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Friday, Jun 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Turn it up

Writ in fire across the heaven, plain as black and white
Get prepared, there’s gonna be a party tonight

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Jun 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WCIA

The Supreme Court issued its decision on President Donald Trump’s executive order trying to ban birthright citizenship, and some Illinois officials are criticizing that ruling.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 along ideological lines the judiciary does not have the power to issue injunctions that affect everyone in the nation. […]

Ed Yohnka, the communications director of ACLU-IL, said the decision’s impact will create inefficiencies in federal courts.

“The court is suggesting that when people are challenging these unconstitutional orders by a president like the current president, that we have to do so in multiple jurisdictions across the country and consume lots of resources and lots of energy,” Yohnka said.

* WGLT

The electric automaker Rivian says it’s cutting over 100 manufacturing jobs to “improve operational efficiency” as it prepares to launch production of a new vehicle in Normal.

Rivian did not say exactly how many workers were laid off or what their duties were. They were salaried, not hourly, positions. The company said only that it represents about 1% of the total number of employees, which was 14,861 people as of Dec. 31. 1% of that would be around 148 workers.

“We have made the difficult decision to reduce a small number of our salaried manufacturing employees as part of an ongoing effort to improve operational efficiency for R2,” a Rivian spokesperson told WGLT. […]

Rivian has around 8,000 employees in Normal, where it makes electric trucks, vans and SUVs in a large manufacturing plant on the community’s west side. It’s McLean County’s second-largest employer, behind only State Farm.

* Politico

— In IL-08: Cook County Commissioner Kevin Morrison has been endorsed by the LGBTQ+ Victory Fund in his bid for Congress in the 8th District. The national organization works to elect LGBTQ+ people to public office.

— In IL-02: Adal Regis has been endorsed by David Axelrod, the political consultant and former adviser to President Barack Obama, according to a statement from Regis, who’s a policy expert.

— Ted Mason has been endorsed by Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi in his campaign for Cook County Commissioner in the 15th District. “Ted Mason is a hardworking, committed, and experienced public servant. From the time he was a staffer in my office through his tenure with Cook County, his dedication to serving the community has only strengthened,” Krishnamoorthi said in a statement.

*** Statewide ***

* Press Release | IDFPR Launches Another 18 License Types on New Licensing System: The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) announced today that 18 more professions are now available for licensure via the Department’s new online licensing system, CORE (Comprehensive Online Regulatory Environment). Today’s announcement marks the successful completion of CORE’s Phase 2.2, with all of Phase 2 set for completion in the coming weeks. The Department will announce when each part of Phase 2 is completed, including which professions are added to CORE.

* Illinois Leaks | 62 Counties, Clerks, and Treasures Named In Lawsuit Filed In Federal Court – Alleged Property Tax Sale Violations: We noted in a prior Shelby County article that Shelby County is one of 62 counties now being sued in federal court, thanks to the State of Illinois’ failing to address the illegal property tax sale laws in the state. Illinois is the only state in the United States that failed to correct the law after the Supreme Court’s ruling on property tax sales and seizures of property 2 years ago. It is our understanding from multiple county officials that the Attorney General is not going to assist individual counties in this lawsuit, so each is on their own. In some cases, this is going to put a real pinch on funds as not all State’s Attorneys are able to practice law in the Federal courts without certain prior authorizations. Hiring outside counsel to handle federal cases can get really expensive. While most county insurance covers these types of suits, there comes a point where insurance companies are going to raise rates or drop clients.

* WCIA | 46 deaths involving trains recorded in Illinois so far this year: The most recent two took place in Normal and Casey this past Tuesday. According to Operation Lifesaver, they’ve calculated 59 total deaths in the state involving trains last year. This year, there have already been 46. Champaign County Sheriff Dustin Heuerman said it’s not uncommon, but the problem needs to be addressed. He said most of the time, these deaths and incidents occur because people are in a rush, and one organization whose mission is to spread rail safety awareness agrees that’s part of the issue.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WAND | Illinois bill requiring paid break time for nursing mothers awaits Pritzker’s signature: Illinois employers are currently required to provide reasonable time to nursing mothers during the work day, but that time is not required to be paid. This plan clarifies that employee time pumping breastmilk has to be paid and that employees should not be required to use paid leave during breaks. “Some people want us to dictate a number of minutes or something,” said Rep. Katie Stuart (D-Edwardsville). “But when you have a very young baby, you nurse them more frequently during the day. You may need more time. It lessens possibly as the year goes by. So, the idea of getting to a definition of the specific number of minutes is probably impossible.”

* WAND | Safe gun storage bill arrives on governor’s desk despite Republican concerns: This legislation could require all guns to be put in a locked container if there are minors, at-risk people, or anyone ineligible to hold a FOID card nearby. Gun owners would be fined up to $1,000 if a minor or prohibited person gains access to a gun that is not safely stored. The fine could increase to $10,000 if the person kills someone with that firearm.

* Capitol News Illinois | National speculation helps ‘get more for the people of Illinois,’ Pritzker says: Pritzker was asked whether he would have run had Trump not been elected last year. “I think I would, but I have to say that in this moment, it feels like walking away is the wrong thing to do given who is in the White House and given how this administration is attacking people all across this country,” Pritzker said.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Molotov cocktails allegedly sparked fire in Austin that killed child, newspaper editor, alderperson says: West Side Ald. Emma Mitts (37th), whose ward includes the fire scene, flatly declared the fire an “arson.” Mitts told the Sun-Times it was triggered by “domestic violence” between a “young man and his girlfriend or ex-girlfriend.” “They had been arguing earlier and, the next thing you know, he was there at the building throwing a Molotov cocktail in the front, then one at the back door,” Mitts said.

* Crain’s | Nerds meet suits at Chicago quantum conference: Chicago is hosting a two-day coming-out party for quantum computing next month, featuring a high-profile roster of executives from industry and the Chicago corporate community. Those taking the stage include leaders from quantum companies that already have a presence in Chicago, such as PsiQuantum and IBM, as well as global technology heavyweights Google, Nvidia, Applied Materials and SK Group.

* Crain’s | Stockyards Cold brings modern refrigeration, and a dose of artistry, to Chicago’s former meatpacking district: The insulated warehouse will feature a 12-panel mural by Bolivian-born artist David Banegas on the building’s Ashland Avenue-facing wall depicting Chicago’s most iconic landmarks. The 100,000-square-foot cold storage space will be completed by late August, and if you walk past the site on 3815 S. Ashland Ave., you might catch Banegas painting the mural. The facility is designed to store food and other perishables in temperatures from -10 degree to 55 degrees and will be built on speculation, or spec, meaning it does not have a tenant or user lined up. Developer Karis Cold is actively marketing the building.

* Sun-Times | Chicago Sports Network removes episode of Bulls podcast — and won’t say why: An episode of “By The Horns” appeared in subscribers’ podcast libraries before it disappeared. CHSN confirmed pulling the show, which covered executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas’ contract extension. Both the network and team told the Sun-Times the Bulls had nothing to do with the episode’s removal. The Bulls did inquire with the network about the show’s format, such as whether it was going to be driven by opinion. The team was seeking information about the show, not questioning the show’s content. The Bulls monitor how they’re covered, and they were surprised to learn the episode had been removed because it wasn’t controversial.

* Block Club | Get Inked For A Good Cause At Chicago’s First-Ever ‘Tattoo Lady Fest’: Campione has now been inking Chicagoans and visitors for 11 years — seven of which have been as the shop owner of Good Omen Tattoo, 2009 W. Belmont Ave. To celebrate her many milestones in the business — and to uplift other talented women who tattoo — she’s hosting a first-of-its-kind convention called Tattoo Lady Fest this September. “Tattoo Lady Fest emerged from years of making connections with other women in tattooing,” Campione told Block Club. “I found power in the shared experience of navigating a male-dominated field.”

* Block Club | Black Yacht Weekend Attendees Call For Stricter Safety Measures After Chaotic And Dangerous Event: Last Saturday’s high winds and waves led a few companies to cancel their charters or remain docked. Some customers vented their frustration on social media while others, including high-profile influencers, expressed outrage over what they described as a lack of safety and organization. Hundreds of visitors were in town for Black Yacht Weekend, which followed the Juneteenth holiday. Now in its fifth year, the annual event draws young Black professionals and creatives from all over the country for a weekend of “unparalleled luxury” with ticketed events on land and water, from VIP yacht parties to rooftop extravaganzas. Those who don’t own boats typically rent one from private owners or charter companies, with groups paying in advance.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Evanston Now | Friendly face-off builds in state senate race: Rachel Ruttenberg and Patrick Hanley worked side-by-side as political organizers in their respective communities long before they were opponents, but next March will face off against each other to fill State Sen. Laura Fine’s seat in Springfield, as Fine looks to secure the Democratic nomination for a seat in the U.S. House. Both candidates recently sat down with Evanston Now to talk about their campaigns, policy positions and visions for their party, and while neither had anything bad to say about the other, they both do see daylight between them as they craft their pitch to voters.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Water rates to increase in Aurora starting in July: Aurora residents will likely see a slightly higher number on their water bill starting in July, after the City Council voted on Tuesday night to raise water rates by 6% for each of the next two years to account for operating and capital needs for the Aurora water and sewer system. For a household paying an average bi-monthly bill of $100.25, the rate increase would amount to about $6.60 more per bill in each of the next two years, according to the item voted on Tuesday. For seniors who qualify for the senior exemption, that increase would be an average of $1.64 per bill in each of the next two years, assuming, based on the city’s figures, that qualifying seniors use on average half the water that the average household uses.

* Naperville Sun | DuPage officials hoping user will emerge to renovate Oak Cottage in Naperville’s Greene Valley Forest Preserve: It was listed as one of the most endangered historic places in Illinois by preservationist organization Landmarks Illinois in 2023. That same year, the DuPage forest preserve district approved the Greene Valley Master Plan, which called for a study to document the house’s history and condition and create a timeline for partnering with a third party to propose a use and long-term maintenance strategy for the structure.

* Daily Herald | Aiming for success: Schaumburg teen becomes national champion in women’s shooting contest: Saanvi is no stranger to the shooting community. She began competing when she was 12, quickly making a name for herself as she claimed the Illinois state championships for 2022, 2023 and 2024. Saavni competes with Arlington International Airgun Club of Arlington Heights, where she is coached by Don Webber.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ‘Heartbreaking’: U of I Extension weighs in on potential SNAP cuts under ‘Big Beautiful Bill’: If the bill passes, U of I Extension said it would effectively mean the end for their SNAP-educational programs. For 30 years, these programs have been helping low-income communities in Illinois across 102 counties make better and healthier food choices. McCaffrey said the millions of dollars per year that come to Illinois would be going to zero, and that zero would mean no more SNAP education programs out of the University of Illinois Extension Office. These programs work with 1,800 community partners statewide, equipping more than a million people with food-related skills like stretching food money, reading nutrition labels and making healthy meals.

* IPM | How northern Illinois teachers are bringing indigenous stories into their classrooms for the first time: Donahoe is the history center’s executive director. That 180-year-old map shows the DeKalb County land stolen from Chief Shab-eh-nay which was returned to the Prairie Band Potawatomi just last year. This past school year, for the first time, Illinois schools were required to teach a unit on the experience and history of Native people in the state. So, when the news coincided with the launch of the state’s new indigenous curriculum requirements, Donahoe knew they had an opportunity to help teachers bring local history to their classroom. So, last summer, they hosted a multi-day training with teachers from every district in the county to show them how to teach with primary sources like the 1843 map. She says they also have old biographies about Shab-eh-nay and court records where the chief sues settlers for stealing his timber.

* WGLT | City of Bloomington will work to assuage massage therapist concerns over new ordinance: Bloomington’s city manager says the newly-passed massage business ordinance will do more than help shut down illicit businesses. “We’re also going to be helping the people within that establishment and there are groups out there that are willing to do that and want to do that, and so that’s going to be a great thing for the community,” Jeff Jurgens said on WGLT’s Sound Ideas. Jurgens said it is heartwarming to see the community focus on helping people who are being exploited.

* WCIA | Decatur man who brought gun to daughter’s school, made threats gets 2 years probation: Evans was charged with intimidation by threatening physical harm, disorderly conduct and unlawful use of a weapon — all felony counts — as well as a misdemeanor charge of violating the Firearm Concealed Carry Act. In May, Evans reached a plea deal with prosecutors and pleaded guilty to unlawful use of a weapon as well as the misdemeanor charge.

* WCIA | $180M Champaign Co. rape liability lawsuit settled out of court: That minor was 13 years old when she was sexually assaulted at the Champaign facility of The Pavilion Behavioral Health System in 2020. The victim’s mother, represented by St. Louis-based Simon Law, sued the following year and originally won $535 million in damages. The award was later reduced to $180 million on appeal and was settled out of court. Judge Bohm said in a prior court ruling that that the evidence was overwhelmingly against The Pavilion that their staff’s negligence allowed for the victim to be raped by another teenage patient.

* BND | Popular East St. Louis coach still doesn’t know if he’s been fired or not: “I just have no clue what’s going on,” Barry Malloyd said after leaving Wednesday’s East St. Louis School District 189 board meeting. He said he was told that the board would have a decision Wednesday if he would be fired from his job as the juvenile transition coordinator and athletic director at Mason Clark Middle School. As of Friday morning, nearly two days since that meeting adjourned — which was the second in as many days that involved discussion of his employment — Malloyd said he still hasn’t heard what the school board members decided.

* WSIL | Firework vendor shares concerns following Marion’s new ordinance on firework use: But new this year for Marion, consumer fireworks are no longer allowed. Now local firework vendors are worried about how that impacts their bottom line. Sky Thunder Fireworks says in order to follow the new ordinance, they had to set up shop outside of city limits. Kelly Whitecotton is a sales clerk for the store. “So we’re out in the countryside,” Whitecotton said.

*** National ***

* New Yorker | Did Lead Poisoning Create a Generation of Serial Killers?: Fraser thinks the master key is to be found in the fact that these serial killers disproportionately originated in the counties and milieu of her childhood. The area south and southwest of Seattle was home to massive ore-processing facilities, and she, her classmates, and her subjects were reared in their murky, particulate shadows. “Spare some string for the smelters and smoke plumes,” she writes of her crazy wall, “those insidious killers, shades of Hades.” The smelters caused a profusion of heavy metals in the region’s air and water, and toxins such as lead and arsenic were found in staggering concentrations in the blood of Tacoma’s postwar children. Some were merely dulled, or delinquent; a few became tabloid monsters. Bundy was the most famous figure in “a long line of outlandishly wanton necrophiliac killers who’ve lived, at one time or another, within the Tacoma smelter plume.” Fraser waxes in a self-consciously Lynchian register, with stygian and hallucinatory descriptions of the Pacific Northwest. In Tacoma, she writes, it was “as if someone had scratched through to the underworld and released a savage wave of sulfur.”

* San Francisco Chronicle | Disposable vapes may be more toxic than cigarettes, study finds: Using a lab device to simulate 500 to1,500 puffs per product, the UC Davis researchers found that metal concentrations increased with use. Leaded bronze components and degrading heating coils were identified as major sources of contamination. “When I first saw the lead concentrations, they were so high I thought our instrument was broken,” lead author Mark Salazar said in a statement.

