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Friday, Mar 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Miss Jenny and the Howdy Boys



Miss Jenny is a southern Illinois music icon. Definitely been missing her since she moved out to North Carolina.

Get outside and enjoy the weather!

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Mar 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

The Illinois House approved a bill empowering the state Department of Insurance to reject excessive increases in home and auto rates. […]

Under current law, insurers most provide notice about rate hikes, but the Department of Insurance does not have the power to cap increases. Legislators voted 66-40, with two present, yesterday to approve the bill after amending it to also cover the car insurance market. It now must be approved by the Senate.

“This bill is an important step forward for Illinois insurance customers,” said Abe Scarr, director of the consumer watchdog Illinois Public Interest Research Group. “If the bill becomes law, it will finally be illegal to charge excessive or unduly discriminatory home and auto insurance rates in Illinois.”

Insurers warned the measure would raise prices by discouraging competition. The Illinois Insurance Association and the National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies said it would add $230 to the average homeowner’s premium, based on average prices in states where regulatory approval is required to raise rates.

*** Statehouse News ***

* The Daily Egyptian | Doody gets GOP nomination for 118th Illinois House seat: The former radio host of the “Working Man Show” said he felt hesitant to enter the race because he’s not a politician. However, after his campaign manager, Murphysboro Mayor Will Stephens, asked him to think it over, he was ready for the task, he said in a February interview. Doody said his main goals are to give back to his community by rebuilding infrastructure and promoting tourism. “I know the territory, I know the geography, I know the people. I identify with them,” Doody said in the interview. “When you’re in the super minority like the Republican Party is, then you’ve got to play three-dimensional chess all the time.”

* Chicago Reader | The fight over Illinois’s data center boom is coming to a head: The POWER Act would require data centers to bring their own clean energy, ensuring Illinois can meet its climate goals and that everyday ratepayers are not footing the bill for the industry’s electricity use. Consumers in the sprawling PJM market—the largest electric grid operator in the U.S., responsible for delivering power to 65 million people from Illinois to New Jersey—will collectively pay $9.3 billion for energy used by data centers between 2025 and mid-2026, according to the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.

* Press release | Ness, COWL to Hold Literacy Forum in Springfield Tuesday: “This is a great opportunity to hear from subject matter experts on issues they’re seeing in education and explore ways we can better equip both educators and students to improve literacy rates in areas across the state,” said Ness. “This information is invaluable as we get into the thick of budget negotiations and debate what money goes where to get the best deals for our residents and our local schools.”

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Johnson proposes $55M tax break for Bulls, Blackhawks 1901 development: With both the administration and local Ald. Walter “Red” Burnett, 27th, in support, the incentive for what’s been dubbed The 1901 Project is likely to be approved as soon as next month, but the tax break raises eyebrows when both a cash-strapped city and Chicago Public Schools rely heavily on property taxes. The potential tax abatement is the first disclosure of public dollars being tapped to support the $7 billion redevelopment of surface parking lots surrounding the United Center into a mixed-use campus featuring a 6,000-seat music hall, 233-room hotel, public parks and up to 9,463 residential units.

* Sun-Times | Chicago Park District pays more than $2 million to ‘sexually exploited’ lifeguard: The toxic workplace culture that once festered at Oak Street Beach led the Chicago Park District to pay more than $2 million to a female former lifeguard there — bringing the total legal tab for the sexual misconduct scandal at the city’s public beaches and pools to more than $8.7 million. The misconduct in the latest case included “grooming, exploitation and sexual assault” by park district supervisors that began when the plaintiff was still a “minor,” according to court records.

* WTTW | Chicago Appeals Order Requiring Officials to Destroy Millions of Police Body-Worn Camera Videos: Requiring the city to delete those videos could complicate efforts by a team appointed by a federal judge to assess the city’s compliance with the federal court order known as the consent decree, which requires CPD to overhaul the way it trains, supervises and disciplines officers while weakening “oversight by limiting the development of accurate, evidence‑based assessments of how policing is actually carried out,” according to the statement. The city has never destroyed even a single video captured by a CPD officer’s body-worn camera, according to evidence presented to Mullen during the court case brought by the Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 7.

