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*** UPDATED x1 *** What else happened Friday?

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* Sun-Times

Utilities providing water in Illinois would be required to replace all lead service lines, and schools across the state would need to follow new standards for sex education curriculums under bills that advanced in the General Assembly Friday.

The proposed Lead Service Line Replacement Notification Act would require “water utilities statewide to replace all lead service lines and creates a low-income water assistance program to help fund financial assistance and water projects that include lead pipe replacement,” according to a news release announcing the passage of the bill. […]

After a heated debate, House members passed legislation that would change the state’s sex education curriculum to “provide comprehensive personal health and safety education in kindergarten through the 5th grade and comprehensive sexual health education in the 6th through 12th grades in all public schools.”

Starting in second grade, students would learn to define consent, gender identity and different types of families, including co-habitating and same-sex couples. […]

The state Senate also took up a bill barring law enforcement agencies from stopping, arresting, searching or detaining someone “solely based on an individual’s citizenship or immigration status.”

Republicans objected, saying it would “tie the hands” of law enforcement.

* Capitol News Illinois

The Illinois Senate passed a bill Friday which would strengthen legal protections for immigrants and require the closure of immigrant detention centers in the state.

Senate Bill 667, known as the Illinois Way Forward Act, would amend the Illinois Transparency and Responsibility Using State Tools, or TRUST, Act, which took effect in 2017.

The bill would prevent state and local law enforcement agencies from collaborating with federal agencies such as Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or from otherwise inquiring about an individual’s immigration status unless presented with a federal warrant.

* More Sun-Times

State legislators on Friday passed a long-sought bill aimed at ensuring better racial diversity in the state’s cannabis licensing process.

State senators passed the House bill in a 50 to 3 vote Friday afternoon, sending the measure to Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who later announced he planned to sign it.

The legislation, sponsored by Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford, D-Maywood, attempts to fix Illinois’ recreational cannabis law, creating two additional lotteries of 110 total adult-use license dispensaries “for people who are social equity applicants — i.e. from a Black or Brown community,” according to a news release announcing the passage of the bill. In addition, those applicants won’t be subject to rules requiring dispensaries be located at least 1,500 feet apart.

“Existing dispensary owners, all non-minorities, have already taken many of the prime locations in the state,” Lightford said in a statement. “Dispensary owners from disadvantaged communities deserve a fair chance to make a profit by having access to lucrative business locations and not being locked out by distance requirements.”

Those additional lotteries will be broken in two and consist of 55 licenses each round.

* Crain’s

Despite strong pushback from business leaders and a series of high-level negotiation sessions, it looks a bill that critics say could endanger Illinois’ data-center boom is teed up for final passage.

As now written, the labor-backed bill would require data centers and their tenants to sign a “labor peace argreement” with a union representing those who work on “but not limited to, pumps, chillers and coolers, fire line safety equipment, backup power generators, building automation system controls and water treatment systems.”

In most cases, that means hiring not only union labor but specific job candidates sent to a company.

After meetings involving Deputy Gov. Dan Hynes and others, sponsors have agreed to delay the effective date of the legislation from shortly after passage until Jan 1. That, as one insider puts it, will give the industry time this summer to “make nice and work something out with” labor, particularly the politically powerful International Union of Operating Engineers.

That isn’t Local 150, by the way. It’s a smaller local.

*** UPDATE *** The amended data-center bill passed the House and heads back to the Senate.

* Related…

* Latino Caucus lays out undocumented immigrant protection agenda

* DCFS reform bills head to governor’s desk

posted by Rich Miller
Saturday, May 29, 21 @ 2:18 am

Comments

  1. Looks like GOPies firmly cemented their long held reputations for all things gross and ugly. Letting the sweaty palms crew trolling women during the remap debate was very creepy. Durkie looked like he flunked Law School 101 by asking a lot of questions without knowing the answers

    Comment by Annonin' Saturday, May 29, 21 @ 10:58 am

  2. ===unless presented with a federal warrant.===
    or
    === … nonjudicial immigration warrant.===

    The difference is crucial. A federal warrant signed by a federal judge should be complied with. Administrative / non-judicial warrants can be worth less than the paper they’re written on. The IRS congressional hearings 20+ years ago showed administrative / non-judicial warrants are often full of errors, errors much less likely to be present in judical warrants.

    Comment by Anyone Remember Saturday, May 29, 21 @ 11:39 am

  3. Thank you, folks on both sides of the aisle who voted to expand marijuana dispensary licenses for social equity applicants. There’s a lot of money to be made. Looking forward to the rollout.

    Comment by Grandson of Man Saturday, May 29, 21 @ 2:47 pm

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