* AP | Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s made promises about vaccines. Here’s what he’s done as health secretary: “I’m not going to substitute my judgment for science,” he said. Yet the Department of Health and Human Services under Kennedy has taken unprecedented steps to change how vaccines are evaluated, approved and recommended — sometimes in ways that run counter to established scientific consensus.

  3 Comments      


Question of the day

Friday, Jun 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It’s been kind of a grim day for some folks, so let’s try to lighten it up. From the Senate Democratic fundraiser last night at Navy Pier…

* The Question: Your own state political cocktail suggestions?

  31 Comments      


Today’s must-read

Friday, Jun 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Peter Nickeas, Casey Toner and Tom Schuba at the Chicago Sun-Times

A young Chicago cop had racked up more than a dozen misconduct complaints by the time authorities say he inadvertently shot and killed his partner, Krystal Rivera, when they confronted two armed men inside an apartment filled with guns and drugs.

Since joining the Chicago Police Department in December 2021, Officer Carlos A. Baker has faced three suspensions and two reprimands, records show, one stemming from a complaint that he failed to arrest a home invader on his first shift working the street.

It was among five complaints he accrued as a probationary officer, when the department could have summarily fired him because he had few union protections.

During his probationary period, Baker also was accused of flashing a gun at a woman he’d met online while she was on a date with another man at a North Side bar. The woman later refused to cooperate with investigators, and Baker faced no discipline, records show.

Baker’s record of complaints is unusual among Chicago police officers. Only 5% of Chicago police had six or more misconduct complaints from 2018 through 2023, according to data collected by the Invisible Institute. […]

In April, the Illinois Answers Project and the Chicago Sun-Times reported that the team oversaw a botched police gun buyback at St. Sabina Church in December 2023. One weapon that had been turned in, a .45-caliber Glock 21 handgun, was later stolen from a room filled with cops at the tactical team office while the guns were being inventoried. The Glock was then used in a series of shootings. Police found it a year later on a 16-year-old boy. […]

Records released by the police show Rivera had been a key witness to the theft of the Glock. The records make clear that she did not do anything wrong and was “not accused of any misconduct.” They show Rivera diligently searched for the gun in her colleagues’ book bags after she learned it was missing.

The police department reopened the internal investigation of the gun’s theft after the Sun-Times and the Illinois Answers Project asked about the incident.

Go read the rest.

  9 Comments      


Last year’s Administrative Procedure Act opinion appears to remain intact after today’s Supreme Court ruling (Updated x2)

Friday, Jun 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here for the ruling. Some background

In a highly anticipated ruling on Friday, the Supreme Court put a partial end to the use of nationwide injunctions from federal courts limiting the decisions of the executive branch.

The 6-3 ruling, written by Coney Barrett, stemmed from Trump’s push to end birthright citizenship, which dictates that everyone born in the U.S. is a citizen, regardless of their parents’ immigration status.

But the decision could have much broader implications, as Trump has long claimed that the courts are overstepping their authority by handing down “nationwide” orders that have temporarily blocked some of his policies.

In her opinion, Coney Barrett wrote: “Some say that the universal injunction ‘give[s] the Judiciary a powerful tool to check the Executive Branch.’ … But federal courts do not exercise general oversight of the Executive Branch; they resolve cases and controversies consistent with the authority Congress has given them. When a court concludes that the Executive Branch has acted unlawfully, the answer is not for the court to exceed its power, too.”

* From the ruling

The plaintiffs allege that the Executive Order violates the Fourteenth Amendment’s Citizenship Clause, §1, and §201 of the Nationality Act of 1940. In each case, the District Court entered a “universal injunction”—an injunction barring executive officials from applying the Executive Order to anyone, not just the plaintiffs. And in each case, the Court of Appeals denied the Government’s request to stay the sweeping relief. The Government argues that the District Courts lacked equitable authority to impose universal relief and has filed three nearly identical emergency applications seeking partial stays to limit the preliminary injunctions to the plaintiffs in each case. The applications do not raise—and thus the Court does not address—the question whether the Executive Order violates the Citizenship Clause or Nationality Act. Instead, the issue the Court decides is whether, under the Judiciary Act of 1789, federal courts have equitable authority to issue universal injunctions.

And the 6-3 majority did, indeed, rule that no such authority exists.

* However, this is also in the majority ruling

Nothing we say today resolves the distinct question whether the Administrative Procedure Act authorizes federal courts to vacate federal agency action. See 5 U. S. C. §706(2) (authorizing courts to “hold unlawful and set aside agency action”).

* Justice Kavanaugh’s concurrence

And in cases under the Administrative Procedure Act, plaintiffs may ask a court to preliminarily “set aside” a new agency rule. 5 U. S. C. §706(2); see, e.g., West Virginia v. EPA, 577 U. S. 1126 (2016); see also Corner Post, Inc. v. Board of Governors, 603 U. S. 799, 826–843 (2024)

* Why is this important? Because, as I explained to subscribers in April, the Administrative Procedure Act is at the core of most of the lawsuits filed by attorneys general against the Trump administration.

Some context from last year

In a major ruling, the Supreme Court on Friday cut back sharply on the power of federal agencies to interpret the laws they administer and ruled that courts should rely on their own interpretion of ambiguous laws. The decision will likely have far-reaching effects across the country, from environmental regulation to healthcare costs.

By a vote of 6-3, the justices overruled their landmark 1984 decision in Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, which gave rise to the doctrine known as the Chevron doctrine. Under that doctrine, if Congress has not directly addressed the question at the center of a dispute, a court was required to uphold the agency’s interpretation of the statute as long as it was reasonable. But in a 35-page ruling by Chief Justice John Roberts, the justices rejected that doctrine, calling it “fundamentally misguided.” […]

Chevron deference, Roberts explained in his opinion for the court on Friday, is inconsistent with the Administrative Procedure Act, a federal law that sets out the procedures that federal agencies must follow as well as instructions for courts to review actions by those agencies. The APA, Roberts noted, directs courts to “decide legal questions by applying their own judgment” and therefore “makes clear that agency interpretations of statutes — like agency interpretations of the Constitution — are not entitled to deference. Under the APA,” Roberts concluded, “it thus remains the responsibility of the court to decide whether the law means what the agency says.”

From that landmark 2024 opinion

And rather than safeguarding reliance interests, Chevron affirmatively destroys them by allowing agencies to change course even when Congress has given them no power to do so.

* NBC News picked up on the use of the APA against President Trump back in February

Lawyers challenging President Donald Trump’s aggressive use of executive power in the courts are turning to a familiar weapon in their armory: an obscure but routinely invoked federal law called the Administrative Procedure Act.

While lawsuits challenging such provocative plans as ending birthright citizenship and dismantling federal agencies raise weighty constitutional issues, they also claim Trump failed to follow the correct procedures as required under the wonky 1946 statute. […]

Known in abbreviated form as the APA, the law allows judges to throw out federal agency actions that are “arbitrary and capricious” on various grounds, including failing to articulate why the agencies are changing policy.

* Isabel and I went through Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s press releases and court filings at the time to see which legal actions invoked the Administrative Procedure Act. There was a lot

* But, as Justice Sotomayor’s dissent explains, the majority failed to see that the Administrative Procedure Act is at the core of the universal injunctions beginning in the third quarter of the 20th Century

The relative absence of universal injunctions against the United States before the late 20th century, moreover, reflects constitutional and procedural limitations on judicial power, not equitable ones. Until the enactment of the Amendments to the Administrative Procedure Act in 1976, sovereign immunity barred most suits against the Federal Government. Id., at 14–15 (citing G. Sisk, Litigation With the Federal Government §4.10(b), p. 339 (2016)). Officer suits against Cabinet officials before that point, moreover, could be brought only in Washington, D. C., due to limits on personal jurisdiction and venue that existed at the time. Brief for Legal Historians in No. 24A884 as Amici Curiae 15–16. The later emergence of universal injunctions against the United States followed the removal of those barriers and the expansion of federal actions and laws. The rise of universal injunctions therefore represents equity’s essential adaptation to modern governance.

Calvinball is essentially being alleged in this dissent.

…Adding… Governor JB Pritzker…

“Stripping birthright citizenship from people born in this country goes against rights guaranteed in the Constitution. We must stand against unconstitutional actions and stand up for the fundamental rights granted to people in the United States of America. Today’s Supreme Court ruling is a dangerous sign that Donald Trump is further consolidating power and putting his own interest above the needs of the American people. As Trump and his allies continue to attack the Rule of Law and undermine the foundations of the United States Constitution, Illinois will stay true to who we are: we are the Land of Lincoln, and we will forcefully defend the freedoms and rights of our people.”

…Adding… Attorney General Kwame Raoul…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul today issued the following statement after the U.S. Supreme Court issued an opinion in the ongoing multistate lawsuit against the Trump administration’s executive order purporting to redefine birthright citizenship to exclude certain children born to non-citizen parents.

“Even after today’s decision, birthright citizenship – a rule that has governed our country since the end of the Civil War – remains the law in Illinois. President Trump’s attempt to strip American babies of citizenship is a flagrantly unconstitutional move that disregards the 14th Amendment and the principle of separation of powers upon which our government was founded.

“As a birthright citizen myself, this is a deeply personal issue for me. As our case continues, I will continue to fight alongside our coalition in challenging President Trump’s executive order and am confident that, under the guidance provided today by the U.S. Supreme Court, our arguments for complete relief will prevail.”

…Adding… Click here for the amended complaint

  15 Comments      


Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?

Friday, Jun 27, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

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

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

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

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It’s just a bill

Friday, Jun 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* During spring session, the House failed to pass one of Governor Pritzker’s priorities that would restricted the use of cellphones in classrooms. IPM Newsroom

Under Senate Bill 2427, each school district would create their own policy for banning cell phones in class by the start of the 2026 school year.

“In conversations with educators from around the state, there is one thing most commonly cited as an impediment to classroom learning: cell phones,” Pritzker said.

Pritzker cited a study from the Pew Research Center that found 72 percent of high school teachers say cell phones are a major problem in their classrooms.

Pritzker said students would be allowed to use smartphones in the classroom in certain circumstances, like if a student monitors a medical condition with their phone.

* Earlier this month, the Tribune took a closer look at why the bill didn’t pass

A coalition of Illinois House lawmakers blocked the [cellphone ban] measure when it came to the House late in the session over concerns about unequal disciplinary impacts, according to bill sponsor, Democratic state Rep. Michelle Mussman of Schaumburg.

Concerns about enforcement disproportionately affecting Black and brown students became more pronounced as lawmakers reviewed the phone restriction alongside another bill limiting police from ticketing students for minor misbehavior, according to Mussman. Legislators were hesitant to pass a statewide school mandate while also debating a measure meant to scale back school discipline practices, she said.

Rep. Curtis Tarver, a Chicago Democrat and a member of the Black caucus, told the Tribune in February he worried about the “unintended consequences” of a phone ban, including inequitable enforcement. […]

In the end, negotiations around the measure came down to a “dance” between ensuring local school boards had control over their own policies while also protecting students from “inequitably applied” policies, Mussman said. Moreover, representatives were unsure how to implement guidance on “how a phone might be returned if it was confiscated, or what to do if anything was lost or broken,” she added.

* Even so, Chalkbeat Chicago’s Samantha Smylie reported this week that sponsors say the bill isn’t completely dead

State Sen. Cristina Castro, the chief sponsor of the bill, said in an interview with Chalkbeat that she did not hear strong opposition to the bill, but believes the language of the bill needed some “fine-tuning.” […]

Bryen Johnson, director of political activities for the Illinois Federation of Teachers, one of the largest unions in the state, said the union generally supports the idea of removing cellphones from classrooms so students can remain focused on their lessons. But the union did not file a witness slip in support of the bill because of unanswered questions, including one regarding liability. […]

State Rep. Michelle Mussman, a House sponsor of the bill and chair of the House’s education policy committee, said in an email to Chalkbeat that lawmakers brought up several concerns such as access to phones in an emergency situation, who would be responsible if a phone was stolen or broken, and enforcement of a policy and whether it would be disproportionately applied to students of color.

Mussman said negotiations over the bill will continue over the summer. Castro says that she and Mussman are committed to getting the bill over the finish line. The bill could return during the fall veto session.

Thoughts?

  14 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Jun 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* No song today because I want you to watch the absolute best sheep dog ever…


Nelson looks like Oscar when he was a little puppy.

* Please keep your comments Illinois-centric. Thanks.

  14 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Jun 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker hints at possible running mate in reelection bid during East Peoria stop. WGLT

    - After speaking to a crowd of supporters at the Workforce Sustainability Center at Illinois Central College in East Peoria, the two-term Democratic governor told a group of reporters who may be under consideration for his next choice for a running mate.

    - “There are some qualified people across the state. There’s one right behind me,” Pritzker said, a nod to state Rep. Jehan Gordon-Booth, a Peoria Democrat who serves as Assistant Majority Leader in the Illinois House and who introduced the governor at the rally.

    - “When you win, you gotta represent everybody and I know Jehan Gordon-Booth has done that in her job as state representative,” Pritzker said. “Who would not want Jehan Gordon-Booth as a leader in this state?”

* Related stories…

* The governor is wrapping up his statewide tour today with a 10:30 am stop at SWIC’s Manufacturing Training Academy in Belleville, followed by a 2 pm visit to IBEW Local 702 in West Frankfort.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* A City That Works | It’s time to start enforcing the rules on the CTA: Unsurprisingly, the CTA and City of Chicago’s approach to-date on this issue has been woeful. The CTA has spent more than $100M on unarmed security guards, who appear to be instructed not to confront bad behavior, and generally seem to stand around on their phones. And while the CTA is also paying for CPD overtime, sworn CPD officers on the Public Transportation Section are down by almost a third from 188 in May 2020 to 132 in May 2025. Communications are also woefully inadequate. There is still not a way to discreetly alert CTA or CPD personnel about an issue. In a fraught situation on a train, riders are expected to put themselves at risk by either calling 911 or pressing an emergency button and speaking to an operator via loudspeaker. Neither is a particularly appealing prospect while being trapped in a small metal can with someone who appears to be a threat to others.

* WBUR | Reverse Course: Life after the levee breach in Dogtooth Bend, Illinois: In 2016, the Mississippi River punched a hole in the Len Small levee, built to protect farmland along an S-shaped curve in the river known as Dogtooth Bend. That hole was never repaired. Here & Now’s Chris Bentley reports on how some farmers in the area have had to give up their land. And, John Ruskey calls the Mississippi River “a creative force” that sculpts the landscape and rejuvenates the people who experience it up close. But climate change is making that force stronger and more destructive. Bentley took a canoe ride with Ruskey and reports on the future of the river.

