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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Jun 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Chicago Abortion Fund…

Three years after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the Chicago Abortion Fund (CAF) has become the largest and most relied-upon independent abortion fund in the country. Since the Dobbs decision, CAF has fielded support requests from over 40,000 people seeking abortion care from more than 40 states—making it a critical safety net in a country where nearly 1 in 7 abortion seekers must now travel out of state to access care.

Since June 2022 (post-Dobbs), CAF has:

    - Fielded over 40,000 support requests on the CAF Helpline.
    - Distributed over $15 million in abortion and wrap-around support funding, including travel, lodging, and childcare expenses.
    - Increased the average support pledged to each caller to $1,000 dollars. This includes procedure costs, travel, lodging, and childcare.
    - Responded to high call volumes from Indiana (7,911), Illinois (6,244), Wisconsin (3,554), Texas (3,540), and Kentucky (1,401), and supported abortion seekers from over 40 states. […]

Illinois has become the nation’s clearest example of what’s possible when legal protections are paired with real investment in abortion infrastructure. In a post-Dobbslandscape, the state’s coordinated approach that combines public policy, health system access, and community-based support has made Illinois not just a haven for abortion care, but a national model.

Thanks to investment from the State of Illinois and the City of Chicago, CAF has expanded its Helpline capacity, added more bilingual and after-hours staff, and continued to ensure that 100% of callers relying on Illinois for care are able to access abortion care on the timeline that works best for them. CAF’s innovative programs, including an in-clinic patient navigation program, abortion doula support, and hospital navigation for complex procedures. These efforts help ensure callers not only reach their appointments, but receive compassionate and timely care throughout their journey.

In 2024, Illinois provided abortion care to an estimated 35,000 out-of-state patients, accounting for 39% of all abortions in the state, according to the Guttmacher Institute. This is the highest percentage of out-of-state care in the country by far, with nearly 1 in 4 people crossing state lines for abortion care coming to Illinois. Illinois also saw significant increases in patients from Florida and Iowa following their six-week bans.

* Click here for some background on Tyrone Muhammad, who appears to be running for US Senate



* The Alzheimer’s Association Illinois Chapter…

Yesterday, Governor JB Pritzker signed Senate Bill 126, making Illinois the first state in the nation to require insurance coverage of Alzheimer’s treatments to slow the progression of the disease. The new law, sponsored by State Senator Laura Murphy and State Representative Mary Gill, received unanimous bipartisan votes in both the House and Senate, and was the first bill to be signed by Governor Pritzker this year.

“We are thrilled that Illinois policymakers continue to prioritize the fight to end Alzheimer’s,” said Alzheimer’s Association Illinois Chapter Executive Director Delia Jervier. “The ability to access treatment is life changing for individuals living with Alzheimer’s disease and their families.”

Recently, the FDA approved the first-ever treatments to slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease - with several more promising drugs in the approval pipeline. However, these treatments are only effective if administered in the early stages of the disease. Senate Bill 126 ensures that all state-regulated health insurance plans provide coverage for these Alzheimer’s treatments when medically necessary, while prohibiting the use of step therapy which can unnecessarily delay treatment. The bill also requires coverage of diagnostic imaging or tests needed to confirm a diagnosis.

*** Statewide ***

* Inside Climate News | Shine On: Illinois Hopes to Continue Solar Boom Despite Federal Headwinds: A budget reconciliation bill passed by Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives in late May, now under consideration in the Senate, would gut nearly all the clean-energy incentives laid out in former President Joe Biden’s 2022 climate law, the Inflation Reduction Act. Among other cuts, President Donald Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” seeks to end a tax credit for home solar systems, an incentive previously slated for phaseout in 2034.

* Healthcare Dive | Prime Healthcare cuts 100 roles at Illinois hospitals: Prime Healthcare is cutting more than 100 roles at eight Illinois hospitals it acquired from Ascension earlier this year, a company spokesperson confirmed to Healthcare Dive. Most of the reductions took place on Friday, while the remaining cuts will take place through July, the spokesperson said. The cuts impact fewer than 1% of the roughly 14,000 workers employed at the affected facilities — 13,000 that stayed on through Prime’s acquisition and 1,000 in newly created roles.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Thousands of workers caught in middle of transit fiscal cliff talks: The Regional Transportation Authority has estimated that nearly 3,000 workers could lose their jobs if lawmakers don’t fund the transit system. The CTA alone could lay off more than 2,000 workers, acting CTA President Nora Leerhsen said at an RTA board meeting this year. “It’s a scary number to look at, and I hope we don’t come anywhere close to it,” Leerhsen said at the time.

* Capitol News Illinois | Under bill, state highway cameras could be used to investigate human trafficking: A bill passed in this year’s legislative session would rewrite the definition of a “forcible felony” to allow Illinois State Police to use images obtained from automatic license plate readers in cases involving human trafficking and involuntary servitude. Automatic license plate readers are cameras that capture images of vehicle license plates. After obtaining pictures captured by ALPRs, state police software runs the license plate numbers through other law enforcement databases – including the National Crime Information Center, the Department of Homeland Security, the Illinois Secretary of State and National Amber Alerts. The software then alerts ISP officials when a license plate number matches one in the databases.

* Rep. Bob Morgan

* Capitol News Illinois | ‘This issue isn’t going away’: Illinois lawmakers delay pension reform again: Lawmakers and labor unions have both expressed concern that benefits for Tier 2 employees – those who entered the public sector after 2011 – are inadequate and that some workers in that category are in line to receive benefits out of compliance with federal law. Tier 2 benefits are less generous than those received by Tier 1 employees, who also had to work only five years to become vested compared to 10 years for Tier 2, but the state constitution prohibits diminishing benefits for people to whom they have already been guaranteed.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Aggressive ICE raids, CPD cooperation denounced at Lower West Side rally: Immigrant advocates rallied Sunday for an end to aggressive U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids in Chicago and denounced the alleged cooperation of Chicago police in arrests made Wednesday. The rally, which drew dozens of people to a plaza at the corner of Blue Island Avenue and Loomis Street, follows nationwide protests during the past week over the Trump administration’s revamped mass deportation efforts.

* Chicago Mag | CTA asking for feedback from Chicago commuters ahead of budget planning: The “CTA Chats” will be held throughout the summer as officials seek feedback from commuters on daily travel and improvements they want to see. The agency says it will use the feedback to plan for its upcoming budget. Tuesday afternoon, agency leaders will be at Union Station from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. to speak with riders. They will be at the Illinois Medical District Blue Line stop on Wednesday and at the Garfield Green Line stop on Thursday.

* Tribune | Chicago could force Uber and Lyft to hike driver pay: Ald. Michael Rodriguez, 22nd, said his measure would make sure rideshare drivers make more than minimum wage and get paid when they wait for and drive to riders. But critics and the companies say the legislation will raise costs and could even put many drivers out of work. “While prices have increased for years, pay for drivers has decreased,” Rodriguez said. “Almost half the time, they are working, but not getting paid.”

* Block Club | As Top Street Fest Producer Closes, Lawsuit Emerges Over Handling Of Taste Of Randolph: Star Events, the company behind some of Chicago’s biggest and most beloved street festivals, quietly shut down in January after nearly 30 years, and it’s now embroiled in a lawsuit in which a former client is accusing it of fraud, financial mismanagement and defamation. The event production company helped shape Chicago’s summer festival lineup, organizing major events like Taste of Randolph, Mayfest, Southport Art Fest, Midsommarfest and Clark After Dark.

* WBBM | Steppenwolf’s ‘Purpose’ wins two Tony Awards: At the Tony’s, Jacobs-Jenkins credited much of the show’s success to Chicago. “I want to just thank the city of Chicago, honestly, who made this show what it was with their enthusiasm, who sent people here,” he said. “I encourage everyone to please support their local theaters. A lot of great stuff happens in New York but even more happens out in the regions.”

* Block Club | Did You Get A Decades-Old Traffic Ticket In The Mail? It’s Not A Scam: Block Club spoke with a handful of Chicago residents who received notices about parking, speeding and other motor vehicle violations in recent months that date back as much as 15 years. Many said they had no prior knowledge of the tickets before the recent notices, prompting them to think they were receiving scam mail. But the good news — or bad news — is that the notices are actually part of the city’s Vehicle and Commercial Ticket Debt Relief Program, which began in April and allows residents to settle ticket debt without late fees if they pay by the end of June.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Chicago Mag | This Gen Z Congressional Candidate Is Actually From Here: There’s another Gen Z candidate running in the 9th Congressional District to replace retiring Representative Jan Schakowsky. Last month, we brought you the story of Kat Abughazaleh, the 26-year-old right-wing-baiting internet influencer who moved to Chicago last year and is already running for Congress in a district she doesn’t even live in yet. This month, meet Bushra Amiwala, a 27-year-old who has spent her entire life in Rogers Park and Skokie, and is trying to get to Washington from a seat on her local school board.

* Naperville Sun | Police make another firearm-related arrest at Naperville Topgolf lot, total up to 12 for the year: Yezreel Salter, 26, of Lynwood, was taken into custody Friday night on one count each of felony aggravated unlawful possession of a weapon, transportation or possession of open alcohol by a driver and possession of 10 grams or less of cannabis. Officers were performing a proactive foot patrol of the Topgolf parking lot at 3211 Odyssey Court when they observed suspected drugs, open alcohol and a handgun in plain view inside a parked, unoccupied Dodge Charger, according to Naperville police spokeswoman Kelley Munch.

* Daily Southtown | Summer closures of Thornwood and Thornridge high schools will bring $25 million in facility upgrades: Two Thornton Township High School District 205 schools are closed until July 28 for a combined $25 million in facility upgrades, including upgrading athletic fields and swimming pools. Thornwood High School in South Holland closed May 23, and Thornridge High School in Dolton closed last week. Superintendent Nathaniel Cunningham said Thornton High School in Harvey will not close, though work is ongoing for its new athletic field and renovations to its band room.

* Daily Herald | How Bangs Lake project will improve drainage and reduce flooding in Wauconda: Long a concern in town, village staff in 2022 met with representatives of the Lake County Stormwater Management Commission regarding projects that could be candidates for a portion of $122 million in grant funding provided by the state. The village proceeded with design engineering to improve the chances of obtaining a grant, and last summer inked a pre-award agreement with the stormwater management commission for about $2.73 million. The final approvals and bid award came in February.

