources associated with that bill that will come forward at the time of our veto session in October,” Pritzker said yesterday when asked about transit funding. “There’s still a lot of work being done — lots of it has been done already. But . . . it’s not soup yet.”

*** Chicago ***

* CBS Chicago | Chicago area man remains in ICE custody after wife says they took wrong turn at U.S.-Canada border: The couple was in Michigan for their construction business when Kristina Ramirez said they made a wrong turn toward Canada. Kristina said along with Sergio, she was detained for three days despite being a U.S. citizen. […] She added: “My husband is not a murderer. My husband is not a criminal. My husband is a very loving, a good person.” Sergio’s immigration attorney said the 32-year-old has been in the U.S. waiting for his U visa application to be approved, and he is eligible for permanent residency through his marriage. His immigration status is under deferred action.

* Block Club | Troubled Bronzeville Nursing Home Could Shut Down After Years Of Complaints, Violations: The potential closing of Southview Manor, 3311 S. Michigan Ave., comes after the Illinois Department of Public Health released a quarterly report on nursing homes that outlined multiple violations at the facility, ranging from an inadequate response when one resident sexual assaulted another to failure to document medication and clinical needs. Southview Manor’s violations date back to 2022, when one resident suffering from Alzheimer’s went missing for 16 hours on one of the hottest days of that year. Staff failed to properly assess the woman’s risk of leaving the nursing home without permission or supervision, despite her previously being identified as a wanderer, the report states. Police found her the next morning and took her to a nearby hospital.

* Block Club | More Kennedy Expressway Lanes Reopen — And Construction Could Wrap By Thanksgiving: All lanes on the expressway north of Addison Street will reopen over the next week, according to a Wednesday news release from the Illinois Department of Transportation. “Reducing the overall length of the work zone by 2 miles represents the latest significant milestone in the ongoing expressway rehabilitation from Ohio Street to the Edens Expressway (I-94) junction,” according to IDOT. But some more ramps and lanes will have to temporarily close overnight for “removing the work zone” between Addison Street and Pulaski Road over the next week. People should prepare for “significant delays” and plan for extra time, according to IDOT.

* Sun-Times | How one Chicago museum is leading the charge for bilingual access to American cultural sites: Spanish is no longer an “afterthought,” says Antonio Díaz Oliva, an editor at the MCA. Instead, the staff at the institution, where bilingual efforts launched in 2020, thinks about it from the beginning stages of a new exhibition. They also put a lot of thought into addressing the nuances in language that might work best for specific galleries based on topic — for example, some Chicagoans might speak a blend of Mexican and Puerto Rican (or MexiRican) Spanish.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Naperville Sun | Naperville council directs staff to negotiate electricity contract terms with IMEA: The decision comes after many lengthy discussions and debates regarding the future of the city’s electricity source, including a nearly five hour workshop last month weighing the pros and cons of renewing with Naperville’s long-time energy provider IMEA. Mayor Scott Wehrli introduced the motion at the Tuesday night council meeting calling for city staff to continue negotiating with the IMEA on the city’s key areas of concern, a proposal he announced on social media the day before the council meeting. Much of the mayor’s proposal centers on concerns about lowering the city’s carbon footprint.

* Naperville Sun | Sales tax hike dumped in favor of 1% grocery tax by Naperville council: The Naperville City Council reversed course Tuesday on how it would replace the lost income from the soon-to-be-defunct state grocery tax, abandoning plans to increase the city’s home rule tax in favor of a local 1% grocery tax. Councilman Benny White, who previously supported increasing the home rule sales tax to compensate for the $6.5 million loss in state grocery tax money, said he had a change of heart after concluding a hike in the sales tax would place a heavier burden on local business owners and those struggling to afford items like diapers and basic cleaning supplies.

* Daily Southtown | Will County Executive Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant boasts of successes, presents $791 million budget: Will County leads the state in numerous categories, including population growth, job creation and single family housing development, said County Executive Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant. Demands for county services have grown with the population, Bertino-Tarrant said during her annual State of the County address Thursday, where she also introduced a $791 million balanced budget for fiscal year 2026. In November, the County Board approved a $832 million budget for Fiscal 2025, with $273 million in the corporate fund, which is used for county operations, and about $558 million in special revenue funds which are restricted in their use.

* Daily Herald | District 211 residents hotly debate transgender player on Conant H.S. girls volleyball team: The conservative group Citizens 4 Kids Education (C4KE) called on members and supporters to voice their disapproval. Many expressed concerns about injuries female athletes could suffer by being pitted against transgender players. Defenders of transgender athletes argued serious injuries in sports aren’t confined to a transgender player being involved.[…] In contrast, Justin O’Rourke of the Community Mental Health Project criticized the way C4KE tried to draw people to the meeting, adding that members of the LGBTQ community are more vulnerable to mental health issues and suicidal thoughts because of the way they’re treated by others. “This is not about safety at all,” he said of the group’s concerns. “This is about prejudice and bigotry.”

* Daily Herald | District 59 superintendent defends equity efforts, but supports board’s search for successor: The board has retained Libertyville-based search firm BWP & Associates to help identify and select a new superintendent, who would be in place for the start of the 2026-27 school year. The leadership change in the Elk Grove Village-based prekindergarten through eighth-grade district isn’t unexpected, after a slate of candidates that formed in opposition to Bresnahan’s equity plan was swept into office after the April 2023 election. The month before, the old board inked a contract extension with Bresnahan, keeping her in the role until June 2026.

* Daily Southtown | Tinley Park District 146 teachers union declares impasse over contract negotiations: While most of the contract’s provisions are settled, the Tinley Council Teachers 146 of Local 604 is fighting for higher wage increases and improved retirement benefits than the district is offering. Negotiations began in February, and the most recently approved contract expired July 31. The district’s most recent offer includes wage increases of 6% for each of the next two school years and 5% for the 2027-2028 school year. Keegan Kociss, a spokesperson for the district, said District 146 teachers are among the highest paid in the surrounding area, saying the district’s proposal is “generous and it’s fair and it keeps our taxpayers in mind.”

* Tribune | Northwestern reaches a settlement with former coach Pat Fitzgerald, who was fired amid a hazing scandal: Northwestern has reached a settlement with former football coach Pat Fitzgerald nearly two years after he sued the university for $130 million following his firing amid a team hazing scandal. Fitzgerald announced the settlement Thursday through a statement via his attorneys, saying he had resolved his claims of breach of contract, defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress with the university to his satisfaction. Terms of the settlement were not disclosed. “Though I maintain Northwestern had no legal basis to terminate my employment for cause under the terms of my employment agreement, in the interest of resolving this matter and, in particular, to relieve my family from the stress of ongoing litigation, Northwestern and I have agreed to a settlement,” Fitzgerald said.

* Daily Herald | West Chicago mayor’s renderings spark community interest in downtown development: West Chicago residents are responding to a series of renderings of downtown improvements Mayor Daniel Bovey recently posted on Facebook. That was exactly Bovey’s intent with the 19 pictures of elements, including a public plaza, courts for athletics, a marketplace and more. Several elements incorporate West Chicago’s history with the railway that runs through the downtown, and a vacant, 150-year-old station. “This is not a plan. We’re inviting the community to be part of the plan from the get-go, so give us your feedback,” Bovey told the Daily Herald this week.

*** Downstate ***

* Rochelle News-Leader | Ogle County Board: Special use permit for solar facility in Mt. Morris Township denied: At its monthly meeting Tuesday, the Ogle County Board voted 17-4 to deny a special use permit for the construction and operation of a two-megawatt community solar energy facility in Mt. Morris Township at 8400 Haldane Road on 17.58 acres. The special use permit was requested by DG Mount Solar of Juno Beach, Florida. Voting in favor of approving the special use permit were Board Members Wayne Reising, Joseph Simms, Susie Corbitt and Don Griffin. “It’s very good farmland,” Board Member Marcia Heuer said. The board has considered a number of special use permit for solar facilities in recent years. Back in December, the board narrowly approved a special use permit for a solar project between Forreston and Polo after previously denying that project due to it being on productive farmland. That petitioner changed its siting to less productive farmland and filed a lawsuit against Ogle County for the denial, stemming from a recent new state law that set statewide standards for wind and solar farm siting and took away previous local controls such as at the county level.

* WSIL | Glenn Poshard event at SIC supports Harrisburg food pantry: Dr. Glenn Poshard will perform a special poetry and music program at Southeastern Illinois College on Sunday, Sept. 7. The event, will take place at 2 p.m. in the George T. Dennis Visual & Performing Arts Center;. The event is also free with donations going to the 4Cs Food Pantry in Harrisburg. Poshard’s program, “Beginnings and Endings,” combines his poetry with music to explore themes of love, faith, and life’s turning points. Attendees have praised his presentations as deeply moving. “This reading is about more than poetry — it’s about connecting to one another in our shared humanity and helping hungry children in our region,” Poshard said.

* WCIA | Mattoon business owner calls on the city to do more after losing money from water issues: The Mattoon City Council is still facing some heat from people in the community after a harmful algae bloom made the city’s water unsafe for use last month. “It’s a good little town, but I just feel like there are a lot of things that could be done better and that should be done better,” said Michelle Cook, owner of 4 Paws Spa and Boutique.

*** National ***

* Law Dork | Judge orders DOJ to give more info on subpoenas targeting trans minors’ medical care: A federal judge on Wednesday ordered the Trump administration to provide information in two weeks about the scope of the Justice Department’s unprecedented investigation into the provision of gender-affirming medical care for those under 19 across the country — including in states where the provision of such necessary care is legal. The order from U.S. District Judge Mark Kearney came in a challenge filed by one of the hospitals targeted in the Justice Department’s attack on the provision of such care for minors. DOJ’s actions broke widely on Wednesday in multiple news reports, although Kearney’s Wednesday order is first being reported at Law Dork.

* Defector | It Took Many Years And Billions Of Dollars, But Microsoft Finally Invented A Calculator That Is Wrong Sometimes: If using Excel professionally is both an art and a science, adoption of Copilot could easily lead to a generation no longer able to properly use or understand it, while still somehow not actually allowing them to produce a useable result. Writ large this is the most poisonous and perhaps longest-lasting result of so much of the AI explosion, and its subsequent force-feeding into every revenue-generating maw—and on some level, is the entire business model: Get people addicted to the thing to the extent they can no longer function without it, and they will simply have to learn to live with it doing a bad job.

* PC Mag | Site Behind Major SSN Leak Returns With Detailed Data on Millions: How to Opt Out: National Public Data, a website infamous for its role in leaking millions of Social Security numbers last year, has returned with the ability to look up anyone’s personal information. The site shut down in December amid a wave of lawsuits against parent company Jericho Pictures after a breach exposed an estimated 272 million unique SSNs and 600 million phone numbers. Since then, the site has been relatively dormant. But today, we spotted the nationalpublicdata.com domain springing back to life with a new interface.

  17 Comments      


Today’s number: 144,000

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday announced the launch of One Click College Admit, a program where Illinois high school seniors and transfer students can apply to and receive acceptance to state colleges based solely on their GPA. […]

Total undergraduate enrollment in Illinois has decreased by over 20% since 2014, equating to 144,000 fewer students, according to a 2023 report by the Illinois Board of Higher Education. But that decline has not been felt equally.

In a 2024 report, an Illinois education commission found that between 2017-18 and 2021-22, Chicago State University lost 31% of its student headcount and Northeastern Illinois University lost 40% — two public schools that showed some of the earliest signs of trouble. Meanwhile, the University of Illinois Chicago and University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign experienced 11% and 15% increases in student headcount, respectively.

Northern Illinois University has also experienced a prolonged drop in enrollment. NIU’s total student enrollment remained relatively flat in 2023 at 15,504, compared with 15,649 in fall 2022, a difference of less than 1%. But those figures are far below its peak in 2006, when it reported a total student enrollment of 25,313 for the fall. Meanwhile, Western Illinois University’s enrollment has dropped by more than 50% since 2006.

* Some national context

College enrollment totaled 19.28 million undergraduate students nationwide in Fall 2024, down 8.43% from peak enrollment in 2010 (21.0 million).