* Tribune | Campfire Milkshake is back for more at Chicago White Sox games. And it’s bringing some new friends.: “We’re introducing our Campfire Milkshake 2.0,” Nick Toth, executive chef at Rate Field, said with some measure of pride while he stood in front of all the new offerings. The 2.0 version of the shake is not all that different from the original, but “we twisted it up a little bit,” Toth said, “to make it shareable for two guests.” On the field, the Sox have not done a lot of things all that well in recent years. Eleven of the past 15 seasons have ended with losing records. They’ve lost at least 101 games in each of the past three seasons. Hope has dimmed amid the losses, and good seats are regularly available at Rate Field, and usually on the cheap through third-party ticket vendors.

* Block Club | DePaul Faculty, Artists Put Pressure On University To Save Art Museum: In an open letter penned by philosophy professor Sean Kirkland and fellow faculty, thousands of DePaul community members, artists, curators and more signed on to oppose the museum’s closure. Since its publication Feb. 28, the letter has received nearly 3,800 signatures. The closure, slated for June 30, “appears to us short-sighted, wrong-headed and grounded in some deeply disappointing principles of prioritization,” the professor wrote.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Elgin police officer fired for social media posts about immigration enforcement: It’s the second time Lentz has been fired over social media posts. In September 2014, he was terminated by the department after Facebook posts that appeared to have racial connotations. An arbitrator ruled that the termination should be reduced to a six-month suspension after a grievance was filed by the police union.

* Daily Herald | ‘It’s very bittersweet for me’: Hollywood Blvd. Cinema to auction decades of movie memorabilia to fund makeover: Some 600 items reflecting decades of accumulated memorabilia, decor, fixtures, and furnishings will be on the block when Donley Auctions holds “The Redesign Auction” for Hollywood Blvd. Cinema. […] “I know we do need to be updated,” she said. “All of the funds are going right back into the building. Nothing will be kept, it’s just to get the new chairs, to do all the updates we’re planning, whole new menu, new rewards program.”

* Crain’s | Amazon wants to eat Costco’s lunch in Chicago’s suburbs: With two test case stores opening in Chicago’s suburbs, Amazon is picking a deliberate fight with the likes of big box retailers Costco and Walmart that promises to be a “battle to watch,” analysts predict. The stores mark Amazon’s latest attempt to crack the notoriously difficult grocery market and compete head-on with established players in brick-and-mortar retail — a space where the e-commerce giant has struggled despite its 2017 Whole Foods acquisition and subsequent experiments with smaller-format stores.

* Neil Steinberg | Definition of a company man? Calbert Wright, who’s been working at Ford’s Chicago Heights plant since 1963: When Wright began work at the age of 23 at Ford, John F. Kennedy was president. Henry Ford still ran the business — albeit Henry Ford II, grandson of the man who founded the automobile manufacturer in 1903. That means Wright, who prowls the floor today checking that workers on the line have enough parts to keep the robots busy — and takes their place when they go on bathroom breaks — has worked for Ford a little more than half the 123 years since the company sold its first car, a two-cylinder, two-passenger Model A, in red, the only color available, for $850 to Ernest Pfennig, a dentist on Clybourn Avenue.

*** Downstate ***

* IPM News | University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign students to pay more for campus health insurance in fall: Champaign-Urbana undergraduates will pay $30 more a semester, starting in the 2026-2027 school year. Graduate students will pay $37 more. Nicholas Jones is the vice president of the University of Illinois System. He told the University of Illinois Board of Trustees Academic and Student Affairs Committee on Wednesday that costs are increasing because prescriptions are getting more expensive and more students are needing more mental health care. […] Costs are also going up in Chicago and decreasing in Springfield. Chicago students have the highest dollar increase, but will still have the lowest total cost at $753 a semester. Springfield students will pay $1,110 a semester.

* WCIA | Champaign Co. evaluating year-long moratorium on mega data centers: Thursday night, the Champaign County Zoning Board of Appeals looked at a year-long moratorium stopping construction on any data center larger than 10,000 square feet. Also part of the conversation was the public. They let the board know how they felt about moving forward. Director of Planning and Zoning John Hall said the county would put together a task force to look into what guardrails they need in place for these centers. Thursday night, the Zoning Board of Appeals decided whether or not to take the next step, and it was a packed house, filled with people eager to let them know that they want this passed.