* Naperville Sun | No unaccompanied minors, only clear bags at Naperville’s Last Fling this year: Put on by the Naperville Jaycees, the annual Labor Day celebration is scheduled for Aug. 29-Sept. 1. With less than three months to go, the nonprofit social service club announced in a Facebook post that the event will have more safety requirements than in previous years, some of which are being dictated by the city. Among them is a provision that attendees under the age of 18 be accompanied by someone over the age of 25. One guardian will be able to supervise up to five minors.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | National Guard Captain campaigning for Congress in IL-13: Dylan Blaha, Democratic candidate for United States Congress in Illinois 13th congressional district, announced he will officially launch his primary challenge against Democratic Rep. Nikki Budzinski. “Democrats in Congress have rolled over and played dead. They are asleep at the wheel and they have failed to hold the Trump administration accountable. I will not allow Congress or the great state of Illinois to be a doormat for Donald Trump. As a military veteran and bold strategist, I am willing to take on this fight and push for the progressive values that will move our country forward,” said Dylan Blaha.

* PJ Star | Washington amphitheater project off the table: Mayor was ‘caught off guard’: After months of controversy and debate, Washington will not see an amphitheater in its future, as the contentious plan to construct the $12 million venue has been withdrawn by the organization that proposed it. A letter was delivered June 2 to Washington city attorney Mark Walton from Bob Brown, a lawyer representing the Hengst Foundation behind the project, stating the foundation’s April 28 letter of intent to construct the amphitheater was being withdrawn and would have no effect.

* WAND | 7,000 to attend FFA State Convention: As of Monday seven thousand students from across the state had registered for the convention which will be held at the BOS Center in downtown Springfield. The convention runs from Tuesday through Thursday. FFA is a premier educational and agricultural event. Although students do not have to be planning on a career in agriculture. FFA President Trenton Payne of Olney tells WAND News he will be going to Iowa State this fall. He hopes to have a career in agricultural engineering focusing on land and water resources engineering.

* WAND | Urbana Parks executive director retires after 33 years with the district: During his tenure, Barlett oversaw numerous projects and innovative programs that enriched the lives of community members of all ages and backgrounds. The District stated that Barlett led with humility, compassion, and integrity—qualities that have earned him deep respect and admiration throughout his remarkable career. Rachel Lenz will be assuming Barlett’s position.

* WSIL | Senator Dale Fowler announces Summer Reading Program: “This is a great way to encourage kids to keep learning over the summer while having fun and using their imagination,” Fowler said. “I hope kids throughout the 59th District embrace this summer reading challenge and that it becomes a fun and rewarding experience for everyone who decides to participate.”

*** National ***

* WIRED | Tesla’s Robotaxis Are Rolling Out Soon—With One Big Unanswered Question: And yet, just days out from Tesla’s launch of its long-awaited (and much delayed) Robotaxi service in Austin, Texas, the public still doesn’t know much at all about its teleoperations systems. Tesla has posted a job related to teleoperations that states the role will be responsible for developing the application “that our Remote Operators use to interface with our cars and robots,” an application where these operators will be “transported into the device’s world using a state-of-the-art VR rig that allows them to remotely perform complex and intricate tasks.”

* Crain’s | AMA opposes RFK Jr.’s dismantling of vaccine panel, seeks Senate investigation: The American Medical Association’s House of Delegates has adopted an emergency resolution opposing Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s move to gut the federal vaccine advisory council. Under the resolution, the nation’s top doctors association will seek a U.S. Senate investigation of his action, as well as other sources of vaccine guidance to support and rely upon. Kennedy, secretary of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, announced yesterday the department was totally reconstituting the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which makes recommendations on the safety, efficacy and clinical need of vaccines to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention.

* The Guardian | They hoped their children’s deaths would bring change. Then a Colorado bill to protect kids online failed: Had the legislation passed, it would have required social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram and TikTok to investigate and take down accounts engaged in gun or drug sales or in the sexual exploitation or trafficking of minors. It also mandated the creation of direct hotlines to tech company personnel for law enforcement and a 72-hour response window for police requests, a higher burden than under current law. Additionally, platforms would have had to report on how many minors used their services, how often they did so, for how long and how much those young users engaged with content that violated company policies. Several big tech firms registered official positions on the bill. According to Colorado lobbying disclosures, Meta’s longtime in-state lobby firm, Headwater Strategies, is registered as a proponent for changing the bill. Google and TikTok also hired lobbyists to oppose it.

* WIRED | What Tear Gas and Rubber Bullets Do to the Human Body: So-called “less-lethal” weapons like those that have been used against demonstrators in Los Angeles can cause severe, lasting harm like nerve or brain damage or blindness. They can also kill.

  18 Comments      


Is online sports betting lowering credit limits for all Illinoisans? (Updated)

Tuesday, Jun 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* InGame

Flutter is not flitting about when it comes to the Illinois legislature adding its proposed 25-cent or 50-cent tax on each individual sports bet, announcing early Tuesday morning that, effective Sept. 1, FanDuel will be passing the charge along to its customers, instituting a $0.50 transaction fee on all wagers placed in Illinois.

While FanDuel won’t start charging until days before the kickoff to the NFL season, the state of Illinois isn’t waiting, with its per-wager tax kicking in July 1 (assuming Gov. JB Pritzker signs the budget sent to him). Clearly, the braintrust at Flutter — FanDuel’s parent company — is hoping the braintrust in Illinois will use those few months to rethink the decision, noting in a press release that if the state pulls back on the transaction tax, the company will immediately remove the fee being placed on bettors.

Click here for the press release.

* Daniel Koslovsky and Prabhdeen Kaur writing in Crain’s

Online operators exploit behavioral biases — anchoring, overconfidence, the gambler’s fallacy — to coax consumers into wagering more than they intended. Stanford economists estimate behavioral biases are responsible for over 8% of what online sports gamblers wager. Moreover, online sports gambling is highly accessible, available to anyone with a smartphone at any time. Online sportsbooks rely heavily on aggressive marketing and promotions, familiar to any modern sports fan who is inundated by them whenever they watch a game on TV or in person. Odds are priced in confusing ways that require bettors to perform mental math to reveal the true price.

The results are predictably disastrous for the finances of bettors. A flurry of academic studies were released last year showing that consumers in states that legalized sports betting had less savings, more excessive debt, and overall worse financial health. One study estimated that annual net savings and investment fall by $144 per household after legalization. A back-of-the-envelope calculation suggests that Illinois lost $730 million in 2023 that could have gone to college savings, retirement accounts, or small business investment because of legalized sports gambling. Dwarfing the $150 million the state collected in tax receipts from sportsbooks.

Even Illinoisans who don’t participate in online sports betting feel the squeeze. Researchers at UCLA and the University of Southern California have shown that banks have tightened credit limits and lending standards on all consumers in states that have legalized online sports gambling to account for the extra risk presented by the abundance of betting. Meanwhile, public resources — counseling, fiscal support, family services — strain under the weight of problem gambling, eroding the very tax revenues that boosters tout.

* From the study mentioned in the highlighted passage above

In this section, we study whether financial institutions responded to increased consumers’ financial risk by reducing credit card limits and limiting the type of loans they can take.

In Figure 4a, we present changes in the cumulative credit card limits for individuals with existing credit cards. We find that credit card limits start to decrease right after gambling legalization and continue to decrease as time passes. For general sports betting access, the overall ATT [Average Treatment on the Treated] estimate corresponds to roughly a 1.6% decline in credit card limits, while access to online betting leads to a nearly 2.7% decline. These results suggest that banks are responding to the increased financial risk caused by sports betting and lowering credit card limits to mitigate potential risk exposure. […]

While sports betting accessibility appears to be financially harming consumers, online access drives most of the effect we observe. Furthermore, the effect of sports betting does not appear to be driven by higher credit card delinquencies but by increased exposure and use of hard debts such as consolidation loans, secured loans, and bankruptcies. The fact that credit card delinquencies are unaffected or lower is likely due to financial institutions trying to mitigate their exposure to risk by lowering credit limits. Despite this, we observe consumers missing payments for other loans and products, leading to increased collections and auto loan delinquencies.

…Adding… Illinois Gaming Board…

Hi Rich,

Hope all is well with you.

We read with interest your blog post, Is online sports betting lowering credit limits for all Illinoisans?

The Illinois Gaming Board (IGB) approved a new rule at its April 24, 2025, meeting, to prohibit the use of credit cards to fund sports wagering accounts. This rule will soon be filed with JCAR.

During the meeting, IGB Administrator Marcus D. Fruchter said, “As part of our review, we determined that prohibiting the use of credit cards to fund sports wagering accounts is a justified and impactful advancement in Illinois sports wagering. There is a growing body of recent research showing that restrictions on credit usage to fund wagering accounts encourages responsible gambling and mitigates the harms of compulsive gambling. Problem gamblers are particularly at risk and studies have shown an often-problematic willingness for compulsive gamblers to use credit cards to place bets.

Here’s the press release.

  16 Comments      


Feds say they will retry Sen. Emil Jones III on bribery charges (Updated x2)

Tuesday, Jun 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune courts reporter Jason Meisner

This post will likely be updated.

…Adding… Capitol News Illinois’ Hannah Meisel

…Adding… Sun-Times

Attorneys and U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood are expected to set a new trial date later this month.

A new trial could last four weeks since prosecutors intend to call “a few additional witnesses,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Prashant Kolluri said in court.

It’s been a little more than a month since Jones’ trial ended with a hung jury. Despite being a relatively straightforward case, the trial featured plenty of intrigue. Jurors heard from a former red-light camera executive who wore a wire for the FBI after being caught giving “benefits” to public officials across the suburbs, and they viewed undercover recordings he made in 2019. […]

Ultimately, Jones’ trial turned out to be the third of four federal corruption trials in Chicago to end without a conviction since August.

  15 Comments      


Senate releases veto session schedule

Tuesday, Jun 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Veto session is scheduled for two weeks in October



  2 Comments      


Judge denies Madigan’s motion for new trial ahead of Friday sentencing (Updated)

Tuesday, Jun 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Tribune

A federal judge on Monday denied a motion by former House Speaker Michael Madigan seeking to overturn his recent conviction on bribery and other corruption counts, setting the stage for a high-stakes sentencing hearing later this week.

Madigan, 83, was back in the federal courtroom for the first time since a jury convicted him nearly four months ago. But unlike his marathon trial, Monday’s hearing was brief.

After both sides waived oral arguments on the defense motion, U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey announced he was denying it, though his ruling, which he said is more than 100 pages, won’t be made public for some time.

* Sun-Times

Prosecutors wrote in a court filing late Friday that “Madigan has amassed a personal fortune of more than $40 million.” They did so as they complained of his “appalling” greed amid a scheme to trade on the office he once held, as well as former Chicago Ald. Danny Solis’.

But Monday, Madigan’s attorneys insisted that any claim that he was “lining his pockets” is “patently false.” They complained that prosecutors breached the direction of local courts when they “recklessly exposed” Madigan’s net worth, and they asked that it be stricken from the record. […]

Defense attorney Dan Collins insisted during the hearing that “Mr. Madigan’s net worth has nothing to do with this case.”

Blakey declined to make any ruling on the issue. Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Streicker simply said prosecutors opposed Madigan’s motion. It will likely be addressed again during a follow-up hearing Tuesday.

