Top Illinois Stories

Sen. Dave Syverson noted that those who support public schools often also choose alternative education for their own families. “(The Education Freedom Tax Credit) just gives families, most of those low-income, the same educational choices and options that educators get, that legislators get, that the governor gets, that we should believe they should get as well,” Syverson said.
Sponsors said this is an attempt to address the financial disincentives that exist for potential jurors to serve. The National Federation of Independent Businesses opposes the bill, as small businesses believe employees should be paid by the government for jury duty.

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The Illinois Supreme Court has again turned away another challenge to Illinois' gun owner licensing regime, this time declaring a man who had his FOID card suspended after he was charged with a crime, but then had it reinstated when the charges were dropped, can't sue the state for violating his Second Amendment rights.
Deputies recovered a handgun, a backpack with multiple loaded magazines, knives, an accelerant, gloves, and other items.
Article imageThe University of Illinois College of Medicine is promoting a web page that encourages professors to adopt “Equitable Assessments & Grading Practices.” “Equitable assessments and grading practices emphasize the process of learning versus performance outcomes and the attainment of grades,” the page, linked on the college’s website emphasizes. One of the listed benefits of grading according to equity is that the practice allows professors to “respect the diversity of students’ social identities as well as the diversity of student interests.
If approved, the bill would make it unlawful for any person to knowingly manufacture or sell a cosmetic product that contains PFAS.
Lawmakers in Springfield are pushing to pass legislation to provide people recently released from prison with housing, which they say will save Illinois taxpayers by reducing the likelihood for someone to reoffend.
“What some are calling ‘cuts’ are often temporary legislative add-ons returning to normal levels, or adjustments that better reflect demand,” the governor’s office claimed via a statement.
Senate Bill 315 is part of an eight-bill package and is modeled after similar legislation in New York and California. The bill would require large developers like Meta, OpenAI and Anthropic to adopt a transparency framework, employ third-party auditors and report a model’s catastrophic risk capabilities.
Amazon has turned aside another attempt to use Illinois' stringent biometrics privacy law to extract a potentially big payout from the company, after a federal appeals court again shut down a class action lawsuit over claims Illinois' residents voices were allegedly wrongly recorded when financial services firm John Hancock used Amazon Web Services and another company to verify customers' identities over the phone.
A new economic development plan for downtown Springfield would create the Capital Area Tourism Authority and would help expand the BOS Center and build a new hotel. Creation of the five-member board (three appointees from the Sangamon County Board, one from the City of Springfield, and one from the Springfield Metropolitan Exposition and Auditorium Authority (SMEAA) was was recently added to House Bill 910, which is also the megaprojects bill.
Jim Dey: "In a Monday committee meeting, the Urbana City Council approved a new 'Ethical Investments' policy that excludes 'investments in organizations that make war.' But council member Chris Evans later characterized a specific reason for the list of companies to be boycotted as 'the Gaza genocide.'”
A city employee fell for the scam and disclosed "sensitive account information" April 29 when they received a phone call from someone impersonating a bank representative, city officials said.
The Centralia facility, which opened in 2012 with just 12 employees, has expanded nearly fourfold in square footage and now employs 141 people; employment at the Centralia site is expected to reach approximately 201 employees by the end of 2028. The $15.3 million investment from Intermountain Electronics is supported by a Reimagining Energy and Vehicles (REV Illinois) agreement with the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity.
Advisory referendums supporting some form of separation have passed in 33 of Illinois' 102 counties, largely in rural and downstate areas frustrated by Democratic dominance in Springfield. But Saturday's meeting in Barrington highlights growing interest in some suburban communities as well.
“We have been on a spending spree, and it’s time to use this year as an austerity year to be mindful of the working families in the state that say ‘Boy, We pay a lot of taxes in Illinois,’” state Rep. Ryan Spain said.
Few issues have drawn more ink than a megaprojects bill aimed at keeping the Chicago Bears in Illinois. They want to build a domed stadium and mixed-use site in Arlington Heights, but they also want property tax certainty. The 40-page original bill passed by the House now is nearly 400 pages.
Gov. JB Pritzker’s record-high $56 billion proposed budget for fiscal 2027 relies on an additional $1 billion in revenue that may or may not materialize and $589 million in not-yet-approved tax hikes.
Founded in 1872 as the Cook County Herald, the suburban Chicago newspaper has grown into the third-largest daily print publication in Illinois, with a current circulation of 52,410, according to its website.
Chicago's lobbyist, John Arena, said that sweeping TIF funds is a key tool the city uses to avoid more harmful financial decisions. “This would deprive local taxing bodies of revenues that they could otherwise use to address budget shortfalls, infrastructure needs, and programming taxpayers rely on for Chicago,” Arena said. “That is a terrible limitation on revenue management. The bill would result in tax increases, service cuts, or both for schools, parks, and other taxing bodies.”
The Illinois Department of Employment Security said the unemployment rate was 5.1 percent in April, unchanged from March, and up +0.6 percent from the same month, one year ago, based on data provided by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Students play basketball at a school playgroundThe Illinois State Board of Education waited until April to distribute $18 million, and then told recipients they had only until the end of August to spend the money or else return it.
Faith Colson, a survivor of abuse by a teacher at her suburban Chicago high school in the early 2000s and the namesake behind Faith’s Law, which strengthens requirements intended to stop grooming in schools. Colson opposes the bill, saying it could make it harder to find a pattern of child abuse if it is not documented in every instance.
The House Gun Violence Prevention Committee voted 9-5 along party lines Wednesday to pass House Bill 4471, which seeks to ban the sale of any semiautomatic pistol with a cruciform trigger bar in Illinois.