* NPR Illinois | Nursing home lobbying group director says possible cut to Medicaid is “deeply troubling”: Ron Nunziato is the senior director of policy for the Healthcare Council of Illinois. It’s a lobbying group whose members represent about 70 percent of the Medicaid occupied beds in the state. He said the uncertainty of how much federal funding the state will receive for Medicaid puts nursing home operators in a bind. “We don’t know what DC will do, and we don’t know how that will impact the state,” Nunziato said. “If they (Congress makes) cuts to Medicaid, the state could look at all Medicaid providers and make a cut to them,” he said. “They could take more from one pot than they do another. And so, it’s deeply troubling to us in this industry.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* CBS Chicago | AIDS Garden Chicago honors trailblazer and former Illinois Rep. Greg Harris: With just days left in Pride Month, AIDS Garden Chicago took the time Thursday to honor former Illinois state representative and longtime LGBTQ+ advocate Greg Harris. On Thursday afternoon, a plaque dedicated to Harris was unveiled at the entrance to the garden, located near the south end of Belmont Harbor. The space memorializes the early days of Chicago’s HIV/AIDS epidemic.

* Tribune | Apparently fake clemency letter for Gangster Disciples founder Larry Hoover sent to Gov. JB Pritzker: At first glance, the petition, which was stamped as received by the governor’s office on June 16, might seem to be a legitimate plea from Hoover himself, using similar language about atonement and redemption that the imprisoned gang leader has used in numerous previous requests for parole and clemency from the courts. But a closer inspection revealed some telltale signs that the document, first obtained by the Tribune through a public records request, is likely a fake. For one, it was purportedly sent June 5 from the “supermax” prison in Florence, Colorado, where Hoover, 74, had been housed for the past three decades. But Hoover had in fact been released from that facility days prior due to Trump’s clearing of his federal sentence on May 29.

* WEBQ | Windhorst Announces Re-election Run for 117th House District Seat: Windhorst has risen through the ranks of House Republican leadership to be selected House Republican Floor Leader, leading debate and holding liberal Democrats accountable for radical leftist legislation. “I have voted against legislation that restricts 2nd Amendment Rights, dangerous legislation that ends cash bail and punishes police officers, all measures that expand taxpayer-funded abortion services, and I’ve fought to end Illinois’ Sanctuary State law that has cost taxpayers billions,” Windhorst said. “Liberal Democrats have gone too far in pushing our state and country’s politics to the left, and I’m fighting back.”

*** Chicago ***

* The Triibe | Who’s behind those texts slamming Mayor Johnson and some progressive alders for their ‘snap curfew’ vote?: The texts are being sent out by the Urban Center PAC, a political action committee launched in 2024 by former Chicago Public Schools CEO and failed mayoral candidate Paul Vallas. Juan Rangel, a former Latiné charter school operator, leads the Urban Center PAC. He’s also the CEO of The Urban Center nonprofit.

* Tribune | Interim CPS chief Macquline King addresses first school board meeting, cites $730 million deficit as top priority: “Families, principals and teachers are counting on us to open schools in August with confidence and clarity,” King said. “I am committed to maintaining momentum and ensuring a smooth start to the school year.” King — who stepped into the position earlier this month — inherits a district long-underfunded by the state and plagued by years of financial woes. She previously served as the city’s senior director of educational policy.

* Sun-Times | Chicago cop who inadvertently shot and killed his partner has a lengthy disciplinary record in a short career: Since joining the Chicago Police Department in December 2021, Officer Carlos A. Baker has faced three suspensions and two reprimands, records show, one stemming from a complaint that he failed to arrest a home invader on his first shift working the street. […] During his probationary period, Baker also was accused of flashing a gun at a woman he’d met online while she was on a date with another man at a North Side bar. The woman later refused to cooperate with investigators, and Baker faced no discipline, records show.

* WTTW | Trump Administration Restores $1M in Frozen Anti-Terrorism Funds to Chicago, City Officials Announce:
But it is more likely that President Donald Trump’s decision to join Israel’s war with Iran prompted a reconsideration of the decision to freeze the funds, Richardson Lowry said. A bulletin issued Monday by the Department of Homeland Security warned “the ongoing Iran conflict is causing a heightened threat environment in the United States” and “the ongoing Israel-Iran conflict could contribute to US-based individuals plotting additional attacks.” Perhaps that warning “compelled them to revisit the notion of holding back funds that lend themselves to protecting citizenry throughout the United States,” Richardson Lowry said.

* Inside Climate News |How Do You Escape a Heat Wave When You Have Nowhere to Go?: Trivedi was one of a dozen Chicagoans seeking refuge at the Garfield Community Service Center, a resource hub doubling as one of the city’s designated cooling areas as the atmospheric heat dome encasing much of the country this week drove temperatures dangerously high. But the center would close at 5 that afternoon. Staffers there try to coordinate shelter beds for those who need them, but demand has been high. “You need to wait all the day and you’re not sure the beds are available or not available,” Trivedi said. Often, he ends up sleeping outside. He hoped he’d have more luck that night.

* Block Club | South Side Alderman’s Push To Rename West Chatham Park Backfires: ‘Mistakes Happen’: The process of renaming a South Side Park after Chicago Bulls star Derrick Rose — a suggestion that’s rankled some neighbors — appears to have unraveled before it even began. Ald. William Hall (6th), who initiated the renaming process, said he made a “clerical error” and has withdrawn his request to the Chicago Park District. […] “There was an error, and guess what? We’re human. And guess what? Mistakes happen,” Hall said at the meeting. “So in my interpretation of what I needed to do, I pushed the wrong button, and clearly it made little waves that it should not have made. But it’s good to know that we’re engaged.”

* Crain’s | New York firm buys distressed Wacker Drive tower at massive discount: A venture of Great Neck, N.Y.-based Kohan Retail Investment Group paid close to $45 million last week for the 65-story office tower at 311 S. Wacker Drive, according to sources familiar with the deal. The sale price for the 1.3 million-square-foot building is a staggering discount from the $302 million it traded for in 2014 to an affiliate of Chicago-based Zeller Realty Group and Chinese investor Cindat Capital Management.

* Crain’s | Indicted ex-Loretto exec pushes his health ventures — while facing a federal arrest warrant: Today, a press release purporting to be from Ahmed commented on “President Donald J. Trump’s recent remarks about conditions in Chicago,” saying Ahmed agreed there are “increasing concerns around public safety, homelessness, and the effectiveness of city-level policies.”The release also had Ahmed weighing in on sanctuary city policies and a call for “long-term, data-driven solutions and increased transparency in local decision-making.” It touts Ahmed’s involvement with reopening medical facilities and supporting job training and housing.

* Tribune | At Albizu High School, migrant grads confront a future shaped by US policy: Federal immigration crackdowns have cast an even longer shadow over their plans. Despite the staff at their high school encouraging them to carry themselves with dignity, their path after graduation remains unclear. Amid it all, Juan and his friends from Albizu — George Pérez Pedraza, also from Mexico, and Jhonnalber “Jupiter” Mejías-Monteverde, from Venezuela — have found comfort in each other. Over the past few months, they’ve shared calls over heartbreak, celebrated birthdays at the beach on Lake Michigan and dreamt of forming a band.

* Tribune | Chicago closes streets early to fix buckling pavement ahead of NASCAR race: On Wednesday evening, the city shut down Balbo Drive from Columbus Drive to Michigan Avenue, which was originally scheduled to close Friday. It also closed Columbus from Jackson Drive to Roosevelt Road — five days ahead of schedule — to allow work crews to repair the pavement buckle. The rest of the course is “holding up fine” and the street closings ahead of the July Fourth weekend race event will remain on schedule, a NASCAR spokesperson said Thursday.

* WGN | No fireworks in Chicago for Fourth of July holiday: Madeline Long, director of communication for the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs & Special Events, told WGN News last year that “as has been the case for several years, the City does not host fireworks for the July 4th holiday.” WGN News recently compiled a list of Fourth of July fireworks displays and festivities spanning the Chicagoland area. Readers may view the entire list by clicking here.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Injustice Watch | Family sues Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart over ‘brutal’ jail death: The 73-page suit filed last week in the Northern District of Illinois by the stepfather of Cory Ulmer, who was 41 when he died, accuses Dart of having a “pattern and practice of covering up or turning a blind eye to the use of excessive force.” An additional 30 county employees are named defendants in the lawsuit.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Kaneland School District files lawsuit against Sugar Grove over Crown development’s TIF district: According to an original proposal, 10% of the TIF funds were to go to the village for any improvements it needs to make in the area, but, in August, then-Sugar Grove Village President Jennifer Konen said Crown had agreed to give another 10% of the funds to be distributed among the other taxing bodies, of which Kaneland is expected to get $26 million. The original TIF agreement also included payments from TIF district funds to offset the cost of schooling for students living in the new housing at the development.

* ABC Chicago | South suburban property owner finally gets house back, says squatters lived in his home for months: “They left it an absolute mess,” Goodman said. “They’ve destroyed the house. It needs at least $25,000.” Goodman is glad that the family who moved into his property is gone, but he is not celebrating. “Why? Because now I need money to fix the house, and it’s going to take several months for me to put it on the market,” Goodman said.

* Shaw Local | Despite delays, Morrison hospital’s $14M expansion stays on budget and on track: Work on a $14 million two-story addition to Morrison Community Hospital continues despite slight delays. The project was expected to finish in January 2026, but Morrison Community Hospital CEO Pam Pfister said this week that utility work delays have pushed the completion date to May 2026.

* Crain’s | NU sued over suicide of scientist targeted in federal China probe: The estate of a Northwestern University professor who died last year is suing the school, blaming it in part for her decision to take her life after she was evicted from her lab and hospitalized following a government investigation of her and other Chinese American scientists. Jane Wu was a tenured faculty member at NU’s Feinberg School of Medicine in neurology, molecular biology and genetics. She and other scientists of Chinese descent were targeted by a Justice Department investigation known as the China Initiative during the first Trump administration that looked into undisclosed ties to Beijing.

* Daily Southtown | Art becomes part of the nature mission at Will County forest preserves: Throughout the year, the district’s visitors centers host exhibits of work by artists local and national, connecting people to nature in ways they may not have expected. “It’s another way of introducing our preserves and nature centers,” said Heather Van Zyl, facility supervisor for Plum Creek Nature Center in Crete Township. “There are visitors and community members who sometimes find their way to us for the first time because of an artist or an exhibition,” she explained. “They say, ‘Now that I know you’re here, I see all these trails and all these exhibits. I’m going to bring my family.’ … It can be a really great introduction.”

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | ‘Outpouring of support’ for Humane Society in Normal after A/C breaks during heat wave: The organization said they now have enough fans and other supplies after donations poured in from Veterans Maintenance Solutions, R.P. Lumber Company, Home Depot, Meijer and individual community members. They urged those still wanting to help to make a monetary donation in the event that their air conditioning unit needs to be replaced.

* 25News Now | Peoria Mayor Rita Ali delivers 2025 State of the City Address: She said Peoria is in a strong financial position, where of its almost $275 million budget, the city has $136 million in reserves and more than $49 million in the general fund. “We continue to pay down our general obligation debt,” Ali said. “Fortunately, we don’t have the excessive financial shortfalls that many cities are currently experiencing.”

* WVIK | Illinois Housing Development Authority awards Aledo ten years of tax credits to fund housing project: Economic Growth Corporation President and CEO Brian Hollenback discusses the tax credits and what the century-old school redevelopment into housing will bring to the city of Aledo.

* Illinois Times | City Council has a tiff over TIFs: The Springfield City Council engaged in a heated debate Tuesday over grants for Tax Increment Financing (TIF) districts. Frustration mounted as supporters of the ordinances questioned why their fellow council members sought further discussion on this initiative but not others, suggesting that it came down to the demographics of those who would benefit from the money. TIF districts can be established by cities in areas that have been identified as economically stagnant or unlikely to attract private investment. TIFs are generally intended to revitalize those areas by funding public and private redevelopment projects and attracting private investment.

* 25News Now | Residents can text their city government through service coming to Pekin: The service, called “TextMyGov,” allows residents to send text messages to their local government and receive automated assistance 24/7. This will allow citizens to engage more with their city’s government and will help residents find information and report issues via text message. Residents will be able to access information using keywords such as “AGENDA” or “GARBAGE” and to report issues using keywords like “TREE DOWN” or “POTHOLE.”

* Illinois Times | Route 66: Monetizing the mother road: An exhibit of famed Route 66 nomad hippie artist Bob Waldmire’s work will open June 28 at the Pharmacy Gallery and Art Space and remain on display through December 2026. Then a quarter-mile stretch of original Route 66 concrete road at Carpenter Park will be uncovered and transformed into a trail with wayside exhibits, with a ribbon-cutting ceremony set for July 11. On the 100th birthday itself, a big bash will happen at Route 66 Motorheads Bar and Grill, with visits from what Springfield Convention and Visitors Bureau director Scott Dahl promises as “high-end” entertainment acts and other, yet-to-be-named dignitaries.

* 25News Now | Peoria Blues & Heritage Music Festival announces second round of artists: Taj Farrant, Buckwheat Zydeco Jr., Maurice John Vaughn with Freddie Dixon & John Watkins, FrankBang and Brandon Santini join the lineup, including Ruthie Foster. Rock legend Gov’t Mule, blues rocker ZZ Ward, and Tommy Castro & the Painkillers. The music festival is Aug. 29-30 along the Peoria Riverfront. The festival will feature late-night events at Kenny’s Westside Pub, local food, craft beer and art vendors.

*** National ***

* WaPo | Trump administration is preparing to challenge budget law, U.S. officials say: In both internal communications and interviews, more than two dozen current and former employees across multiple agencies said the administration appears to be readying to push the boundaries of the law meant to prevent the president from unilaterally overturning spending decisions made by Congress. Key White House aides have long argued that the law is an unconstitutional limit on presidential power and suggested that they will seek court rulings to overturn it, which could allow the White House to determine which spending to carry out.

* Wired | ‘They’re Not Breathing’: Inside the Chaos of ICE Detention Center 911 Calls: A WIRED investigation into 911 calls from 10 of the nation’s largest immigration detention centers found that serious medical incidents are rising at many of the sites. The data, obtained through public records requests, show that at least 60 percent of the centers analyzed had reported serious pregnancy complications, suicide attempts, or sexual assault allegations. Since January, these 10 facilities have collectively placed nearly 400 emergency calls. Nearly 50 of those have involved potential cardiac episodes, 26 referenced seizures, and 17 reported head injuries. Seven calls described suicide attempts or self-harm, including overdoses and hangings. Six others involved allegations of sexual abuse—including at least one case logged as “staff on detainee.”

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, Jun 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Friday, Jun 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Jun 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Jun 27, 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

Thursday, Jun 26, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WCIA

A professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign said the state is behind when it comes to affordable housing.

A study co-authored by labor professor Robert Bruno estimated the state is short more than 220,000 homes right now. He said Illinois would need to build 227,000 homes in the next five years to close the gap. That’s double the current rate.

Bruno said there are two main factors causing the shortage.

“You have on one hand a double digit increase in in the cost of a of a single family home, while at the same time, for a number of reasons, you see suppressed construction of those new family homes,” Bruno said.