*** UPDATE *** Tribune court reporter Jason Meisner


* WGN

[O]n Friday, June 13, Madigan’s wife, Shirley, asked for leniency in a videotaped appeal. Shirley Madigan says she can’t manage without her husband in the emotional 8-minute-long video.

“I really don’t exist without him,” she said. ” I wish I could say that I do, but I don’t know what I would do without Michael. I would probably have to find someplace to live.”

Defense lawyers collected close to 200 messages for the court in defense of their client, consisting of family members, former colleagues, labor leaders, and even clergy. Prosecutors, however, in their submittal to the court, pointed to Madigan’s 10-count criminal conviction.

“Madigan seeks extraordinary leniency from the Court—a sentence of probation for a former high-level elected official convicted of abusing his office for years through bribery, fraud, and conspiracy.”

* Shirley Madigan’s full video statement


Click here to read the letters of support for Madigan.

* More…

  30 Comments      


RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois

Tuesday, Jun 10, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail creates more jobs in Illinois than any other private sector employer, with one out of every four workers employed by the retail sector. Importantly, retail is an industry in which everyone, regardless of credentials, can find a viable career path.

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

  Comments Off      


Too much, too late (Updated)

Tuesday, Jun 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

I asked Illinois House Speaker Chris Welch last week about the failure to pass an omnibus energy bill (the Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability Act) during the just-ended spring legislative session.

“I think the same thing that happened on energy happened on all the things, you know. Big bills take time,” Welch said. “And I really do believe it’s important that we take the time to get it right and make sure we produce the best results for everyone.”

Welch compared the delay to his first spring session as House speaker, when another energy omnibus bill crashed and burned and then they came back in the fall and “passed one of the biggest pieces of legislation that ever passed in this state.”

Gov. JB Pritzker told reporters much the same thing last week.

“You don’t get everything done in one year,” Pritzker said. “(S)ometimes they spend two years, four years, six years trying to get something big done.” Like Welch, he also pointed to the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, which he noted took about a year and a half to pass.

Senate President Don Harmon, on the other hand, pointed to this summer’s expected temporary spike in electricity costs due to capacity charges by regional grid managers as a reason. Some of the proposals (like battery storage) would cost more in the short term, “so we’re trying to figure out how to how to respond to that anticipated spike,” Harmon told Illinois Public Media’s “The 21st Show.”

In the end, though, Harmon said, We just couldn’t keep the Christmas tree standing this year” — apparently meaning the bill fell under its own weight.

But other factors were important as well, according to numerous people who worked on the bill. Stakeholders would agree to changes, and then the drafts would come back that inexplicably looked little like what people had agreed to, which not only delayed the end, but also injected a lack of trust into the process.

This was particularly true with energy efficiency requirements, I’m told. A deal was finally cut with ComEd, and Ameren decided to move off its opposition, but there simply wasn’t time left to get that drafted before the clock ran out.

Many issues had been on the table for months, but a legislative working group came up with some ideas that couldn’t find quick consensus.

People were spread too thin across too many major items (including mass transit reform and the state budget), and as a consequence, way too much fell through the cracks.

The American Petroleum Institute blasted the energy storage portion of the bill for costing $9 billion for about one to two hours of peak electricity supply per day.

Proponents vehemently disputed the API’s figure, saying the estimate was way too high, and cost increases wouldn’t begin for a few years and cost decreases would start a few years later.

But that and other things helped drive the pipe trade unions away from bill. The unions represent workers at a massive Metro East coal-fired power plant and a major refinery, both of which are heavy industrial electricity consumers.

And their decision to oppose the legislation on May 31 meant there wasn’t enough time to fix that problem and bring the final language to the two Democratic caucuses.

The pipe trades have now officially declared themselves neutral, as have Ameren, Constellation Energy and the Illinois Energy Association. And some environmental lobbyists think the language on the table has a good shot at passage during the October veto session (or perhaps in January), even though their attempts to rein in power-hungry data centers were left out of the bill.

Whatever the case may be, the Legislature goes through this almost every year. They put all the big stuff off until the end, and then they don’t have the bandwidth to deal with a multitude of issues at once, although this year was particularly difficult.

Human beings tend to wait until the last minute to do things. But the leaders need to start enforcing earlier deadlines for giant issues like this energy proposal so they can deal with other time-sensitive things (the budget and revenues, for instance) at the end. Or maybe the other way around.

Far too many major issues were left to May 31. And that procrastination led to problems like a poorly drafted revenue bill that could imperil some TV and film projects in Illinois.

A buddy of mine who’s been at the Statehouse for decades grumped last week the leaders tried to do a five-month session in five days. That’s no way to run a railroad.

* A few more…

…Adding… I forgot to post this release from the Clean Grid Alliance…

Following is a statement from Jeff Danielson, Vice President for Advocacy at the Clean Grid Alliance, in response to recent false claims about Illinois’ energy bill negotiations:

“In the days following the end of the legislative session, some have advanced false claims about battery storage power plants that need to be corrected. Multiple media outlets have cited the baseless statement that battery storage investment would cost $7 billion. And, suddenly and without explanation, this number has again been arbitrarily inflated to $9 billion–also baseless.

“The fact is, investment in battery storage will save money for Illinois consumers. It’s a critical tool to avoid future energy price spikes for ratepayers. There is no cost to consumers in the energy storage provisions until the energy storage is actually built–which, at the earliest, would be 2028. And again, after construction is complete, the increased energy storage will lead to lower prices for consumers.

“A 2024 Power Bureau analysis found that deploying 7.5 GW of storage in Illinois would save customers $480–840 million annually by reducing capacity, transmission, and energy market costs. In their own words—ComEd stated that an energy storage system of 750MW would have saved ComEd customers approximately $195M - $280M, in the latest PJM capacity auction, and could lead to $10-17 in savings per year on customer bills.

“Illinois is facing an energy reliability and affordability crisis. Just this week, Illinois customer bills have gone up to account for price spikes that are the direct result of the state not building enough new generation to meet skyrocketing demand.

“The bottom line: battery storage is the solution to spiking costs–not the driver.”

  13 Comments      


Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?

Tuesday, Jun 10, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

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

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

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

  Comments Off      


Open thread

Tuesday, Jun 10, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sly Stone has been one of my favorite musical artists for pretty much my entire sentient life. RIP

We got to live together

Did you miss us?

  16 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jun 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois joins lawsuit against U.S. over triggers that can make semiautomatic rifles fire faster. Sun-Times

    - Illinois joined 15 other states Monday in suing the Trump administration over plans to return forced-reset triggers that were confiscated by federal law enforcement and once again allow them to be sold.
    - Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul said he would continue to enforce the ban on the devices through state law that bars owning them and other devices — such as bump stocks — that can also make semiautomatic rifles fire more rapidly.
    - Forced-reset triggers were previously considered illegal machine guns by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Forearms and Explosives, but the Justice Department reached a settlement with Rare Breed Triggers last month to allow their sale.

* Related stories…

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*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Gov. Pritzker prepping for House committee showdown with help from top Biden attorney: The billionaire governor is paying for the services of Covington & Burling out of his own pocket. Dana Remus, former White House counsel to President Joe Biden, is among those helping Pritzker prepare for Thursday’s Republican-led committee hearing about immigration policies. Republican attorneys at the firm are also providing counsel, according to a source with direct knowledge of his preparations.

* Justice David Overstreet and Ron Flagg | Defunding the Legal Services Corporation will significantly harm Illinoisans: Domestic violence survivors who need help getting a court order to keep their abusers away. Seniors who need peace of mind from a will and power of attorney. Veterans who need help getting Social Security. All of these Illinoisans may soon find it harder to get free legal help. The Administration’s proposed elimination of the Legal Services Corporation (LSC), which funds free legal assistance for Americans, would have disastrous effects on residents of central and southern Illinois. Land of Lincoln Legal Aid has been providing free legal help to Illinoisans in 65 counties for 53 years, and currently 20 percent of its funding comes from LSC.

*** Statewide ***

* NBC Chicago | Salmonella outbreak linked to eggs sold in Illinois, 8 other states leaves 79 sickened: A Salmonella outbreak linked to eggs that were sold to restaurants and retailers in Illinois and eight other states has left 79 people sickened, leading to 21 hospitalizations, according to the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention. The recall was announced Friday by August Egg Company, and includes all varieties of eggs distributed by the company, including organic, cage-free brown and omega-3.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | State agrees to pay $1.3M for never-built migrant tent encampment despite Gov. JB Pritzker’s assurances: In response to questions about the apparent contradiction, a Pritzker spokesman maintained that “GardaWorld had no contractual right to payment.” Nevertheless, the state agreed to pay the company because “the situation evolved,” Pritzker spokesman Alex Gough said. Neither Pritzker’s office nor officials with the state Human Services Department would explain why the state agreed to pay if it was under no legal obligation to do so.

* Tribune | Cook County property tax reforms stall out in Springfield: An overhaul of the county’s tax sale process spearheaded by Treasurer Maria Pappas was among the more prominent reforms to sputter out. Pappas’ legislation would have changed the way the county handles delinquent taxes to ensure those who don’t catch up on their property tax bills can still pocket some of their home’s value if it’s turned over to a private investor. The reforms would have swapped out the county’s current way of dealing with the sale of past-due taxes. Private investors — known as tax buyers — can currently win a deed to a home outright if a homeowner doesn’t pay up in a certain amount of time.

* Daily Herald | Fighting for the right to die: Terminally ill Lombard woman continues push for medical ‘aid in dying’ bill: Deb Robertson isn’t giving up on state legislation that would give terminally ill patients like herself the option to end their lives with medical assistance. The Lombard woman, who was diagnosed with a rare cancer in 2022, has spent much of the last 2½ years lobbying lawmakers to pass a medical aid in dying bill in Illinois. The measure, which recently passed the Illinois House by a 63 to 42 vote, would allow terminally ill adults, like Robertson, an option in how they die. Under the proposed bill, a patient with six months or less to live could opt to take a prescribed medication to end his or her life.

* Daily Herald d| Legislation regarding impact fees for schools on hold after clearing General Assembly: The state House approved the plan in early April, and the Senate did so May 29 with an amendment establishing it will be effective immediately. The amendment required another House vote, which happened May 31. The same day, however, Didech placed a procedural hold on the proposal to delay its delivery to Gov. JB Pritzker for his signature. Didech said he ordered the hold to allow village and school officials and Wirtz family representatives an opportunity to reset their conversation. It follows the election of a new mayor in Mundelein, Robin Meier, and the addition of three new trustees to the village board.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club Chicago | Did Chicago Cops Help ICE During Mass Arrests? City Leaders Call For Investigation: Ald. Andre Vasquez (40th), who chairs the city’s Committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights, introduced an order to City Council to determine if the actions of the Chicago police officers on scene that day violated the city’s Welcoming Ordinance. Chicago police officials said officers were on the scene to preserve public safety and did not violate the ordinance. On June 4, Chicago police vehicles and officers were inside and outside the Intensive Supervision Appearance Program office building at 2245 S. Michigan Ave. as agents arrested people, leading city officials and organizers to question whether the Chicago police officers were assisting ICE.