* WCIA | NJCAA basketball tournament brings $1 million economic impact to Danville: The City of Danville is seeing a boost in business this week as the National Junior College Athletic Association hosts its Division II men’s basketball tournament there. Danville Area Community College is serving as the host site for the tournament. The Danville Area Visitors’ Bureau said these games can bring more than $1 million into Danville. Hotels are sold out, and visitors are packing restaurants each night.

* WSIL | Shawnee Forest to burn 869 acres at Sulphur Springs today: Officials evaluated weather conditions before the burn. If conditions were not favorable, they were prepared to cancel the activities. Residents were advised they might experience smoke during the burn. “When driving, slow down and turn on your headlights when you encounter smoke on the road,” an advisory stated.

*** National ***

* AP | Judge rules US government overreached with transgender health care declaration: The ruling grants preliminary relief to health professionals who provide the treatments. The judge also denied the government’s motion to dismiss the case. “Today’s win breaks through the noise and gives some needed clarity to patients, families, and providers,” Letitia James, the Democratic New York attorney general who led the lawsuit, said in a statement Thursday. “Health care services for transgender young people remain legal, and the federal government cannot intimidate or punish the providers who offer them.”

* AP | CBS News shutters its storied radio news service after nearly a century, ending an era: When it went on the air in September 1927, the service was the precursor to the entire network, giving a youthful William S. Paley a start in the business. Famed broadcaster Edward R. Murrow’s rooftop reports during the Nazi bombing of London during World War II kept Americans listening anxiously. Today, CBS News Radio provides material to an estimated 700 stations across the country and is known best for its top-of-the-hour news roundups. The service will end on May 22, the network said Friday.

* WaPo | Teens allege Musk’s Grok chatbot made sexual images of them as minors: Police alleged a person arrested in December had used Grok, xAI’s chatbot, to edit photos, including one from the teen girl’s Instagram account, removing a blue bikini from one image to “depict her without any clothes,” according to a lawsuit filed Monday. The teen is suing xAI as part of a group of Tennessee teenagers who allege the company’s AI tools were used to create nude images of them by editing photos in which they were clothed. The edited photos spread across Discord and Telegram in recent months, and some were bartered for other child sexual abuse material in online chatrooms, according to the complaint, which was first reported by The Washington Post.

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Friday, Mar 20, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Credit Unions: Long-Term Financial Empowerment

Friday, Mar 20, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Credit unions play a major role in housing stability, financial wellness, and long-term financial empowerment. Programs generally include:

    ✔ Certified financial counseling
    ✔ HUD‑certified housing guidance
    ✔ Homebuyer education and down payment assistance
    ✔ Debt management & budgeting support
    ✔ Community financial education workshops

These programs reflect the People Helping People cooperative philosophy—helping members build financial security and achieve homeownership.

Great Lakes Credit Union Foundation’s Executive Director, Matthew Rizzie speaks to their financial education and counseling program, stating that “every year we work with more than 1,000 individuals and members that need help with looking at their budget, looking at their savings plan, developing a plan to improve their credit. In the last year, not only did we work with more than 1,000 people, we’ve been able to save more than $7 million in homes that would have gone into foreclosure. And in the past 3 years, we’ve saved more than $50 million in homes that would have gone into foreclosure with the work that we’re doing”.

Learn more at https://betterforillinois.org/

Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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Question of the day

Friday, Mar 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* 25News Now

An advisory question on the [Peoria County] ballot asked if Illinois should lower the bar for independent and third-party candidates. Currently, those candidates often have to collect up to 20 times more signatures than Republicans or Democrats to get running. […]

Supporters said making the requirements equal would increase competition and give voters more options at the polls.

Opponents argued the current system ensures candidates have serious backing before joining a race.

The ballot measure passed, with 83% of voters supporting the new requirement.

* The advisory referendum’s full language

Should the State of Illinois adopt fair and achievable signature requirements for independent and new-party candidates, making them equal to requirements of Republican or Democratic party candidates (rather than the current requirements that are up to 20 times greater) for County, State and Federal elections, in order to increase ballot access for potential candidates?