* Shaw Local

Four-term state Rep. Dan Ugaste, R-Geneva, said he is exploring a possible run for Illinois governor, even as Gov. JB Pritzker announced Thursday morning he would seek a third term. […]

For the moment, Ugaste said he is trying to decide whether there is a pathway for him to run for governor.

“I need enough political support throughout the state and enough financial support to get elected,” Ugaste said. “Him running isn’t going to deter me.”

* Illinois Department of Employment Security…

The unemployment rate decreased in all twelve metro areas for the year ending May 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 four metropolitan areas, leading to consecutive months with year-over-year growth: Champaign (4 consecutive months); Chicago (11 consecutive months); Elgin (9 consecutive months); Springfield (19 consecutive months). […]

The metro areas which posted the largest over-the- year decreases in total nonfarm jobs were the Davenport-Moline-Rock Island MSA (IL Section) (-2.8%, -2,500), the Kankakee MSA (- 1.8%, -800), the Bloomington MSA (-1.7%, -1,600), and the Decatur MSA (-1.7%, -800). The metro areas which had the largest over-the- year percentage increases in total nonfarm jobs were the Champaign-Urbana MSA (+3.0%, +3,500), the Chicago Metro Division (+0.5%, +17,400), the Elgin Metro Division (+0.3%, +1,000), and the Springfield MSA (+0.3%, +300). Industries that saw job growth in the majority of the twelve metro areas included: Private Education and Health Services (ten areas); Mining and Construction and Financial Activities (seven areas each).

The metro areas with the largest unemployment rate decreases were the Champaign-Urbana MSA (-1.0 point to 3.2%), the Elgin Metropolitan Division (-0.9 point to 3.6%), and the Lake County Metro Division (-0.9 point to 3.6%). The Chicago Metro Division reported a decrease of -0.2 point to 4.9%.

*** Pritzker Re-Election Campaign Roundup ***

* ABC Chicago | Gov. Pritzker announces re-election campaign for 3rd term: ‘Keep Illinois moving forward’: He is the first Illinois governor since the late former Republican Gov. Jim Thompson to seek a third consecutive term. The governor spoke at Chicago’s Grand Crossing Park Field House on the South Side. It’s the same location where he announces his first run for governor in April 2017.

* Sun-Times | Gov. JB Pritzker announces run for 3rd term to protect Illinois from ‘chaos and craziness’ of Trump: Pritzker isn’t expected to announce a running mate during his initial campaign tour, which includes more rallies later Thursday in Rockford, Peoria and Springfield, plus two additional downstate appearances on Friday.

* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker announces reelection campaign: The state GOP issued a statement saying Pritzker should be “fired not re-hired.” “He’s prioritized illegal immigrants over Illinois families, hiked taxes, and rammed through the largest, most bloated budget in state history,” ILGOP Chairman Kathy Salvi said in a statement. The governor’s political future has been the topic of significant speculation, especially since he was shortlisted for former Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate search last summer in her campaign for the White House. That and his vocal and frequent condemnations of President Donald Trump have fueled speculation of a presidential run in 2028.

* Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker makes it official at South Side rally: He’s running for a third term to be Illinois’ chief executive: In the campaign video, Pritzker appears in the small town of Chestnut, which is the geographic center of the state, to make his case that Illinois is the middle of the national battle over politics and government. “These days, Illinois is standing at the center of the fight: The fight to make life more affordable, the fight to protect our freedoms, the fight for common sense,” Pritzker said, focusing on Trump before pivoting to what Pritzker describes as his successes as governor since he first took office in 2019, including balanced budgets, state credit upgrades and hiking the minimum wage.

* NBC Chicago | ‘Ready for the fight’: Pritzker announces run for third term as Illinois governor: NBC News found Pritzker walking along Chicago’s lakefront just hours before the video was released Thursday. When asked about his upcoming announcement, the governor responded by jokingly asking, “What’s going on?” He said he was walking to “clear his head.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* WAND | Proposal calling for annual report on prison hospice, palliative care awaits Pritzker’s signature: Over 1,000 Illinois prisoners are 65 or older and a growing number of those people are in need of end-of-life care and support services. The Illinois Department of Corrections does not have a formal hospice program, as end-of-life care is provided on a prison by prison basis. Sponsors and advocates said this has led to inconsistent care for prisoners diagnosed with terminal illnesses or who are expected to reach the end of their life.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Illinois lawmakers failed to pass a school cellphone ban – for now: State Sen. Cristina Castro, the chief sponsor of the bill, said in an interview with Chalkbeat that she did not hear strong opposition to the bill, but believes the language of the bill needed some “fine-tuning.” Teachers unions, administrator groups, and state lawmakers had expressed concerns about schools’ ability to enforce cellphone restrictions and what schools would do about cell phone access in emergency situations such as an active shooter scenario.

*** Chicago ***

* NBC Chicago | Universal is bringing a new year-round horror experience to Chicago, city announces: The new venue will mark the second location for the popular Universal Horror Unleashed brand, following one other location in Las Vegas, and a first for Universal in the Midwest. Universal Horror Unleashed: Chicago will transform a vacant commercial building, located across from the new Bally’s Casino at 700 W. Chicago Ave., “into a world-class horror attraction and entertainment destination.”

* Crain’s | With old plan dead, city reopens Loop site to developers: Chicago planning officials are back on the hunt for a developer to breathe new life into a city-owned site in the southeast corner of the Loop after plans for a $102 million, 20-story apartment building fell through. […] The solicitation comes roughly four years after the city selected a 207-unit, all-affordable high-rise residential plan from nonprofit developer Community Builders as the winner of a green-building competition to redevelop the site. Dubbed Assemble Chicago, the project included a Rush University health clinic and a YMCA location as anchor retail tenants. But it didn’t land the necessary financing to kick it off as interest rates spiked and banks tightened up lending for new ground-up development.

* Sun-Times | Water Tower Place owner pitches mall consolidation, lists upper floors for sale: MetLife engaged JLL about a year ago in an advisory role, Kirschbraun said, as the owner explored the option of consolidating mall space. If such a move were to happen, its retail space would shrink to the mall’s first three floors, according to a property brochure from JLL. “We’re open to anything that supports the rest of the complex,” Kirschbraun said.

* WBEZ | Andersonville’s iconic pizzeria Great Lake has quietly returned, with more than pie: It’s understandable. The husband-and-wife duo learned what viral meant before viral was a thing, in 2009, after GQ writer Alan Richman told everyone the mortadella-topped pizza with earthy, bready crust at their tiny Andersonville shop with uncompromising standards was the best in the country. Then came the rest of the national media, the lines snaking down Balmoral Avenue, celebrities like Beyonce and Jay-Z, and frustrating three-hour waits for pizza (for everyone else).

* Sun-Times | Damen Silos should be a concert venue, groups say: So far, property owner Michael Tadin Jr. hasn’t budged on plans to tear down the historic structures near South Damen Avenue along the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal. Nor has he been swayed to sell the property. Preservationists and a community organization say the buildings should be saved and restored. They could be a backdrop for public park space that would be used as permanent music festival grounds, they argue.

* Chicago Mag | How to Coexist With Coyotes: The odds are that some of these pups won’t survive for long. “Our research indicates that coyotes of all ages in the Chicago area generally have roughly a 60 percent chance of surviving each year, even juveniles in their first year,” wildlife ecology professor Stanley D. Gehrt reports in the 2024 book Coyotes Among Us: Secrets of the City’s Top Predator (written with journalist Kerry Luft). “Still, the survival rates of juvenile coyotes in Cook County are approximately five times higher than the 13 percent survival rate reported for rural juvenile coyotes.”

* Sun-Times | Chicago Pride Parade 2025: Route map, street closings, how to get there, reader tips: The parade begins at 11 a.m. at West Sheridan Road and North Broadway — viewing begins at West Grace Street and North Broadway. It continues south along North Broadway, then to North Halsted Street and east along West Belmont Avenue to North Broadway. Finally south to West Diversey Parkway, ending at the corner of North Sheridan Road and West Diversey Parkway.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Air conditioning restored to some units at Park Forest apartment complex: Park Forest spokesperson Joshua Vinson said Autumn Ridge apartment management reported fixing the air conditioning at two of the complex’s four buildings and that they were on track to restore air in the rest of the building by Friday. “They give us an update, so this is what they’re saying,” Vinson said, noting the village is still working to determine who owns the 119 E. Sycamore St. apartments.

* Daily Herald | Rolling Meadows buys strip mall space to expand social services: The city council this week inked a contract to purchase more than 5,300 square feet of long-vacant office space on the second and third floors of the shopping center at 2214 Algonquin Road, plus the first floor entry area, staircase and elevator used to access the upper floors. The location — in the center of a building that’s home to a number of shops — is highly visible and will be more accessible to residents in need of social services, city officials say.

* Daily Herald | Trump store owner agrees to leave Huntley location after effort to evict her: Just before the store’s eviction trial was set to begin on Wednesday, the store owner, her landlord and their lawyers agreed to a settlement. Among the terms of the agreement are that store owner Lisa Fleischmann vacates the premises by 6 p.m. July 17 and that she pays the landlord’s attorney fees and court costs, which she has done, court records show. Fleischmann said she picked the move-out date and hopes to be in a new location by late September or October. She also would like to start selling merchandise online.

* Press Release | Medill becomes the new home for the Illinois Journalism Education Association: The Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications has become the new institutional home for the Illinois Journalism Education Association (IJEA), after a unanimous vote of support by IJEA’s board. IJEA is a nonprofit organization that works with teachers and advisers across Illinois to promote high standards in scholastic media. “We’re excited to take on this role and to work closely with the dedicated board, students and advisers who are members of this storied organization,” said Medill’s Dean Charles Whitaker. “We look forward to continuing to strengthen and grow scholastic journalism and publishing here in Illinois.”

*** Downstate ***

* KFVS | “Y’all Rock Carbondale” to welcome public to camper showcase: The showcase will feature performances from bands that will be created during the 2025 Rock Camp. The camp will take place at the Eurma C. Hayes Center from July 7-11. 55 campers ranging from ages 3-12 will attend Rock Camp. During the camps, they will learn an instrument and participate in workshops.

* WSIL | SIU helps aspiring pilots with disabilities take flight: Southern Illinois University is making strides in aviation accessibility for aspiring pilots with disabilities. The university is hosting the 2025 class of Able Flight, marking its second year in partnership with the nonprofit program. Since May, students have been engaged in intensive flight training, thanks to scholarships from Able Flight. They are working towards earning Sport Pilot certificates, which allow them to operate aircraft without physical disability barriers.

* BND | AC goes out at metro-east animal shelter, so adoptions fees are being waived: “We have more than 80 animals in the facility, so identifying the ones that need immediate help is a little difficult with our staff,” Henke said. Both cat and dog rooms have been affected by the broken air conditioning. More than 12 rooms need new air conditioners, and with each costing more than $5,000, retrofitting the facility is too expensive.

*** National ***

* AP | Key Medicaid provision in President Donald Trump’s bill is found to violate Senate rules. The GOP is scrambling: Guidance from the parliamentarian is rarely ignored and Republican leaders are now forced to consider difficult options. Republicans were counting on big cuts to Medicaid and other programs to offset trillions of dollars in Trump tax breaks, their top priority. Additionally, the Senate’s chief arbiter of its often complicated rules had advised against various GOP provisions barring certain immigrants from health care programs. Republicans scrambled Thursday to respond, with some calling for challenging, or firing, the nonpartisan parliamentarian, who has been on the job since 2012. Democrats said the decisions would devastate GOP plans. “We have contingency plans,” said Majority Leader John Thune of South Dakota.

* AP | States can cut off Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood, the Supreme Court rules: “This is yet another shameful ruling that inserts the government directly between a patient and their doctor—just like Dobbs three years ago and Skrmetti last week. Intimate, personal decisions about health care shouldn’t require sign off from extremist politicians,” U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., said in a statement in response to the high court’s decision. “Each and every action taken by anti-choice extremists threatens the life of someone you know. Eventually, the tides must turn—and we must protect health care for all.”

* ProPublica | Fossil Fuel Interests Are Working to Kill Solar in One Ohio County. The Hometown Newspaper Is Helping.: Someone sent text messages to residents urging them to “stop the solar invasion” and elect two county commission candidates who opposed the solar farm. And one day this past March, residents received an unfamiliar newspaper that contained only articles attacking Frasier Solar, a large project that would replace hundreds of acres of corn and soybeans with the equivalent of 630 football fields of solar panels.

* The Atlantic | The End of Publishing as We Know It: According to one comprehensive study, Google’s AI Overviews—a feature that summarizes web pages above the site’s usual search results—has already reduced traffic to outside websites by more than 34 percent. The CEO of DotDash Meredith, which publishes People, Better Homes & Gardens, and Food & Wine, recently said the company is preparing for a possible “Google Zero” scenario. Some have speculated that traffic drops resulting from chatbots were part of the reason outlets such as Business Insider and the Daily Dot have recently had layoffs. “Business Insider was built for an internet that doesn’t exist anymore,” one former staffer recently told the media reporter Oliver Darcy.

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Speech focused around building on past accomplishments rather than bold new plans

Thursday, Jun 26, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From today’s press conference following Gov. Pritzker’s announcement…

Reporter: But from your speech, too, it also sounded like protecting legacy…

Pritzker: Well, sure, balancing the budget every year, that’s something we want to keep doing. Making sure that we’re moving our fiscal situation in the right direction, protecting people’s individual rights, like reproductive rights, LGBT rights. Those are all things that are part of a legacy that I think that we need to protect.

* He also talked about the country at large a lot. From his speech…

Our nation sits on the precipice of an economy that will be reshaped over the next few years by the innovations of artificial intelligence. And while there will be many ways in which AI makes us better and healthier and more efficient as a society – it will also require us to reform education to meet the future of work.

In that context we must create an American economy whose sole purpose is not to make a small amount of very rich people richer but rather one that provides good, stable middle class jobs that pay enough to afford to buy a house, raise a family, and live a fulfilling life.

We must reckon with the fact that everything is too damned expensive. From groceries to concert tickets to mortgages to cars to healthcare, we have created a world where one job isn’t enough to raise kids, one salary not enough to own a home and one lifetime of work not enough to earn retirement. And the answer does not lie in tariffs that tax workers, budgets that gut Medicaid, and DOGE bros that strip research funding from our universities.

Instead, the answer starts with growing Illinois’ economy – with relentlessly pursuing the industries and jobs of the future. We must continue the work started by my administration to attract and grow businesses.

That takes continual investment in

    * world class airports and railroads
    * peerless institutions of higher learning
    * protected fresh water
    * abundant clean energy
    * well designed urban landscapes
    * and nutrient rich rural farmland.

But nothing is more important to grow our economy than the quality of our people, and we must protect that because we have a workforce that is second to none.

* Isabel asked what his big new ideas are…

Isabel: Your original campaign slogan was ‘Think Big.’ What are your big ideas for the remainder of this term and your third term?