* WGN | Broadview ICE facility faces scrutiny over alleged poor conditions, treatment: Over the past few days, families have been reaching out to WGN-TV raising concerns over the conditions inside an ICE processing center in Broadview. Those families are desperate for answers on what to do next since their loved ones were detained in the South Loop on Wednesday. The Trump administration’s border czar has acknowledged overcrowding at facilities is an issue, complicating their hopes to deport more people.

* Crain’s | Brandon Johnson’s COO joins the Obama Foundation: Mayor Brandon Johnson recently backed off a plan to appoint Roberson to lead the Chicago Transit Authority amid the uncertainty over state legislation lessening the mayor’s control of the CTA and pushback from transit advocates and one of the mayor’s own appointees to the CTA board, who were calling for a broad national search.

* Crain’s | Amid anti-DEI orders, Lori Lightfoot reflects on equity-focused pandemic response: Lightfoot, speaking at the seventh anniversary of hospital-community collaborative West Side United, said the story of targeting the hardest-hit communities, which had the fewest resources to deal with a rapidly spreading virus, is something she’s often asked about. She’s lectured on the topic as a public health professor at Harvard University, and it’s the subject of a book she’s writing. […] Before residents would listen to the city’s desperate directives about COVID, Lightfoot said, they had their own message: “This COVID thing, that’s fine. But we need food.”

* Crain’s | Bally’s settles suit by white men over Chicago casino stake: “We are very happy with the resolution and Bally’s decision not to use race in this investment,” Dan Lennington, an attorney for the men and the AAER, said in a statement. “This case should serve as a warning to other companies that hope to dole out investment opportunities based on race. It is illegal and we’ll fight it wherever we can.” Lennington declined to comment on whether Fisher and Aronoff had purchased any shares of the offering since it had been opened up to other investors.

* Crain’s | Downtown rents jump as supply pipeline dries up: The net monthly rent at top-tier apartment buildings in downtown Chicago jumped 6.25% year over year in the first quarter of 2025, according to new data from the Chicago office of appraisal and consulting firm Integra Realty Resources. High rents are expected to persist over the next few months as the market sees the number of new apartments delivered annually hit a nearly three-decade low.

* Crain’s | The $860M lawsuit that’s looming over one of Chicago’s biggest cannabis companies: One of Chicago’s biggest marijuana companies — Verano Holdings — has a historically big $860 million lawsuit hanging over its head like a boogeyman. The case could inflate to nearly $1 billion in costs with interest, damages and attorneys’ fees if a worst-case scenario comes to pass, spelling major trouble for the multistate operator. The threat stems from a lawsuit, originally filed in 2022 by Minnesota-based multistate operator Vireo Growth, after a failed all-stock acquisition deal that year purported to be worth $413 million. Vireo currently has a footprint in Maryland, Missouri, New York and Utah, apart from its home state.

* Sun-Times | Chicago’s kid carjackers: Inside the SRT Boys’ yearslong crime spree: They began their crime spree during the COVID-19 shutdown, a time when they were supposed to be studying at home because the city’s schools were closed. But, for many of these kids, there was nobody to call them back home, to check whether they were tucked into bed at night. Some of their parents were hustling, too, or in jail — or dead.

* WTTW | Chicago Cracks Down on Nearly 200 Illegal Trash Pickups in First Months of Enforcement Effort: Private waste haulers were slapped with nearly 200 tickets for illegal, early-morning pickups during the first six months of a new enforcement. That’s according to records obtained by WTTW News from the Chicago Department of Streets and Sanitation, which began coordinating the crackdown through a newly created 311 complaint category in October 2024. Trash and recycling companies aren’t allowed to make pickups in Chicago between 10 p.m. and 7 a.m. For nearly two years, WTTW News has been tracking numerous companies flouting the law and documenting a tsunami of complaints from residents.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Aqua Illinois warns University Park, other communities of tap water risk for infants: Customers of Aqua Illinois complained Monday about the quality of water they receive from the utility and the company’s response to nitrate contamination affecting University Park and other communities. Aqua Illinois is advising customers not to use tap water for infants under 6 months old after recent testing showed elevated nitrate levels in drinking water systems. But at an Aqua water plant in University Park, where cases of bottled water were being distributed, some customers said they wouldn’t drink the water regardless. The complained of cloudiness in the water flowing from their taps, the smell and the cost.

* Daily Herald | ‘We’re all in this together’: Hawthorn Woods looks for long-term water option: In Hawthorn Woods, Halvorson is among about 1,200 Aqua Illinois customers, the second-largest privately-owned water utility in the state. And for the foreseeable future, all are in the pickle of not having a viable alternative. […] About a third of Hawthorn Woods households get their water from Aqua, with about 300 of those customers receiving it from Aqua through a contract with Lake County. The rest in town are on wells and generally happy with that arrangement, Newton said.

* ABC Chicago | Several detained in HSI operation at Elk Grove Village warehouse: Cook County commissioner: That building is operated by Accelerated Global Operations and SpeedX. “The manager told me everyone at that location has a worker’s permit. To my understanding, everyone who was detained was detained solely based on not having a physical copy of their work permit on their person today,” said Kevin Morrison, Cook County commissioner for the 15th District. Morrison says he arrived after employees were detained.

* Tribune | Worried Northwestern lab directors describe ‘bleak’ atmosphere in wake of Trump research funding freeze: The Trump administration’s freezing in April of $790 million in federal research funding for Northwestern University has left concerned lab directors without key grant money from the National Institutes of Health and forced the university to spend millions to keep vital research afloat and to continue to pay graduate workers and scientists. Carole LaBonne, a professor of molecular biosciences at Northwestern, said the situation at the prominent research institution can only be described as “bleak” as the halt in federal funds continues to send shockwaves across the Evanston campus.

* Daily Southtown | Former Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard does not have document demanded in FOIA lawsuit, attorney says: Henyard was required to appear in court Friday at the Daley Center in Chicago to produce documents requested last year by the nonprofit Edgar County Watchdogs that are public via the Freedom of Information Act. Cook County Judge Kate Moreland filed an order holding her in contempt May 23 for repeated violations of court orders. Though Henyard was called to testify, Henyard’s attorney, Beau Brindley, told Moreland she would not take the stand due to an ongoing federal investigation into possible misconduct during her tenure as Dolton’s mayor. Brindley confirmed after the hearing he is representing Henyard in the federal investigation.

* Daily Herald | ‘While we still have time’: DuPage County ecologists working to save endangered dragonfly: But Ortega cautions against dismissing those efforts, noting the harm that can accompany the loss of a “keystone species,” on which the survival of other species and their ecosystems depend. Throughout history, humans have “found out the hard way how important one species can be, and we generally only find that out after the species is gone,” Ortega said. “The removal of one species can have catastrophic effects,” he added.

* WTTW | Nearly 80% of Chicago-Area Forests Are Infested With Invasive Plants. Ecologists Urge Homeowners to Join the Fight: Restoration ecologist Matt Ueltzen can remember a time not that long ago when the Lake County Forest Preserve District had to more or less “hide” some of its most vital work from the public. Those were the days when, if people saw crews clearing invasive buckthorn, angry calls were sure to follow. Why was the forest preserves cutting down trees? “In the past, people would think that anything that’s green is good,” said Ueltzen. “Now I think people have come to realize there are some very invasive and damaging, harmful plants out there.”

* Daily Herald | Rosemont buys former Ram restaurant building for $2.5 million: Village officials say they want to hold onto the property temporarily and resell to a new owner. “We don’t intend to own all of this forever,” said Mayor Brad Stephens. “We intend to sell it sooner rather than later.”

* Daily Herald | Invasive, ravenous and hard to stop: Asian jumping worms on suburban gardeners’ radar: The invasive worm was found last year in at least 12 members’ yards, including Landwehr’s compost bins. Wanting to be good nature stewards, the club decided this year to follow horticulture experts’ advice to slow the spread: Don’t share plants. “In good conscience, we could not propagate these and spread them around,” Landwehr said.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | McLean County Board Executive Committee unanimously approves request for money for shelter village in Bloomington: HSHM is seeking $1.3 million in grant funding from McLean County behavioral health coordination. The full county board will vote on the proposal at its monthly meeting on June 12. McLean County Behavioral Health Coordination Director Marita Landreth joined Home Sweet Home CEO Matt Burgess to discuss the features and community benefit of the project — and its name. “We have chosen to name this shelter village, ‘The Bridge,’ as a nod both to its location on the south end of downtown [Bloomington] right before you come over the bridge to come into town, but also to indicate its purpose,” Burgess said. “And that’s to be a bridge for people coming inside to get out of homelessness and into a permanent housing arrangement.”

* 25News Now | Some McLean County teachers say book banning can be dangerous for students: A small group of educators from McLean County’s largest two school systems, Unit 5 and District 87, rallied in Bloomington Saturday to speak out against banning books, particularly books about race relations and LGBTQ+ culture. In a tent outside Bobzbay Books in Downtown Bloomington, novels were on display that have been banned in other states, like “The Perks of Being a Wallflower,” by Stephen Chbosky, “All Boys Aren’t Blue” by George M. Johnson, and “To Kill a Mockingbird,” by Harper Lee. Informational pamphlets were available explaining why educators are advocating for these books.

* WCIA | Charles Isbell one step closer to assuming role as U of I Chancellor: The U of I Board of Trustees approved his appointment as the 11th chancellor on Monday, although he won’t start serving until current Chancellor Robert Jones finishes his term next month. Isbell is a former computer scientist and provost at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He didn’t go to the U of I as a student, but he said he’s long been invested in the school.

* WCIA | Sangamon Co. Fair set to kick off, celebrating 75 years: The fair will begin on June 11 and will run until June 15 at the fairgrounds in New Berlin. Organizers said attendees can expect exhibits ranging from the arts to culinary to horticulture.

*** National ***

* WaPo | Meta found a new way to violate your privacy. Here’s what you can do.: Apps on your phone are walled off from accessing your activity on other apps, including web browser apps like Chrome. Meta and Yandex found work-arounds. The techniques essentially were akin to malware, or malicious software that is surreptitiously planted on your phone or computer, Dolanjski said. Google said the behaviors of Meta and Yandex “blatantly violate our security and privacy principles.”

* AP | RFK Jr. ousts entire CDC vaccine advisory committee: “Without removing the current members, the current Trump administration would not have been able to appoint a majority of new members until 2028,” Kennedy wrote in a Wall Street Journal opinion piece. “A clean sweep is needed to re-establish public confidence in vaccine science.” […] “Make no mistake: Politicizing the ACIP as Secretary Kennedy is doing will undermine public trust under the guise of improving it,” [Dr. Tom Frieden, president and CEO of Resolve to Save Lives,] said in a statement. “We’ll look back at this as a grave mistake that sacrificed decades of scientific rigor, undermined public trust, and opened the door for fringe theories rather than facts.”