Both Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez and Mayra Macías will need to collect at least 10,816 valid signatures to run as independents against Patty Garcia, who secured the Democratic nomination after Rep. Chuy Garcia dropped his reelection bid at the last minute. Patty Garcia only needed 697 signatures, according to the State Board of Elections.

For US Senate, independents face a much higher bar, they must gather signatures equal to 1 percent of the vote in the last statewide general election, or 25,000 valid signatures. Democratic and Republican candidates only need a minimum of 5,000.

And in the race for Sen. Dale Fowler’s seat, independent candidate William Lo will need at least 3,973 valid signatures to get on the ballot. His opponents, Republican Rep. Paul Jacobs and Democrat Tamiko Mueller, only needed 1,000.

* The Question: Should Illinois lower signature requirements for independent and third-party candidates to equalize them with major party candidates? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.


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It’s just a bill

Friday, Mar 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* National Association of Social Workers - Illinois…

The Illinois primary is over, and the good news is that crypto companies, online gambling giants, and social media platforms are apparently doing just fine.

Fairshake, the PAC backed by Coinbase, Ripple Labs, and Andreessen Horowitz, spent more than $10 million in Illinois races, including a single $10 million push to defeat one Senate candidate. DraftKings and FanDuel’s PAC spent $2.5 million across 10 Chicago-area state legislative races. Meta’s PAC threw in hundreds of thousands more. Total outside spending in Tuesday’s primary topped $50 million. In a primary.

These are not struggling industries. These are industries spending lavishly to make sure the people writing Illinois tax law stay friendly. So, General Assembly, here is NASW-Illinois’s humble suggestion: raise their taxes and fund school social workers with the revenue.

The logic is not complicated. The same social media platforms profiting off teen anxiety and the same gambling apps targeting young adults are now funding campaigns to make sure nobody in Springfield makes them pay for the damage. Most Illinois schools do not have a single licensed mental health professional for the general population of students. The youth mental health crisis is only getting worse, and thanks to Tuesday’s primary, we finally know which industries have the money to help fix it.

These industries have made abundantly clear they have money to spare. The General Assembly has the power to redirect some of it toward the kids paying the price. Using tax revenue from the industries creating this problem to hire school social workers is, frankly, the least they can do.

Apparently finding money for school based mental health is hard. Finding $50 million to influence a primary is not. The General Assembly should correct that imbalance and raise taxes on these industries to fund school social workers

* WTVO

Illinois lawmakers are working to sharply restrict how police and other law enforcement use biometric technology, a bill that privacy advocates say could become one of the strongest surveillance-limiting laws in the country.

House Bill 5521, introduced by Rep. Kelly Cassidy, creates the Illinois Biometric Surveillance Act, which would prevent law enforcement from accessing, obtaining, or using any biometric identification system.

Under the bill, law enforcement agencies would be prohibited not only from using biometric tools directly but also from partnering with outside vendors, government entities, or federal agencies to obtain biometric data. […]

The bill would also amend the Illinois Identification Card Act and the Illinois Vehicle Code, preventing the Secretary of State from using facial-recognition search services except for when verifying someone’s identity to issue a mobile driver’s license or ID.

* WTVO

Rep. Marcus C. Evans, Jr. (D-33rd) introduced HB4737, the Illinois Kratom Consumer Protection Act, which would create statewide standards for labeling, testing, and selling kratom products. The bill would also repeal the state’s existing Kratom Control Act and replace it with significantly stronger consumer protections.

Under the proposal, kratom retailers would be prohibited from selling any product intended for ingestion if it contains:

    - More than 2% 7‑hydroxymitragynine in its alkaloid composition,
    - Synthetic kratom compounds,
    - Any controlled substance,
    - Products marketed in ways “attractive to children,”
    - Or forms that are combustible, injectable, or designed for vaporization. […]

Violations would carry penalties ranging from civil fines of $5,000 to $10,000, escalating to a two‑year ban from selling kratom after multiple offenses. Sales to anyone under 21 would become a misdemeanor, while selling kratom mixed with a controlled substance could result in a Class 4 felony.