Pritzker: Well, there are an awful lot of things we’ve got to still accomplish, right? We still need to get to universal preschool. We’re on our way. It’ll happen probably in 2027, but importantly, we have unfinished business, so we’ve got to keep moving forward. That’s one example. We’ve got to keep moving toward credit upgrades in our state, and we’ve got to make sure that we’re continuing to fund K-12 education. I want to say one important thing that gets overlooked often. When I took office, Illinois, eighth graders were 15th in the country in reading scores. We’re now second in the country. I want to be number one. We were 22nd in the country eighth grade math scores when I took office. We’re now number four in the country. I want to be number one. So again, the big things we’ve got to accomplish are, on behalf of the people of Illinois, the direction that we’re taking and keeping you along

Discuss.

  42 Comments      


RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Thursday, Jun 26, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments.

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

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition

Thursday, Jun 26, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Pritzker reelection announcement react

Thursday, Jun 26, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Again, click here to read the governor’s remarks as prepared for delivery and click here to watch the video. From Leader McCombie…

Illinois House Minority Leader Tony McCombie released the following statement in response to Governor JB Pritzker announcing his intent to run for a third term:

“The third term Pritzker slump won’t be any better than seasons one and two. We know what to expect - agency mismanagement, regressive taxation, and record spending. Illinois families need a governor for all people who understands true bipartisanship and growing our economy.”

That came from her state account, by the way. Checking on why.

This post will be updated.

…Adding… RGA…

The Republican Governors Association (RGA) today released the following statement in response to JB Pritzker announcing his campaign for a third term as Illinois Governor:

“People are fleeing Illinois by the hundreds of thousands and Illinois families continue to suffer the consequences of JB Pritzker’s abject record of failure at home while he spends his time on a national vanity project trying to further his own political career. Opportunities for working Illinois families are in the garbage, criminal illegal immigrants are protected over law-abiding citizens, and Pritzker’s tax hikes are destroying family budgets,” said RGA Rapid Response Director Kollin Crompton. “Pritzker’s reign in Illinois has left families trapped in an economic disaster, and taxpayers are the ones left to shoulder the burden. It’s time to bring common sense to Illinois and end Pritzker’s feast on Illinois’ working families.”

* DGA…

DGA Chair Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly released the following statement on Gov. JB Pritzker running for reelection as governor of Illinois:

“Gov. JB Pritzker is an effective leader who has delivered strong results for Illinois throughout his time as governor. He turned a fiscal disaster into a balanced budget — overseeing a remarkable nine credit rating upgrades — championed economic development and attracted thousands of new good-paying jobs, expanded access to affordable health care, and made historic investments in education and infrastructure. Moreover, as politicians in Washington push an extreme and harmful agenda, Gov. Pritzker has been a staunch defender of reproductive freedom and our democracy. Illinoisans can trust him to keep standing up for their rights as he keeps the state moving forward.

“The DGA looks forward to supporting Gov. Pritzker as he continues to deliver the steady leadership that Illinoisians deserve.”

* ILGOP…

ILGOP Chairman Kathy Salvi released the following statement following Illinois Governor JB Pritzker’s decision to run for a third-term as governor:
“JB Pritzker’s first two terms have been nothing short of a total failure. He’s prioritized illegal immigrants over Illinois families, hiked taxes, and rammed through the largest, most bloated budget in state history. He has used and abused the fine people of Illinois, allowing heavy handed government to meddle in the lives and safety of ordinary Illinoisans. These last nearly eight years under his governance merits firing not rehiring. While businesses and families flee, Pritzker sees Illinois as nothing more than a stepping stone for the White House.

“One thing is clear — the only way our state will have actual representation and relief is by voting Republican.”

What the media should ask JB: Will you commit to serving another four years if you win re-election? Or can we expect you to jet across the country running for president while putting Illinois on the backburner.

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Rate Pritzker’s re-election launch video (Updated with Pritzker’s prepared remarks)

Thursday, Jun 26, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go

* Press release…

Governor JB Pritzker announced his re-election campaign, pledging to continue to get big things done for working families and keep moving Illinois forward. The announcement comes with the release of a new video “Keep Illinois Moving Forward,” where the Governor makes the choice clear between our historic progress here in Illinois and the chaos in Washington – direct from the center of Illinois in Chestnut.

“These days, Illinois is standing at the center of the fight: the fight to make life more affordable, the fight to protect our freedoms, the fight for common sense,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “We don’t just talk about problems. In Illinois, we solve them. Because we know government ought to stand up for working families and be a force for good, not a weapon of revenge.

“I’m running for re-election to protect our progress and continue solving the problems we face. I love this state, and it’s the honor of my life to serve as your Governor – to help lead through the most challenging of times and celebrate the most joyful ones together. I’m ready for the fight ahead. So, whether you’re at the center of Illinois, or anywhere else, join me, let’s keep Illinois moving forward.”

Governor Pritzker’s announcement comes on the heels of signing his seventh balanced budget, ushering in an era of fiscal stability in Illinois that has led to nine credit upgrades and the elimination of nearly $17 billion in unpaid bills. This success has allowed Illinois to invest in core priorities including tax relief for working families, record funding for early childhood education, K-12 schools, and higher education financial aid, and healthcare affordability.

With newfound fiscal stability, the Governor has made transformative investments in infrastructure and secured major economic development wins for the state. Illinois is now a leader in the industries of the future like quantum and electric vehicle manufacturing, creating tens of thousands of jobs and bringing billions in investments to our communities.

Thanks to the Governor’s leadership, Illinois remains a symbol of hope and freedom as we face down Donald Trump’s attacks, with abortion rights and civil rights enshrined into law and protections for our LGBTQ and immigrant communities stronger than ever before. Keeping Illinoisans safe remains the Governor’s top priority and with a ban on assault weapons, bump stocks, and ghost guns and historic investments in violence prevention, communities are safer and more prosperous.

Through it all, the Governor has never lost sight of the promise he made in his first campaign – to put Springfield back on the side of working families. In passing a $15 minimum wage, mandating paid leave, and enshrining worker protections into law, the Governor has made clear he will always fight for the working people of Illinois.

…Adding… Click here to read the governor’s prepared remarks. Click here to watch it live. [Fixed link.]

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Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?

Thursday, Jun 26, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

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

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

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

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Open thread

Thursday, Jun 26, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Smile Politely

Prior to the release of her new album How Are You Lately?, Smile Politely had the chance to catch up with Peoria-based songstress Emily How. How Are You Lately? is How’s first long play album featuring 11 songs, with “Normalcy,” “Zombie Song,” and “Undertow” released as the album’s singles.

How wrote every song on the album, while they were recorded, mixed, and produced by Jacob Hill. How shared that Hill also plays guitar, keys, and banjo on the album. Alongside How and Hill, the current band lineup also includes Matt Filarski on drums and Bowie Adams on bass.

* “Normalcy”

* Please keep your chat Illinois-centric. Thanks.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Jun 26, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois Democratic lawmakers ask RFK Jr. to stop sharing Medicaid data with Trump deportation officials. Sun-Times

    - Lawmakers in the letter cite a CMS audit announced last month that would increase “federal oversight” of state Medicaid agencies to ensure federal funds were not being used to provide health coverage to those who lack legal status.
    - But the Democrats claim CMS “inappropriately and potentially unlawfully” used the audit to obtain personal data and shared it with Homeland Security.
    - Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office is “closely monitoring this matter and evaluating our options,” according to spokesperson Jamey Dunn-Thomason.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Subscribers know much more. WQRL | Vercellino to challenge incumbent Windhorst for 117th House District: Vercellino, of West Frankfort, became the first Republican elected as County Treasurer since the 1950s and beat a sitting Democrat for the office in 2018. Since then, Vercellino has worked with Democrat and Republican boards alike to get county finances back on track to better position Franklin County for decades to come. Vercellino says he’s a proven leader who’s ready to bring his leadership abilities to a bigger stage. Vercellino says since 2017 he has seen an exponentially growing grassroots base of people willing to step up to help make Illinois a better place to live, work, and grow.

* Illinois Times | The college crisis: When University of Illinois Springfield recently was designated Illinois’ top regional state university, it was a dose of good news on a campus that has seen its enrollment drop by more than 800 students during the last decade. UIS is reviewing programs and pondering whether they continue to serve student needs, Chancellor Janet Gooch told Illinois Times. It’s a situation almost all of the state’s regional institutions find themselves in.

* STL Post Dispatch | Pope Leo XIV among 1 in 4 Illinoisans with unclaimed property: The amount the pope is in line to receive should he make a claim? $8.65, which equals about 7.45 euros. “I am happy to send $8.65 to the world’s most famous White Sox fan,” Frerichs said in a statement. “My office is truly committed to returning everyone’s missing money, no matter how long it takes or what elevated title they have taken.”

*** Statewide ***

* ABC Chicago | Illinois seeking to counter information from RFK Jr’s new vaccine panel doctors call untrustworthy: The head of the Illinois Department of Public Health told the ABC7 I-Team among the conversations underway are how to potentially stand up interstate vaccination programs. Those plans revealed as physicians and others were protesting Wednesday as the new advisory committee on immunization practices at the CDC met for the first time after Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. fired all 17 members and seated an entirely new board, with some vaccine skeptics like himself, to determine national vaccine policy.

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois’ soil conservation funding stagnates amid recent high-profile dust storms: On May 16, Chicago saw its first major dust storm since the Dust Bowl, which stretched from Texas to New York in the early 1930s and deposited 300 million tons of soil across the nation – 12 million tons of which settled in the Chicago region, according to the Bill of Rights Institute. The storm in May dropped visibility in the city to near zero as wind gusts blew over 60 mph at times, according to the National Weather Service. Taylor said the atmospheric environment that day was more characteristic of the dry environments in the High Plains or Southwest U.S., not the Midwest. As rain began to fall near Bloomington, it quickly evaporated and cooled the atmosphere, creating strong pockets of wind that began to move North. And as winds sped up, the storm began to pick up and move dry and loose soil from fields it passed over, which created the dust storm.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Attorney General Raoul joins lawsuit challenging Trump’s termination of federal grants: Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced this week he has joined another multistate lawsuit challenging the Trump administration’s decision to withhold billions of dollars in federal funds that had previously been approved for states and other grantees. The complaint, filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Massachusetts, challenges several actions the administration has taken since Trump returned to office Jan. 20 that involved terminating federal grants that had previously been approved by various agencies.

* Tribune | Recent political violence in the United States has local elected officials concerned about the causes: State Rep. Bob Morgan (D-58) said he was “shocked and shaken” when he heard about the shootings, noting he was familiar with Hortman, but had not met her. Morgan mentioned he quickly contacted local law enforcement to see if there were any threats against anyone locally. “Unfortunately, this is not the first time we have had to go down this path and consider our own safety and safety of our colleagues,” Morgan said.

* McHenry County Blog | Pastor Corey Brooks Declines $200,000 in Legislative Pork for Project H.O.O.D.: In his speech endorsing Jim Oberweis to replace Florida Congressman Bryon Donalds Chicago Pastor Corey Brooks stated that his Project H.O.O.D. would not accept government money. […] asked him about the $200,000 that was included in the pork-filled state budget. He remained true to his Florida statement; he said he had turned it down.

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools budget for 2025-26 school year delayed: Chicago Public Schools’ budget for the 2025-26 school year, normally released in June, is delayed until at least late July, prompting uncertainty and anxiety for principals and schools — and potentially setting them up for cuts right before the fall. The district’s new fiscal year starts on July 1 and schools received their budgets for the coming school year in May, based on the assumption that the district would have just a $229 million deficit to close. Those school-level budgets were mostly flat, district officials said, though some schools already experienced some cuts.

* Sun-Times | CPS school board to consider green schools pilot program: The proposal would use the cash-strapped district’s limited resources to invest in energy-efficient projects that proponents say could save money in the long run. If approved, the resolution would establish a healthy green schools pilot program at Chicago Public Schools with the goal of investing in at least 12 clean energy projects at neighborhood schools by the end of the 2025-26 school year. Those projects could include rooftop solar, heat pumps or geothermal systems that use stable underground temperatures for heating and cooling buildings.

* Sun-Times | Funeral home gets Chicago’s lucrative $4.4M body removal contract: Current and former Chicago police officers question whether a single funeral home has the capacity to handle the citywide business. Ald. Anthony Napolitano (41st), who has served the city as both a police officer and a firefighter, said he doesn’t “know if it’s possible.” […] The new contract includes a penalty for delayed transport of bodies. If the contractor fails to arrive at the scene within 75 minutes of the initial call-out by 911 dispatchers, the fee of $172 per body will be cut in half.

* Block Club | Mosaic House, A New Coworking And Childcare Center, Wants To Help NW Side Moms Build Community: The coworking center is opening July 14 on the border of the Dunning and Montclare neighborhoods. The space, 7129 W. Belmont Ave., will feature structured child care in the back with a spacious work area in the front. Mosaic House plans to host events like resume-building sessions, peer support groups, wellness workshops, panels on motherhood and yoga classes.

* WBEZ | Many Chicagoans likely to wait decades for dangerous lead pipes to be replaced: Now a senior policy advocate for the environmental group Natural Resources Defense Council,Perry is part of a coalition that fought for stricter rules to force cities like Chicago to remove their toxic lead pipes faster. Last year, advocates celebrated a big win: The Biden-era U.S. Environmental Protection Agency mandated that all water systems across the country begin replacing their lead service lines by 2027. Under the new rule, Chicago would have about 20 years to replace its estimated 412,000 lead service lines, giving the city its most accelerated timeline yet for dealing with the public health crisis. Lead is especially harmful to children with developing brains and can cause a number of serious health conditions in adults. But Chicago is set to fall 30 years behind that timeline, according to the city’s replacement plan, submitted to the Illinois EPA in April and obtained through a public records request. It aims to complete 8,300 replacements annually for 50 years, wrapping up in 2076.

* Sun-Times | Chicago Gay Men’s Chorus mourns loss of member in fatal hit-and-run in Lake View: Siddall joined the chorus in 2018 and “quickly became a vibrant and vital part of our community,” said Kevin Corbett, Chicago Gay Men’s Chorus managing director. “A gifted performer, Brendan lit up the stage in several performances, sharing their talent and energy with joy and authenticity,” Corbett said in a statement. Siddall served as the president of the chorus’ membership council.

* WBEZ | How Chicago drag designers are pushing the boundaries of fashion: “If you want something more eccentric, you might go to Eda Birthing or Mats,” said Chicago drag queen Miss Toto. “If you want pageantry, you’re going to Utica or Joshuan Aponte. It’s like you have the whole spectrum of what you could possibly get in Chicago. In a lot of other cities, you might not be able to even find someone to sew you one thing, but in Chicago you can find someone to sew anything.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Shaw Local | Grocery tax here to stay in DeKalb: – When the state grocery tax lifts on Illinoisans in January, DeKalb purchases will continue to be taxed locally, the DeKalb City Council voted this week. The grocery tax, as passed in a pair of 5-2-1 votes, will take effect locally Jan. 1, the day the state grocery tax expires.

* Sun-Times | Northwestern University undertaking a variety of cost-cutting measures amid financial pressure: On June 10, Northwestern University sent an email to staff and faculty announcing it would implement cost-cutting measures, including a hiring freeze and “decreases in the total number of staff positions.” It also said staff would not get bonuses next year, that the university was switching health insurance companies and there would be changes to the tuition benefits program, which provides employees with financial assistance toward the cost of courses.