  18 Comments      


Catching up with the congressionals

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC has endorsed Sen. Robert Peters (D-Chicago) for the 2nd Congressional District…

Today, the Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC (CPC PAC) announced it has endorsed Illinois state Senator Robert Peters in the March 17th primary for Illinois’s 2nd Congressional District. […]

Over the past three election cycles, the CPC PAC has raised over $13 million and invested in progressive candidates across the country. Over the decade, a majority of CPC PAC’s preprimary endorsements have gone on to win their race in the general election. In 2024, the CPC was the only ideological caucus to send new members to Congress in 50% or more of races in which its affiliated PAC made a pre-primary endorsement. The Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC has a mission of electing strong progressive leaders to Congress who share the Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC’s vision for America’s future.

* Yesterday, Sen. Willie Preston (D-Chicago) kicked off his campaign for the 2nd CD in Danville. Vermilion County First

With Illinois District 2 Congresswoman Robin Kelly running in 2026 to replace the retiring U.S. Senator Dick Durbin, some interested Democrats have thus far declared their candidacies to replace Kelly in the House of Representatives. One of them, Illinois 16th District State Senator Willie Preston, arrived in Danville to introduce himself on Wednesday (August 20th) morning.

Preston, who represents portions of Chicago and nearby suburbs in the Illinois Senate, said he wanted to start in the southernmost part of the district to let Vermilion County know he intends to represent everybody. He calls Illinois’s District 2 a “mirror of the country” with its urban and rural diversity. Preston says his family has a rural background in its history, having migrated from the fields of Mississippi. He says everybody counts.

“I want to demonstrate from the beginning that it’s not to me about politics, so much as “we want to win this election, so we’re going to stay where most of the vote is.” No; every single person inside the 2nd Congressional District deserves representation,” Preston said. […]

“It’s important to remember that 267 members of Congress today are former state senators and former state representatives.” Preston said. “There’s a reason for that. And that reason is because this is the perfect training to be able to become an effective Congressman.”

* Politico

In IL-09: Sam Polan, a former policy adviser with the North American Aerospace Defense Command, is running as a Democrat for Congress in the 9th District. He served in the Army Air Defense and was later selected for special operations and deployed three times to the Middle East.

“We are at an inflection point where our Democratic leaders have also failed us — failed to stop the Trump attacks, failed to put up candidates with fresh ideas that excite voters and failed to provide a clear vision,” Polan said in his launch announcement. “We can’t keep doing the same thing and expecting different results. We need a new generation of leadership.

— In IL-07: Danica Leigh, the former chief of staff of clinical affairs at the University of Chicago, is running on the Democratic ticket for Congress in the 7th District. In launching her bid, Leigh notes that she “was fired” because of her political campaign. “I’m running anyway because I don’t believe we’ll get through this moment in our country’s history without personal sacrifice,” she said.

In a statement, the university said it “does not comment on individual personnel matters” but acknowledged that it adheres to rules on conflict of interest that a “candidacy for elected political office is generally incompatible with active full-time university employment.” The university may offer an employee who has decided to run for office the opportunity to take a leave of absence.

* Background is here if you need it. The fried chicken fight continues. Evanston Now

The tax exempt status of the Heartwood Center — which has been leading the fight against a proposed Popeyes restaurant in Evanston — is being challenged by a neighbor.

Adam Finlayson, who lives at 1216 Darrow Ave., about a block from the site of the proposed restaurant, filed formal complaints Wednesday with the Internal Revenue Service, the state attorney general and the county board of review.

He alleges the center has misused a religious tax exemption by leasing office space to health practitioners and renting apartments in buildings it owns. […]

Finlayson, who is supporting supporting Mayor Daniel Biss in his race to succeed Jan Schakowsky in Congress, also raised questions over Heartwood’s invitation to congressional candidate Kat Abughazaleh, who appeared and spoke at the Popeyes protest last week. […]

In his complaint, Finlayson described Heartwood’s invitation of Abughazaleh to the protest as a violation of tax-exemption laws, which say organizations are “absolutely prohibited from directly or indirectly participating in, or intervening in, any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for elective public office.”

Abughazaleh tried to spin her Popeyes protest appearance after taking some heat


* KWQC

Republican Julie Bickelhaupt announced she is running for Congress in Illinois’ 17th District on Monday.

Bickelhaupt’s campaign will focus on the rising cost of living, protecting agriculture and strengthening education, according to a media release.

“Families here are being crushed by rising costs, unsafe streets, and politicians in Washington who put their radical agendas ahead of our interests,” Bickelhaupt said in the release. “I’ll fight to lower costs on everything from energy to health care, defend our jobs, and make sure Illinois families have a fair shot at a better life.”

Bickelhaupt and her family run a seventh-generation cattle and grain farm near Mount Carroll, officials said. She also manages HR for her family’s insurance business.

  9 Comments      


AG Bondi threatens to cut Illinois’ federal funding and send in federal law enforcement

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* NewsMax

Attorney General Pam Bondi has told Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle that their “sanctuary” policies must end immediately.

Bondi gave the Illinois leaders, all Democrats, until Tuesday, Aug. 19, to prove they were complying with federal law and lay out “the immediate initiatives you are taking to eliminate laws, policies and practices that impede federal immigration enforcement.”

But the Illinois lawmakers are pushing back. Ann Spillane, general counsel to Pritzker, wrote a letter back to Bondi noting that Illinois follows the law.

“While we cooperate with federal law enforcement to arrest violent criminals, neither federal law, nor sound public policy, requires our state to divert resources away from community safety and towards civil immigration enforcement,” Spillane wrote. “Unfortunately, based on recent events, we have not observed that type of coordination with local law enforcement in Washington, D.C., or Los Angeles, California.” […]

In an interview, Bondi said they would cut Illinois’ federal funding and send in federal law enforcement like they did in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.

“If they’re not going to keep their citizens safe, [President] Donald Trump will keep them safe,” Bondi said on FOX Business.

* Politico

Hyperbole aside, the courts have repeatedly upheld the rights of states to take a pass on helping federal immigration officials unless they have a warrant looking for known criminals.

A federal judge last month threw out the Trump administration’s bid to force Illinois and Chicago to aid its mass deportation efforts, saying it would encroach on autonomy guaranteed to states under the Constitution.

* Meanwhile, in DC

As members of the National Guard deploy to the nation’s capital as part of the Trump administration’s takeover of policing in Washington, members of the military are also set to take on prosecutorial roles handling civilian crimes.

Twenty members of the Defense Department are set to begin working as special assistant U.S. attorneys — federal prosecutors — in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia next week, two people familiar with the matter told NBC News.

Tim Lauer, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office, confirmed the move, saying members of the Judge Advocate General (JAG) Corps would be joining the office, though he did not know how long the detail would last. […]

U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro recently told Fox News that her office is understaffed and needs 90 prosecutors, as well as 60 investigators and paralegals. The Trump administration has fired numerous federal prosecutors who worked on the Jan. 6 cases, contributing to the shortage.

“To the extent the U.S. Attorney’s Office has a shortage of lawyers, this administration did itself no favors by firing qualified prosecutors who worked on Jan. 6 cases and pushing out others by pursuing such an obviously political agenda,” said former Assistant U.S. Attorney Brendan Ballou, who worked on Jan. 6 cases. “It sounds like the U.S. attorney is trying to import both staff and credibility; I don’t think it’ll work.”

Perhaps Illinois’ most currently well-known National Guard JAG officer is 1LT Christian Mitchell, who was a deputy governor and is now Gov. JB Pritzker’s running mate.

You gotta wonder if Mitchell’s gonna find himself deployed during the campaign.

  21 Comments      


Who needs all that water when you’ve got a virtual ’soulmate’? (Updated)

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW

Illinois and Ohio rank fourth and fifth in the nation behind Virginia, Texas and California in terms of the number of data centers they house, whether that purpose is crypto mining, cloud computing or generative artificial intelligence.

In the past year or two, as the AI arms race has heated up, the size and scope of these centers has mushroomed, as has the pace at which these behemoths are being built, [Helena Volzer, a water policy experts at the advocacy organization Alliance for the Great Lakes] said.

A single hyperscale center of the sort operated by tech giants such as Meta or Microsoft — 10,000 square feet or more, with 5,000-plus servers — can consume 1 million to 5 million gallons of water each day. That’s 365 million gallons of water a year, Volzer said, or as much as 12,000 Americans’ annual use put together.

Not a single Great Lakes state currently has water management mechanisms in place to curb over-extraction, or what could be termed “de-watering,” before it happens, she said. The first step could be revising state groundwater management laws.

* Sun-Times

Large data centers, many devoted to researching artificial intelligence, are expected to use more than 150 billion gallons of water across the U.S. over the next five years, according to the advocacy organization Alliance for the Great Lakes.

That’s enough water to supply 4.6 million homes.

The data centers, which also use large amounts of power, need water for cooling and because of the size of the large operations — sometimes more than 10,000 square feet — an enormous amount is needed for each site.

But in almost all instances, the amount of water that’s being withdrawn for a single data center development is unknown because secrecy agreements between government bodies and companies keep this information from being publicly disclosed, according to Helena Volzer, water policy expert with the Chicago-based group.

* Inside Climate News

Non-disclosure agreements that companies ask municipalities to sign when they propose a data center further obscure how much water is needed and where it would come from, making it difficult to determine whether municipalities have enough supply, said Volzer, with Alliance for the Great Lakes.

To help combat that, some states in the region like Ohio and Indiana are now conducting regional water-demand studies, which would help communities determine where water is available before approving a data center. Some water managers are also conducting those studies in Illinois, but they are not required.

A bill proposed in February by Illinois state Sen. Steve Stadelman would have required data centers to disclose how much electricity and water they use, but lawmakers failed to vote on it before the legislative session ended May 31. […]

Ordinances in other Great Lakes states could serve as a model for how to regulate water diverted to data centers, she added. In Michigan, for example, companies proposing data centers must show that there is enough existing water supply to support the facility in order to get the state tax incentive.

…Adding… More about how data centers use water from Bloomberg

Many data centers rely on evaporative cooling, or “swamp cooling,” where warm air is drawn through wet pads. Data centers typically evaporate about 80% of the water they draw, discharging 20% back to a wastewater treatment facility, according to Shaolei Ren, an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of California, Riverside. Residential water usage, by comparison, loses just 10% to evaporation, discharging the other 90%, Ren said. (A spokesperson for Google said the company doesn’t have a standard percentage because any data center would see some variation based on factors like location, temperature and humidity.) […]

Recently, Microsoft said it developed a data center design that is closed so that water doesn’t evaporate but rather is constantly circulated between servers and chillers, without the need for refilling. The design will be deployed first in facilities in Wisconsin and Arizona, planned for 2026.

Crusoe Energy Systems, a developer behind OpenAI’s Stargate site in Abilene, also plans to use closed-loop cooling systems. But here, too, “there is a tradeoff in energy,” said Ben Kortlang, a partner at G2 Venture Partners, an investor in Crusoe. These systems are more power-hungry than evaporative methods, he said.

Click here for more info on data centers and wastewater treatment facilities.

* “OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Concedes GPT-5 Was a Misfire, Bets on GPT-6″

One lesson from GPT-5’s launch is that people form emotional ties with AI, he noted. Some users described the new model as colder, more mechanical, and less supportive than its predecessor. After GPT-4o was deprecated, some Reddit users even said the upgrade “killed” their AI companions.

Despite the outcry on subreddits like r/MyBoyfriendisAI, r/AISoulmates, and r/AIRelationships, Altman estimated that fewer than 1% of ChatGPT users have “unhealthy relationships” with the bot but said the company is paying close attention. […]

While GPT-5 is still rolling out, Altman said that OpenAI is already looking ahead, noting the timeline between GPT-5 and 6 would be much shorter than GPT-4 and 5. However, Altman said GPU capacity may impact that calculation.

“We have better models, and we just can’t offer them because we don’t have the capacity,” Altman admitted, citing a shortage of GPUs, the powerful chips needed to run large AI systems. To solve that, Altman said OpenAI would need to spend “trillions of dollars on data center construction in the not very distant future.”