HB4737 has been assigned to the House Cannabis & Intoxicating Products Subcommittee.

* Center Square

An Illinois proposal would require shelters and rescues to register pet microchips in a national database before dogs and cats are adopted.

Microchips are already a standard requirement for pets adopted from shelters and rescue organizations in Illinois. Animals must be implanted with a microchip before leaving the facility, and adopters typically pay the cost as part of the adoption fee. […]

The bill’s most debated provision would bar shelters from adopting out dogs previously deemed dangerous by animal control or ruled vicious by a court. Opponents have largely focused their concerns on that restriction. […]

Lawmakers advanced the bill from committee with the understanding that supporters and opponents would work on possible amendments.

* Canary Media

Illinois could soon follow in the footsteps of Utah and Virginia with a law allowing plug-in solar arrays, often called ​“balcony solar.”

A bill that would make it simpler to install plug-in solar passed out of the state legislature’s Senate Energy and Public Utilities Committee on March 12. It’s now scheduled for a hearing in the full Senate, and a House committee on utilities is also considering the bill. Advocates are hopeful that the measure will pass both Democratic-controlled chambers this legislative session, which runs through the end of May, and then be signed by the state’s Democratic governor, JB Pritzker. […]

Despite the fast-growing enthusiasm for plug-in solar, some bills, like one in Wyoming, have failed. Utilities have raised safety concerns, such as danger to lineworkers if the arrays don’t shut off during power outages and continue sending electricity onto the grid, or a home’s electric system becoming overloaded. […]

In Illinois, utilities have thus far not raised opposition. ComEd spokesperson David O’Dowd said the utility does not have a position on the bill. Ameren did not respond to a request for comment.

* WAND

A bill moving in the Capitol could increase awareness of agriculture education programs.

The Illinois State Board of Education would be required to submit a report on the status and availability of ag education programs on or before March 1, 2027. […]

This bill passed unanimously out of the House Education Policy Committee and now moves to the House floor.

Sen. Doris Turner (D-Springfield) is the sponsor of the same bill in her chamber. Senate Bill 3226 passed unanimously out of the Senate Education Committee March 3 and awaits further action.

* Fox Chicago

Former Chicago Bulls All Star Joakim Noah stood alongside community leaders Thursday to push state legislation aimed at expanding housing support for people returning from prison, arguing stable housing can shape whether someone successfully rebuilds their life.

Advocates with the Home for Good Coalition gathered at the National Public Housing Museum to raise awareness of the proposal, which would increase funding for rental assistance and wraparound reentry services across Illinois.

Supporters say the timing matters. Some housing programs already exist, but strict funding limits cap how many people they can help. As more people leave prison each year, advocates say the gap between need and available support continues to grow. […]

Advocates say the legislation would expand rental subsidies and strengthen partnerships between housing providers and service organizations. Supporters argue that could help stabilize people during the critical months after release, when recidivism risks are often highest.

* WAND

A new bill in Springfield could ban the sale of DIY machine guns in Illinois.

The proposal would prohibit the future sale of semi-automatic handguns that can be easily converted into fully automatic weapons using switches. […]

“It’s not just about Chicago. We’re seeing these incidents all throughout the state,” said Rep. Justin Slaughter (D-Chicago). “In 2023, a 19-year-old outside of East St. Louis was charged with illegally trafficking switches from China to St. Clair County. In Peoria, teenagers have been arrested for possessing and trafficking 3D printed switches.” […]

House Bill 4471 is assigned to the House Firearm Violence Prevention Committee. The deadline to pass House bills out of committee is March 27.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, Mar 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Mar 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois lawmakers plan to rescind Cesar Chavez Day. WGN

    - In Illinois, Latino lawmakers plan to rescind a statewide resolution that marks March 31 as Cesar Chavez Day.
    - They plan to instead honor Dolores Huerta on her birthday which is April 10.
    - The New York Times investigation includes sexual abuse claims by Dolores Huerta, a civil rights icon herself. She says she kept silent about the abuse for decades out of fear that it would damage the farmworker movement.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | ICC approves ComEd proposal requiring multimillion dollar deposits for new data center projects: The new tariff provisions are “an important first step” to addressing the impacts of large demand project applicants and customers (LDPAC) on the grid, ICC Chairman Doug Scott said during the ruling Thursday. The modifications include requiring scaled-up application deposits starting at $1 million per data center project, as well as larger deposit requirements – often in the tens of millions of dollars – for infrastructure buildout such as new substations and transmission connections.