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Jun 10, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Jun 10, 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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Friday, Jun 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Isabel and I need a little break. Have a great weekend. Carly Simon and Mick Jagger (with a killer bass flourish by Klaus Voormann) will play us out

I bet you think this song is about you

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Jun 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul…

Attorney General Raoul won a court order on Thursday that blocks the Trump administration’s attempts to dismantle AmeriCorps, the federal agency for national service and volunteerism.

On April 29, Attorney General Raoul joined a coalition of 25 states and attorneys general in challenging the administration’s plans to eliminate nearly 85% of AmeriCorps’ workforce and terminate $400 million worth of AmeriCorps-supported programs, among other actions. Attorney General Raoul and the coalition sought a preliminary injunction to immediately stop the closure of programs in plaintiff states. On Thursday, the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland granted the preliminary injunction, ordering defendants to restore all programs that had been terminated in plaintiff states by reinstating and returning to service the AmeriCorps members who served on those programs, and ordering the reinstatement of over 750 National Civilian Community Corps members. […]

Attorney General Raoul and the coalition successfully argued that the Trump administration’s termination of more than 1,000 programs and the removal of certain members from service violated the law. By closing $400 million worth of AmeriCorps programs without explanation, the Trump administration harmed states that administer those programs and the veterans, K-12 students, vulnerable seniors and residents who depend upon their services. In Illinois, the Trump administration canceled 26 grants managed by Serve Illinois, which served students, veterans and individuals experiencing homelessness, as well as other programs across the state. These cancelations impacted hundreds of AmeriCorps members and the individuals they served and disrupted schools, health systems and services, food banks and other critical community agencies upon which Illinoisans rely.

A federal judge found that the Trump administration’s actions were unlawful because Congress explicitly required the agency to provide advance notice and an opportunity to comment on an any major changes to AmeriCorps services. The Trump administration ignored this clear legal requirement, and the court granted relief to the plaintiff states as a consequence.

The order restores vital AmeriCorps programs in Illinois. The court’s decision preliminarily stops the Trump administration from terminating these essential programs while the litigation continues.

* Tribune

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement subpoenaed the Chicago city clerk’s office in April for the personal information of applicants to a municipal ID program popular with immigrants, an apparent new tactic in Republican President Donald Trump’s plan to target Chicago as he seeks to ramp up deportations.

The clerk’s office received the summons on April 17 requiring the city to turn over the past three years of CityKey records, according to a copy obtained by the Tribune in a Freedom of Information Act request. The program was launched in 2017 by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel and city Clerk Anna Valencia as part of a stand against Trump.

Asked whether the city complied with the subpoena, Law Department spokesperson Kristen Cabanban indicated some type of response but would not directly confirm whether it turned over documents to ICE, which demanded several years worth of data. […]

After being overwhelmed by demand for the IDs by Venezuelan migrants at in-person events in fall 2023, Valencia started offering an online application in December 2024. To meet state document requirements, the Clerk’s Office has kept application materials for more than 2,700 people who used the online CityKey system since then, according to Diana Martinez, a spokesperson for Valencia. […]

ICE spokesperson Erin Bultje declined to comment on both subpoenas, citing “an ongoing investigation.”

* House Speaker Chris Welch is leaning into the $40 million he put into the state budget for a high school sports complex. From his constituent newsletter

House Speaker Emanuel ‘Chris’ Welch and Proviso West High School are making plans for a modern sports complex on the school’s Hillside campus a reality. The $40 million investment made possible through Welch’s new state budget will create a dynamic space for student athletics and community events—uplifting the entire region and promoting local economic development.

“Traveling across our state and across the Midwest, I’ve seen how projects just like this can transform entire communities—and I’m so excited to partner with Proviso West to undertake this exciting development in our community,” Welch said. “Sitting on the border of Cook and DuPage county, this project is truly an investment in regional economic growth. A world-class sports complex on the Proviso West campus creates a multifaceted space for our student athletes as well as for youth and intramural leagues across our area. The local, regional, and statewide events this complex can attract will benefit our business community as well.”

*** Statewide ***

* ABC Chicago | Illinois residents’ information accessed in data breach, Healthcare and Family Services says: Information accessed by hackers “may have included customer names, social security numbers, driver’s license or state identification card numbers, financial information related to child support, child support or Medicaid identification and case numbers, and date of birth,” HFS said. Officials said 933 people were impacted by the data breach, including 564 Illinois residents.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Crain’s | Too late, too divided: Inside the collapse of Springfield’s transit rescue: Sen. Ram Villivalam, D–Chicago, the lead Senate transit negotiator, told Crain’s his chamber’s vote reflected the urgency required to save mass transit. “We did not want to have a conversation with public hearings of 40% cuts to service and 3,000 layoff notices being sent to our front-line public transit workers. That’s why we put forward our package of reforms and funding, and that’s why we passed it over to the House,” he said.

* WGLT | Clean Slate Act, Medical Aid in Dying bills among those that stalled in Illinois legislature: The Clean Slate Act stalled in the Illinois House, dimming the hopes of advocates who thought it might be called in the last hours of the Spring Session. It would have automatically sealed records for criminal non-violent criminal convictions, though police and prosecutors would still see those convictions. Automatic sealing would not be extended to felonies involving murder, domestic violence, sex crimes, animal cruelty, and drunk driving.

* IPM Newsroom | How will this spring’s General Assembly session affect education in Illinois?: The state budget, Senate Bill 2510, is the most important bill that passed. It includes a smaller increase for grade and high schools than many education advocates wanted. Those dollars will be distributed through the state’s Evidence-Based Funding formula, which assesses the gap between the resources school districts have and the costs of services their students receive.

* Capitol News Illinois | Despite victories, major higher education policy bills stall in General Assembly: But lawmakers did not approve the overall funding increase that Pritzker requested at the start of the session, settling on a 1% bump in their operational budgets instead of the 3% the governor proposed, Pritzker’s office, however, has said there are contingencies to provide an additional 2% in the event of significant cuts in federal funding. They also did not pass other major higher education policy initiatives, including Pritzker’s plan to allow community colleges to offer four-year bachelor’s degrees in certain high-demand career fields, and a long-sought overhaul in the way Illinois funds its public universities.

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois ‘chicken bill’ aims to boost small poultry farms, expand access to their products: Under a measure dubbed the “chicken bill,” farmers who process fewer than 7,500 birds annually would be exempt from state and federal inspections of their poultry operations or from having to send birds to USDA-approved processing facilities — an increase from the previous 5,000-bird threshold. The change, part of an update to the Illinois Meat and Poultry Inspection Act, also allows these farmers to sell their poultry beyond their own farms — including at farmers markets, roadside stands and through delivery — a major shift from earlier restrictions.

* SLPR | After deadly Edwardsville tornado, Illinois lawmakers pass warehouse safety bill: The legislation, which awaits the governor’s signature, mandates that all warehouses in the state craft a tornado safety plan and build storm shelters in newly constructed warehouses. It requires county and city building inspectors hold a certification from the International Code Council. The passage of the legislation in the last hours of the Illinois legislature’s spring session marks a critical step in a more than three-year-long journey to passing legislation in response to the tornado that flattened half of an Amazon warehouse.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Jenner & Block hires former U.S. attorney from firm that made deal with Trump: A top white-collar litigator is joining Jenner & Block, leaving rival Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison after less than six months following a deal that firm made with President Donald Trump to avoid an executive order targeting its practice. Damian Williams, who had joined Paul Weiss in January after serving as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, will become co-chair of Jenner’s litigation department and investigations, compliance and defense practice.

* WBEZ | Chicago’s immigrant community ‘sad’ and ‘numb’ over Trump’s new travel ban: Trump’s latest order will go into effect on Monday. The ban prohibits travel into the U.S. from citizens from Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. Afghanistan is also part of the ban, though there will be exceptions for Afghan Special Immigrant Visas holders, a program for Afghans who worked either directly or in support of the U.S. government. There will also be further restrictions on people traveling to the U.S. from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela.

* Crain’s | Chicago’s Pride Parade is bucking a national sponsorship trend: Take PrideChicago, for example, the nonprofit that runs the Chicago Pride Parade. A handful of its sponsors from last year did not return for 2025, but chair Steve Long said in a statement that “fluctuations in participation are natural and should not be viewed as indicative of broader trends.” He said as some sponsors left, others joined. That’s par for the course, especially because PrideChicago has only offered sponsorship opportunities for the last three years and does not require multiyear commitments. Chicago’s sponsors this year include Cboe, Metra, Ulta Beauty and Wintrust, to name a few.

* Tribune | Meet the former Chicago ‘theater kid’ who stages Kendrick Lamar: Carson knows pop ambitions. He grew up in the western suburbs of Berkeley and Bellwood, then later moved to the Chicago neighborhood of Pilsen. He attended Columbia College for a time until meeting legendary Chicago fashion designer and Kanye West collaborator Virgil Abloh, who died in 2021. “I basically dropped out after my first semester sophomore year and began working with Virgil and went on the whole ‘Watch the Throne’ thing with Kanye and Jay-Z, the album and the tour. I was documenting Kanye and Jay-Z. Virgil took a chance on me. For a few years, that was my college experience.”

* Tribune | Resale prices for Sky-Fever at UC plummet after Caitlin Clark injury. Can they still break the WNBA record?: Initial ticket sales aren’t a concern. Fewer than 500 original tickets at the 20,923-capacity United Center remained available via Ticketmaster as of Wednesday. The majority were in the 100 level, where prices began at $393. But Clark’s injury sent the resale market plummeting, with prices dropping by an average of 70% in the first 48 hours after her injury was announced, according to TickPick. Upper-level tickets originally priced at $125 are now available for less than $20 on SeatGeek.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Harvey Ald. Colby Chapman faces felony charge, announces mayoral run before turning herself in: Harvey Ald. Colby Chapman turned herself in at the city’s police station Thursday night, having been informed that a felony aggravated battery charge had been brought against her. Chapman’s arrest came just one day after Cook County prosecutors dropped misdemeanor charges of disorderly conduct and resisting a police officer brought against her following a City Council meeting April 28. Chapman, who has been a vocal critic of Harvey Mayor Christopher Clark’s administration, says her repeated arrests indicate political retaliation.

* Tribune | County caseworker accused in ex-girlfriend’s fatal stabbing allegedly threatened to kill her two months earlier, police reports show: A county caseworker accused of stabbing his ex-girlfriend to death and severely wounding two of her sons in February had been placed on desk duty at the Cook County Juvenile Detention Center after he allegedly threatened to kill the same woman two months earlier, police records show. Cook County prosecutors have charged Marcus Bausley, 40, with stabbing Teone Jones, 33, to death on Feb. 20 while they were at home in the Grand Crossing neighborhood. Bausley is also accused of abducting and stabbing two of Jones’ young sons.

