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It’s just a bill

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* Sun-Times

Despite facing legislative hurdles, Democrats on an Illinois House committee voted to push forward a bill that would let terminally ill patients request life-ending medication.

The legislation, which needs approval from the state House, Senate and governor’s office, would legalize the prescription of life-ending drugs.[…]

In Illinois, however, legislation approving medical aid in dying has struggled to gain support within the General Assembly’s Democratic supermajority.

“This is an incredibly difficult issue for me and my district,” state Rep. Curtis Tarver, D-Chicago, said before the committee’s vote. “ I will be a yes [on the bill] now, I cannot commit to being a yes on the floor [of the House of Representatives].”

* G-PAC…

The Gun Violence Prevention PAC of Illinois (G-PAC), the state’s leading gun safety organization, joined with lawmakers today to applaud the General Assembly’s passage of Safe At Home to protect more children and at-risk and prohibited people from accessing guns in Illinois.

House members voted 69-40 late Wednesday to pass Safe At Home (Senate Bill8) led by House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch and sponsoring Representatives Maura Hirschauer and Kevin Olickal. Safe At Home now heads to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk for consideration. […]

SB 8 would better promote responsible gun ownership in Illinois by enhancing what it means to safely store weapons and strengthening reporting requirements for lost and stolen guns. Working together, these safety measures will protect more children, at-risk and prohibited people from accessing deadly weapons, targeting an increasing number of instances of accidental shootings, suicide, mass shootings, and crime and violence in Illinois communities. […]

Provisions of Safe At Home include:

* The Pantagraph

Legislation that would authorize a race track and casino in Decatur has cleared the starting gate, but continued opposition from a key player in the gaming industry could keep it from reaching the finish line before lawmakers wrap up their spring legislative session later this week.

Senate Bill 1473, sponsored by state Sen. Patrick Joyce, D-Essex, passed unanimously out of the Senate Executive Committee on Wednesday. However, some members would not commit to supporting the legislation on the floor amid a dispute between the bill’s proponents and Hawthorne Race Course in suburban Chicago.

The friction could effectively punt the issue to later this year, a delay that could push back a privately funded $150 million project in Decatur that proponents say is “shovel-ready.”

And it could further imperil the state’s horse racing industry, which has taken a beating in recent years due to factors that included competition from neighboring states and closure of marquee racetracks like Arlington Park.

* Capitol News Illinois

Legislation that would require Illinois public libraries to have life-saving medications on hand for people experiencing opioid overdoses and provide staff training has unanimously passed the Illinois Senate and is now on Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk.

The legislation, House Bill 1910, was proposed by a high school student in Elgin. It would require all Illinois public libraries to maintain a supply of opioid antagonists like naloxone — a nasal spray that can rapidly reverse an opioid overdose with virtually no side effects — and have at least one staff member working at all operating hours who is trained in administering the medication.

Illinois Math and Science Academy senior Jordan Henry brought the idea for the bill to Rep. Anna Moeller, D-Elgin, after volunteering with harm reduction organizations and researching effective responses to opioid substance abuse.

“It’s a good example of how anyone can change public policy if they work at it and are dedicated and have a passion,” Moeller said. Moeller first met Henry while door-knocking one summer, and after discussing Henry’s idea for the bill, worked together with her to draft and introduce it in the spring legislative session.

* WAND

In 2024, carbon sequestration was legalized in Illinois with multiple concerns raised by farmers and GOP members. On Wednesday, state Democrats passed a plan in hopes to quell some of those concerns.

The proposal would give compensation to land owners if their property has been disturbed by the construction of a carbon capture pipe. Property owners could receive compensation if their crops, trees, fences, shrubs, livestock or other objects were damaged during construction.

“This bill further clarifies just compensation for land owners and gives further protection for surface owners in case their land is hurt or destroyed n the process of laying down a pipeline,” state Sen Laura Fine (D-Glenview) said on the Senate floor.

When called for a vote, the plan passed unanimously out of the Illinois Senate. The legislation will now head to the House floor for further debate.

* ProPublica

Illinois legislators on Wednesday passed a law to explicitly prevent police from ticketing and fining students for minor misbehavior at school, ending a practice that harmed students across the state.