* SJ-R | Postmaster General says Illinois is USPS’ ‘biggest problem’ area: He said the district is “right, dead in the center of the heart of where our biggest problem is. Right down the center of America, from Chicago to St. Louis to Memphis.” Steiner added he believes problems in central and southern Illinois to be more of a staffing problem than a network problem. “My understanding is it’s a staffing problem. That it is hard to get employees to work in the plants where we need them to work, and we don’t have a lot of flexibility to give retention bonuses … because of the way our union contracts work. But that area, I can promise you, is looked at by us – not just every week – every single day, and the numbers are getting better. They absolutely are not there yet,” Steiner told Budzinski.

* Block Club | Chicago Women Outvoted Men By 23% In Tuesday’s Primary Election, Data Shows: Unofficial results from the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners showed women cast 223,376 ballots and men cast 171,385 — a difference of about 23 percent. Those numbers will change somewhat as final votes are tallied, but they fall in line with historical turnout: Women in Chicago outvoted men by about 23 percent in June 2022’s primary and 19 percent percent in March 2018’s primary, according to data from elections board spokesperson Max Bever. “Election after election in Chicago, female voters outpace men every single election,” Bever said. “There’s generally more female registered voters in Chicago, and they also turn out at better rates election after election.”

*** Statewide ***

* Crain’s | Illinois high court finds employers could be on the hook for time worked outside normal hours: Although federal regulations exclude that requirement, the court found Illinois’ wage law does not include any similar provisions. That means employers could be required to compensate employees for required activities outside of the normal work day. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit asked the state’s high court to decide if state law includes the federal regulation found in the Fair Labor Standards Act. The question originates from a civil suit brought against Amazon by two former employees, although the court’s ruling is not an official ruling in that case.

* Tribune | Planned Parenthood of Illinois agrees to pay $500K over allegations of discrimination against white employees: Staff were required to regularly attend the DEI training sessions or “affinity caucuses” that were racially segregated, according to the EEOC. Planned Parenthood of Illinois also gave Black employees greater access to time off than white workers, the EEOC alleged. Planned Parenthood of Illinois “took action to remove the manager responsible for the misconduct uncovered by the investigation,” according to the EEOC.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Oak Park Journal | Franklin dominates field in State House 8th District primary: While her 20% winning margin may have been a surprise to some, it wasn’t to Franklin, who said her victory was the result of old school political leg work in the precincts, and networking with people.  “It was important to me, as a new face, to not be outworked by anyone,” she said on the day following the election.  “Building trust with voters really started when I gathered petitions (in August),” she said. “My strategy was ‘get your (butt) on those doors.’ I knocked on over 25,000 doors. 

* CNI | Christian Mitchell sizes up the Pritzker vs. Bailey rematch: “I absolutely view Darren Bailey and Aaron Del Mar as real opponents for a couple of reasons,” Mitchell said. “One is they’re on the ballot, and they’re going to be running hard, and there’s going to be a lot of money probably coming in from the outside in opposition. And I think that at the end of the day, they have a very extreme agenda that would take Illinois backward.”

* NBC Chicago | Illinois’ film industry sets new record for production spending:
Illinois’ film industry set a new record last year, with production companies spending $703 million: the highest total in state history, Gov. JB Pritzker announced. “Fourteen years ago today, actually, we were filming the pilot of Chicago Fire in these very streets,” said actor Joe Minoso at a news conference Thursday at Cinespace Studios Chicago.

* CNI | Margaret Croke wins Democratic primary for Illinois comptroller: “Thank you to the voters across Illinois for putting their trust in me to serve as the Democratic nominee for state comptroller,” Croke said in a statement Thursday. “I am running for this office to be a fiscal watchdog who will protect taxpayer dollars, ensure transparency in how our state spends money, and pay bills on time. I am incredibly grateful that my message is resonating with so many people across our state.” Results of the closely contested race as of Thursday afternoon show Croke receiving 34.6% of the vote with 92% of precincts across the state reporting. The race was too close to call on Tuesday night as Sen. Karina Villa, D-West Chicago, trailed by a few points.