  30 Comments      


Channyn Lynne Parker named CEO of Equality Illinois, first Black transgender woman to lead the organization

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Windy City Times in June

Brian Johnson, who has led Equality Illinois since 2016, stepped down June 30 as CEO of the statewide LGBTQ+-rights organization, marking the end of a nine-year tenure defined by coalition-building, statewide outreach and a focus on intersectional advocacy.

Under Johnson’s leadership, Equality Illinois transitioned from an organization laser-focused on marriage equality to one advocating for LGBTQ+ equality on many fronts. […]

Now, longtime LGBTQ+ advocate Channyn Lynne Parker is stepping in as interim CEO, bringing years of experience in direct service, public policy and movement leadership to the role. Parker will continue serving as CEO of Brave Space Alliance, a Black- and trans-led organization on the South Side, while seeing Equality Illinois through its transition.

* Equality Illinois announced today that Channyn Lynne Parker will permanently lead the organization. Press release…

Equality Illinois, the state’s leading LGBTQ+ civil rights organization, announced today that Channyn Lynne Parker has been named the organization’s next Chief Executive Officer following an extensive national search. A nationally recognized human rights advocate, movement builder, and executive leader, Parker brings more than two decades of experience advancing LGBTQ+ justice, racial equity, and community-based solutions across Illinois.

Parker currently serves as CEO of Brave Space Alliance (BSA), where she led a powerful organizational turnaround—restoring stability, rebuilding trust, and launching new services including behavioral health programming, transitional housing, and onsite access to third-party healthcare service. Her commitment to health equity and community-centered policy leadership is rooted in her earliest professional work at The University of Chicago, where she worked directly with youth living with HIV. That experience deepened her understanding of the intersection between lived experience, public health, and systemic policy change — an approach that continues to inform her leadership today.

Following her tenure at The University of Chicago, Parker went on to serve in nearly a decade of community leadership roles at Howard Brown Health, Broadway Youth Center, and Chicago House, where she advanced youth housing, healthcare access, and reentry services for LGBTQ+ communities. She is a longtime board member of Equality Illinois and currently serves on several statewide commissions, including those focused on poverty elimination, addressing hate crimes, and protecting reproductive rights. She was previously honored with Equality Illinois’ Humanitarian Freedom Award for her advocacy.

“Equality Illinois has long been a beacon for justice, and I am honored to step into this role at such a critical time for our communities,” said incoming CEO, Channyn Lynne Parker. “This is more than a professional transition for me—it’s deeply personal. I’m committed to leading with courage, compassion, and collaboration as we build a future where every LGBTQ+ person in Illinois is seen, valued, and protected.”

Her selection follows a thorough and competitive process led by McCormack + Kristel Executive Search Consultants. All candidates were evaluated equitably through the same fair and transparent process, and Parker emerged as the clear choice based on her experience, leadership, deep ties to Illinois’ most impacted communities, and vision for the future of LGBTQ+ advocacy in Illinois.

“Channyn is a visionary leader whose career has been dedicated to building power and advancing LGBTQ+ people and communities in our state,” said Equality Illinois Board Chair Justin DeJong and Equality Illinois Institute Board Chair Kelly Emery. “Her depth of experience, her authentic connection to the work, and her ability to lead through our current political environment made her the clear choice to guide Equality Illinois into its next chapter.”

Parker is the first Black transgender woman to lead Equality Illinois in its 34-year history. Her appointment comes at a pivotal time for LGBTQ+ rights in Illinois and across the country. As a transformational leader with an unwavering commitment to equity and justice, she is uniquely prepared to guide the organization forward and expand its reach, impact, and visibility in the years to come. Parker will begin her role as full time CEO on November 17, 2025.

* Brave Space Alliance…

The Board at Brave Space Alliance looks forward to supporting Channyn as she enters this next chapter as CEO of Equality Illinois. BSA has deeply benefited from Channyn’s leadership and vision, especially as she guided the organization through a critical period of rebuilding, solidifying our foundation for long-term strength and impact. As the first Black trans woman to lead Equality Illinois, Brave Space Alliance is proud to have been a part of her professional journey and looks forward to continued collaboration between our organizations in advancing justice for our communities.

The Board will soon launch a search for a new President and CEO to search for a leader who will continue to guide Brave Space Alliance in its mission to uplift, empower, and provide life-affirming resources for Black, trans, and LGBTQ+ communities across Chicago’s South Side.

  1 Comment      


The Illinois Trial Lawyers Association: Protecting Working People & Fighting Trump’s Predatory MAGA Agenda

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Don’t be fooled by the same front groups, associations and companies that are backing Trump’s predatory MAGA agenda of raising prices, slashing Medicaid, and gutting the Environmental Protection Agency, Food & Drug Administration, and Occupational Safety and Health Administration.

They want Illinois to turn its back on people who have been harmed by the negligence and malfeasance of big corporations, and wrongly believe our state can’t be pro-worker and pro-business.

The Illinois Trial Lawyers Association is proud to stand with state elected officials who are aggressively fighting Trumpian policies and those who support them.

While the federal government and other states abandon their responsibilities to protect Americans from preventable harms, Illinois is a beacon in the nation’s dark night, showing what responsible government looks like. Our state balances the needs of business with workers’ rights and consumer protections to create opportunities for everyone to thrive, not just the wealthy and well-connected.

Trial lawyers will always fight for working people and the most vulnerable, helping them to receive justice and holding corporate wrongdoers accountable.

For more information about the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association, click here.

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It’s now a law

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker signed SB 1519 yesterday, banning police from ticketing students for breaking school rules. Sen. Karina Villa…

A new law championed by State Senator Karina Villa addresses the discriminatory disciplinary practice of ticketing in schools. […]

In 2015, the Illinois General Assembly passed a law ending the ability of schools to issue monetary fines to students for disciplinary infractions at school. However, students in schools across the state continue to be fined due to the practice of students being referred to law enforcement for school-related behavior.

Villa led Senate Bill 1519 to address this issue following an investigation that revealed that Black and Latino students were ticketed at disproportionate rates. Between 2019 and 2021, 11,950 tickets were issued with fines as high as $750.

The new law ensures that no person is allowed to issue a fine or fee to a student as a disciplinary consequence for behavior during school. The law also requires school districts with a school resource officer to have a memorandum of understanding with their local law enforcement agency establishing that SROs are properly trained and do not use fines or tickets for disciplinary infractions.

Senate Bill 1519 was signed into law Wednesday and is effective immediately.

The bill does not prevent students from being penalized for serious crimes committed on school grounds.

ProPublica and the Chicago Tribune broke the story. ProPublica in May

The new law would apply to all public schools, including charters. It will require school districts, beginning in the 2027-28 school year, to report to the state how often they involve police in student matters each year and to separate the data by race, gender and disability. The state will be required to make the data public.

The legislation comes three years after a ProPublica and Chicago Tribune investigation, “The Price Kids Pay,” revealed that even though Illinois law bans school officials from fining students directly, districts skirted the law by calling on police to issue citations for violating local ordinances.

“The Price Kids Pay” found that thousands of Illinois students had been ticketed in recent years for adolescent behavior once handled by the principal’s office — things like littering, making loud noises, swearing, fighting or vaping in the bathroom. It also found that Black students were twice as likely to be ticketed at school than their white peers.

* WICS

Governor JB Pritzker has signed a new law mandating universal mental health screenings for school children, set to begin in the 2027-28 school year. The law requires school districts to offer free mental health screenings to all students from third through twelfth grade, although parents can opt their children out if they choose.

The Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) is tasked with providing resources and model policies to schools by September 1, 2026, to prepare for the screenings. However, concerns have been raised about the availability of staff to conduct these screenings.

“There’s not enough counselors and social workers and psychiatrists and psychologists working inside of our schools,” said Dr. Tony Sanders, Superintendent of the Illinois State Board of Education. […]

To address staffing shortages, ISBE has introduced incentives for individuals to become licensed counselors and social workers. “We remove barriers so that people can come and work in public schools,” said Sanders. The state board is also exploring community health partnerships to support mental health services in schools.

“If you talk to principals and superintendents across this state, they’re all looking for ways to bring in mental health supports for their students,” Sanders added.

* 25News Now

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bill into law that allows the Bloomington-Normal Water Reclamation District to help better protect the water supply and expand its economic reach.

The law allows the district to sell treated wastewater and receive waste within a 50-mile radius. This, in turn, helps companies that want to use treated wastewater as an alternative to drinking water to help power and cool their data centers and processes.

District Executive Director Timothy Ervin said this will create a long-term way to save drinking water for consumption, rather than businesses using it for other reasons. […]

The new law will take effect immediately.

* Advantage News

Gov. J.B. Pritzker enacted a law launching the Farmland Transition Commission, a lifeline for young farmers struggling to secure land. This comes as an Illinois state Senator says farmland is disappearing to solar and wind projects.

State Sen. Sally Turner, R-Beason, sponsored legislation to create the commission. She said the commission will address barriers and support Illinois’ next-generation farmers, calling it “very much so necessary” as more than 129,000 acres of farmland have been taken out of production for solar projects across the state. […]

Turner said the group’s mission is to create a “one-stop shop” of resources for aspiring farmers, connecting them with grant opportunities, rental listings, and information on purchasing equipment. She said Indiana has implemented a similar portal that coordinates state and federal programs to support new farmers.

“There are so many issues a young farmer faces when they come back from college,” Turner said. “Dad might be retiring, and he needs the value of his machinery to do that. That means the young farmer has to figure out how to start from scratch. We have tools like this for business, but not for young farmers, and that’s what this is about.”

* Illinois Ag Network

Small-scale poultry farmers across Illinois are celebrating after Gov. JB Pritzker signed House Bill 2196 into law, marking a major step toward strengthening local food systems and supporting farm businesses.

The legislation, sponsored by Sen. Sally Turner (R-Beason) and Rep. Charlie Meier (R-Okawville), raises the annual poultry processing cap for on-farm producers from 5,000 to 7,500 birds, aligning Illinois more closely with federal standards and neighboring states. HB2196 also eliminates a longstanding 30-day ownership requirement for individuals wishing to process poultry and livestock for personal or cultural use and authorizes direct-to-consumer sales at farmers markets.

Advocates say the reforms will open doors for small farmers while maintaining food safety. “This is a transformative win for our members,” said Liz Moran Stelk, executive director of the Illinois Stewardship Alliance. “It gives small farmers the tools they need to succeed while respecting food safety and community traditions.”

Farmers say the new law comes at a critical time. Bethany Salisbury of Saratoga Homestead in Henry noted the impact on her operation after two key processors stopped handling duck and quail last year. “The timely passage of this law will allow me to continue producing quail, waterfowl, and other poultry with safe, on-farm processing to continue meeting the needs of consumers in my community,” Salisbury said.

  4 Comments      


IPA: SB40 With Energy Storage Will Slash Sky-High Electric Bills

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Consumers across Illinois are seeing massive increases in their bills because of inadequate energy supplies and rising demand. And yet a tool that numerous studies have shown could have averted some of these increases now and in the future, battery energy storage, waits for legislative action.

Last session, without evidence, opponents claimed adding energy storage in Illinois would spike ratepayer bills. But no fewer than a half dozen studies in Illinois and across the country from groups like the Illinois Power Agency, Clean Grid Alliance and NRDC have shown that storage saves billions for ratepayers.

The Facts:

    - The IPA analysis of SB40 found that Ameren customers would save “from $5.48/month to $12.15/month by 2030 and $13.82/month to $20.54/month by 2035.”

    - ComEd customers would save “from $1.52/month to $2.32/month by 2030 and $7.89/month to $8.52/month by 2035.”

The facts don’t lie – consumers are seeing the cost of doing nothing in their spiking electric bills NOW. Adding energy storage to Illinois’s electric grid will save consumers billions.

That’s why CUB is asking lawmakers to pass SB40 as the best way “to contain costs for electric customers while managing unprecedented energy demand.”

Illinois must follow the facts and enact SB40 this fall to deploy 6 gigawatts of energy storage by 2035. Click here for more information.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Senate President Harmon appeals $10M fine for improper campaign contributions. Capitol News Illinois

    - The Illinois State Board of Elections fined Harmon’s campaign $9.8 million earlier this year following Chicago Tribune reporting that Harmon accepted $4 million more than was allowed during the 2024 election.
    - Harmon is appealing the board’s decision, and his lawyer argued in a hearing on Wednesday that the self-funding exemption should have remained in place, because Harmon’s name was not on the ballot in 2024.
    -Though Harmon began self-funding his campaign in the middle of an election cycle in which he was not on the ballot, Harmon’s attorney Mike Kasper said reestablishing caps either after the 2024 primary or general election would establish new limits on fundraising in the middle of Harmon’s term.

