
Joel Ebert is The Daily Line's reporter covering the Illinois state government. He covered politics in Illinois, South Dakota and West Virginia before joining The Tennessean in 2016 to report on the Tennessee General Assembly and state government. In West Virginia, he worked as a daily statehouse reporter before transitioning to provide daily coverage of the trial of former Massey Energy CEO Don Blankenship, who became the first chief executive of a major corporation convicted of a workplace safety crime. A native of Illinois and graduate of the University of Illinois at Chicago, Ebert is a student of Chicago politics whose work has been cited by national media. He’s received awards from the press associations in South Dakota, West Virginia and Tennessee, including the Malcolm Law Award for investigative reporting. In 2019, he was a National Press Foundation fellow.
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Former state govt & legislative reporter for @thedailylineIL, @Tennessean, @wvgazettemail, @charleywest & @capitaljournalIn a reversal, Gov. JB Pritzker announced Wednesday members of the Illinois General Assembly would be bumped ahead and given access to receive a COVID-19 vaccine alongside seniors and “frontline” workers.
Pritzker announced the move less than three weeks after he said lawmakers should wait their turns, but members of the legislature have since called for the governor to prioritize them.

State lawmakers now eligible for vaccines, Pritzker says in reversal
Lawmakers have already begun introducing a raft of new legislation as they prepare to hold in-person and virtual meetings starting this week. Last year, the COVID-19 pandemic and the shortened legislative session pushed the vast majority of members’ proposals off the table.
Hundreds of bills are introduced every General Assembly, and this year has proven to be no different. As of Sunday, 706 bills have been introduced in the House so far, according to the General Assembly’s website. The Senate, meanwhile, has seen the introduction of 133 bills.

Early filed bills include changes to ethics, elections, legislature and Pritzker’s COVID-19 authority
News in brief: IDPH redirecting nursing home vaccines; Senate Democrats launch podcast; former Sen. Sam McCann indicted

TDL Springfield Morning Briefs Wednesday February 04
TDL Springfield Morning Briefs Wednesday February 03
Illinois Department of Public Health director Ngozi Ezike on Tuesday encouraged members of Congress to widen the federal supply chain of COVID-19 vaccines to states and said the federal response to the pandemic under former President Donald Trump “hampered” states’ efforts to fight the virus.
Ezike was one of five public health experts to testify before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce in a virtual hearing, with members of the panel peppering the witnesses on a variety of topics with the aim of finding solutions to accelerate COVID-19 vaccinations.

Trump’s vaccine promises were ‘too good to be true,’ Ezike tells Congressional committee
A handful of Illinois lawmakers are calling for state officials to create a new database aimed at preventing COVID-19 vaccine doses from being wasted.
On Jan. 22, 15 state senators, all Democrats, urged Gov. JB Pritzker and Illinois Department of Public Health director Ngozi Ezike to create such a database due to concerns that local health departments may not be able to use all the vaccine doses they are given.

Lawmakers call for state database to prevent vaccine waste as health departments rush to distribute thawed doses
More than four years after Russian hackers breached it, Illinois’ voter registration database is set for a revamp.
Last month, members of the Illinois State Board of Elections (ISBOE) voted to initiate the process to replace the statewide voter registration database, which was launched in 2009 to meet requirements set by the federal Help America Vote Act (HAVA).

Four years after Russian hack, Illinois voter registration system set for overhaul
News in brief: Senate to hold hearings on vaccine rollout, unemployment insurance; Rabine to run for governor; Super Bowl bets soar.

TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Tuesday, February 9
TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Monday, February 8
As the Illinois General Assembly prepares to return to work in the coming days, some of the first bills filed include a bevy or proposed changes to state laws related to education, transportation, cannabis and guns.
As of Monday afternoon, legislators have introduced 740 bills in the House, while 133 measures have been filed in the Senate, according to the General Assembly’s website.
This is the second part of a multiday Daily Line review of the early filed bills.

Changes in education, transportation, cannabis and gun laws among slew of newly filed bills
News in brief: Senate to hold hearings on vaccine rollout, unemployment insurance; Rabine to run for governor; Super Bowl bets soar.

TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Tuesday, February 9
TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Monday, February 8
Willis, Williams become latest House speaker candidates; Pritzker expands vaccine distribution eligibility; decreased COVID-19 mitigations on the horizon; Pritzker calls for Trump’s impeachment; Miller condemned for Hitler quote.

TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Thursday, January 7th
Days from the Friday start of the General Assembly’s lame duck session, the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus offered a preview Wednesday of a multi-faceted legislative package that would license police officers, boost early childhood programs and form a commission to study reparations, among other measures.
During a nearly two-hour virtual town hall forum, members of the Black caucus, led by Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford (D-Maywood), shared specific ideas that will be part of the legislative agenda, including plans to introduce bills that would create a reparations commission, implement police officer licensure requirements, establish funding formulas for early childhood and higher education and prohibit the closure of hospitals until 2023.

Black Caucus releases ‘comprehensive’ legislative package as lame duck session nears
Most years, Jan. 1 marks the enactment of hundreds of new laws. But like with much that occurred in 2020, this year is different.
The start of the new year will initiate three new laws, all of which were originally introduced in 2019, while offering a reminder of Gov. JB Pritzker’s recently failed graduated income tax proposal, which would have taken effect on Jan.1 had voters approved it.

Coming Jan. 1: new laws on missing persons, address confidentiality, insulin caps

News in brief: Health officials stress effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccine; state anticipates receiving 507,000 by end of December, outlines priority groups
TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Wednesday, December 23rd

Last week, when members of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee gathered in Chicago for a special hearing, lawmakers were overwhelmingly focused on asking state officials about the COVID-19 outbreak at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home.

With lawmakers focused on COVID-19 outbreak at LaSalle Veterans’ Home, cases, deaths mount at Manteno, Quincy facilities

A new bill filed on Monday seeks to allow the General Assembly to conduct business remotely during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and future emergencies.
Sponsored by Rep. Ann Williams (D-Chicago) and Sen. Robert Martwick (D-Chicago), the legislation (HB 5868) comes months after a similar measure narrowly failed in the House and just weeks ahead of the legislature’s anticipated return to Springfield.
New bill seeks to allow legislature to conduct remote business

TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Monday, December 21st

Providing free broadband Internet access to every Illinois household would cost between $3.3 billion and $4.2 billion each year, according to a new report that is set to be presented to the Illinois General Assembly.
Free statewide broadband access would cost more than $3B a year: report
Bio
Former state govt & legislative reporter for @thedailylineIL, @Tennessean, @wvgazettemail, @charleywest & @capitaljournal