* CNI | ‘Illinois farmers can feed Illinois’: State grant program offers assistance: Illinois food producers and businesses can apply for a share of $3.6 million in state grant funding through March 27 as part of a program to reduce Illinoisians’ reliance on food from out of state. The Local Food Infrastructure Grant program, through the Illinois Department of Agriculture, supports small agricultural operations and food producers working with cold storage, processing equipment, refrigerated transportation and distribution systems. The grant program is currently open for applications, and applicants must complete a pre-registration before applying. Funds will be distributed in June.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson fires community safety chief: Gatewood said he received little explanation from other top administration leaders when he was fired, but was told in a meeting by Johnson’s senior advisor Jason Lee that the administration hoped to focus more on policy in place of his on-the-ground approach. Gatewood served as a key liaison between Johnson’s City Hall team and the Chicago Police Department. Leading the office created by Johnson, he became a regular at neighborhood safety meetings, heated protests and crime scenes.

Fox Chicago’s Paris Schutz interviewed Gatewood last night. Click here to watch.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Meisha Ross Porter, former NYC schools chief, drops out of the running for Chicago Public Schools CEO: That leaves two finalists: interim CEO Macquline King and Sito Narcisse, former superintendent of East Baton Rouge Parish schools. The Chicago Tribune first reported that Porter had withdrawn. Porter had not yet met with Mayor Brandon Johnson or a community panel, meetings expected to happen this week with all the finalists.

* Sun-Times | Brandon Johnson’s budget director got illegal property tax breaks for five years: Guzman and Kaegi say that, until asked by a Chicago Sun-Times reporter about the tax breaks, they were unaware she was violating state law by collecting the homeowner exemption on her investment property and also her Bronzeville home. Illinois law allows homeowners one such exemption every year and requires them to live in the home. Now, Kaegi’s staff has canceled the homeowner exemption on the investment property and ordered Guzman to repay $2,071.89 in tax breaks she got — not what she wrongfully failed to pay for the past five years but just for the past three years. Kaegi also waived any interest payments.

* Sun-Times | CPS revokes Aspira’s ability to operate charter schools in Chicago in rare move: Aspira’s two high schools started the school year with about 600 students, but the campuses are being emptied out. Aspira’s leaders said the organization didn’t have enough money to continue operating through the end of the school year, while the district said state law forbade it from continuing to float Aspira as much cash as it needed. Board members did not comment before they canceled Aspira’s contract, but in the past, several said Aspira’s poor financial management necessitated the closure. They also said they felt terrible about the students having to transition midyear.

* ABC Chicago | Some question if Chicago school should be renamed after César Chavez sex abuse allegations: At the Haymarket Memorial that commemorates labor struggles through the years, a plaque that honored Chavez is now covered over with black tape. And in the Southport Corridor, a mural outside Cafe Tola honoring Chavez will be repainted with a picture of Dolores Huerta, according to the restaurant’s head of operations.

* Tribune | Chicago schools, parks consider renaming César Chavez monuments after bombshell sexual abuse allegations: The reaction to Wednesday’s story was swift and immediate as activists, elected officials and other leaders across the country began talking about changing institutions named in Chavez’s honor. On Thursday, Chicago Public Schools said in a statement that it has begun the process to consider a name change for César E. Chavez Multicultural Academic Center in the Back of the Yards neighborhood. The district said it will begin to solicit feedback from the school community and bring recommendations to the school’s Local School Council for review.