* Related stories…

* At 6:30 pm, Governor Pritzker will accept the James Monroe Smith Founder Award from the Legal Council for Health Justice recognizing the state’s efforts in advancing health equity and defending the rights of LGBTQ+ Illinoisans. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Streetsblog Chicago | Illinois House Majority Leader Eva-Dina Delgado thinks Springfield can solve the transit fiscal crisis during six days in October: Streetsblog caught up with one of the key players in the current Springfield drama, House Majority Leader Eva-Marie Delgado, a Democrat whose district includes parts of Chicago’s Northwest Side. Along with fellow Chicago Democrat Rep. Kam Buckner, she’s co-leader of the House’s Public Transit Working Group, which is trying to solve this very tricky legislative puzzle.

* Sun-Times | AI’s latest feat: Depleting drinking water sources around Illinois, Midwest: Large data centers, many devoted to researching artificial intelligence, are expected to use more than 150 billion gallons of water across the U.S. over the next five years, according to the advocacy organization Alliance for the Great Lakes. That’s enough water to supply 4.6 million homes. The data centers, which also use large amounts of power, need water for cooling and because of the size of the large operations — sometimes more than 10,000 square feet — an enormous amount is needed for each site. […] Illinois state lawmakers tried to address the issue of increased power demands from data centers during their legislative session in the spring, but business groups beat back the effort. A bill proposing that data center energy and water usage information be made public was introduced in the same session but was sent to committee and never debated.

*** Statehouse News ***

* ABC Chicago | Gov. Pritzker says he supports independently drawn legislative maps if done on national basis: “I think having an independent commission is a good idea. It has to be done on a national basis, though; it can’t be done state by state. We’d be unilaterally disarming as Democrats if we did that, but I think we should make it happen,” Pritzker said. The governor’s comments came one day after former President Barack Obama Chief of Staff Bill Daley and former Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood kicked off “Fair Maps Illinois.”

* WGIL | Retired State Police officer Brad Beekman launches bid for Illinois 36th State Senate district: Brad Beekman, a recently retired Illinois State Police master sergeant from Bushnell, officially launched his Republican campaign for the 36th State Senate District on Wednesday, bringing over 20 years of law enforcement experience and a focus on family and economic concerns. Democratic incumbent Mike Halpin is seeking another term in the Illinois Senate 36th District.

* CBS Chicago | Illinois Secretary of State pledges to address spiking car insurance rates: “A safe driver with a poor credit score will pay more — about $862 per year more — than a driver with excellent credit who has a DUI,” Giannoulias said. “Let that sink in.” The Illinois Secretary of State’s Driving Change campaign is aimed at preventing insurance companies from using socioeconomic data such as credit scores, ZIP codes, and age to charge Illinoisans higher auto insurance rates.

* Daily Herald | ‘How do we get there?’ State reps weigh transit rescue options ahead of fall veto session: “There’s a lot of opposition” to the delivery fee, and “the mayors are against the transfer tax,” said Democratic state Rep. Marty Moylan of Des Plaines, chair of a House transportation committee. He said it would have been “a lot easier” to get a measure approved in the spring session, when only a simple majority was needed as opposed to veto session. “Because if they want it effective immediately, you need 71 votes,” he added, “or you have to wait until next session in January.”

* Shaw Local | State rep nixes Sauk Valley Chamber membership over prayer wording at fundraiser, DEI statement on its website: The chamber’s Board of Directors on Wednesday said the Sauk Valley Area Chamber of Commerce is reaffirming its mission of enhancing the economic climate and quality of life in the Sauk Valley area, “through its commitment to being a non-partisan and non-denominational organization that serves the entire community without bias or affiliation to any specific political party or religious denomination.” “As a civic and economic development organization, the Chamber exists to support local businesses, foster community engagement, and promote inclusive growth across all sectors,” according to an email the Chamber sent to Shaw Local in response to Fritts’ announcement. “Our mission is rooted in values of respect, diversity, and unity. We welcome individuals and organizations of all backgrounds, beliefs, and traditions, and we strive to create an environment where everyone feels valued and represented.”

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Johnson to unveil budget plan mid-October, starting months of tension over $1B gap: Johnson is tentatively scheduled to deliver his 2026 proposal on Oct. 16, according to a schedule provided to some members of the City Council obtained by Crain’s. The address will land two weeks earlier than last year, when Johnson delayed the speech to the frustration of some on the council who wanted more time to amend and craft a final spending plan.

* ABC Chicago | Giannoulias plans to reestablish emissions testing in Chicago, starting with South Side mobile unit: It’s rolling out a mobile testing site on the South Side, as part of a pilot program. The mobile unit is slated to become one of several new emissions testing sites in Illinois. It’s all part of the secretary of state’s plan to reestablish emissions testing in the city of Chicago.

* Tribune | Borrowing, pensions and TIFs: What’s fueling the CPS budget standoff?: Chicago Public Schools’ fiscal road map, backed by interim CEO Macquline King, runs counter to the agenda of Johnson, a former Chicago Teachers Union organizer, who has advocated both now and in the past for borrowing to address budget woes. The standoff illustrates two entrenched sides — the mayor, Harden and their allies who support borrowing, against board members and advocates who don’t — digging in just over a week before the district is required by law to balance its budget.

* Sun-Times | CPS prioritizes facility repairs, IT upgrades in building maintenance budget: The CPS capital budget, which funds construction and building maintenance projects for this school year, is about 9% smaller than last year at $556 million, down from $611 million. Nearly all of it is paid for through borrowing, while there’s some help from the city through tax increment financing, or TIF, dollars and state funding. CPS is the only district in Illinois that has no way to raise new revenue for building construction or maintenance, so taking on new debt year after year becomes necessary to fund most projects.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago’s legal community buzzing about U.S. Attorney Boutros’ recruiting e-mail: More than a dozen former federal prosecutors, even current sitting judges, told the I-Team they, too, received this same unorthodox email, and found it concerning. “You have people who come to the office, give what they have to give, and then leave. By and large, there is turnover by design,” Safer said. Safer hasn’t worked in the Northern District of Illinois office in more than 25 years.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Will County Board member Jacqueline Traynere charged with computer tampering: Will County Board member Jacqueline Traynere faces three counts of computer tampering, according to a complaint filed this week in Will County Circuit Court. Traynere, a Bolingbrook Democrat, allegedly accessed the email account of board member Judy Ogalla, a Monee Republican, in March 2024 without Ogalla’s authorization, according to the charges. The misdemeanor charges filed by special prosecutor William Elward state Traynere forwarded emails from Ogalla’s account to herself and others.

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County Treasurer’s office employees move to unionize, with support by outgoing head: “The right of workers to organize and bargain collectively is an American right,” Kim said in a brief statement. “God bless America.” According to a news release, earlier this week, the 13 employees filed a majority interest petition with the Illinois Labor Relations Board, which will certify the union. The employees are responsible for processing and accounting for county revenue and assisting the public in paying and assessing property tax bills.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Emily Rosen appointed Geneva city treasurer, after no candidates ran for seat in April: Geneva officially has a new treasurer, after Emily Rosen’s appointment by Geneva Mayor Kevin Burns was OK’d by the City Council at its meeting Monday evening. After no candidates ran for the seat in the April 1 election, the treasurer post was left unfilled, according to past reporting. In July, the city opened applications for Geneva residents to apply for the role through Aug. 7.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Batavia City Council considers energy policy for future of electric utility: As discussions continue about cost, reliability and sustainability goals, the Batavia City Council is considering adopting an energy policy to guide how it provides electricity to residents in the future. Currently, the city has its own municipal electric utility, according to Batavia City Administrator Laura Newman. The Batavia Municipal Electric Utility gets its energy via a power sales agreement with the Northern Illinois Municipal Power Agency, or NIMPA, a joint action agency made up of Batavia, Geneva and the city of Rochelle.

* Daily Herald | ‘I am Team Naperville’: Allison Longenbaugh stepping down from city council: In what she called a “gut-wrenching decision,” Naperville City Councilwoman Allison Longenbaugh will step down from her seat after more than two years in the role. An emotional Longenbaugh said she is taking a private sector professional opportunity that does not allow her to serve in public office. Her resignation becomes official Monday. Longenbaugh routinely asked questions of city staffers as part of written Q&A’s posted with council agendas. She appeared to relish her research.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora committee discusses lifting ban on backyard chickens: While no official ordinance has been drafted, aldermen who sit on the Rules, Administration and Procedures Committee have spent time at the past two meetings discussing the possibility of allowing backyard chickens within city limits and the logistics of how that may work. No decision has been made yet, but aldermen seem to agree that, if the ban is lifted, there would still be restrictions against roosters, along with other requirements. Currently, the city’s ordinance bans people from keeping dangerous animals, bees or farm animals within city limits. However, special permission can be given to things like pony rides and petting zoos.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Mark Jontry retiring after this term as Regional Superintendent of Schools, endorses assistant superintendent for the role: The regional superintendent of schools for McLean, DeWitt, Livingston and Logan counties will not run for re-election. Mark Jontry has served in his role for the Regional Office of Education [ROE] #17 for 17 years, after serving as assistant regional superintendent for four years. The ROE provides various resources and support to educators, students and families.

* KSDK | Police arrest 3 law enforcement officers accused of assaulting man at Illinois bar: Three law enforcement officers are facing charges after they were accused of assaulting a man at a Staunton, Illinois, bar over the weekend. A press release from Staunton Police Chief Jeffrey Doerr said two men who work for the Macoupin County Sheriff’s Department and one man who works as a Bunker Hill police officer were arrested. The release said the arrests were related to an incident that happened at Skeeter’s Pub early Saturday morning.

* WCIA | 250 U of I students in temporary housing to start semester: More than 6,000 students have moved into their new rooms so far; 250 of them will be placed in temporary housing. “Temporary housing means students are paying half what they would normally pay,” said University Housing Marketing Associate Director Christ Axtman-Barker. “There are more students in those rooms because they are temporarily converted study lounges.”

* BND | East St. Louis school bus drivers say unresolved issues could impact students: Several former and current drivers for Illinois Central’s Caseyville facility gathered outside the district administration building Monday with megaphones and signs, alleging several issues with the bus company ranging from unfair pay to grievance procedures not being followed. The demonstrators said they do not plan to strike; their current union contract prohibits it. But Marsha Jones, a former employee at Illinois Central and the Caseyville site’s union steward and representative, said the issues could result in students spending more time on buses if they’re left unaddressed.

* WGLT | Trained weather spotter grows online community of weather watchers in Central Illinois: Bessler said he would like as many people, specifically members of the Facebook group, to receive the same NWS spotter training that he did. For accurate reporting, Bessler uses a radar app on his phone to track storms, which he then posts on the Current Central Illinois Weather Facebook page. Bessler said he makes sure to address specific counties with warnings of approaching storms.

*** National ***

* AP | The Texas House OK’d GOP-favored redistricting. California intends to counter with map of its own: The national redistricting battle enters its next phase Thursday as California Democrats are scheduled to pass a new congressional map that creates five winnable seats for their party, a direct counter to the Texas House’s approval of a new map to create more conservative-leaning seats in that state. California Gov. Gavin Newsom has engineered the high-risk strategy in response to President Donald Trump’s own brinkmanship. Trump pushed Texas Republicans to reopen the legislative maps they passed in 2021 to squeeze out up to five new GOP seats to help the party stave off a midterm defeat.

* Former President Barack Obama


* Sun Sentinel | DeSantis targets Florida congressional districts, seeks changes that could aid Republicans: The governor repeatedly cited the Broward-Palm Beach County district represented by U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick as the one that he believes is unfairly drawn, and should be changed. He acknowledged that any changes to Cherfilus-McCormick’s district would involve changes to neighboring congressional districts — likely including the one represented by another Broward-Palm Beach county Democrat, U.S. Rep. Jared Moskowitz.

