Capitol News
Pritzker to tell Congress ‘both parties are to blame’ for broken immigration system
Capitol News Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker will tell a congressional committee Thursday that America’s immigration problems are a result of a bipartisan failure to reform the country’s immigration system and secure the country’s borders. In more than five pages of written testimony submitted by the governor to the U.S. House Oversight Committee ahead of hours…
Read MoreInsurance plans could soon be required to cover hippotherapy in Illinois
Capitol News Illinois SPRINGFIELD – Under a bill awaiting the governor’s signature, certain insurance plans would have to cover hippotherapy and other forms of therapeutic horseback riding in Illinois. Hippotherapy is a type of physical, occupational and speech therapy where the movement of a horse is used to treat a patient’s specific disability or disorder.…
Read MoreFeds to retry Sen. Emil Jones after mistrial on bribery, lying to FBI charges
Capitol News Illinois CHICAGO — Federal prosecutors on Tuesday announced they intend to retry state Sen. Emil Jones III after his April trial on charges of bribery and lying to the FBI ended in a hung jury. Jones, a Chicago Democrat and son of former Illinois Senate President Emil Jones Jr., stands accused of agreeing…
Read MoreDespite setbacks, gun rights groups continue push to overturn Illinois assault weapons ban
Capitol News Illinois Gun rights advocates once again are asking a federal appeals court in Chicago to overturn Illinois’ ban on assault-style firearms and large-capacity magazines in a case that may be destined for the U.S. Supreme Court. In briefs filed Friday with the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, attorneys representing plaintiffs challenging the law…
Read More‘This issue isn’t going away’: Illinois lawmakers delay pension reform again
Capitol News Illinois SPRINGFIELD — Public employees hired since 2011 must continue to wait for pension reform after Illinois lawmakers declined to take up the issue during the spring session. Lawmakers and labor unions have both expressed concern that benefits for Tier 2 employees – those who entered the public sector after 2011 – are…
Read More‘Clean Slate’ Act to seal nonviolent criminal records loses in race against time
Capitol News Illinois SPRINGFIELD — The “Clean Slate” Act, which could have sealed thousands and potentially millions of nonviolent criminal records in Illinois, had bipartisan support but failed to pass in the final flurry of legislative action this spring, the sponsor says. Senate Bill 1784 would have required law enforcement agencies to automatically seal eligible…
Read MoreUnder bill, state highway cameras could be used to investigate human trafficking
Capitol News Illinois SPRINGFIELD — A bill passed in this year’s legislative session would rewrite the definition of a “forcible felony” to allow Illinois State Police to use images obtained from automatic license plate readers in cases involving human trafficking and involuntary servitude. Automatic license plate readers are cameras that capture images of vehicle license…
Read MoreIllinois’ $55.2B budget ‘incomplete,’ Civic Federation president says
Capitol News Illinois SPRINGFIELD — Illinois’ latest budget misses the mark in several key areas, according to one independent nonprofit fiscal analyst. State lawmakers sent Gov. JB Pritzker a $55.2 billion budget on May 31 that raises $1 billion in new revenue and increases spending by more than $2 billion in fiscal year 2026 compared…
Read MoreIllinois ‘chicken bill’ aims to boost small poultry farms, expand access to their products
Capitol News Illinois SPRINGFIELD — A bill that would lift long-standing restrictions on small poultry farmers in Illinois, reducing red tape and transforming the way local farmers process and sell their products, is heading to the governor. Under a measure dubbed the “chicken bill,” farmers who process fewer than 7,500 birds annually would be exempt…
Read MoreLegislative leaders discuss next steps for failed transit reform push
Capitol News Illinois SPRINGFIELD — Minutes before the clock hit midnight and the calendar flipped to June 1, the Illinois Senate advanced a much-watched legislative proposal to reform and fund public transportation in the Chicago area and prevent dire cuts to service. But Chicago Democrat Sen. Ram Villivalam’s Hail Mary attempt to avoid cuts was…
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