* WBEZ | Obama Presidential Center is taking a big swing at contemporary art: When you think about presidential libraries, you probably don’t picture fine art. Among the 13 institutions in the United States dedicated to a more recent slate of presidents, only one features a notable commission: an expansive mural created in 1960-61 by regionalist Thomas Hart Benton for the lobby of the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum in Independence, Missouri. Chicago will be the exception, keeping with President Barack Obama’s vision for a presidential center that veers far from the conventional approach to presidential libraries. Obama and his wife, Michelle, envisioned art as being a fundamental part of the $800 million Obama Presidential Center when it opens on Juneteenth after 10 years of planning and construction.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WGN | Joliet City Council passes 795-acre AI data center development project: JCC passed the A.I. data center development project on an 8-1 vote Thursday evening, moving forward with a project to construct the largest data center in the State of Illinois — roughly the size of New York City’s Central Park. The project is set to construct 24 two-story buildings on the 795-acre campus of the “Joliet Technology Center” near South Rowell and West Bernhard roads, just south of the Chicagoland Speedway. Developers said the project will unfold in four phases across 5-7 years, with each phase including the construction of six two-story buildings and a power substation to tap into high-power electricity resources on the local grid.

* Pioneer Press | Glencoe Library $17.5 million referendum passes; will add 4,000 square feet: Glencoe residents easily approved the $17.5 million advisory bond referendum for the library at 320 Park Ave., which has not undergone a major renovation since opening in 1941. The measure received 1,168 votes in support and 590 opposed, according to results posted on the Cook County Clerk’s website. “We were so happy the community came and supported the renovation plan,” Library Director Andrew Kim said.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | UIS union employees authorize strike amid contract dispute: Union leaders said negotiations have stalled for months, with little progress since talks began last summer. Faculty and staff said they are particularly frustrated with a salary proposal from UIS Chancellor Janet Gooch and school administration. According to union officials, they were offered a one percent raise, amounting to 16 cents more per hour for some employees. Thomas Gebhardt, support staff president for University of Professionals Illinois, said offers like these undermine the value of workers to the university.

* Fox Chicago | Takeaways as Illinois basketball dominates Penn to open the NCAA Tournament: The No. 3-seeded Illini pulled away from the Ivy League champ and No. 14-seeded Penn with an epic presence in the post and beyond the arc. Learn More The Illini pasted Penn 105-70. It was the kind of win that gets Illinois over a collapse in the Big Ten Tournament.

*** National ***

* NPR | The Postal Service may be out of cash in 2027 without Congress’ help, postmaster says: The warning is the latest development in longstanding money troubles at USPS — a unique federal government agency that relies on stamps and service fees, not tax dollars, to deliver mail and packages six days a week to every address in the country. “I am not sure that the American public is aware that the Postal Service is at a critical juncture. I know that I wasn’t aware of the extent of it before I took on this role, but at our current run rate and if we continue to pay our required obligations in the same manner as we have done in recent years, then we will be out of cash in less than 12 months,” Steiner, who joined USPS last July, said in a written statement released ahead of a House Oversight subcommittee hearing on Tuesday.

* Crain’s | Billionaires Uihlein and Thiel pump millions into Republican PAC: The Restoration of America PAC, largely funded by Lake Forest billionaire Richard Uihlein, also gave an additional $2.5 million last month to the super PAC arm of the Club for Growth, which advocates against high taxes and government regulation. Uihlein and his wife Elizabeth contributed $72 million to federal candidates and political groups during the 2024 election cycle, making them the biggest Illinois givers on a ranking compiled by Open Secrets, a nonprofit that tracks money in U.S. politics. The Uihlein family run Uline, a privately held distributor of office supplies and packaging materials based in Pleasant Prairie, Wis.

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Good morning!

Friday, Mar 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Today we have the largely unknown pioneer of electronic music, Daphne Oram

* Stylist

Composer and innovator Daphne Oram was a pioneer of electronic music. As the first person to design and build an electronic musical instrument, she created the blueprint for modern music. […]

Not only was Oram among the first to experiment with electronic sounds, she defied the double-barred boys’ club of both the BBC and the electronics industry to do it.

At one point the BBC told Oram to take six months off work as they were concerned about effects of radiophonic sound waves on the female body. In response Oram quit and set up her own studio in Kent, where she built the groundbreaking Oramics machine, a sound synthesizer which turned pictures into sound. The composer drew on film strips to create electrical charges controlling amplitude, timbre, frequency and length of sound.

Oram continued to produce soundtracks and incidental music until ill-health forced her into retirement
 in the Nineties. She died in 2003, aged 77.

What’s going on?

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Friday, Mar 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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