* NPR | Some Florida farmers reduce crops as deportation fears drive workers away: “You just never know where agents are,” F. says, lowering his voice, even though no one is around. And as a farmer, that has meant having to reduce his workforce by nearly half. “A lot of the migrants have left,” he says. “The rest are hiding.”

* The City | Eric Adams Advisor Winnie Greco Handed a CITY Reporter Cash Stuffed in a Bag of Potato Chips: The failed payoff — a wad of cash in a red envelope stuffed inside an opened bag of Herr’s Sour Cream & Onion ripple potato chips — was made by Winnie Greco, a longtime Adams ally who resigned last year from her position as the mayor’s liaison to the Asian community after she was targeted in multiple investigations. She resurfaced recently as a consistent presence in his re-election campaign.

* NBC | Japanese American groups blast use of Fort Bliss, former internment camp site, as ICE detention center: The Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center at Fort Bliss in El Paso, which opened this past weekend, will be able to hold as many as 5,000 detainees upon its completion in the coming months, making it the largest federal detention center in U.S. history. Japanese American advocates, however, say that the facility, which once imprisoned people considered “enemy aliens,” is a chilling reminder of a dark past. “The use of national security rhetoric to justify mass incarceration today echoes the same logic that led to their forced removal and incarceration,” said Ann Burroughs, president and CEO of the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles.

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Open thread

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Bloomberg Law

A Chicago federal judge threw out the Trump administration’s challenge to an Illinois law regulating employers’ use of the E-Verify program, finding some of the federal government’s claims were “based on nothing but speculation.” […]

In granting Illinois’ motion to dismiss Tuesday, Judge Sharon Johnson Coleman found that “the federal government’s broad interpretation of its power to regulate matters of immigration would swallow the historic powers of the states over employment-related issues.”

The federal government argued a preemption theory that was “broad to the point of absurdity,” wrote Coleman, of the US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. […]

The government “has alleged no facts at all to support an inference” that the Illinois law discourages E-Verify enrollment “such that the law is in conflict with Congress’s purpose in establishing the program,” Coleman wrote.

* Governor JB Pritzker

Governor JB Pritzker, the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO), and Richardson Electronics, Ltd. – a leading global manufacturer of engineered solutions, green energy products, power grid and microwave tubes and more – today announced the Company will expand its operations at its manufacturing headquarters in La Fox, Illinois. Richardson Electronics plans to make a capital investment of more than $8.5 million over the next four years with support from the Reimagining Energy and Vehicles in Illinois (REV Illinois) program. The Company plans to expand its operations, retain nearly 200 skilled employees, and create 54 new full-time jobs in the region. […]

Richardson Electronics will build upon its existing alternative energy business to develop next-generation energy storage products that support electric grid stability. The Company will invest in equipment and structural upgrades in order to research, develop, and produce next-generation battery energy storage system (BESS) technologies at the Company’s Illinois manufacturing facility. These technologies are designed to address brownouts, reduce electricity costs, and support renewable energy integration, while demonstrating the commercial viability of long-duration energy storage (LDES). The Company’s BESS technology is being developed for industries such as manufacturing, healthcare, and critical infrastructure operations.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | Alderman Sigcho-Lopez Joins Speaker Welch’s Campaign for Democratic State Central Committee: “Speaker Welch understands that without investing in the city of Chicago, and the people who make it work, our state cannot thrive,” said Alderman Sigcho-Lopez. “The billionaires’ and oligarchs’ agenda of divestment, division, and disinformation has not improved our lives. Working people across our state and across the 7th District need leadership focused on bringing dignity to the lives of all Illinoisans, and Speaker Welch is committed to doing just that. I look forward to opportunities to bring our communities together in solidarity to fight for better days for all of our neighbors.”

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club Chicago | State And Lake CTA Station Getting $440 Million Overhaul With Glass Roof, Elevators To Red Line: The price of the project has ballooned from the $180 million estimated by city officials in 2021 to $444 million. Schroeder said the renovation is over 90 percent federally funded. On the street level below, the city also plans to remove columns and increase the vertical clearance to try to ease vehicle traffic. New sidewalk bump-outs will make crossing the busy Downtown streets a shorter walk for pedestrians.

* Block Club | Have Thoughts On Chicago’s Speed Cameras? You Can Weigh In Through A City Survey: Earlier this month, the Equity in Enforcement working group launched a survey to gain feedback on draft recommendations it has crafted since the group was created by the City Council in January. The survey is available in English, Spanish and Traditional Chinese and can be filled out here. It will be live through Monday.

* Tribune | Bullet that killed Officer Krystal Rivera struck her from behind in vest opening: autopsy: Investigators with the medical examiner’s office found Rivera was shot in her left flank from behind. The fatal shot pierced her skin near her left armpit and traveled through both her lungs, wedging itself in her ribs, autopsy records show. “Because the lethal injury was caused by another individual who volitionally fired a weapon knowing the action could cause death,” the record states. “The manner is HOMICIDE.”

* ABC Chicago | Retired Chicago priest reinstated to church after sexual abuse allegations, Archdiocese says: The allegations against Monsignor Daniel Mayall came in February 2025. At the time, Cardinal Blase J. Cupich announced he would remain out of ministry and school activities during an investigation. Six months after the letter, Cupich announced that Mayall would be reinstated. “While he strenuously denied the allegation, he fully complied with my request and cooperated with the investigation,” Cupich said in the letter. “After receiving the results of the thorough investigation, the IRB determined that there is not a reasonable cause to believe Monsignor Mayall sexually abused the person making the accusation. In addition, the IRB recommended that Monsignor Mayall be reinstated to ministry. I have accepted their recommendation effective immediately.”

* Block Club | Stolen Dog Bam Bam Reunited With Ecstatic Owner: ‘The Entire City Has Been Searching For This Dog’: Garrido was told by officers that the two people who brought in Bam Bam found him near the station in the 5600 block of North Milwaukee Avenue, though details are still murky, he said. Once owner information was found through Bam Bam’s chip, Santiago was contacted and picked up Bam Bam. Garrido was not there for the reunion but was told Santiago was ecstatic.

* Chicago Reader | Car racing on Chicago’s streets before NASCAR : The Chicago Times-Herald Race was held on Thanksgiving Day, November 28, 1895. It was the brainchild of Times-Herald publisher H.H. Kohlsaat and was created not just to sell newspapers but also to promote the burgeoning auto industry. The first cars in the U.S. had been produced only two years earlier. The winner of the race was promised $2,000, with $1,500 for the runner-up, $1,000 given to the third-place racer, and $500 for fourth. (In 2025 dollars, $2,000 in 1895 is approximately $76,539.)

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Nurses sue Endeavor Health alleging wage theft, dangerous understaffing: Four nurses are suing Endeavor Health and an executive, alleging wage theft, dangerous understaffing and invasion of privacy by the suburban health system. The federal lawsuit from Tricia Poreda, Karen Hernandez, Jessica Balagtas and Juline Patlan accuses Endeavor of violating the Fair Labor Standards Act, or FLSA, and Illinois wage laws, with claims of nurses forced to work off the clock, having meal breaks deducted despite having to work through meals and withheld promised pay for certifications and leadership duties.

* Daily Herald | Naperville City Council seeks to renegotiate terms of proposed electricity contract: The city is proposing contract revisions that would increase Naperville’s voting rights within the Illinois Municipal Electric Agency and would set measurable benchmarks to lower its carbon footprint. City council members voted 7-2 to support the measure, with Ian Holzhauer and Mary Gibson casting dissenting votes. The contract proposal comes after months of debate about whether to extend the city’s contract with IMEA. Opponents objected to an extension, noting IMEA’s reliance on a coal-fired power plant to meet energy needs for its 32 member communities. Others also questioned the need to decide on a contract when the current contract does not expire for another 10 years.

* Oak Park Journal | Oak Park terminates Flock license plate reader contract: The Oak Park board of trustees voted to cancel the village’s contract with Flock Safety, shutting off the eight license plate reading cameras the company operates in the village. The board opted to cancel the contract outright rather than adopt a measure that would’ve shut the cameras off for 90 days. The decision comes weeks after the state announced it was investigating the company that runs them.

* Tribune | With no Chicago Street Race, NASCAR will return to long-dormant Joliet track in 2026: NASCAR said it paused the Chicago Street Race because it needs more time to explore rescheduling the event away from Independence Day and finding ways to speed up the build-out and breakdown of the pop-up racecourse, in response to concerns from the city. That left a gaping July Fourth hole on the racing schedule, which Joliet will now fill, at least in 2026. Launched in 2001, Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet hosted NASCAR’s premier racing series for 18 years. But the 1.5-mile oval has essentially been idled since it was acquired in 2019 by NASCAR as part of a $2 billion merger agreement with International Speedway Corp.

* Naperville Sun | Longenbaugh announces she’s resigning from the Naperville City Council post: Longenbaugh, whose term expires in 2027, announced her resignation at Tuesday’s council meeting, citing a job offer she received that conflicts with her ability to serve. Her vacancy is effective Aug. 25. “I love my career and I love serving on city council, which has made this a gut-wrenching decision not just for me but for my entire family,” she said. Longenbaugh lost her job at J.P. Morgan last February, a company she had been with for 31 years. While she could not disclose what her new job is, it was one she thought she could not reject, she said.

* Evanston RoundTable | Evanston library employees to rally against plan to split from city: The employees, represented by AFSCME Council 31, and their supporters plan to gather at Fountain Square at 6 p.m., then march to the main library at 1703 Orrington Ave. to speak at the Library Board’s regular meeting scheduled for 6:30 p.m., the union said in a news release late Tuesday. “Library employees have always stood against any proposal that could result in cuts to library services, hours, programs and jobs,” Anders Lindall, AFSCME Council’s 31’s public affairs director, said in a statement. “That’s why they’re unified now with their community of patrons and supporters to strongly oppose the plan to split the library away from the city of Evanston.”

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg favors bike path on west side of Springinsguth Road, further use of roundabouts: Schaumburg village board members Tuesday generally favored having the Springinsguth Road bike path entirely on the west side after a 2029 renovation. The discussion also included further consideration of the use of roundabouts at appropriate intersections on a case-by-case basis. One roundabout is proposed for the intersection of Springinsguth and Weathersfield Way, though there wasn’t 100% agreement on several aspects of the 1.5-mile improvement project between Schaumburg and Wise roads.

* NBC Chicago | 4 new stores opening at suburban Chicago outlet mall, including high-end and beloved brands: According to a release, Rag + Bone will open at the outlet store at the mall Aug. 21. The popular New York label will be located near the Aritiza and Versace outlets inside the mall, and will offer discounted fashion-forward denim, casualwear, footwear and accessories for men and women, the release said.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Dates announced for Christkindlmarket in Aurora and Chicago: The holiday market in Aurora is organized by German American Events, a group which will also operate the Christkindlmarkets at Daley Plaza and Gallagher Way in Wrigleyville in Chicago during the holidays. This year’s Christkindlmarket in Aurora will be open Thursdays to Sundays from Nov. 21 through Dec. 24. It will be open from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Thursdays, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sundays, according to a press release about the market.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | O’Fallon beefing up security to preserve annual City Fest: After disturbances at some local festivals, including disruptive behavior at the St. Nicholas Catholic Church annual parish picnic in May and skirmishes at last year’s City Fest, organizers have put new safety plans in place. City Fest Chair Marcie Lapolice said Police Chief Kirk Brueggeman has been meeting with the committee, and they have reviewed site plans and security measures. “These are precautions,” Brueggeman said. “It’s unfortunate what happened at Nickfest. If we can do these safely, we’re all for it. It’s very taxing on public safety, and we understand this is good for the community, so we’ll do what we can to make it successful.”

* WGLT | Multiethnic houses of worship in Bloomington-Normal are hubs of faith and resources for parishioners: Community engagement and resource services evolved as the attendance at Spanish services expanded. They include a three-day-spiritual retreat called Cursillo, Spanish Bible study, and translation and notary services, said Joaquin. But due to President Trump’s anti-immigrant policies, Joaquin said they’ve pivoted to advocacy. “We started working on information for immigrants. We hosted a ‘Know Your Rights’ workshop,” she said.