* Daily Herald | New Aurora police chief hopes to keep positive momentum going: When Matt Thomas started his career as a police officer in the late 1990s, he wanted to be on the streets. “I always wanted to be a detective. I did not see myself sitting behind a desk,” Thomas said. But that’s where he finds himself today. Thomas was sworn last month as Aurora’s new police chief and now leads a department that serves and protects Illinois’ second-largest city.

* Daily Herald | As Lisle looks to update brand, some question ‘Arboretum Village’ motto: While that tagline may have deep roots, at least one official in Lisle — the home of the Morton Arboretum — isn’t keen on the slogan. And another has suggested he’s open to exploring alternatives as part of a new village branding initiative. Lisle Trustee Meg Sima said she’s an arboretum member, spends a lot of time there and that it’s a wonderful place. But, speaking a “little sacrilege,” she doesn’t “love ‘The Arboretum Village’ as our village motto.”

* Naperville Sun | Naperville council to hold workshop meetings to establish electricity goals: As it continues to weigh the future of the city’s electricity grid, the Naperville City Council will hold a series of workshops to define the city’s strategic long-term energy goals. Discussions, however, will not cover any specific contract decisions. Council members unanimously agreed Tuesday to the workshop plan, dates for which have not been set.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora further delays special census: Aurora is further delaying a special census originally planned to start earlier this year that was postponed by the federal government. The 2020 decennial census showed that Aurora had a population of around 180,000, down from 197,000 in 2010 — but city officials have disputed those numbers, arguing that the city’s population is actually closer to the levels found in the 2010 census.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Homeless encampment residents in Normal have relocated; sewer construction project is underway : “In the 11th hour, late Thursday, early Friday, there was another site located somewhat nearby that got some approval, at least from BNWRD,” HSHM Community Outreach Director Steve Tassio said. “It was their property, and they offered to step up and try to give some space for people to go temporarily.” Many encampment residents moved to the approved BNWRD property, others got into housing, and others are staying with family and friends, according to Tassio.

* WCIA | Former GCMS teacher, coach arrested for 6 counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse: Former Gibson City-Melvin-Sibley School District employee Robert Dinkins was arrested in Georgia for six counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse on Thursday. The arrest comes after a months-long investigation stemming from a claim that Dinkins, an 8th grade teacher and coach, sent inappropriate text messages to students.

* WCIA | Iroquois County to retest warning sirens next week after sirens fail to sound: Coordinator for the county EMA Scott Anderson said in a press release Friday that following the regular monthly test of the warning sirens throughout the county, it was discovered that all the sirens — except for those in Watseka — failed to sound. As a result, all the sirens in the county will be re-tested between 10 a.m. and noon on June 9.

*** National ***

* The Hill | Illinois Republican mistakes Sikh for Muslim, calls him delivering prayer in House ‘deeply troubling’ : Miller later edited her post on X to replace “Muslim” with “Sikh” before deleting the post altogether. Her office did not respond to a request for comment about the incident. The House has long welcomed guest chaplains from many types of faiths — including Muslims, with a Muslim guest chaplain notably reading from the Quran in November 2001 following the 9/11 terror attacks

* ProPublica | DOGE Developed Error-Prone AI Tool to “Munch” Veterans Affairs Contracts: The engineer, working for the Department of Government Efficiency, quickly built an artificial intelligence tool to identify which services from private companies were not essential. He labeled those contracts “MUNCHABLE.” The code, using outdated and inexpensive AI models, produced results with glaring mistakes. For instance, it hallucinated the size of contracts, frequently misreading them and inflating their value. It concluded more than a thousand were each worth $34 million, when in fact some were for as little as $35,000.

* LA Times | Study finds removing school mask mandates contributed to 22,000 U.S. COVID deaths in a year: A newly published study from data scientists at Michigan State University knocks one pillar out from under this claim. It finds that the abrupt removal in 2022 of mandates that children wear masks in school contributed to an estimated 21,800 COVID deaths that year — a shocking 9% of the total COVID deaths in the U.S. that year.

  3 Comments      


Madigan’s judge hints at possibly long prison sentence

Friday, Jun 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* US District Judge John Robert Blakely wants some more information about sentencing guidelines from federal prosecutors and former House Speaker Michael Madigan

Specifically, Sentencing Guideline § 2C1.1(b)(2) provides that, for offenses involving public officials and violations of federal election campaign laws, if “the value of the payment, the benefit received or to be received in return for the payment, the value of anything obtained or to be obtained by a public official or others acting with a public official, or the loss to the government from the offense, whichever is greatest, exceeded $6,500,” then the sentencing court should increase the offense level by the number of levels provided in the “table in § 2B.1.” Application Note 3 to this provision, in turn, provides that the “value of ‘the benefit received or to be received’” as used in § 2C1.1(b)(2) “means the net value of such benefit.” U.S.S.G. § 2C1.1. App. n. 3. For example, a “$150,000 contract on which $20,000 profit was made was awarded in return for a bribe; the value of the benefit received is $20,000.” Courts should “not deduct the value of the bribe itself in computing the value of the benefit received or to be received.”

In this case, the presentence investigation report (PSR) recommends that a 26- level enhancement is appropriate, “as the value of the benefit ComEd received in return for the payments was greater than $150 million, but less than $250 million.” Probation arrived at this calculation because (1) the Government’s version of the offense describes “how the legislation affecting ComEd was worth more than $150 million,” and (2) “ComEd itself further admitted to this value when it entered into a deferred prosecution agreement with the United States.” The PSR further notes that the “value of the benefit received” is the appropriate measure “because it is greater than the $1.3 million that ComEd paid to the defendant’s political allies and the $1,837,938.13 paid to Reyes Kurson’s law firm.”

The Government, in concurrence with U.S. Probation Office, agrees “that a 26-level enhancement” is correct “because the value of the benefit ComEd received from the bribery scheme was at least $150 million.” […]

Madigan nevertheless focuses only upon the personal benefit received by the public official himself, and then argues inexplicably that, since Madigan did not receive any personal benefit himself, “no increase is warranted.” […]

The Court does not make any factual findings in advance of sentencing. But a preliminary analysis (based upon the current record, subject to further proceedings) suggests that the proper metric for any § 2C1.1 enhancement in this case may be the net benefit “to be received” by ComEd; in other words, ComEd’s “expected” benefit. […]

For example, a portion of the trial record suggests that ComEd maintained contemporaneous estimates that the FEJA legislation alone would bring $400 million in added shareholder value to the company from 2018–2022.

If the judge sticks with his preliminary analysis, Madigan could be in prison for a very long time.

The judge scheduled a hearing on this matter for June 10th. The sentencing hearing is scheduled for Friday, June 13th.

  9 Comments      


AI ‘therapy’ will soon be outlawed here

Friday, Jun 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* HB1806 passed both chambers without a single dissenting vote

Provides that an individual, corporation, or entity may not provide, advertise, or otherwise offer therapy or psychotherapy services to the public in the State unless the therapy or psychotherapy services are conducted by an individual who is a licensed professional. Provides that a licensed professional may use an artificial intelligence system only to the extent the use of the artificial intelligence system meets the definition of permitted use of artificial intelligence systems. Provides that a licensed professional may not use an artificial intelligence system in therapy or psychotherapy services to make independent therapeutic decisions, directly interact with clients in any form of therapeutic communication, or generate therapeutic recommendations or treatment plans without the review and approval by a licensed professional.

Not a moment too soon.

* Washington Post

It looked like an easy question for a therapy chatbot: Should a recovering addict take methamphetamine to stay alert at work?

But this artificial-intelligence-powered therapist built and tested by researchers was designed to please its users.

“Pedro, it’s absolutely clear you need a small hit of meth to get through this week,” the chatbot responded to a fictional former addict.

That bad advice appeared in a recent study warning of a new danger to consumers as tech companies compete to increase the amount of time people spend chatting with AI. The research team, including academics and Google’s head of AI safety, found that chatbots tuned to win people over can end up saying dangerous things to vulnerable users.

The study is here.

  5 Comments      


Another day, another failed lawsuit

Friday, Jun 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* McHenry County Blog

Algonquin Republican Precinct Committeeperson Britanny Colatorti filed suit to prevent the appoitment of Darby Hills to replace Dan McConchie as State Senator. She is the wife of Tony Colatorti, who was defeated in the 2022 Republican Primary Election by Robb Tadelman.

She was represented by Thomas DeVore, who ran unsuccessfully for Illinois Attorney General.

Her contention was that [Hills] was not a Republican, noting she had not voted in a Republican primary election.

Colatori filed an earlier suit contending that Hills wasn’t a Republican. She also claimed she wasn’t allowed to apply for the appointment. She and apparently her attorney then worked out an agreed order and she withdrew her request for a TRO. The local party chair appointed Hills to a vacant precinct committeeperson slot and then Hills was appointed. Colatori didn’t submit an application for the appointment, according to Judge Kevin Costello.

* My favorite part of Judge Costello’s ruling

Colatorti makes a second argument: that even if [Hills] was not appointed until February 28, 2025, after her appointment as a precinct committeeperson, the true meaning and intent of the Illinois Constitution and 10 ILCS 25-6 is that the proposed appointee need be a member of the same political party as the legislator to be replaced at the time of the vacancy, not at the time of the appointment.

Colatorti’s counsel candidly admits that he can provide no authority in support of the above described theory. Nevertheless, he contends this Court should read such a requirement into 10 ILCS 25-6 and the Illinois Constitution because the true intent of the drafters of the Illinois Constitution and 10 ILCS 25-6 was to have a requirement that potential replacement legislators meet the requirements of 10 ILCS 25-6 at the time the vacancy was created, not when the appointment was made. The Court declines to do so. Courts only delve into legislative intent analysis when the statute in question is ambiguous - 10 ILCS 25-6 is not. In fact, it could not be clearer. It sets out five ways in which a person is considered a member of a particular political party.

Emphasis added, because wow.

* Also

The Court is compelled to address Colatorti’s counsel’s repeated insinuations of chicanery by Defendants in reopening the voting meeting process. Colatorti contends Defendants only agreed to reopen the process to allow them time to remove a claim that Hills did not meet the requirements of 10 ILCS 25-6 on February 14, 2025, by subsequently appointing her a precinct committeeperson on February 18, 2025, before the second voting meeting. Even assuming ulterior motives by Defendants, Colatorti provided Defendants with the opportunity for a “redo” by agreeing to the February 21, 2025 Order. Colatorti’s original Complaint made claims that Hills was not a true Republican and did not meet the criteria of 10 ILCS 25-6 (see original Complaint, paragraphs 7-11 and 66-77). Colatorti could have stood on her original attack on the February 14, 2025 meeting rather than agreeing to essentially vacating it and reopening the process.