* Daily Herald | Skokie attorney joins race for Schakowsky’s congressional seat: Democrat Howard Rosenblum has joined the race in Illinois’ 9th Congressional District, which includes parts of Cook, Lake and McHenry counties. “This is a campaign to restore the foundations of our democracy,” Rosenblum said in a news release. “I know how important equality under the law and full opportunity through civil rights is. My legal experience fighting back is exactly what we need in Washington right now.”

* Daily Southtown | Oak Lawn $13 million Polaris flood control project to begin this fall: Oak Lawn is moving forward with plans to build a detention basin for stormwater storage in the fields near Polaris Intermediate School after over a year-long delay. Village Board voted Tuesday to approve an agreement with the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago to split the cost of the estimated $13 million plan to alleviate flooding during major storms. More than 6,600 feet of storm sewers also will be replaced with larger pipes, ranging from 30 inches to 5 feet in diameter.

* Shaw Local | ‘Reeks of a power grab’: Crystal Lake park board’s spate of controversial moves sparks public outcry: Recent actions by the Crystal Lake Park District board, with three newly elected members, have caused tension in the community, with many residents speaking out against a series of swift changes. Dozens of residents attended a park board meeting last week, with the crowd overflowing into two other rooms to view the meeting on TV screens. Some spoke in favor of the recent board actions, but many more criticized how the board speedily passed agenda items such as the removal of the diversity, equity and inclusion policy, claiming the board violated the Illinois Open Meetings Act. Other issues prompting criticism include the hiring of a previous board member as the new park district attorney for a substantially higher price than the previous attorney and replacing the members of a volunteer lake advisory committee with a lakeside homeowners association.

* Daily Herald | ‘People rely on us’: Don’t fret, household hazardous waste collection to resume in July: “The program is continuing,” said Pete Adrian, recycling coordinator. “There’s no crisis here by any means.” The agency is permitted to hold a certain amount of materials, such as pesticides, motor oil, household cleaners and gasoline but relies on state funding to have them removed for recycling. “There’s a volume of material we have to move out of the facility to make space for the next batch coming in,” Adrian said.

*** Downstate ***

* The Telegraph | Manure trucks block anti-Trump protest at Macoupin County Courthouse: A weekly anti-Donald Trump protest held outside the Macoupin County Courthouse in Carlinville was undeterred Tuesday when protesters showed up to find trucks and trailers containing manure parked where they normally protest. “They have trucks of manure in line of where we usually protest,” protestor Toni Leahy said. “It definitely stinks on the sensory level, not just on the idea of it.” […] Instead, they proceeded to “flip the script” by making impromptu signs, one of which said, “Trump’s policies stink.”

* WCIA | Evidence of former Iroquois Co. Health Admin’s gambling will be allowed in court: Schippert, the former Administrator of the Iroquois County Public Health District, is facing 33 felony counts, including theft of government property, forgery and official misconduct. She previously pleaded not guilty to the charges. The Illinois Attorney General’s Office alleges that between May 31, 2020, and July 15, 2022, Schippert filed fraudulent timesheets, all while time-stamped video footage showed Schippert at various gaming parlors for at least 759 hours — 260 of which were during regular business hours.

* WAND | Parents could owe hundreds in fines for kids who commit crimes under new Tolono ordinance: First-time penalties include a $250 fine. A second offense within 12 months of the first doubles to $500. A third offense within 12 months of the first offense is $750 with each incident following an additional $750.

* WGLT | Deriva Energy proposes 300-megawatt solar farm in eastern McLean County: Deriva said the project represents about $563 million in direct and indirect investments in McLean County in jobs, construction output, tax benefits and earnings. The company estimates the project would generate $65.6 million in property tax revenue over the solar farm’s 40-year lifetime. The bulk of that money would to the Tri-Valley school district in Downs [$45.3 million]. The project is on track to begin construction in mid-2027 and start operation in late 2028.

* WQAD | Karen Kinney retiring as Rock Island County clerk: Rock Island County Clerk Karen Kinney announced she will not seek another term in office after 26 years of service. She said in a statement that she believes that the time has come to allow new leadership to guide her office. “I am deeply grateful for the trust and support of my colleagues, the County Board, and the residents of Rock Island County. Together, we have navigated challenges, celebrated milestones, and worked diligently to serve the public with integrity and dedication,” Kinney said in a press release announcing her decision.

* WCIA | New affordable student housing could be coming to Urbana: A new housing option could be coming to Urbana. It’s designed for students to spend their time on campus while staying somewhere affordable. Holton Bagley, the business owner who is trying to bring it to campus, said it’ll be the first one in Urbana. It’s in an old fraternity house with more than 20 rooms. But before it can open, the city has to give it the green light.

* WCIA | Carle Illinois College of Medicine students, professor helping breast cancer patients with new prostheses: 3D printing and scanning can be used for a variety of reasons. At the University of Illinois, and the Carle Illinois College of Medicine, a team of researchers is using it to help breast cancer patients. Dr. Victor Stams, a Carle Health plastic surgeon and professor at the Carle Illinois College of Medicine, is working alongside his team of medical students to create custom-fit breast prostheses.

* WCIA | Central Illinois HVAC repair companies swamped with demand: “I would say right now the most important thing we’re seeing is a lack of maintenance from a home ownership perspective,” said general manager Jeff Kenyon. “Maintenance is very important, it’s kind of like changing oil in your car. A lot of dirty filters, a lot of capacitors, just simple breakdowns.” Changing your filters and rinsing your unit’s coils helps maintain airflow in your unit and avoids exhaustion of the unit.

*** National ***

* The Atlantic | Why Do Billionaires Go Crazy?: David Frum is joined by the author and editor Tina Brown for a conversation about the disorienting effects of extreme wealth. They discuss how billionaires often become detached from reality, how philanthropy is used to consolidate image and influence, and how Brown’s personal experience with Donald Trump shaped her understanding of his ego and evolution.

* Philadelphia Inquirer | Two more patients say they faced questions around citizenship at hospitals in Philly and Abington: Both said they wondered why that information was being sought. Both are U.S. citizens, but feared the potential impact on those already wary of seeking treatment because they may be undocumented or have uncertain immigration status. At least five other people in the region responded to earlier Inquirer reporting on the issue by posting on social media that they too had been asked about their citizenship while seeking attention at area hospitals.

* NPR | Former DOGE engineer says federal waste and fraud were ‘relatively nonexistent’: A former employee of the Department of Government Efficiency says that he found that the federal waste, fraud and abuse that his agency was supposed to uncover were “relatively nonexistent” during his short time embedded within the Department of Veterans Affairs. “I personally was pretty surprised, actually, at how efficient the government was,” Sahil Lavingia told NPR’s Juana Summers.

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

Thursday, Jun 26, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Jun 26, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Thursday, Jun 26, 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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Pritzker launches re-election campaign with two-day statewide tour

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Governor Pritzker’s two-day tour kicks off with a rally on Chicago’s South Side…

Day 1: Thursday, June 26, 2025

STOP 1: CHICAGO

    WHAT: Governor JB Pritzker to formally kick off his re-election campaign with a rally on the South Side of Chicago

    WHEN: 10 AM, Thursday, June 26

    WHERE: Grand Crossing Park Field House, 7655 S. Ingleside Ave, Chicago, IL 6061

    This event will be live-streamed HERE.

STOP 2: ROCKFORD

    WHAT: Governor JB Pritzker to highlight historic infrastructure investments at Rockford Airport

    WHEN: 1:30 PM, Thursday, June 26

    WHERE: Chicago Rockford International Airport, 2 Airport Cir, Rockford, IL 61109

STOP 3: PEORIA

    WHAT: Governor JB Pritzker to highlight efforts to expand workforce training at Illinois Central College

    WHEN: 4:30 PM, Thursday, June 26

    WHERE: Illinois Central College, 1 College Drive, East Peoria, IL 61635

STOP 4: SPRINGFIELD

    WHAT: Governor JB Pritzker to celebrate the campaign launch with Springfield area supporters

    WHEN: 6:30 PM, Thursday, June 26

    WHERE: Arlington’s, 210 Broadway, Springfield, Illinois 62701

Day 2: Friday, June 27, 2025

STOP 1: BELLEVILLE

    WHAT: Governor JB Pritzker to highlight investments in workforce development at Southwestern Illinois College

    WHEN: 10:30 AM, Friday, June 27

    WHERE: SWIC Manufacturing Training Academy, 2500 Carlyle Ave, Belleville, IL 62221

STOP 2: WEST FRANKFORT

    WHAT: Governor JB Pritzker to highlight the administration’s work to put Springfield back on the side of working families at IBEW Local 702

    WHEN: 2:00 PM, Friday, June 27

    WHERE: IBEW Local 702, 106 N Monroe St, West Frankfort, IL 62896, US

  3 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* NBC Chicago

Viral social media posts have claimed Illinois could “soon” impose a mileage tax of 30 cents per mile driven, but is that actually looming for motorists?

The short answer to that question is no. The measure that included a per-mile tax stalled out in the General Assembly during the spring session, and was never brought up for a vote before the Senate’s transportation committee.

What’s more, the “30 cents per mile” claim is not found within the text of the legislation, with the actual number likely being significantly lower.

As I told you yesterday, this bill stalled during the session. It never moved out of committee. Yet the myth lives on. From Facebook

And it didn’t come out of thin air. Forbes may have actually started this misinformation campaign. They’ve since updated their story to reflect reality. Click here to read an excerpt of the original version.

*** Statewide ***

* AJ Wilhelmi | Medicaid cuts in Senate bill threaten care, access and jobs in Illinois: For Illinois, the impact would be severe and far-reaching. The Commonwealth Fund estimates our state could lose at least $2 billion in Medicaid funding each year. Just one element of the proposal — a 10-percentage-point reduction in the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) — would alone cost Illinois more than $800 million annually. The American Hospital Association estimates that each $1 billion in Medicaid cuts over 10 years would cost Illinois $2 billion in lost economic activity and more than $71 million in lost tax revenue. Multiply that by the projected $2 billion in annual cuts over 10 years, and the consequences become even more alarming.

* Illinois Business Journal | Illinois Farm Bureau, Illinois Press Foundation award grants to 26 high school journalism programs: More than $35,000 total in grants will be distributed to the schools in the fall to pay for laptops, cameras, broadcasting equipment, newspaper printing costs, website hosting fees and more. The Illinois Press Foundation Board of Directors’ Education Committee approved the grant recipients.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WAND | Gluten free food handling proposal arrives on Pritzker’s desk, awaits signature: The legislation requires all hospitality workers to receive training about what celiac disease is and how to stop gluten contamination with gluten-free food. Sen. Sally Turner (R-Lincoln) said this is a great way for Illinois to support people with celiac disease. “It’s interesting when you go to a restaurant and some don’t have a menu for celiac disease,” Turner said. “Sometimes the servers don’t even know what it is, so I think this awareness is a really good thing so we can fully understand it, ourselves and also people working in the industries.”

* WAND | Bill requiring seat belts on school buses arrives on Pritzker’s desk: This bill could mandate that any school buses manufactured in Illinois have three-point seat belts starting in 2031. Sponsors said this change is solely about student safety, as lawmakers on both sides of the aisle want children to come and go from school safely.

* Center Square | IL legislator continues quest to eliminate property taxes for 30-year homeowners: Proposed by Anderson earlier this year, Senate Bill 1862 seeks to end property taxes for state residents who have lived in and paid on residential properties for at least three decades. “I think it’s just a fundamental idea that at some point you have to own your own stuff,” Anderson told The Center Square. “Right now, in America, and I don’t care what state it is, you can pay your house off, pay property taxes for 40, 50 years and then you fall on hard times, can’t pay your property taxes and now the government can take it. At some point, you have to own your stuff. It has to be yours and you don’t owe anybody anything.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Bucking policy trend, public access to video of CPD Officer Krystal Rivera’s fatal shooting is delayed: A judge has barred the release of video and other materials related to the investigation into the friendly fire shooting death of Chicago police Officer Krystal Rivera, a move that came after the Cook County state’s attorney’s office asked that the information be shielded from public records requests. Rivera, 36, a four-year veteran of the department, was mistakenly shot and killed by a fellow officer on June 5 after a confrontation with an armed suspect.

* Edward Keegan | Chicago Fire stadium plans cry out for a bit of quirkiness: As shown, the new stadium is simple, unimposing and not unattractive. The developers explain that Gensler has designed in the “‘Chicago School’ of architecture,” but it’s more of a generalized warehouse aesthetic that you might find at a contemporary shopping mall anywhere in America. It cries out for a bit of quirkiness that would make the structure more distinctive and genuinely grounded in Chicago’s unique architectural culture. An exposed steel canopy over the stadium’s seating will provide welcome shade during the summer and some protection from precipitation, but its most important function is helping to define the stadium’s interior as a more intimate space than a 22,000-seat venue might otherwise feel. It’s also where a more contemporary take on Miesian structural expression might create a more memorable building.

* Block Club | South Side Community Gardens Need Water Access From The City — But Getting It Is A Struggle: Gladly’s farm isn’t the only one that’s had to get creative while tending to crops. Dulce Margarita Morales, co-founder and lead educator at Cedillo’s Fresh Produce, runs a farm and a neighborhood garden in Englewood. The farm has water access, but the garden has been without it since 2020, she told Block Club. “Before that, we were able to utilize it. But then all of a sudden, somebody came Memorial Day weekend [that year] and left the hydrant open for three days. Then the city came and put a cap on it,” said Morales, who has worked with the garden for nine years.

* Sun-Times | White Sox, MLB ban spectator who taunted Diamondbacks’ Ketel Marte: “Baseball is family,” the Rate Field video board declared from left field as Arizona’s second baseman walked to the plate Wednesday afternoon. “The White Sox community supports Ketel Marte.” Sox fans backed up that sentiment with an ovation for the All-Star infielder, but it sure didn’t feel like it a night earlier for Marte, who broke down in tears Tuesday after a fan hurled an insult about his late mother. The unidentified 22-year-old spectator’s vitriol earned him an indefinite ban from all MLB ballparks — and it forced fans, players and coaches to once again reckon with the verbal abuse that all too often rains down from the stands at the old ballgame.

* Block Club | The Barrel That Launched A Sour Beer Movement Is Now At Chicago’s Off Color Brewing: Last month, Laffler received a surprise visit from a longtime friend and industry peer from St. Louis who brought with him a freshly emptied French oak barrel. It was stamped with three characters synonymous with the brewing method that has captured so much of Laffler’s imagination: pH1. First used as a wine barrel more than 30 years ago, pH1 has taken on an almost mythological aura in the craft brewing industry. It’s been described as “beer famous,” and the batches it produces, a fraction of most breweries’ typical yields, have led beer enthusiasts to scour message boards with faint hopes of finding a bottle available for trade.