* WSIL | Free fun at Du Quoin State Fair with music, shows, and art: Fairgoers at the 2025 Du Quoin State Fair can enjoy a wide array of free entertainment throughout the event. With free admission, families are invited to experience a full day of fun without financial worries. “We recognize that families may be experiencing tough times financially, and entertainment dollars are stretched thin,” said Jerry Costello II, Director of the Illinois Department of Agriculture. “Expanding free entertainment options keeps the fair affordable, allowing families to make memories that last a lifetime.”

*** National ***

* Straight Arrow News | Interactive ‘ICE Detention Map’ shows 71% of detainees have no criminal record: Of all the statistics in the spreadsheet, this may be the most telling: Of the 46,113 individuals detained by ICE, 71% have no criminal record. That finding was highlighted Friday at the Hackers on Planet Earth conference in Queens, New York, where the privacy organization Lockdown Systems unveiled a new tool that visualizes all of ICE’s data on an interactive map of the country.

* Pew Research Center | How Americans View Journalists in the Digital Age: There is a lack of consensus – and perhaps some uncertainty – about whether someone who primarily compiles other people’s reporting or offers opinions on current events is a journalist, according to a new Center survey. Americans are also split over whether people who share news in “new media” spaces like newsletters, podcasts and social media are journalists. In some ways, Americans’ ideas about journalists are still tied to what the news industry looked like in the 20th century. When asked who comes to mind when they think of a journalist, many everyday Americans who participated in our focus groups said they think of traditional TV newscasters like Walter Cronkite and Tom Brokaw, modern anchors like Lester Holt and Anderson Cooper, and even fictional characters like Clark Kent.

* Cal Maters | Why one union became one of the most pro-housing voices in California: The Carpenters’ involvement has given some Democratic lawmakers the opportunity to address the housing crisis with the blessing of a construction union. They’ve presented an alternative to more traditional demands from organized labor embodied by the State Building and Construction Trades Council, which has opposed nearly all high-profile proposals to lower hurdles for developers that do not include minimum pay levels and union hiring requirements that some housing advocates see as so stringent and costly they effectively hamper building more housing.

* Chalkbeat | Plenty of schools have no-zeroes policies. And most teachers hate it, a new survey finds: Eight in 10 teachers said giving students partial credit for assignments they didn’t turn in was harmful to student engagement. Opposition to no-zeroes policies came from teachers of various racial backgrounds, experience levels, and who worked with different demographics of students.

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Unclear on the concept (except for the coverage angle) (Updated x2)

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Congressional candidate calls for special session within 10 days even though nobody has anything ready to actually vote on once they get to town…


It’s easy to say “the time is now,” when you aren’t involved in either crafting a bill or shepherding it through both chambers to reach the required three-fifths super majorities (and, notice that the Senate’s chief transit bill sponsor isn’t demanding an immediate return). This stuff doesn’t happen by magic. And, by the way, the Senate’s bill, which Sen. Fine didn’t vote for, has no chance in the House.

* Senate President Harmon talked earlier this month about a special session

As soon as there’s an agreement on how to put this together, I will happily call the Senate back into session to vote on it. But until there’s an agreement, it’s counterproductive. […]

I worry that if we go down to Springfield without an agreement, all we’re going to do is gin up a bunch of Chicago-bashing and other counterproductive rhetoric that will dig people in deeper and make it harder for us to pass a meaningful bill that benefits the folks who take the ‘L’ or the bus.

Not to mention that if the GA does come back early, the Chicago Teachers Union will be demanding action on their fiscal agenda, which will only intensify the Chicago-bashing.

But, this empty call will probably give these three a little press bump, which is what it’s probably all about.

…Adding… The RTA is considering moving some money around to delay any cuts to the CTA, according to the Tribune

Allocating more money to the CTA, the RTA has said, would push CTA’s fiscal cliff back two or three months until the middle of 2026, leaving more time for state lawmakers to pass long-term funding for public transit throughout the entire region.

Keep in mind that the transit systems are receiving an unexpected $150 million in new sales tax revenue this calendar year, and that will increase next year.

…Adding… CTU is already on board with the fantasy session…

The governor talked about this today…

What CTU and the mayor are talking about, which is, you know, providing another billion or billion six for Chicago public schools. That’s just not going to happen. And it’s not because we shouldn’t. We should, we should try to find the money, but we don’t have those resources today, and we’re not going to see the resources from the federal government level either.

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Study: Illinois pre-apprenticeships boost women, minorities in construction

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Programs to prepare workers for skilled trades apprenticeships have significantly boosted the number of women and people of color in Illinois’ construction workforce and also yield a big return on investment, according to a report released Wednesday.

In Illinois, enrollment in pre-apprenticeship training programs since 2017 has led to a 95% and 202% jump in the number of Black and female apprentices, respectively, according to research by the nonpartisan Illinois Economic Policy Institute and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign’s Project for Middle Class Renewal. […]

Researchers found that $66 million invested in the construction careers and IL Works pre-apprenticeships since 2017 translated into an investment of about $12,000 per program participant and $35,000 per placed apprentice.

For pre-apprentices who get jobs in the skilled trades, the programs yield a 900% return on grant investment over 10 years, in terms of their earnings. […]

More pre-apprenticeship hubs have been created as part of the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, researchers noted. In 2024, they won nearly $40 million in grants for clean energy regional pre-apprenticeships and workforce hubs. Programs are run by community colleges and nonprofits such as 548 Foundation, which focuses on solar industry training.

* Related…

    * Press Release | Governor Pritzker Announces Applications Open for Next Round of Illinois Works Pre-Apprenticeship Program: Today, Governor JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) announced applications are now open for the fifth round of the Illinois Works Pre-Apprenticeship Program. The Illinois Works Pre-Apprenticeship Program provides training opportunities, expands the talent pipeline, and boosts diversity in the construction industry and building trades. Grantees will be selected through a competitive Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) process. […] This round of $25 million in funding will increase the representation of underrepresented groups – including people of color, veterans, and women in the construction trades. This round of Illinois Works Pre-Apprenticeship Program funding will fund up to 45 programs throughout the state including new grantees, serving nearly 2,000 residents.

    * Shaw Local | Will County celebrates graduates of state training program that paves way for careers in trades: Almost 20 people have graduated from a pre-apprenticeship program in Will County that prepares them for union trade apprenticeships and construction project opportunities. The ceremony for 18 graduates of the Illinois Works Pre-Apprenticeship Program was held Wednesday on the fifth floor of the Will County Courthouse in Joliet.

    * WQAD | YWCA Quad Cities expands summer Pre-Apprenticeship Program for youth: The 13-week program is open to residents ages 16–24 and provides full or part-time employment at local businesses. All student wages are funded by the YWCA, easing the cost for employers and helping young people gain job experience. The first week’s focus on professional development, including résumé and cover letter writing, job readiness training, and career exploration. Participants also learn life skills such as budgeting, understanding insurance and employee benefits, and how to open a bank account through workshops and guest speakers.

  17 Comments      


It’s now a law

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times’ education reporter Emmanuel Camarillo

As a parent-mentor at Lloyd Elementary in the Northwest Side neighborhood, [Maria] said some students expressed fears that they or their family members would be detained and deported by federal agents, perhaps on their way to school. Families considered leaving, she said. […]

That’s why she joined immigrant rights groups and elected officials Tuesday to celebrate Gov. JB Pritzker signing the “Safe Schools for All Act” into law, which advocates say will help protect families. The law prohibits public schools from denying any student access to a free education based on their immigration status or that of their parents. […]

The law also prohibits schools from disclosing or threatening to disclose information related to the immigration status of the student or an “associated person.” And it requires schools to develop procedures for reviewing and authorizing requests from law enforcement trying to enter a school. […]

State Rep. Lilian Jimenez, D-Chicago, and State Sen. Karina Villa, D-West Chicago, were lead sponsors of the bill. It strengthens at the state level protections that already existed at the federal level but feel tenuous under the current administration, they said. In 1982, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Plyler v. Doe that states cannot deny students a free public education on account of their immigration status.

* WAND

A new Illinois law will create a student investment program within the state treasurer’s office. […]

“This bill is about making sure people have the ability to offer another option to Illinois borrowers so that at the end of the day they’ll be able to have more money in their pockets and be able to afford the loans that they’re currently on the hook for,” said Sen. Omar Aquino (D-Chicago). […]

This plan passed out of the Senate on a 46-12 vote and received a 67-38 vote in the House with one member voting present. House Bill 1430 took effect Friday.

“Some of us are still paying student loans,” said Rep. Eva-Dina Delgado (D-Chicago). “Having the opportunity to refinance a very high-interest-rate loan by going through a program like this is a great opportunity for us to be offering to Illinoisans.”

* Rep. Dagmara Avelar…

As cases of discrimination rise and federal leaders retreat from workplace equity and public accommodation efforts, state Rep. Dagmara “Dee” Avelar, D-Bolingbrook, is providing new tools to help Illinois enforce basic human rights policies with a new law streamlining the investigation process and enhancing protections.

“Moving away from a one-size-fits-all approach when investigating discrimination cases cuts red tape and allows human rights investigators to promptly address the growing number of cases we’re seeing statewide,” said Avelar. “This move also alleviates troubling staff burdens as the department handles a significant uptick in caseload due to federal civil rights agencies gutting staff.”

The Illinois Department of Human Rights (IDHR) is the agency responsible for investigating and enforcing the state’s anti-discrimination law. Avelar’s Senate Bill 2487 seeks to streamline the department’s investigations and improve efficiency by allowing the agency to determine whether a “fact-finding conference” is necessary on a case-by-case basis. Currently, IDHR is required to hold a fact-finding conference for most discrimination cases. The change aims to prevent unnecessary delays and ensure that each discrimination charge receives a tailored investigation.

Additionally, the legislation outlines civil penalties, allowing monetary fines in cases of egregious or systematic discrimination involving multiple violations of the human rights law. […]

Senate Bill 2487 was signed into law Friday and will go into effect January 1 of next year.

* Inside Public Accounting

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker recently signed into law new legislation sponsored and heavily influenced by the Illinois CPA Society (ICPAS), one of the largest state associations serving the certified public accountant community. The new law evolves Illinois’ CPA licensure framework in response to talent pipeline issues, shifting demographics and changing financial and audit regulatory standards.

The legislation, House Bill (HB) 2459, originally introduced in March by Reps. Natalie Manley and Amy Elik and supported by chief senate sponsor Sen. Suzy Glowiak Hilton and co-sponsor Sen. Chris Balkema, passed unanimously in both chambers earlier this year.

The legislation amends the Illinois Public Accounting Act to create two additional pathways to CPA licensure in Illinois. Scheduled to be implemented starting in 2027, these new pathways include:

    - Obtaining a bachelor’s degree with a concentration in accounting, completing at least two years of relevant work experience and passing the CPA exam.
    - Obtaining a master’s degree with the required concentration in accounting, completing at least one year of relevant work experience and passing the CPA exam.

The bill also preserves the state’s legacy licensure pathway, which requires aspiring CPAs to complete 150 credit hours of qualifying education, complete one year of relevant work experience and pass all portions of the CPA exam to become licensed in the state—the pathway that’s been in place since 2001.

Additionally, the bill ensures that out-of-state CPAs can serve clients in Illinois without having to obtain an Illinois license if their issuing state’s licensure requirements are substantially equivalent to Illinois’ and safeguards Illinois CPAs will have the same practice privileges across state borders. ICPAS believes this law change will help reduce barriers to entry into the CPA profession, most notably, the time and costs required to become a CPA, while still preserving the rigor and integrity of the credential. The Illinois board of examiners and the Illinois department of financial and professional regulation were integral partners in drafting the bill, helping to ensure the state’s CPA licensure model evolved in a manner that addresses Illinois’ ongoing accounting talent shortage and growing need for CPAs to serve the business community and protect public interests.