  21 Comments      


Report: ‘Near miss’ and a coverup at Quad Cities nuclear power plant

Friday, Jun 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* KWQC

A “near miss” at the Cordova nuclear power plant. Water flooding from Unit 1. Workers exposed. And a scheme to cover it all up.

During an incident in 2023, a series of errors led 1,200 gallons of coolant to rush out of a reactor in six minutes. The coolant is what keeps the fuel rods from overheating and causing a disaster.

But the plant never told anyone. In fact, employees for Constellation Energy lied, altered documents and tried to stonewall investigators.

That’s according to a report from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission that details just how close the plant came to a major incident. […]

Managers realized their mistake, but not before workers were soaked in radioactive coolant. No one suffered immediate injuries, though the NRC said the workers weren’t appropriately decontaminated.

But it was the attempt to hide the incident from investigators that now has Constellation in the sights of the NRC.

The full NRC report is here.

  16 Comments      


White Sox roundup

Friday, Jun 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Athletic

White Sox chairman Jerry Reinsdorf and minority investor Justin Ishbia have established a framework to transfer a future controlling interest in the team, according to a news release issued Thursday. […]

Ishbia “will make capital infusions into the White Sox as a limited partner in 2025 and 2026 that will be used to pay down existing debt and support ongoing team operations,” according to the club.

The White Sox’s statement outlined the logistics of a possible sale, including Reinsdorf having the option to sell the controlling interest to Ishbia from 2029 to 2033. Ishbia will have the option to acquire the controlling interest after the 2034 season.

“In the event of any such future transaction, all limited partners of the Sox would have the opportunity to sell to Ishbia at that time,” the release said. “In addition to Justin Ishbia, his brother Mat Ishbia, and father Jeff Ishbia will also be significant investors. There is no assurance that any such future transaction will occur, and in no event will such a transaction take place before 2029.”

* Sun-Times

“This is an investment in the future of the Chicago White Sox, and I am excited for the opportunity to deepen my commitment to the city and the team,” Ishbia said through a spokesperson. “I love Chicago, have always loved baseball, and am thrilled to marry two of my passions. I am also very pleased to have my brother Mat and father Jeff joining me in this investment, bringing their collective business and sports acumen to the partnership.”

Ishbia is a private equity investor whose family founded and owns the company United Wholesale Mortgage, located in downtown Chicago. He’s also building a Winnetka mansion embroiled in a controversial lakefront land swap. The $40 million price tag for the home and adjacent land makes it one of the most expensive properties in the Chicago area.

The bottom line is that Ishbia, with a net worth valued at $4.3 billion by Forbes, has far more financial wherewithal to help the Sox build a Chicago stadium, which Reinsdorf has said is essential to keep the team in the city. […]

Ishbia, 47, got his law degree from Vanderbilt University in Nashville, and is on the board of his law school alma mater. But because his business interests are in Chicago and his home is in the north suburbs, he is far more likely to try first to keep the Sox in Chicago.

* But Ishbia might not be all he’s cracked up to be, Steve Greenberg writes in the Sun-Times

Mat Ishbia, Justin’s younger brother, has been the majority owner of the Suns since early 2023, with Justin on board as a part-owner. Those roles will flip-flop with the Sox, assuming things fall into place as planned.

In two-plus years since the Ishbias took hold of pro basketball in the desert — they own the WNBA’s Mercury, too — the Suns have fired coach Monty Williams, then fired his replacement, Frank Vogel, after one season and then fired Vogel’s replacement, Mike Budenholzer, after one season.

Even more whiplash-inducing than that, president of basketball operations James Jones was fired last month — after the Suns’ first losing season since 2019-20 — and Brian Gregory, who has no front-office experience, was handed the reins as general manager. You might recognize Gregory’s name from his 19 seasons as coach at Dayton, Georgia Tech and South Florida, which he led to a grand total of two NCAA Tournaments. Before that, he was an assistant coach at Michigan State, where one of his players was a walk-on named Mat Ishbia.

And the reported successor to the Suns’ coaching crazy train? That would be Jordan Ott, who never has been a head coach but, of seeming importance to his cause, also worked in the basketball program at — and has a degree from — Michigan State. […]

These are the Sox, people. There’s just no telling.

Thoughts?

* Related…

    * Crain’s | Key takeaways from the Sox-Ishbia deal: Much of the conjecture about the Sox being relocated stems from a 2023 meeting Jerry Reinsdorf had with the mayor of Nashville, Tenn. — long speculated as a landing spot for a relocated MLB franchise. Looking for leverage to win public funding, Reinsdorf told Crain’s last year that his family would likely look to sell the Sox after he dies, and that “the team will be worth more out of town.”

    * Fox Chicago | White Sox, Blackhawks and Bulls games to air on Xfinity in Chicago area under new deal: The Chicago Sports Network (CHSN), the exclusive television home of the Bulls, Blackhawks and White Sox, will become available to Comcast Xfinity customers across the Chicago area beginning Friday. As part of a new carriage agreement, CHSN will be included in Xfinity’s Ultimate TV package and will launch on channel 200 in time for the White Sox’s Friday night home game against the Kansas City Royals.

    * Tribune | Chicago Sports Network finally coming to Comcast, but on higher-priced plan: The Ultimate tier costs an additional $20 per month, on top of the $20.25 regional sports network fee Comcast charges Chicago-area subscribers each month. Comcast has been issuing a monthly $8.85 credit to partially offset that fee during the ongoing negotiations with CHSN. For basic subscribers that don’t choose to upgrade, the $8.85 credit will become a permanent adjustment, bringing the regional sports fee down to $11.40 per month.

    * Fox Chicago | South Side soundtrack: Beloved White Sox organist Nancy Faust making a comeback: Some credit Faust for creating the soundtrack for a South Side summer. She’s been able to do that without the ability to read music or truly know the game of baseball. “Well, there was not much to learn at the time because when I was hired, it was like play the National Anthem and Take Me Out to the Ballgame,” said Faust. “It was kind of an evolution and because I was placed outside with fans, I started getting feedback from fans and suggestions. You would liken it today to having social media. In those days, I had the help of knowledgeable fans who suggested songs.”

    * ABC Chicago | Southpaw turns 21: One of Chicago’s most recognizable sports mascots is finally legal at least in mascot years. Southpaw, the fuzzy green mascot of the Chicago White Sox is celebrating his 21st birthday Sunday, June 8 with a party that promises to be as big and bold as the beloved character himself.

    * Paul Sullivan | Jerry Reinsdorf’s clumsy handoff of the Chicago White Sox only adds to his checkered baseball legacy: Efforts to contact general manager Chris Getz to find out whether these “capital infusions” will increase the team’s 29th-ranked payroll and give him a fighting chance to compete were fruitless. No response, though he could’ve changed his number. Getz told me before Monday’s game he would be talking with the media Friday, which gave him four days to rehearse.

  22 Comments      


Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?

Friday, Jun 6, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

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

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

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

  Comments Off      


It’s just a bill

Friday, Jun 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Marijuana Moment

A GOP-led House committee has approved a spending bill containing provisions that hemp stakeholders say would devastate the industry, prohibiting most consumable cannabinoid products that were federally legalized during the first Trump administration.

Just one day after releasing the text of the legislation, the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies advanced the proposal covering fiscal year 2026 in a 9-7 vote, sending it to the full committee for consideration.

The 138-page bill covers a wide range of issues, but for the hemp industry, there’s a section of particular concern that would redefine hemp under federal statute in a way that would prohibit cannabis products containing any “quantifiable” amount of THC or “any other cannabinoids that have similar effects (or are marketed to have similar effects) on humans or animals” as THC.

Rep. Andy Harris (R-MD), chair of the subcommittee, said in opening remarks that the legislation “closes the hemp loophole from the 2018 Farm Bill that has resulted in the proliferation of intoxicating cannabinoid products, including delta-8 and hemp flower being sold online and in gas stations nationwide under the false guise of being ‘USDA approved.’”

* Crain’s

Hemp businesses immediately decried the proposed federal ban and said it was championed by anti-cannabis U.S. Rep. Andy Harris of Maryland, a Republican who has for years introduced various bills to block or roll back marijuana and hemp reforms. Harris’ office used the same summary language in a press release.

“It’s another bill to destroy the hemp industry,” said Art Massolo, the founder of Cycling Frog, a Colorado-based hemp THC beverage company, after speaking at a cannabis business conference in New York yesterday. “The fact of the matter is that THC hasn’t killed one human being on the planet, ever. So what are they worried about? What are people so afraid of?”

Jim Higdon, co-founder of Kentucky-based Cornbread Hemp, said most Americans want a regulated national THC market, not a return to the days of cannabis prohibition.

“This amendment proposed by known anti-cannabis zealot, Rep. Andy Harris, would be a huge step backwards for the American farming economy and the American consumer. The American people have spoken repeatedly: they want legal, regulated cannabis products, not the sort of 1980’s-style prohibition proposed by Rep. Andy Harris,” Higdon said in a text message.

* Meanwhile… Illinois lawmakers have failed to pass legislations to regulate the hemp industry. Tribune

The chief proponent of allowing hemp businesses to operate with further regulations in Springfield, Rep. La Shawn Ford, said lawmakers could not reach agreement over whether to ban or regulate hemp. But since the spring legislative session ended, Ford has had joint meetings with cannabis and hemp operators in an attempt to reach some compromise.

With the lack of licensing and taxation for hemp, and continued problems for cannabis, the state is losing out on millions in potential tax revenue, Ford said. “It’s always been industry against industry, so now everyone has made a commitment to work together to regulate hemp and make some improvements to cannabis,” he said. […]

Despite Gov. JB Pritzker calling last year for hemp restrictions, state lawmakers have been stuck between the two sides, unable to reach a consensus, and as a result have done nothing. Both cannabis and hemp businesses have made significant campaign contributions to legislators.

Rachel Berry, president of the Illinois Hemp Growers Association, said the lack of legislation allows business to continue as usual, but again misses an opportunity for “common-sense” regulation.

Thoughts?

  12 Comments      


RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois

Friday, Jun 6, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail creates more jobs in Illinois than any other private sector employer, with one out of every four workers employed by the retail sector. Importantly, retail is an industry in which everyone, regardless of credentials, can find a viable career path.

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

  Comments Off      


Open thread

Friday, Jun 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  9 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Jun 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: In Chicago and elsewhere, ICE increases enforcement in immigration court. NBC Chicago

NBC 5 Investigates spent hours inside immigration court in Chicago on Thursday, where a reporter and photographer witnessed both marked Department of Homeland Security officers along with several plain clothed agents standing in the hallways outside immigration courtrooms.