* Sun-Times | Ferris Bueller vest sells for $279,400 at auction: A vest worn by Matthew Broderick as the titular character in the Chicago-based cult classic, “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,” sold for $279,400 after it was auctioned off by Sotheby’s New York. The vest, worn by Ferris as he played hooky and frolicked through some of the city’s most iconic spots — including Wrigley Field and the Art Institute — was put up for auction June 5.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Toni Preckwinkle picks new Cook County Forest Preserves boss: After a year and a half without a permanent leader, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle has nominated a new head for the county’s Forest Preserves. On Wednesday, she named Adam Bianchi as her pick to become the district’s new superintendent. Her choice will face a vote from the Forest Preserves board — which has the same members as the Cook County board — next week.

* Naperville Sun | DuPage to establish community land bank, trust to incentivize more affordable housing: “People that work in DuPage and contribute to our economic stability (being) able to afford to live and raise their families here seems like it should be a fundamental right, but it’s something that we’re struggling with,” DuPage County Board Chair Deb Conroy said. “We want to fix it.” The average median household income in DuPage County as of 2023 was $106,961, according to census data. Meanwhile, as of last month, the median sale price of a home in DuPage was $425,000, per data from Redfin, a national real estate brokerage.

* Daily Southtown | Air Force veteran’s Park Forest home gets thousands in repairs through Cook County program: Launched in 2023, the Veterans Home Repair Program tapped $1.25 million in federal American Rescue Plan Act funds. Along with Kellogg’s home, the county program repaired the homes of veterans in Chicago, Blue Island, Calumet City, Dolton, Homewood, Lansing, Matteson and Richton Park. Interior and exterior work was done on all of the homes, with costs ranging from $15,000 to $45,000, according to the county.

* Daily Southtown | Defeated Markham Park Board member appointed to Bremen District 228 Board: Bremen High School District 228 recently welcomed a new board member, filling an almost three-month vacancy after the previous member ran for a village board. School Board members chose Laurence Patterson II to fill the vacancy. Patterson, who was a Markham Park Board member from 2019 to 2023, when he lost a reelection bid, said he is excited for the opportunity to continue his long-term goal of “breaking down generational barriers” and helping local youth engage with their community.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Champaign considers changes to parking requirements to boost affordable housing development: The city is considering eliminating the minimum parking space rules for new apartments and houses. The council hopes that this ordinance change will encourage the development of more affordable housing options, such as duplexes and townhomes. A formal vote on the proposed change is expected in the coming weeks.

* IPM | Champaign County workers threaten to strike over stalled contract negotiations: More than 100 workers rallied Monday afternoon outside the Champaign County Courthouse in Urbana. The group, represented by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, claims administrators are not offering fair wages or affordable insurance. “In this economy, everybody’s losing ground,” said local AFSCME president Cece Phillips. “We deserve to not worry about how to put food on the table. We work for the freaking county.” Phillips said the county has offered a 2% raise — which she said isn’t enough, especially for employees earning $16 an hour.

* BND | Controversial solar farm at Belleville cemetery to bring less income than expected: The original lease would have required Belleville Solar LLC to pay an initial lump sum of $500,000 and annual rent payments of $69,375. An amended lease will reduce the lump sum to $250,000 and annual rent payments to $50,252 for the first 25 years and $55,311 for the last 10, according to Mayor Jenny Gain Meyer.

* WGLT | Carle expands transitional outpatient mental health program to Normal: Carle BroMenn Medical Center developed its intensive outpatient program [IOP] called “Journey” in Normal based on a similar initiative at Carle Health Methodist Hospital in Peoria. “Having an IOP option allows us to offer patients a way to more easily transition back to their daily lives before they found themselves in crisis,” said Heather Hintz, executive director of Carle Behavioral Health, in a statement. “They receive more intensive and frequent treatment while also having some level of independence and return to their daily routine.”

*** National ***

* The Guardian | Harvard hired a researcher to uncover its ties to slavery. He says the results cost him his job: ‘We found too many slaves’: The initiative received its first public blow last spring, when two university professors on the committee to create a memorial stepped down, saying in a letter obtained by the student newspaper that the university had attempted to “dilute and delay” their efforts to reach out to descendants. The committee was formed in 2023, based on one of the recommendations of the Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery report to “honor enslaved people through memorialization”. In a statement made to the student newspaper, a spokesperson for the university said it “take[s] seriously the co-chairs’ concerns about the importance of community involvement and of taking steps that will enable Harvard to deeply engage with descendant communities”.

* Reuters | Judge blocks feds from withholding EV charger funds: The U.S. Transportation Department in February suspended the EV charging program, which was part of former President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, and rescinded prior approval of states’ spending plans. Lin’s ruling did not apply to District of Columbia, Minnesota and Vermont, which also sued over the funding rescission but did not provide evidence that they would suffer immediate harm as a result of the Transportation Department decision.

  3 Comments      


Update: Lawmakers, advocates call for special summer session - Dems respond to several suburban mayors’ complaints about mass transit package

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Seems a bit late. From the Suburban Mayors Coalition for Fair Transit via the Illinois Municipal League

Honorable Members of the Illinois General Assembly:

Over the past 18 months, members of both chambers have dedicated considerable time to evaluating our region’s transit system and exploring ways to improve service for the more than one million daily riders who rely on Metra, Pace, and the CTA. Many of these riders are among our most vulnerable residents, who have no alternative means of transportation. We appreciate your commitment to addressing the looming fiscal cliff facing public transit. However, the legislative proposals introduced thus far raise significant concerns for municipalities and the residents we represent.

We respectfully share the following concerns:

Real Estate Transfer Tax

The proposed $3 per $1,000 real estate transfer tax would apply to transactions in suburban Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will Counties while excluding the City of Chicago. This new tax would add to the growing barriers to affordable housing in our communities. Furthermore, it would derail parallel legislative efforts that aspire to improve housing access across the state.

Retail Delivery Fee

A statewide $1.50 delivery fee on all motor vehicle deliveries of goods subject to sales tax would affect every household, regardless of income or proximity to transit. This fee is regressive, disproportionately burdens low to moderate income families, and lacks a clear connection between those paying and those benefiting from the transit system.

Development Authority

The proposed authority for the new regional transit entity to acquire, develop, or redevelop property within a ½-mile of transit stations or ⅛-mile of bus stops raises serious concerns about local control and private property rights. Even with the inclusion of local zoning requirements, granting such powers to an unelected regional board would allow development across broad swaths of suburban communities potentially overriding local planning efforts. This also includes concerns about the regional board exerting authority over local parking requirements. These decisions should remain under municipal governments.

Board Composition and Voting

The proposed structure of the NITA Board lacks the necessary safeguards to ensure balanced regional representation. We urge you to consider models like the CMAP Board, which requires a 4/5 majority vote to pass all major decisions. Without similar protections, there is a real risk of disenfranchising any one subregion and discouraging collaboration.

Board Membership

The restrictions on who may be Directors on the NITA Board and service boards preclude local elected officials who may be the most knowledgeable people on transportation needs of their constituents. Local elected officials have been some of the most reliable and knowledgeable members of our region’s boards for decades. There is a reason so many members of boards like CMAP, the service boards, and ISTHA have been elected officials or former elected officials, they know the regional challenges of funding and operating complex systems.

Service Standards and Funding Distribution

The proposed performance metrics and service propensity measures may disadvantage Metra and Pace in favor of CTA, potentially skewing future funding and service priorities. Considering the legislation proposes only fifteen votes of the NITA Board to approve these criteria, the suburbs and collar counties could face significant hurdles in receiving sufficient funding to providing transit to their residents. Greater clarity and assurances regarding service equity and long-term funding parity are essential before finalizing this legislation.

We are asking you, our legislators, to stand up for our hometowns and your constituents in northeastern Illinois and across the state. We urge you to pass legislation that would provide for a more efficient and regionally balanced approach to public transit. We further hope this new legislation will align new revenue sources with access to transit service, ensures meaningful representation for all subregions, and preserves local authority over land use, parking and development.

Transit reform should focus on improving service, expanding access and financial sustainability, not on development powers at the expense of municipal autonomy or creating new burdens on residents with little connection to the transit system.

We respectfully ask to be included in ongoing discussions to better collaborate on a path forward that supports fair, reliable, and equitable public transit for all northeastern Illinois.

Thank you for your service and for your attention to this critical issue.

Sincerely,
The undersigned Mayors and Village Presidents:

    Rodney Craig, Village of Hanover Park
    Leon Rockingham, Jr., City of North Chicago
    John Noak, Village of Romeoville
    Nancy Rotering, City of Highland Park
    William McLeod, Village of Hoffman Estates
    Frank Saverino, Village of Carol Stream
    Craig Johnson, Village of Elk Grove Village
    Jeffery Schielke, City of Batavia
    Tom Dailly, Village of Schaumburg
    Philip Suess, City of Wheaton
    Gary Grasso, Village of Burr Ridge
    Frank Trilla, Village of Willowbrook
    Paul Hoefert, Village of Mount Prospect
    Eleanor Sweet McDonnell, Village of North Barrington
    Donna Johnson, Village of Libertyville
    Tom Hundley, Village of Addison
    David Kaptain, City of Elgin
    Rick Reinbold, Village of Richton Park
    Mark Kownick, Village of Cary Larry Herman, Village of Oak Brook
    Rick Mack, Village of Ringwood
    David Pileski, Village of Roselle
    Joseph Marchese, City of Darien
    Sam Cunningham, City of Waukegan

* From a spokesperson for Reps. Eva-Dina Delgado and Kam Buckner…

Years of discussions and more than a year of formal negotiation have generated valuable feedback, and that has brought us to the point where we are close to a better path forward for our transit agencies. While some discussions continue, those discussions need to be focused on constructive feedback and solutions.

* From Senate President Don Harmon’s spokesperson John Patterson…

We welcome the feedback and look forward to their input and ideas on how to resolve this looming crisis.

Your translation of the responses?

* Meanwhile, Sen. Ram Villivalam talked to Governing Magazine about the immediate future

Governing: Are there sticking points in the reform conversation. If so, what are they?

Villivalam: The reforms that have been presented in House Bill 3438 are largely agreed to by all of the stakeholders and I think represent what our residents and taxpayers want to see in terms of having a safe, reliable, accessible and integrated public transit system. The Senate has passed a package of reforms and funding with a transformational investment of $1.5 billion. We believe the package of reforms has really achieved a consensus of stakeholders and residents that have been involved in this process.

Governing: You’re waiting for the House to vote on that.

Villivalam: If there’s a better funding plan that achieves $1.5 billion in investment, we’re happy to work with folks on that. Our position, though, is that we passed a bill, and short of there being a better funding plan, we’d like to see our bill passed and sent to the governor.

In other words, the governance and related reforms are basically locked down. Some revenues are still up in the air.

…Adding… Press release…

Labor, Environmental, and Transit Advocates call on legislators to return to Springfield, address $770 million transit fiscal cliff

With pink slips scheduled for September and planned cuts to transit service, advocates and workers rally, urge state lawmakers to prevent a catastrophe

WHAT: The Illinois General Assembly adjourned on May 31 without addressing the state’s $770 million transit fiscal cliff. With pink slips scheduled for September and the RTA’s instruction for the CTA, Metra, and Pace to plan for service cuts, transit riders and workers are urging the General Assembly to avert a catastrophe by returning to Springfield for a special summer session.

After months of negotiations, legislation passed the Senate on May 31, but was not available to be called in the House. The bill included long-awaited reform measures agreed upon by labor, environment, and transit advocates and a new, dedicated revenue stream for transit.

As a result of Springfield’s inaction, the RTA estimates that nearly 3,000 transit workers could lose their jobs, including 2,000 CTA workers. The service boards have indicated that staffing cuts will result in a 40% reduction to service, leaving Chicago with a transit network smaller than Madison, WI.

By law, the 2026 CTA, Metra, and Pace budgets must only include the funding they will receive for the next year when the budgeting process begins in July 2025. As such, even though the General Assembly is scheduled to return in October for a fall veto session, the agencies must still plan as if they are not receiving the funding to address the fiscal cliff. All four agencies have indicated that, even if a revenue solution were proposed, the collected revenue from October through December would not be enough to plug the budget hole.

WHO:

State Senator Ram Villivalam
State Senator Graciela Guzmán
Tiffany Rebb, CTA Bus Operator
Orlando Rojas, Metra Conductor
Ann Marie Moore, Flight Attendant, Transit Rider
Evan Urchell, The People’s Lobby, Transit Rider
Jose Manuel Almanaza, Equiticity, Transit Advocate

WHEN: Thursday, June 26, 2025

12:00 PM

WHERE: 238 S. Riverside Plaza, Chicago, IL (Between Union Station & Chicago River under the overhang)

  25 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in (Updated)

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker’s 2026 campaign slogan? (Snark is not discouraged).

  56 Comments      


An unintentional peek behind the scenes

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a Rep. Sue Scherer (D-Decatur) fundraising email…

I’m thinking her consultant might be a bit peeved that Rep. Scherer shared the secret sauce, but also that she didn’t follow the consultant’s advice.

Discuss.

  25 Comments      


Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

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

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

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

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Open thread

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Recent 4 Non Blondes

And so I cry sometimes when I’m lying in bed
Just to get it all out what’s in my head

Keep your comments Illinois-centric please. Thanks.

  4 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Ex-Ald. Ed Burke about to become ex-con Burke. NBC Chicago

    - The NBC 5 Investigates Team has learned that less than one year after former Alderman Ed Burke was sent to prison, he is preparing to be sent home.
    - Burke’s two-year sentence behind bars is set to end after serving less than ten months.
    - Several sources with direct knowledge of his case tell NBC Chicago that Burke will be released from the Thomson federal prison in northwestern Illinois to a halfway house or, more likely, home confinement.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WBEZ | Chicago indie filmmakers say the Illinois Film Office is causing them headaches: Prairie State Production Alliance — a group of 61 independent filmmakers and production companies — sent a letter to Pritzker last month in which it said the Film Production Tax Credit program is unfairly forcing indie filmmakers to go through bureaucratic obstacles and interpret rules that aren’t clear. They say the roadblocks have pushed some to decrease their film budgets, leading to fewer jobs, that others have canceled projects, and some are considering moving productions to other states and that these are all issues the tax-credit program was supposed to guard against.

* NBC Chicago | 3 Chicago-area hospitals with broken air conditioning as heat, humidity continues: Even prior to a heat wave that swept over the Chicago area beginning on Saturday, patients at Weiss Hospital in Uptown were affected by issues the building had with air conditioning, leading to the relocation of some patients to West Suburban Hospital in Oak Park. However, when temperatures soared this past weekend, patients began to suffer at West Suburban as well, with some rooms becoming extremely hot and requiring the relocation of patients.

*** Statewide ***

* WBEZ | On Dobbs anniversary, Illinois is more crucial than ever for abortion access: Last year, Illinois had around 35,000 out-of-state abortions. However, it is becoming increasingly more difficult for women to get timely abortion access, with two-to-three week wait times that can leave women in dangerous positions. Reset checks in with advocates about the current state of access – and demand – in Illinois.