Top Chicago Stories

Hilario Domínguez began his CPS career in 2015 as a special education teacher. But in November 2021, a fellow employee accused Domínguez of discrimination and sexual harassment; the employee said Domínguez repeatedly made a Nazi salute and called them “Hitler” in front of students. In November 2022, he took leave from CPS and eventually joined CTU staff.

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"For the last decade, (Stacy Davis) Gates and her allies have been building a political machine fueled by members’ dues. Teachers just sent the bill back."
Along 53rd Street in Hyde Park, hotels are busy with bookings this summer, especially around the time when the center opens. "There are now active tourists on the South Side. They aren't just staying downtown. They aren't staying in the Loop. They are actually able to experience the full city," said Courtney Woods with Pen & Paper: A Joint Creative.
"Should Johnson succeed in sending the Bears into the arms of Hammond, he will have made his relationship with Pritzker that much worse, harming the chances of striking future deals in the city’s interest so long as these two are involved. The governor has deemed a Bears stadium in Arlington Heights a top priority, and a fellow Democrat is trying to scotch it. Politics in this state doesn’t get much rougher than that."
Gov. JB Pritzker makes an appearance Saturday at Suenos Music Festival in Grant Park. Dr. Simi represents a budget-friendly chain of pharmacies and low-cost clinics throughout Mexico, Colombia and Chile. Danny Ocean, a producer and singer-songwriter from Venezuela, has used his music to address displacement and the lack of healthcare in Latin America. And access to affordable healthcare is one of Pritzker’s cornerstone campaign promises.
Mayor Thaddeus Jones explained the budget shortfall, saying the community's tax revenues from Cook County were late, and additional revenue streams haven't reached expectations.
The union wanted to increase dues by as much as $800 a year to fund even more political activities. In an FAQ provided to members ahead of the vote, the union also admitted to being investigated by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service and audited by the U.S. Labor Department. But according to union leadership, with about 80 percent of schools counted, it appeared that “roughly 60 percent of members” voted no on the increase.
The mayor said, in part, "People say, 'Well, why do you focus so much on the West and South sides of Chicago?' Knowing the role that Black voters play in securing labor rights, civil rights, immigrant rights, taking Black folks out of the equation undermines healthcare, education, housing, transportation. The Trump administration knows that. Right-wing extremism knows that."
Diego Emmanuel Reyes, 21, is accused of intentionally slamming his SUV into the rear of the ICE agent's white pickup truck while the officer was performing official duties, according to the indictment. After the initial crash, prosecutors claim Reyes hit the gas, accelerating his SUV forward and aggressively pushing the agent's truck.
"Because of massive unfunded pension obligations and rampant malfeasance — which of course includes overspending on “affordable” housing and copious settlements, some undeserved, awarded to exonerated criminals — bankruptcy is coming to Chicago. It might be called something else, because, under current Illinois law, government bodies cannot file for bankruptcy, but the end is near."
Dr. Olusimbo Ige, commissioner of the Chicago Department of Public Health, speaks during a press conference at the Cook County medical examiner's office, Oct. 1, 2025. (Eileen T. Meslar/Chicago Tribune)Dr. Olusimbo Ige came under fire after terminating more than two dozen Health Department employees last fall, breaking a mayoral pledge to avert layoffs, and for returning tens of millions of dollars in federal COVID-19 grants.
The Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office says no public funds are being used for the agency’s new Regional Transit Task Force. Task force participants include the Chicago Police Department, Chicago Transit Authority, Cook County Sheriff’s Office, U.S. Attorney’s Office, FBI, ATF, DEA, Metra and Pace.
"The Illinois legislature faces a May 31 deadline to finalize their Arlington Heights work. Otherwise, the only tangible choice the Bears would have is the Indiana site because that state's legislature put together a package to help the Bears fund a new stadium and Governor Mike Braun signed the bill into law. So Illinois is at minimum trying to keep the Bears in the state. But the Chicago folks are moving slowly to improve their chances of keeping their team in their city, even if it costs the state the team. This infighting surprises. Or perhaps not."