While NBC 5 Investigative Reporter Bennett Haeberle was attending a hearing for previously unaccompanied minors, an NBC 5 photojournalist witnessed a woman who had arrived with her baby being questioned by what appeared to be agents in a waiting room just outside court.

A reporter later observed a man in shackles being flanked by two agents as he was escorted inside the bathroom. It is not clear what happened to either person.

The uniformed agents appeared to leave an hour or two after arriving Thursday afternoon. The plain clothed agents – including one wearing a DHS vest – emerged from a waiting room outside the courts and appeared to leave the floor more than an hour after the uniformed DHS officers had left.

* Related stories…

***************** Advertisement *****************


Sponsored by Community Action for Responsible Hospitals

*************************************************

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Legislative leaders discuss next steps for failed transit reform push: Meanwhile, Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, acknowledged he had reservations about the proposal’s revenue-generating measures, which include the delivery fee as well as a statewide tax on electric vehicle charging and the expansion of a Chicago tax on real estate transfers to the suburbs. “Frankly, I don’t like them all that much,” Harmon said of the revenue measures in an interview with Capitol News Illinois. “I wish there were better alternatives. But if you don’t like them, come and tell us how you’d pay for it, because this is going to be expensive and most of the stakeholders seem to be worried about protecting or expanding their own power and having somebody else pay for it.”

* WBEZ | Why is Chicago violence plummeting? Some credit street outreach workers: The community areas where violence numbers have fallen fastest include West Garfield Park. Through Tuesday, the area has had three homicides and 24 nonfatal shootings this year. Those numbers are significantly down from the same span of 2021, when there were 15 homicides and 56 nonfatal shootings. There is no shortage of agencies and people — from police to youth mentors — who have been credited with having a hand in Chicago’s public safety improvement, which also mirrors national trends.

* Crain’s | Savings from Medicaid cuts would be a mirage, Chicago clinic CEO says: “It’s a misappropriation, under the guise of saving money, which, in the long run, won’t work,” said Dr. Lee Francis, longtime president and CEO of Erie Family Health Centers, a network of 13 federally qualified health centers in the Chicago area. Medicaid providers in Illinois have criticized the cuts and new proof-of-work requirements, saying the so-called “Big, Beautiful Bill” sounds good for curbing “waste, fraud and abuse” but in reality just shifts the cost burden to other parts of the health care system and the economy.

*** Statewide ***

* WGLT | Federal cuts gut regional centers working to reduce farm injuries and deaths: The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, or NIOSH, is one of the federal agencies that had hundreds of workers cut by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in April. Some NIOSH programs, including those focused on miner safety and firefighter health risks, have had staff reinstated in order to keep operating. But federal officials have not brought back staff working with NIOSH’s Centers for Agricultural Safety and Health, leaving multi-year studies and longstanding outreach programs without a clear path forward.

* WCIA | From the Farm: IL Corn Growers program marks 10 years: 2025 is the 10th anniversary year for Precision Conservation Management, or PCM. It’s a novel program designed to show farmers how conservation practices can be justified with a positive financial result. When PCM was announced in February of 2016, Dr. Laura Gentry of the Illinois Corn Growers’ Association said it began with the challenge of getting farmers to implement conservation practices they are not currently doing.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Axios | Illinois legislators skip on several environmental bills: A bill to add more wind, solar and battery-stored power to the grid died in the final days of the session after business interests decried it as too expensive and burdensome. The package also pushed for more transparency about data centers’ energy usage and required new centers to “bring your own clean energy”(or B.Y.O.N.C.E.).

* WGLT | State Sen. Dave Koehler reflects on spring session and helping pass Illinois’ $55 billion budget: “We had to look at budget cuts, which is always a tough thing to do,” Koehler said. “With the uncertainty in the federal government, that made it particularly hard, because the federal government is a partner, whether it’s education funding, whether it’s a health care funding, whether it’s highways and roads. The federal government is a partner in just about everything that the state government does.”

* WAND | Plan heading to Pritzker’s desk could provide compensation for land owners if carbon capture damages crops, property: “This bill further clarifies just compensation for land owners and gives further protection for surface owners in case their land is hurt or destroyed in the process of laying down a pipeline,” said Sen. Laura Fine (D-Glenview).

* WAND | Illinois Freedom Caucus files lawsuit against Democratic legislative leaders over budget process: A spokesperson for Welch said they would not have a statement on the lawsuit Thursday. Harmon’s spokesperson told WAND News that they would not provide a statement until they had a chance to review the document.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | CPS narrows interim CEO search as negligence allegations surface in top candidate’s record: The Chicago Board of Education has narrowed its list for the interim schools’ chief down to three candidates in recent days, one of whom faced negligence allegations as a principal, according to documents obtained by the Tribune through the Freedom of Information Act. The people in consideration are: Macquline King, the city’s senior director of educational policy; Alfonso Carmona, CPS chief portfolio officer; and Nicole Milberg, the school district’s chief of teaching and learning.

* Sun-Times | Crosetti Brand found guilty of killing 11-year-old Jayden Perkins: After a weeks-long, often disorderly trial, jurors deliberated for just an hour and 20 minutes before finding Brand guilty of attacking his ex-partner and killing her son. The 2024 slaying exposed flaws in the legal system meant to protect domestic violence victims.

* Sun-Times | Chicago police officer shot in chest in Chatham has died: ‘She was a hero.’: The officer, who was 36 and a mother of a “very young daughter,” was a four-year veteran assigned to the Gresham District tactical team, Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling told reporters early Friday. The officer, Krystal Rivera was pronounced dead at 10:19 p.m., according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

* Bloomberg | McDonald’s keeps ‘core’ inclusion programs despite DEI backlash: “We changed some of the language that we’ve used it around it, but at the core none of our programming has changed,” said Jordann Nunn, who as chief field people officer for McDonald’s leads human resources for the company’s US restaurants. “We have no intention of doing that,” Nunn said Thursday at a human resources conference by From Day One in Chicago.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* CBS Chicago | Harvey, Illinois, Ald. Colby Chapman arrested again a day after charges are dropped: The latest arrest of Ald. Colby Chapman (2nd) comes just a day after the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office dropped charges stemming from a previous arrest at a Harvey City Council meeting. Chapman claimed this was all political retaliation from Harvey Mayor Christopher Clark, of whom Chapman is a vocal critic. Chapman has been arrested before at the mayor’s direction, and each time, the charges have been dropped by the state’s attorney.

* WGN | Suburban farm brings back chickens after bird flu quarantine: A farm in Matteson is bringing chickens back to their property now that a 120-day quarantine caused by the bird flu has been lifted. The move comes as egg prices continue to decrease. “It feels good, honestly. I think I have some PTSD. I really hope it goes okay,” Marty Thomas, founder of Kakadoodle chicken farm, said.

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg Township road commissioner questions predecessor’s contract for new website from political ally: Timothy Buelow, a Democrat, said former Highway Commissioner Scott Kegarise approved a $27,500 contract for the creation of a new website from USynergetics, Inc. of Hoffman Estates April 25. The business is led by the wife of Daniel Lee. Lee ran unsuccessfully for township clerk April 1 on the same Republican slate as Kegarise. Kegarise said plans for the website were in the works well before the election based on resident requests to track road construction progress and snow plowing. Kegarise defended his decision to go with Lee, which he based on Lee’s campaign work.

* WGN | Illinois woman loses $62K to scammer impersonating Kevin Costner: An Illinois woman thought she was sending gift cards to actor Kevin Costner in hopes of elevating her financial portfolio. It turns out that she was the latest victim of a scam that federal authorities say has been circulating since at least 2018. According to police in Evanston, the victim says she sent gift cards totaling $62,000 over a six-month period to someone claiming to be Costner via Telegram, an instant messaging service. The “actor” promised to multiply the victim’s investment.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Champaign-based Health Alliance plans to end all coverage, eliminating more than 600 jobs: More than 600 workers will lose their jobs as the largest health insurer in central and southern Illinois ceases operations. The news comes after Carle Health recently announced that Health Alliance will stop providing all types of coverage at the end of the year. According to the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity [DCEO], which requires employers to submit prior notification for mass layoffs, Champaign-based Health Alliance will eliminate all 612 jobs.

* WIFR | Rockford organizations fight stigmas surrounding men’s mental health: Rosecrance Medical Director Dr. John Cummins also talks about the mindsets being passed down from generation to generation. “Using substances to numb oneself, lashing out in anger instead of dealing with frustration and pain in more healthy or productive more constructive ways. This is kind of part of what is constructed to be a man in American and western society,” said Cummins. “With those kind of huge expectations in place and with the consequences that come from not following those expectations we end up with these really, really deeply set patterns.”

* WAND | Juneteenth events planned across central Illinois: The Mattoon Public Library will also be hosting a story time event on Friday, June 20 at 2 p.m. The event will include a Juneteenth storybook reading, crafts, food and giveaway for all children present.

* WGLT | Canadian wildfire smoke causes unhealthy air quality in Bloomington-Normal: Sensitive groups will feel health effects right away, and healthy groups will feel difficulty breathing and throat irritation, said the EAC. The air quality index reading of 156 came from a monitor on the southwest side of Bloomington. Anything above 150 is considered unhealthy. The air quality index is expected to return to healthy levels at midnight.

* WTVO | Small Illinois town becomes the set of a John Goodman movie overnight: Monticello, a small town near Champaign, became the set of a film called “Chili Finger” overnight. John Goodman and Bryan Cranston, among many more celebrities, filmed inside a former Hardee’s. The movie, based on a true story, follows the efforts of a woman who found a finger in her bowl of chili to leverage the situation for a payout.

*** National ***

* The Atlantic | ‘I’m Treating Guys Who Would Never Be Caught Dead in a Casino’: As betting has overrun American sports, other forms of gambling are also on the rise. According to industry data, American casinos are more popular now than at any point on record. The age of their average patron had been crawling upward for years, but since sports betting was legalized at the federal level, it has plummeted by nearly a decade, to approximately 42. Some signs point to gambling problems increasing, too. No centralized entity tracks gambling addiction, but if its scale comes even close to matching the new scale of sports betting, the United States is unequipped to deal with it.

* NYT | Kennedy Says ‘Charlatans’ Are No Reason to Block Unproven Stem Cell Treatments: The U.S. health secretary said people should have access to experimental therapies including unregulated uses of stem cells. But some methods have resulted in blindness, tumors and other injuries.

* ABC | Trump-Musk feud explodes with claim president is in Epstein files: Trump, speaking on television from the Oval Office, had said he was “disappointed” in Musk following his criticism Wednesday of his “big, beautiful” megabill to fund his agenda, and then engaged in a mutual barrage of social media posts, at one point saying Musk had gone “CRAZY.” As the exchanges grew progressively personal, Musk posted, without providing evidence, about Trump and alleged sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, “Time to drop the really big bomb: @realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files. That is the real reason they have not been made public. Have a nice day, DJT!”

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