* Rep. Kimberly DuBuclet…

A bill sponsored by state Rep. Kimberly DuBuclet, D-Chicago, will help ensure that the state only invests state dollars in financial institutions that make it a priority to guarantee access to financial services to all customers regardless of their backgrounds. […]

DuBuclet’s Senate Bill 1301 will require all state funds deposited in financial institutions be held in entities that have a passing rating from the state’s Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR). In 2021, as part of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus’ (ILBC) Four Pillars framework to address systemic racism, financial institutions in Illinois began rating financial institutions on their ability to serve the needs of local residents

Before its passage, many low- and moderate-income residents may have had to rely on payday lenders and other less reliable methods to meet their financial needs. To attain a passing rating, institutions must adequately advertise services to the community, offer nondigital alternatives, and not engage in discriminatory practices, among other criteria.

Senate Bill 1301 passed both chambers with bipartisan support and was recently signed into law by Gov. JB Pritzker earlier this month.

* WCIA

A new state law signed on Friday will ensure that Illinois K-9 units receive veterinary care after they retire.

House Bill 3140 creates the Police K-9 Care Program and the Police K-9 Care Fund. Lawmakers said K-9s spend their entire lives protecting the state, and this new law will ensure that they also receive the protections and care they need.

Handlers would be reimbursed for a retired police dog’s veterinary care up to $1,500 per dog. This care could include annual wellness exams, vaccinations, parasite prevention treatments, surgery and more. […]

The initiative was originally started by the Illinois State Police Command Officers Association and will be funded by the sale of Illinois Police K-9 Memorial Plates.

* WCIA

Two bills seeking to make life easier for veterans and their family members just got the governor’s signature.

Senate bill 1160 allows people who served in the United Nations protection force in Somalia, Panama, or Grenada to apply for the forces license plate.

The second, House bill 2572, affects the Dependents Educational Opportunity Grant Act and Scholarship. This allows the veteran’s department to change the language surrounding the scholarship. Before this, they couldn’t change its rules. […]

Both bills will go into affect at the start of next year.

* Sen. Rachel Ventura and Rep. Hoan Huynh…

Under a new law led by State Senator Rachel Ventura and State Representative Hoan Huynh, simulation training will be considered an approved form of continuing education for licensed health care professionals. […]

House Bill 3850 allows simulation training provided by an approved sponsor to count toward a licensed health care professional’s continuing education requirement, aiming to modernize professional education and help retain health care workers across Illinois.

Currently, simulation-based training for medical licenses is not required by the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. In an attempt to modernize current educational practices, the bill aims to add simulation training as an approved training tool for professional licensing, expanding opportunities for hands-on learning. […]

House Bill 3850 was signed into law on Aug. 15, and goes into effect immediately.

  5 Comments      


Rate Willie Preston’s launch video

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

llinois State Senator Willie Preston, a working-class Democrat, maverick and chair of the Il. Senate Black Caucus, will make a campaign announcement regarding the Second Congressional District Wednesday at 3 p.m. at Skyway Bowl, a black-owned South Side bowling alley.

He will make earlier stops in Danville at 10 a.m., Kankakee at noon and South Holland at 1:30 p.m.

Preston previously has announced that he was considering entering the crowded Democratic field to replace incumbent U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly (IL-02).

Before his upset election to the 16th State Senate District in 2022, a race in which he was outspent 20-1 and opposed by Democratic party bosses, Willie worked as a union janitor, union carpenter and as a butcher to help support his wife and six children.

During his brief time in the Senate, he has been a leader fighting for justice reform, standing up for Black health and wellness, promoting apprenticeship programs, and tackling the high costs of living for seniors and working families. He recently urged Gov. J.B. Pritzker to commute the sentence of Larry Hoover Sr.

* Launch video

  15 Comments      


Consumers Are Getting Slammed With Higher Electric Rates – Don’t Add Fuel To The Fire With ROFR

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois consumers are feeling the heat, both from triple-digit temperatures and soaring electricity bills. Ameren customers are seeing 18–22% rate hikes. ComEd has customers paying as much as triple-digit increases.

And it’s going to get worse. In July, the PJM Capacity Auction hit another record high - a 22% increase on top of the record highs everyone just started paying. This will already lead to further rate increases next year!

As frustration heats up, lawmakers must choose: support competition that drives prices down or fan the flames of electricity inflation with “Right of First Refusal” (ROFR) legislation.

ROFR kills competition and boosts prices by giving incumbent utilities exclusive rights to build transmission lines. It’s so anti-competitive that both presidents - Biden and Trump - opposed it in 2020 and 2023.

As the ICC has said, “The Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) believes that competition among transmission developers spurs innovative results and helps control costs.”

ROFR would send electricity prices even higher. Springfield should focus on long-term strategies to lower electricity bills, not raise them. As ROFR may resurface this fall, legislators should reject it and stand up for cost-cutting competition that benefits consumers.

  Comments Off      


Reform group has ’serious concerns’ about Daley/LaHood remap proposal

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

The departure of Texas Democrats who spent two weeks in suburban Chicago evading a vote in their state on a Republican-backed redrawing of congressional district boundaries has not ended the conversation on partisan gerrymandering in Illinois.

A bipartisan pair of former high-level officials from President Barack Obama’s administration on Tuesday began their public push to stop state lawmakers from directly drawing their own district boundaries, a change they argue would mean more competitive elections and a General Assembly that better represents the will of the voters.

The “Fair Maps Illinois” proposal marks the third attempt since 2014 to reduce heavy partisan influence in how Illinois district boundaries are drawn following the once-per-decade census. Supporters argue the latest effort, which requires amending the state constitution, will be tailored to fit the narrow frame the Illinois Supreme Court has outlined for citizen-driven amendments after legal challenges struck down similar proposals in 2014 and 2016.

The group — being led by Chicago Democrat William Daley, Obama’s former chief of staff, and Peoria Republican Ray LaHood, Obama’s former transportation secretary — made its announcement just one day after Texas lawmakers headed home after their legislative walkout temporarily prevented the Texas GOP from jamming through a congressional remap and elevated gerrymandering as a national issue.

The Fair Maps Illinois effort wouldn’t affect the drawing of congressional maps and is focused just on the process of drawing district boundaries for the state House and Senate. Still, that issue has created substantial pushback statewide in the past, and backers acknowledge they once again anticipate having to fend off legal challenges.

* Change Illinois is not impressed…

As the leading organizations in the fight for Independent Maps in 2016 and opposing the gerrymandering of Illinois’ congressional and legislative districts in 2021, we know firsthand the egregious flaws and issues with Illinois’ current remapping process.

We have serious concerns with the approach and the language being proposed by the new Fair Maps Illinois initiative, which held its launch event earlier today. We are first and foremost troubled by the initiative’s lack of robust engagement during the development of the proposal with community organizations and leaders, who are most impacted by racial and partisan gerrymandering. That shortcoming has led us to question who will benefit if the proposal were to make it on the ballot and ultimately be enshrined in the Illinois Constitution.

The ballot language also misses key and necessary components to ensure the redistricting process is equitable and fair. The proposal is based on the existing flawed, politically-controlled process in our state constitution that leaves the fate of voters’ representation to a coin flip. Democracy is too important to be left up to a 50/50 chance of either major political party having complete control of the remap.

At a minimum, any changes to Illinois’ undemocratic redistricting process in Illinois should uphold and require the following principles:

    1. COMPLY WITH THE U.S. CONSTITUTION

    2. COMPLY WITH FEDERAL AND STATE VOTING RIGHTS ACT

    3. COMPRISE AND UPHOLD A NON-PARTISAN PROCESS

    4. MAXIMIZE VOTER CHOICE, ELECTORAL CANDIDACY AND COMPETITIVENESS

    5. RECOGNIZE AND PRESERVE COMMUNITIES OF INTEREST

    6. ACCURATELY INCLUDE PERMANENT RESIDENCE OF ALL ILLINOISANS

    7. COMPRISE AND UPHOLD A TRANSPARENT AND ACCOUNTABLE PROCESS

    8. PROVIDE FOR OPEN, FULL, AND MEANINGFUL PUBLIC PARTICIPATION

“The fight for Fair Maps has never been more important in light of what is happening across the country with states contemplating or starting mid-decade congressional gerrymanders to maximize partisan advantage,” said CHANGE Illinois executive director Ryan Tolley. “At the same time, we cannot abandon our principles and must ensure that reform efforts are rooted in the community organizations and leaders most affected by gerrymandering. Instead of trusting a politically-controlled process to cure gerrymandering, we should focus on empowering and protecting voters through expanding the Illinois Voting Rights Act.”

We will be convening community organizations and leaders to understand the impact this proposal would have on their ability to participate in the remap process and ensure that we collectively elevate those needs and concerns.

  27 Comments      


Tariffs Impact Everyone

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The shelves of Springfield’s Whimsy Tea are filled with hundreds of tea blends from 149 different countries around the globe. For a retail business whose main product is predominantly reliant on international trade, owner and founder Gordon Davis is facing challenges unlike any other for his business: the specter of rising tariffs. The increased costs associated with tariffs impact us all, and Gordon predicts from his retail experience that the trickle-down effects will keep rolling and rolling.

Retailers like Gordon enrich our economy and strengthen our communities, even during the uncertainty of increased tariff expenses. IRMA is showcasing some of the many retailers who continue to make Illinois work.

  Comments Off      


Cat got your tongue, General?

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I have been trying without any success since July 18 to obtain a quote from the Illinois attorney general’s office about this situation. WTTW is also having problems

The Adams County Sheriff’s Office has transferred at least two men into U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody, in apparent violation of the state’s TRUST Act and Way Forward Act, according to a lawyer who helped provide technical support for the legislation. Both men were later deported.

In a statement, Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin pointed to both men’s criminal charges — but in one case, the federal government dismissed its criminal complaint; in the other, he was never charged for the alleged crime that landed him in jail.

In addition, the Adams County Jail also has a contract with the U.S. Marshals Service that authorizes ICE to utilize the jail to detain people for $80 a day. Such contracts also appear to run afoul of state law.

The acts generally prohibit collaboration between Illinois law enforcement officers and federal immigration agencies.

“All of those things are violations,” Mark Fleming, associate director of federal litigation with the National Immigrant Justice Center, said of both the men handed off to ICE by Adams County and the jail contract.

WTTW News detailed these apparent violations to Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office, which oversees compliance and enforcement of the state’s sanctuary laws. The office did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

  22 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: As President Trump vows to eliminate mail in voting, Illinois election officials say fraud is ‘extremely rare’. WTTW

    - In Illinois, there are numerous security checks in place to ensure the accuracy and security of mail in voting, according to Matt Dietrich, a spokesperson for the state’s Board of Elections.
    - Voter fraud in Illinois is “extremely rare,” Dietrich said. Five people faced charges in DuPage County following the 2020 election, but certified instances of fraud remain few and far between.
    - Ryan Tolley, executive director at CHANGE Illinois, said the president’s false claims about the election could have the potential to depress voter turnout if people don’t feel confident in the system.
    - The Constitution makes the states the entities that determine the “time, place and manner” of elections, but does allow Congress to “make” or “alter” rules for federal elections.

* Related stories…

* Governor Pritzker will be in South Holland at 1:30 pm to give remarks at the groundbreaking ceremony for South Suburban College’s Allied Health & Nursing Center. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Unraveled | Eyes on the heartland: 404 Media recently revealed a Texas deputy ran a national search of an ALPR database to look for a woman who allegedly self-administered an abortion. Audit logs obtained by anonymous researchers also show how police in and outside Illinois have used the network of one particular ALPR manufacturer, Flock Safety, to assist ICE with immigration investigations. Both of these scenarios are prohibited under Illinois law. […] Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias has called upon Attorney General Kwame Raoul to investigate these incidents. The AG has not yet publicly commented on the issue.

* Pantagraph | Central Illinois activists, officials on guard as Supreme Court looks to reconsider same-sex marriage ruling: Justices are expected to consider this fall whether to take up the case of former Kentucky county clerk Kim Davis, who was jailed for six days in 2015 after refusing to issue a marriage license to a gay couple due to her religious beliefs. […] Channyn Parker, interim CEO of Equality Illinois, said this news is not surprising, considering how President Donald Trump built his candidacy on a promise to dismantle many hard-won fights for rights, particularly for the LGBTQIA+ community.

