
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.
Bio
Former state govt & legislative reporter for @thedailylineIL, @Tennessean, @wvgazettemail, @charleywest & @capitaljournal
When Rep. Monica Bristow (D-Godfrey) last faced a Republican opponent in an election, she won by less than 400 votes.
Madigan connections color downstate race between Rep. Monica Bristow, Republican Amy Elik

News in brief: Pritzker announces eviction moratorium extension and money for welcome centers; unemployment rate continues to decline.
TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Monday, October 19th

Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan and other top Democrats may be wounded by a widening federal corruption investigation, but their campaign war chests are fuller than ever.
Madigan, Harmon rake in union cash, dwarfing GOP fundraising

TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Friday, October 16th

The system by which banks and public appraisers value homes in Illinois is antiquated and should be restructured as part of a broader effort to improve equity in homeownership, a panel of lawmakers were told Thursday.
Lenders, advocates call for revamping appraisals while addressing homeownership, lending inequities

TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Thursday October 15th

Making their closing arguments as voters head to the polls, advocates for Gov. JB Pritzker's graduated income tax proposal on Wednesday argued the plan would kickstart efforts to address Illinois’ fiscal woes while opponents said it would give the General Assembly unfettered power to increase taxes in the future.
Proponents, opponents of graduated income tax proposal make closing arguments in forum

News in brief: PTAB hails exiting director; Jennifer Pritzker donates to anti-tax amendment group; state Census budget gets a boost; COVID-19 deaths hit a milestone; cannabis collections tax exceed $100M
TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Wednesday, October 14th

The prison population in Illinois has fallen by more than 18 percent during the COVID-19 pandemic, resulting in the state having its fewest number of inmates since the 1990s, the head of the state Department of Corrections (IDOC) said Tuesday.
Illinois prison population decreased by 18 percent since start of pandemic

Illinois is on pace to see its deadliest year on record in terms of opioid overdose deaths, with more than 60 percent of the state’s 322 deaths recorded in May attributed to Cook County residents, according to state data obtained by The Daily Line.
Illinois on pace for nearly 3K opioid deaths in 2020, most lethal year on record

Two years after suffering a narrow defeat, Republican David Friess is hoping the voters of House District 116 want to go in a new direction. Bordering the Missouri state line, the district, which includes Monroe and Randolph and portions of Perry and St. Clair counties, has been represented by a Democrat from two families for more than 20 years.
Candidates tout conservative credentials in bid to represent Metro East state house district

News in brief: U.S. Rep. Bost contracts COVID; Black caucus debuts final pillar; judge rejects tax lawsuit request; a GOP bus tour
TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Monday, October 12th
Late infusion of money into House District 65 race in Kane County highlights heightened stakes

TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Friday, October 9th

A panel of lawmakers on Thursday said the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) needs to improve its communication with their offices in order to more effectively reach out to minority-owned businesses and communities.
Senators call for increased legislative involvement in state’s outreach efforts to minority-owned businesses

TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Thursday, October 8th

The state’s learning standards and assessments need to be updated to ensure Illinois’ education system is more equitable, a panel of state lawmakers were told Wednesday.
Lawmakers encouraged to rewrite Illinois education standards as part of equity efforts

Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday announced seven “guiding principles” that will serve as starting points for making the state’s criminal justice system more equitable.
Pritzker outlines ‘guiding principles’ for criminal justice reform as veto session nears

News in brief: Welch announces Madigan probe delay; Frerichs cancels press conference; Senate committees take on violence reduction and crime victim help
TDL Springfield Morning Briefs: Wednesday, October 7th

More Illinoisans died of opioid overdoses in May than any other month since as least January 2018, according to a new report from the state Department of Public Health.
Illinois recorded more than 250 opioid overdose deaths in April, followed by 269 in May, making it the deadliest two-month period on record since 2018. Since then, the previous monthly record for opioid overdose deaths was set in Dec. 2019, when nearly 250 Illinoisans died.
Opioid overdose deaths in Illinois spiked during early months of COVID-19 pandemic: report
Bio
Former state govt & legislative reporter for @thedailylineIL, @Tennessean, @wvgazettemail, @charleywest & @capitaljournal