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

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

The legislation passed the House 69-44. It passed in the Senate last month 37-17 and now heads to Gov. JB Pritzker, who previously has spoken out against ticketing students at school. A spokesperson said Wednesday night that he “was supportive of this initiative” and plans to review the bill.

* WAND

A proposal to ban some rental junk fees passed the Illinois Senate Executive committee on Wednesday.

Junk fees that would be banned include fees that are put alongside an application fee, a lease renewal fee, eviction notice or eviction fee, routine or after hours maintenance fee, contacting a landlord fee, a maintenance hotline fee, a fee to inspect a unit and a fee to setup an online utility account.

Advocates say they’ve listed these specific junk fees because they’ve heard some Illinoisans have experienced at least one of these fees.

Originally the bill would ban move-in fees, but changed after behind the scenes negotiations. Now the proposal would not allow a landlord to charge a security deposit and move-in fee. However, when a landlord chooses the latter, the move in fee must not be more than 20% of the first full month of rent. […]

The bill passed out of the Illinois Senate Executive committee on a partisan 9-4 vote. Now this plan will head to the Senate floor where lawmakers could talk about it before the end of session.

posted by Isabel Miller
Thursday, May 29, 25 @ 10:00 am

Comments

  1. == closure of marquee racetracks like Arlington Park. ==

    Am I confused here? What is the second “marquee” track that got closed? Or is this a weird use of a plural that shouldn’t actually be plural?

    Comment by Homebody Thursday, May 29, 25 @ 10:03 am

  2. =ending a practice that harmed students across the state.=

    While that is not a practice my district participates in, I think calling it harmful is nonsensical. They were violating the law. Don’t have the laws if you don’t want them enforced or write them so that the enforcement conforms to what you want (which they finally did). If legislators are wondering why they are getting increased concerns for student behavior from the IEA they would be well advised to look in the mirror for the source. The ILGA sends some pretty conflicting messages. Crack down on vaping (that was one of the biggest reasons for these tickets that I know of), just not too much?

    Comment by JS Mill Thursday, May 29, 25 @ 10:12 am

  3. “legislation approving medical aid in dying has struggled to gain support within the General Assembly’s Democratic supermajority.”

    My dad suffered for years before dying. His medical insurance (”Cadillac insurance” through the State) ceased payment toward his treatments after they determined, without a doctor saying so, that the likelihood of improvement was too low to justify continued treatment. He suffered worse for a couple years before he died.

    If the State can decide when a person is no longer worthy of healthcare, then a person should be able to decide when they’re through suffering without healthcare.

    Comment by AlfondoGonz Thursday, May 29, 25 @ 10:36 am

  4. ===In Illinois, however, legislation approving medical aid in dying has struggled to gain support within the General Assembly’s Democratic supermajority.===

    We die. It is part of being human. A lot of us allow ourselves to maintain some kind of delusion about what incredible amount of pain occurs as someone lays dying of cancer. I understand there are some dogmatic concerns but those religious views weren’t exactly developed in an era of modern medicine and modern medical intervention.

    Let people have some choice with regard to how long they have to wither in pain before they die loaded with opiates.

    Comment by Candy Dogood Thursday, May 29, 25 @ 10:44 am

  5. Death is undefeated…there is no benefit derived from suffering.

    We have the decency to euthanize our dying pets, do we deserve less?

    Comment by Dotnonymous x Thursday, May 29, 25 @ 1:08 pm

  6. “I think calling it harmful is nonsensical.”

    From Propublica’s original piece:

    students have no right to legal representation and little chance to defend themselves against charges that can have long-term consequences. Ticket fines can be hundreds of dollars, presenting an impossible burden for some families, and administrative or court fees of up to $150 are often tacked on.

    Unpaid fines are sometimes sent to collections or deducted from parents’ tax refunds. And, unlike records from juvenile court, these cases can’t be expunged under state law.

    I’m no parent, but that sounds kinda harmful to me.

    – MrJM

    Comment by @misterjayem Thursday, May 29, 25 @ 1:56 pm

  7. =Legislation that would require Illinois public libraries=
    Before imposing this requirement would be curious to see the data on how many cases there have been. This sounds like a feel good measure not based on hard facts.

    Comment by I.T. Guy Thursday, May 29, 25 @ 7:48 pm

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