"As a Chicagoan, I have no illusions about the city politics. There has never been reasonable fiscal policies in the city in my lifetime. However, Johnson has moved from the dismissive to delusional in ignoring the economic realities growing in the city."
David Greising, of the Better Government Association: "In many states, the law requires detailed cost-benefit analysis on all bills with major financial implications for state budgets. Illinois has one such law, but it is full of loopholes that render it almost meaningless."
Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas says the dramatic increase is due to two AI experts she recently hired. "In the last six weeks, due to artificial intelligence, look at this 28,000 people have gotten $73 million. We are killing it," Pappas said.
Mayor Brandon Johnson says his plan is also focused on engaging with young people and providing summer jobs and safe spaces for youth. This upcoming holiday weekend, Chicago's top cop says days-off for his officers have been canceled to provide more resources in targeted areas.
Robbins Mayor Darren Bryant was behind the wheel of a white sedan when Calumet Park police pulled him over for making an illegal turn. He asked a total of 15 times why he was pulled over before police pulled him from the vehicle and placed him under arrest. During that interaction, police asked him 10 times to provide his license and insurance, but he did not. "You don't know who you're arresting right now," Bryant said after he was handcuffed.
“The district really went on a hiring spree during COVID, against the advice of most financial experts,” said Austin Berg, of the Chicago Policy Center,. “They were adding a lot of recurring costs on one-time revenues that they knew would go away after the pandemic was over.” Berg also said CTU asked too much of the district in the two bodies’ most recent contract.
Judge Erica Reddick’s ruling Thursday came after more than 400 attorneys, clergy members, elected officials and community organizers accused Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke of abandoning her official duties in refusing to investigate widespread allegations of crimes committed by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in and around Chicago. But Reddick found that it is law enforcement agencies, not the prosecutor’s office, that are tasked with launching such investigations.
"In (Mayor Brandon) Johnson’s mind a progressive council aligns with a progressive mayor and that’s how government should function. He is continuing the tradition of giving the council and public too little time and too little information. Major decisions — from asset sales to pension holidays to tax-increment financing and the casino deal — have been shaped behind closed doors, with the council largely rubber-stamping them."
“I make my own detritus,” Bradford said, “and then I use the detritus to make a painting.” The debris makes his canvases impressionistic and sculptural, and resistant to linear, literal storytelling.  
Rendering of the proposed $7 billion mixed-use development that would surround the United Center. If approved, the 10-year project — called The 1901 Project — would start in spring 2025. Tens of millions in public funding may also be required to build a new Pink Line CTA station near the United Center.
teen-takevoer.png "You know, it's not parent-shaming to say that you should know where your children are at 10, 11, 12 o'clock at night, when you have a 12-year-old or a 13-year-old," he said.
"Chicago Public Schools has an 82.5 percent high school graduation rate, although only 27 percent of students are proficient in math and 42 percent in reading. ... Around 43 percent of CPS students going to state community colleges are enrolled in remedial courses."
Officer Kevin Mangan had responded to a location where three people had pulled up and blocked an ambulance from leaving a separate scene in McKinley Park. When Mangan started writing that ticket, police said a 30-year-old woman started banging on a squad car. Then she and a 33-year-old man attacked Mangan.
Chicago Police Department rookies at their graduation ceremony Monday, June 5, 2023 at Navy Pier.The ordinance from Ald. Matt Martin prohibits officers from engaging in “extremist activities,” defined in the measure as any attempt to overthrow the U.S. government through violence or “unconstitutional means.”

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If this bill passes, say goodbye to local control over all Illinois parks and expect to see open drug and alcohol use, needles, no sanitation and fire hazards, but no ordinary park users.

Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.
The state's existing buyout program for its own pensions is the precedent for Chicago, which should be a warning: Look out for similar exaggerated claims and shoddy analysis.

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