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It’s just a bill

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* Rep. Kam Buckner…

State Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, is leading the House efforts to reform law enforcement hiring practices in response to the 2024 murder of Sangamon County-resident Sonya Massey.

“Last year, Sonya Massey lost her life because our process for hiring law enforcement has fundamental flaws,” Buckner said. “The man responsible for her murder concealed serious indiscretions and, as a result, he was given a badge, which he used to gain entry to Sonya Massey’s house, and a gun, which he used to shoot her. Reforms we are putting in place will close the loophole that put Sean Grayson, a person clearly unfit to be a member of law enforcement, in a position to perpetrate this tragedy.”

Continuing his record of fighting for safer and more equitable policing in Illinois, Buckner is sponsoring Senate Bill 1953. This measure requires the release of personnel records between law enforcement agencies and hiring boards prior to the hiring of police or law enforcement officers.

Senate Bill 1953 was written with input from the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police and the Illinois Sheriffs Association. It has the support of the ACLU, the Attorney General’s Office and numerous law enforcement organizations. Senate Bill 1953 was passed with unanimous support in the Senate, and is currently being considered in the House.

* WAND

A 2023 law will allow Illinois to start building small nuclear reactors next year, but some lawmakers argue the state should lift the 1987 moratorium on large nuclear reactors as well. […]

“The MISO and PJM grids are under severe power pressures,” Sen. Sue Rezin (R-Morris) said Friday. “Numerous grid study reports have sounded the alarm that the US is and will be short of power in the 2030s.” […]

Industry leaders said it could take eight to 10 years for Illinois to build more nuclear facilities. Although, sponsors believe this expansion could help downstate communities that saw their economy once boom with coal plants. […]

Senate Bill 1527 had 27 co-sponsors as of May 5. Rezin hopes to move the legislation before the chamber’s committee and third reading deadline of May 9.

* G-PAC…

Illinois Representative Maura Hirschauer, Chair of the House Gun Violence Prevention Committee, today announced a key Wednesday hearing on Safe At Home (SB8), which will protect more children, teens, and vulnerable people from accessing guns in Illinois.

Safe At Home is sponsored by Hirschauer and Rep. Kevin Olickal and will strengthen the state’s safe storage law and reporting requirements for lost and stolen guns. Working together, these safety measures will protect more children, teens, and vulnerable and prohibited people from accessing deadly weapons, helping to prevent the increasing number of instances of accidental shootings, suicide, mass shootings, and crime and violence in Illinois communities. […]

Provisions of Senate Bill 8 include:

* Capitol News Illinois

Health care unions continue to rally for legislation to address understaffing they say strains hospitals and threatens both patient safety and staff well-being.

Lawmakers are considering the Hospital Worker Staff and Safety bill, which would establish mandatory nurse-to-patient staffing ratios and increase support for underfunded hospitals.

The proposed legislation, Senate Bill 21 and House Bill 3512, aims to establish minimum staffing ratios in hospitals and fund critical safety-net hospitals across the state. Advocates with health care worker unions have been holding a series of rallies at the Capitol in support of the legislation in recent weeks. […]

But similar versions of the proposed legislation have been introduced at the Statehouse for recent years and have failed to gain traction. Generally backed by unions representing nurses, such as the Service Employees International Union, previous staffing ratio measures have run into opposition from hospital groups that say they’re unworkable.

The proposed legislation filed this year has yet to receive a hearing in a substantive committee, meaning it will be an uphill battle for it to move by the time the legislature adjourns at the end of the month.

* Streetsblog Chicago

Good news for rail fans: Recently, Illinois legislators discussed a groundbreaking bill to launch statewide train service.

Senate Bill 1901 and House Bill 3285 and would beef up the Illinois Department of Transportation’s Bureau of Railroads, giving it the clout to plan, engineer, and coordinate elements of a statewide rail program. The Senate Appropriations-Public Safety and Infrastructure Committee mulled over the proposed law on April 23. The analogous House committee considered the bill on April 30.

The aim of this initiative is coordinate train and bus service all across the Land of Lincoln. The backbone of the system would be high-speed rail between Chicago and St. Louis, and service would be aligned with local public transportation.

In addition to supersizing IDOT’s railroad bureau, the legislation would help bankroll the maintenance and construction of existing and new track and bridges. It would also help pay for electrifying track, purchasing new trainsets, and supporting ongoing operations.

Something to keep in mind: HB3285 and SB1901 are both appropriation bills.

* Sen. Mike Simmons…

State Senator Mike Simmons is leading legislation that would allow the use of municipal wastewater for industrial processing, reclaiming it from a variety of sources.

“Utilizing treated wastewater reflects our commitment to sustainable resource management,” said Simmons (D-Chicago). “This initiative not only conserves water but also supports environmental resilience.”

By reclaiming water from a variety of sources, treating it and reusing it, industrial wastewater could be used for power generation or cooling of data centers. Because this water may have limited contact with humans, it tends to be less costly and less energy intensive to treat and reuse, ultimately saving money and resources for communities.

House Bill 2391 would allow the use of treated municipal wastewater for industrial purposes.

“We need to rethink how we use every drop,” said Simmons. “Recycling treated wastewater is a smart, forward-thinking way to conserve resources and protect our environment.”

House Bill 2391 passed the Senate Environment and Conservation Committee on Thursday.

posted by Isabel Miller
Tuesday, May 6, 25 @ 9:45 am

Comments

  1. IL is a net exporter of energy due to our large nuclear reactors. IL one of the best non-carbon energy profiles in the country thanks to our large nuclear reactors. Other countries like France with LNRs have almost all non-carbon grids, while a nation like Germany that phased out its LNRs has become more dependent on coal and Russian natural gas.

    If IL wants to remain green and reduce our carbon emissions while meeting growing electricity demands, why tie our hand behind our back with a LNR prohibition?

    Comment by Incandenza Tuesday, May 6, 25 @ 10:03 am

  2. = but some lawmakers argue the state should lift the 1987 moratorium on large nuclear reactors as well=

    Makes complete sense - Illinois should pass this to allow new large-scale Nuclear plants, as the current fleet of plants is all aging and in their second life extension licensing plan and will need to be replaced in the coming decades. There are several reliable and tested options, such as the Westinghouse AP1000 PWR- they have also learned their lesson from the cost overruns at Vogl 3 and 4. The construction trade unions will for sure be in favor as well.

    Comment by Donnie Elgin Tuesday, May 6, 25 @ 10:56 am

  3. Illinois should pass the repeal on building nuclear quickly - it’s crazy we had a moratorium at all

    Comment by Dave Buster Tuesday, May 6, 25 @ 11:47 am

  4. Did Illinois ever get around to passing minimum safety standards for the small nukes? Especially security. A lightly guarded small nuke could be attacked and radioactive material could be stolen and spread around a densely populated area, like downtown Chicago. Until specific security measures are spelled out in detail, small nukes should NOT be approved.

    Comment by Dupage Tuesday, May 6, 25 @ 1:40 pm

  5. @Dupage - Are you serious?

    Comment by NobodyAskedMe Tuesday, May 6, 25 @ 2:28 pm

  6. Any hope in preventing small nuclear plants from being located within municipal boundaries? None has yet been installed commercially, so the technology (while sound on paper) needs to be proven before exposing thousands of people to it in close proximity.

    Comment by Jibba Tuesday, May 6, 25 @ 10:43 pm

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