* WTVO | Vaping is about to get more expensive in Illinois on July 1st: The tax on vaping products, cigars, chewing tobacco, and synthetic nicotine will increase from the current 15% to 45% of the wholesale price. The extra taxes are expected to bring in $50 million in revenue for the state.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WGEM | Tracy to run for re-election to the Illinois Senate in the 50th District: Tracy, who serves as the Senate Republican Whip, said she is seeking another term to continue fighting Gov. JB Pritzker’s tax-and-spend fiscal policies and to stand up for Illinois families against government overreach and burdensome mandates.

* Chicagoland Journal | Pritzker Administration Announces 2025 Affordable Housing Tax Credit Developments: The Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA) Board approved awards totaling $24 million in federal Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) and an additional $39 million in federal and state subordinate resources that will finance the creation and preservation of 16 affordable housing developments in 11 counties throughout Illinois. The LIHTC awards are expected to generate an estimated $180 million in private capital to support the development of 850 affordable homes for low- to moderate-income families, seniors, and veterans.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | After Objections, CPD Agrees Officers Will Not Search Vehicles Based on Smell of Raw Cannabis: Reform Groups: The coalition, led by the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois, “applauds” CPD for amending the policy in late May, calling the latest version “an improvement” that reflects an agreement reached in August 2023 that prohibits officers from “conducting an investigatory stop or search of an individual based solely on an officer smelling cannabis/marijuana without any other specific and articulable facts of criminal activity,” in a court filing made Monday.

* Crain’s | Push for mandatory security cameras puts City Hall at odds with biz and the ACLU: A measure introduced last week at the City Council requiring businesses in Chicago to maintain security cameras has drawn pushback from business groups and civil liberty advocates. The opponents of the measure say it’s overly broad, imposes burdensome costs on businesses, and gives the Chicago Police Department expanded subpoena authority. Introduced by West Side Ald. Emma Mitts, 37th, with 24 cosponsors, the ordinance requires all companies with a business license from the city to install security cameras focused on all entrances and exits, the public sidewalk near doors and their parking lots.

* Nadig Newspapers | Sale of ‘any cannabinoid hemp’ product to be banned in 41st, 45th wards on Chicago’s NW Side: The ban is primarily intended to help prevent minors from using products that include Delta-8 or Delta 9 THC, which contains compounds found in cannabis plants. These compounds can be found naturally from cannabis plants or produced synthetically. THC is an active ingredient of cannabis. However, under the ordinance the sale of these products will be banned to both children and adults. The ordinance doesn’t make it clear if there are exceptions, such as infused liquor products and other beverages that are sold only to those age 21 and over. Hemp beverages are becoming increasingly popular at retail shops and bars.

* WGN | TSA breaks record for busiest day ever at O’Hare: The Transportation Security Administration released a statement Tuesday that said Sunday, June 22 broke the record for most people screened on a single day at O’Hare. The stat was reflected around the country as TSA reports the day was also the busiest day nationwide. “Officers screened nearly 3.1 million individuals,” the statement said.

* Sun-Times | Hundreds attend visitation for slain CPD Officer Krystal Rivera: For Ariana Vilcins, to know Chicago Police Officer Krystal Rivera was a “privilege.” Vilcins, who taught Rivera’s daughter, described Rivera as a devoted and kind mother — qualities she sees reflected in 11-year-old Bella. “Krystal was 100% devoted to her child and wanted her daughter to have the best education, the best life and the most love that she could possibly have,” Vilcins said. “Bella is a cheerful, loving little girl, and it’s a result of the way she brought up her daughter.”

* Sun-Times | Griffin MSI’s new online collection lets visitors experience the 1893 World’s Fair — and more: The free searchable database will feature 7,000 pieces from the museum’s 35,000-item collection and about 1,000 images have been uploaded so far.

* Crain’s | New York’s famous Katz’s Deli is doing a pop-up in Chicago: The event is meant to promote Windy City Smokeout, the annual barbecue and country music festival held outside the United Center. The festival is planned for July 10-13 this year. Tickets to the pop-up event cost $45, which includes the price of the sandwich and sides.

* WGN | 12th annual Chicago Food Truck Festival returning to South Loop this weekend: The Chicago Food Truck Festival is returning to the South Loop on June 28-29, celebrating its 12th season with a nod to one of the city’s most iconic bites: the Chicago-style hotdog. The festival, held at 2300 South Indiana Avenue, will feature classic comfort food and innovative dishes from over 40 food trucks and local vendors.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Fox Chicago | Juneteenth flag dispute in Aurora sparks backlash against new mayor: Aurora residents questioned why the Juneteenth flag wasn’t officially raised, while a Pride flag ceremony earlier in the month was held as planned under the previous administration. Mayor John Laesch said he’s scaling back city-run flag raisings to be more fiscally responsible, instead encouraging community-led celebrations. The issue was addressed at Tuesday’s city council meeting, where residents spoke out; the mayor’s office says groups can still request flag raisings.

* Legal News | Man stays in jail indefinitely until pays ex-wife $10M: Appeals court: A 60-year-old man who has been held in the Cook County Jail for nearly three years despite facing no criminal charges will need to remain there, a state appeals court has ruled, because he can’t prove to the courts that he doesn’t actually have $10 million to pay his ex-wife, as a Cook County judge ordered him to do. On June 24, a three-justice panel of the Illinois First District Appellate Court backed the decision of Cook County Judge Michael Forti to keep that man, Steve Fanady, in custody under a civil contempt order.

* Shaw Local | Ex-Joliet Township trustee loses bid to dismiss pandemic relief fraud case: A former Joliet Township trustee must still face 16 felony charges accusing him of pandemic relief fraud and other financial crimes after a judge denied a pretrial motion that alleged prosecutorial misconduct.

* Shaw Local | Out-of-town shoppers pay more grocery taxes than St. Charles residents, finance director says: St. Charles and Geneva are two of the last Kane County municipalities yet still undecided, after Batavia voted in May to impose the tax, joining Algonquin, Burlington, Montgomery, North Aurora, South Elgin and Sugar Grove. The St. Charles City Council is expected to put the tax to a final vote at its July 7 meeting. City staff, in favor taxing groceries, have presented a local tax as maintaining the “status quo,” not enacting an additional, new tax on residents. City finance director Bill Hannah presented that view for the first time to officials during a recent Government Services Committee meeting. The committee supported the tax unanimously, though a Council vote still is needed.

* Daily Southtown | Mokena joins other towns in replacing state’s 1% grocery tax: The village of Mokena has joined numerous other municipalities in continuing the 1% grocery tax the state of Illinois will end Jan. 1. The Mokena Village Board voted 6-0 Monday to continue the tax that brings in about $850,000 a year, funding general services, “anything affecting public safety, streets, administration, those types of things,” Village Manager John Tomasoski said.

* Daily Herald | After 18 months of debate, Prospect Heights adopts rules for backyard chickens: The move still had its critics, but the crowd of about a dozen people who attended the city council meeting Monday was much smaller than those attending previous hearings on the issue. “People finally realized the council wasn’t saying no to chickens,” Mayor Patrick Ludvigsen said. Advocates of the rules said the practice could no longer exist in the city without some restrictions. Building and Development Director Dan Peterson said resident complaints that surfaced in October 2023 couldn’t be ignored, leading city staff and the council to take action.

* Crain’s | Three suburban Mariano’s set to close: “This closure is part of a larger company-wide decision to run more efficiently and ensure the long-term health of our business,” Amanda Puck, vice president of communications and brand development for Kroger’s Mariano’s and Roundy’s divisions, said in a statement. Cincinnati-based Kroger acquired Mariano’s former parent company, Milwaukee-based Roundy’s, in 2015. Roundy’s is now a subsidiary of Kroger.

*** Downstate ***

* News-Gazette | Tolono board OKs ordinance holding parents responsible for kids’ unlawful acts: Village President Terrence Stuber said the board is frustrated by antics of a few scofflaws and want to take a proactive approach in hopefully remedying the situation. “There has been a lot of juvenile mischief and vandalism throughout our community, and some board members were fed up with it,” Stuber said. “They were fed up with the vandalism at the park; they were fed up with the attempts to break into people’s cars, all of the disturbing of the peace that has been going on by (minors).”

* WGLT | With location secured, shelter village in Bloomington is on track to open for winter: “We will get construction started as soon as humanly possible,” Burgess said. Burgess said he has already begun speaking with the general contractor and has submitted permits to the City of Bloomington. Even with the lot purchased and a behavioral health grant secured, funds are still needed to build The Bridge. Burgess said in the coming weeks HSHM will launch a “Build The Bridge” campaign, asking the community for donations.

* WGN | First human West Nile Virus case confirmed in Illinois: Illinois had its first confirmed human case of the West Nile Virus of the year Tuesday, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The confirmed case is an individual from southern Illinois who was hospitalized due to complications of the infection.

* WSIL | SIH breaks ground on new $19.9 million Mulberry Center in Harrisburg: The project will increase inpatient capacity from 30 to 42 beds, including 12 private rooms. It will also feature modern healing spaces with renovated Adult and Geriatric Psychiatry wings, updated communal areas, and a refreshed outdoor courtyard. The facility will also provide specialized medical-psychiatric care for patients with both medical and psychiatric needs. Enhanced care programs will include expanded group therapy, therapeutic activities, crisis care, and improved follow-up care after discharge.

* BND | More than 3,000 lost power in Fairview Heights area at height of afternoon heat: Brian Bretsch, public relations manager for Ameren, a power line pole malfunctioned and fell on top of another power line, causing the outage. The utility has reroute power to all but 111 customers by 4 p.m., Bretsch said. Power was restored to all customers by 5:35 p.m., he said.

* WGLT | Airbnb owner: Normal’s coming ban is an ‘overcorrection,’ and there are better options: The Normal Town Council banned new short-term rentals [STRs], such as Airbnb and Vrbo, and will require owners of existing STRs to convert them to long-term rentals within five years. That’s aimed in part at addressing noise, parking and other complaints that may result from allowing what’s essentially a business in a single-family neighborhood. “As it stands today, I think it’s an overcorrection,” said Marie Poundstone, who manages four STRs in the area under the name Bloomington Retreats, including one in Normal. “I am hoping they’re going to look through data and try to figure out a better option.”

* WTVO | ‘I could be dead,’ Rockford teenager reflects on traumatic experience after hit-and-run: “I could just see this car coming towards me, and I didn’t have enough time to react, and it just hit me.” Hunt said she flew into the air before landing on nearby grass. She said her bruises are fresh, but she is grateful to still be here today. “It was very hard riding in the back of the ambulance,” Hunt said. “So many thoughts were racing through my mind. I’m just glad to be alive, because if I was a second later, I could be dead.”

* WICS | Lincoln enlists former Pontiac mayor to boost Route 66 tourism efforts: As Central Illinois gears up for the Route 66 Centennial, the city of Lincoln is turning to a former mayor to spearhead its tourism efforts. Scott McCoy, who previously served as mayor of Pontiac, has been appointed as Lincoln’s new director of tourism. McCoy is credited with elevating Pontiac to one of the top three Route 66 tourist destinations in Illinois, a success Lincoln officials hope to replicate. “We can only hope to be as successful as Pontiac, but they’ve been at it for a lot longer, so we have to start somewhere,” said Lincoln Mayor Tracy Welch.

* WSIL | Judge closes Williamson Co. hunting club for 2 years; two ordered to pay fines: Hugh Thomas Burns Jr., 67 of Carbondale, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to violate the Lacey Act. The attorney’s office said, as the owner of Burns Hunting Club, LLC, Burns was involved in the sale of wildlife in violation of federal law. […] Court documents stated the hunting club sold memberships and provided paid guiding services on its property to migratory bird hunters. Burns and co-defendant Michael McKinney, 52 of Benton, were both accused of providing guided services over illegal baited hunting fields.

* WCIA | New childcare facility filling a void in Christian Co.: Monday morning, they celebrated their ribbon cutting ceremony for the new Assumption community childcare center. “And it’s been really exciting because it’s been such a buildup and our communities, both communities, and all the surrounding ones really have really needed this,” said Aimee Younker, childcare teacher. “And so, it’s been such an excitement to watch it grow.” Fundraising efforts include more than $300,000 raised to open their doors. Younker has four children of her own and she said she remembers when it was hard to find childcare herself.

* WGLT | Chicago teen charged in shooting at ISU’s Bone Student Center: Thomas is accused of shooting another person April 27 outside a sorority event being held at the Bone Student Center. The victim, who was not a student, was injured but survived. ISU Police said Thomas has “no affiliation with Illinois State University” other than being at the Bone that night. Police released security-camera photos of someone they subbed a “person of interest” within a day of the shooting. It’s unclear how long Thomas has been the suspect but remained at large.

*** National ***

* USA Today | ‘Killer bees’ keep spreading (and killing) across the US: In the last three months alone, a man mowing his property died after a bee attack, three people were taken to the hospital after tree trimmers disturbed a colony, hikers ran a mile to get away from an agitated hive and a woman and bees spooked by a lawn mower swarmed three horses. The horses later died from “thousands” of stings, their owner said. Scientists say the bees’ temperament is a defense mechanism to ward off predators – and note that because honey bees die after stinging, they are sacrificing themselves to protect their colony. But to unsuspecting humans, killer bees sure seem aggressive, spiteful and terrifying.

* WTTW | Advocates Say ‘Really Vulnerable Lives’ at Stake as Trump Administration Moves to Shutter LGBTQ+ Suicide Prevention Line: According to the latest data from SAMHSA, more than 14.5 million people have called, texted or sent chats to the 988 Lifeline and have been transferred to a crisis contact center since July 2022. Nearly 1.3 million of those were routed to the LGBTQ+ specialized service. “We know LGBTQ youth are four times more likely to commit suicide than their youth counterparts,” said Precious Brady-Davis, a commissioner for the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago. “Youth deserve people who understand what it’s like to come out. It’s support services, it’s resources, it’s comfort, it’s someone telling them it’s OK to be who you are.”

* Cannabis Business Times | US House Committee Approves Bill to Close THCA ‘Loophole,’ Ban Intoxicating Hemp Products: The House Appropriations Committee voted along party lines, 35-27, on June 23 to approve the Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill. The 138-page spending bill includes more than $25 billion in discretionary allocations to address myriad issues facing U.S. farmers, ranchers and rural communities. In addition to focusing on America’s food and drug supply, this year’s bill also includes language to rewrite the rules around hemp-derived cannabinoid products. The provision aims to address what elected officials and law enforcement groups nationwide have increasingly viewed as a public health and safety concern in the aftermath of the 2018 Farm Bill’s federal legalization of industrial hemp cultivation. The 2018 Farm Bill regulates hemp as an agricultural commodity but not finished goods containing the plant’s derivatives.

* Sports Illustrated | California’s Anti-Sweepstakes Bill Could Shake Up Online Gaming And Fantasy Sports: California is moving in lockstep with states like New York and Louisiana, proposing legislation that would make it illegal to support, facilitate, or promote sweepstakes-style online casinos. That means no wiggle room for payment processors, game suppliers, platforms, or even high-profile influencers who back them. If passed, California would join Connecticut and Montana in formally banning these operations.

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