*** Statewide ***

* FOX Chicago | Illinois resists Trump DOJ request for sensitive voter data: In a letter dated Aug. 14, the head of the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division asked Illinois Election Board Executive Director Sarah Matthews for sensitive data on Illinois voters. The data includes “the registrant’s full name, date of birth, residential address, his or her state driver’s license number or the last four digits of the registrant’s social security number as required under the Help America Vote Act.” The letter came after the board responded to an initial request by sending limited information on voters that protects personal data. It’s the same information that the general public is able to purchase, and something utilized by political parties and action committees.

* Sun-Times | Duckworth heads to Japan to boost Illinois’ quantum chances in race against China: Sen. Tammy Duckworth landed in Japan early Wednesday on a trip aimed at bolstering Illinois’ relationships around quantum technology, supply chain and national security. And a huge focus is beating China in the race to create a functioning quantum computer. The trip marks Duckworth’s 12th trip to Asia and 14th congressional member delegation trip since 2018. Her trip began in South Korea with a meeting with SK Chairman Chey Tae-won, whose SK Group and its subsidiary companies announced plans to invest $52 billion in the U.S. in semiconductor, green energy and biotech projects.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | AG Raoul seeks court order blocking Trump Administration’s attempt to share private SNAP data: Attorney General Kwame Raoul, with 21 attorneys general and the state of Kentucky, filed a motion to block the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) from attempting to force states to turn over personal and sensitive information about millions of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) recipients while litigation challenging the legality of the demand continues. SNAP is a federally funded, state-administered program that provides billions of dollars in food assistance to tens of millions of low-income families across the country. SNAP applicants provide their private information to state agencies with the understanding, backed by long-standing state and federal laws, that their information will not be used for unrelated purposes.

*** Chicago ***

* ABC Chicago | CPD leaders were warned of ‘problematic patterns’ with tactical team’s traffic stops turned searches: The ABC7 I-Team first reported in May about this team of officers, including some who have been named in lawsuits against the city, and internal oversight complaints that led to discipline. Now, after filing more Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests with the city, the I-Team has learned the Civilian Office of Police Accountability (COPA), the independent city agency that investigates allegations of police misconduct, warned Chicago police leadership of “problematic patterns” involving the tactical unit’s traffic stops turned searches late last year.

* FOX Chicago | Chicago Public Schools board members split on proposed budget to close $734M deficit: “This isn’t a personal decision,” said elected board member Ellen Rosenfeld, who supports the budget. “There is a city TIF policy that requires a certain amount of TIF money to come to the schools. It’s not at the mayor’s whim; it’s not if we don’t do that, then this happens. There’s a TIF act under state law.” Rosenfeld criticized the CTU, which criticized former Mayor Lori Lightfoot for calling on CPS to pick up the pension payment. With Johnson, the CTU has changed its position 180 degrees.

* NBC Chicago | Mike Quigley among potential Chicago mayoral candidates mulling run: Among the candidates who are in the “maybe” column is long-time Rep. Mike Quigley, who has been in office since 2009 and who has been crisscrossing the city, talking to various groups, according to NBC 5 Political Reporter Mary Ann Ahern. […] Quigley also addressed transit funding issues, which come as the CTA embarks on a $3.6 billion project to extend the Red Line. “Should it cost a billion dollars for a mile for that extension? How much of that is our fault? It’s a quarter of that (cost) in Europe,” he said.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago mayor visits Southwest Side, as residents call for more help after repeated flooding: “The system itself became overwhelmed. The time the system was built, it was designed for a five-year rain, but we are getting more like 100-year rain,” Chicago Water Department Commissioner Randy Conner said. […] “We need the state as well as the federal government to provide emergency relief for homeowners as well as our businesses. We will not allow this disaster to turn into a tragedy,” Johnson said. “The more information we have the better prepared we will be to fight for the relief of our communities that desperately need them.”

* Sun-Times | Southwest Side residents frustrated after repeat flooding: ‘I hope the city helps us’: “The city failed to plan properly in the past, and we will continue to see damaging flooding incidents until there are some real structural changes and improvements to our infrastructure as a whole,” Johnson said. Shortly after taking office in 2011, then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel rejected calls to privatize Chicago’s water system and embarked on what he called a “great jobs bill.”

* ABC Chicago | Dog stolen from blind owner in Logan Square returned to owner, Chicago police say: Bam Bam he 14 year old dachshund was reportedly in his backyard near Monticello and Fullerton when two men took him on June 5. Chicago police said the 14 year old Dachshund was dropped off Tuesday night by two people at the 16th District Station on the Northwest Side. The dog appeared healthy and was reunited with his owner, who is blind.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Shaw Local | Joliet narrowly approves local grocery tax: The Joliet City Council voted 5-4 to keep in place a 1% grocery tax now being imposed by the state. Instead, Joliet will impose the tax starting Jan. 1 when the state repeals it. Joliet already gets the money imposed by the state grocery tax so by keeping it in place locally the city keeps the revenue source. […] For Joliet, the tax amounts to $3.7 million a year.

* Sun-Times | State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke selects new top assistant: Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke has selected a new top aide after her former first assistant abruptly stepped down Monday. Prosecutor Craig Engebretson has been named the new first assistant state’s attorney, O’Neill Burke announced in an email to staff. Engebretson has worked as an assistant state’s attorney in the office for over 20 years, and most recently served as chief of its Juvenile Justice Bureau. “I am honored to have him join our executive team and look forward to his continued leadership,” O’Neill Burke wrote.

* WGN | Parents demand fixes as School District 160 in Country Club Hills faces scrutiny over spending habits: School District 160 in Country Club Hills met Tuesday night for the first time this school year amid ongoing problems continuing to plague the district. The district is now under scrutiny as the Illinois Board of Education issued an audit for the last two fiscal years regarding grant money the district received. […] Parents had previously threatened not to enroll their child(ren) if Supt. Duane Meighan remained in his position.

* Daily Herald | West Dundee to charge residents with lead water service lines part of the replacement cost: The village board Monday voted 4-2 to charge residential water customers $5,000 of the approximately $13,000 it will cost to replace a line from the water main to the meter. Work is supposed to start in September on the first phase of a three-year, more than $7 million plan to replace 430 service lines.

* Shaw Local | Underwood decries Yorkville’s stance on fining, possibly jailing homeless people during town hall meeting: U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood said she was disappointed to hear that the Yorkville City Council recently approved an ordinance to fine and possibly jail homeless people who are sleeping in their cars overnight and camping on public property. “I think it just goes against our values,” Underwood, D-Naperville, said during a town hall meeting Aug. 18 at Oswego High School. “Where’s the compassion?

* Daily Herald | Curb your enthusiasm? Arlington Heights trustees like street makeover, but not $4.4M cost: “We just spent the first half of tonight’s meeting talking about taxes,” Trustee Tom Schwingbeck said late Monday, after the board approved a new streaming tax and extended a local grocery tax. “If we had the funding to do this where it wasn’t going to cost the village any money that would be one thing. But … seeing this project with approximately a $1 million gap that we’ve got to come up with — that’s hard to swallow.”

* Daily Herald | Suburbs regrouping from onslaught of recent storms: Similarly, the DuPage River in DuPage and Will counties, and Salt Creek in DuPage County have receded below flood stage. In Cary, Mayor Mark Kownick declared a state of emergency due to widespread flooding. Emergency management agencies in Cook and McHenry counties are collecting damage assessments.

* Sun-Times | Former Jan. 6 defendant gets 17 years for wrong-way crash that killed Skokie woman: His 17-year sentence consists of 14 years for the aggravated DUI and three years for fleeing a traffic stop before the crash. The 47-year-old Woods must serve 85% of the 14 year sentence and 50% of the three-year sentence. He’ll get credit for roughly 1,000 days already served. That puts him on track for release around early 2036, when he’d be 58.

*** Downstate ***

* WICS | Champaign City Council greenlights new $90K housing study to address market gaps and needs: The study will cost a little more than $90,000 and aims to take a fresh look at housing in Champaign. The city hasn’t conducted a housing study since 2010. City officials say the study will examine the city’s housing stock, identify gaps in the market, and explore opportunities for neighborhood development and affordable housing.

* WSIL | Community organizations address youth violence in Carbondale: Carbondale Police say more than a dozen young people attacked and damaged a homeless encampment, leaving one person injured. […] Carbondale United’s Executive Director Nancy Maxwell says they also need to work with the parents. “I know a lot of people focus on the children, but those children have parents, and if the parents are not getting the help, then we’re still losing the children,” Maxwell said.

* WTVO | ‘Misuse of public resources’: Roscoe Village President vetoes mural removal: Roscoe Village President Carol Gustafson vetoed the village board’s decision to paint over a mural on Main Street. Gustafson called the proposal a misuse of public resources and disrespectful to the artist during a board meeting on August 19. “The board’s decision to fund the removal of this public art on private property is, in my judgment, a misuse of public resources,” Gustafson explained. “This action diminishes the value of the artist’s work, disregards the opinions of many residents who supported the project and does not serve the broader public interest.”

* WGLT | New owner brings ‘growth mode’ to the Normalite newspaper – and optimism about the future of local news: Billy McMacken recently bought the Normalite Newspaper Group from longtime owner Ed Pyne. That included eight papers around Central Illinois, including the Normalite in Normal. “Ed’s done a good job of being successful with these papers, but there’s room to grow,” McMacken said. McMacken, a South Dakota native who now lives in Sycamore, Illinois, has worked in newspapers his whole professional life, in reporting, business and management roles. He last worked for News Media Corp., a chain of papers that shrunk while he was there and closed this summer after he left. He’s known Pyne for a few years and knew he was looking to retire – if he could find the right owner for the Normalite.

* WAND | Forsyth cannabis dispensary joint days away from opening doors: The Village of Forsyth has estimated the first year of tax revenue from Bud & Rita’s to be $500,000, which they will devote to new projects in the community. In addition to bringing more business to the community, the dispensary is also partnering with local businesses to mutually benefit.

* WAND | Springfield takes first step towards new ownership of Robin Roberts Stadium: The Springfield Park District currently owns the ballfield where the Lucky Horseshoes play. A nonprofit wants to take over the stadium and invest in much-needed upgrades. The City must enter into an intergovernmental agreement with the Park District, and then transfer the park to the nonprofit. Springfield City Council must vote on the proposal again next week before it can be finalized.

*** National ***

* WSJ | Trump administration to vet immigrants for ‘anti-American’ views: The Trump administration plans to scrutinize social media for “anti-American ideologies” when deciding to grant visa or green-card applications. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the primary agency in charge of legal immigration, said Tuesday that its officers should give significant weight to evidence that an immigrant “has any involvement in anti-American or terrorist organizations” when reviewing residency, work and visa applications.

* NYT | Texas Republicans Ready to Pass New Redistricting Maps, Just as Trump Wanted: Republicans in the Texas House were poised on Wednesday to approve an aggressively partisan redistricting plan, overcoming Democratic protests and delivering to President Trump the congressional map he called for. The redrawing of Texas’s maps, designed for Republicans to pick up five U.S. House seats, is likely only the first redistricting battle in what could be a bruising and protracted coast-to-coast clash over the coming months between states led by Republicans and those led Democrats.

* ProPublica | RFK Jr. Vowed to Find the Environmental Causes of Autism. Then He Shut Down Research Trying to Do Just That.: Erin McCanlies was listening to the radio one morning in April when she heard Robert F. Kennedy Jr. promising to find the cause of autism by September. The secretary of Health and Human Services said he believed an environmental toxin was responsible for the dramatic increase in the condition and vowed to gather “the most credible scientists from all over the world” to solve the mystery. Nothing like that has ever been done before, he told an interviewer. McCanlies was stunned. The work had been done. “That’s exactly what I’ve been doing!” she said to her husband, Fred.

* NYT | Trump Says Smithsonian Focuses Too Much on ‘How Bad Slavery Was’: President Trump accused the Smithsonian Institution on Tuesday of focusing too much on “how bad slavery was” and not enough on the “brightness” of America as his administration conducts a wide-ranging review of the content in its museum exhibits. […] Mr. Trump made the comments a week after the White House told the Smithsonian that its museums would be required to adjust any content that the administration finds problematic in “tone, historical framing and alignment with American ideals” within 120 days.

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Open thread

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

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* Catching up with the congressionals
* Trump sends National Guard to Memphis, says Chicago is ‘probably next’ — again
* Isabel’s morning briefing
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* Yesterday's stories

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