Springfield News
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After eight weeks on the job, Gov. JB Pritzker has appointed 55 people to head up state agencies and serve on state boards and task forces.
Democrat JB Pritzker addresses the party faithful at the 2018 Illinois Democratic County Chairs' Association Breakfast. [Photo courtesy of Lee Milner]
As part of The Daily Line’s occasional series on the diversity of Pritzker’s picks for these positions, TDL found as of Friday, nearly half of these roles have been filled by women, while 38 percent of the governor’s appointees are people of color.
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Gov. JB Pritzker won progressive plaudits when he — a man worth an estimated $4 billion — backed a plan for a graduated income tax early on in his campaign for governor in 2017.
Gov. JB Pritzker proposes progressive income tax rates in his Capitol office Thursday. [Hannah Meisel/The Daily Line]
But as Pritzker claimed frontrunner status in a crowded Democratic field last year, and eventually became the party’s nominee to face off against Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner, everyone from journalists, Republican critics and even some within his own party began demanding that then-candidate Pritzker release a framework of progressive income tax rates.
But over and over, Pritzker refused, saying he would rather negotiate rates with the legislature than release his own rates. On Thursday, however, the wait finally ended, and the governor claimed his plan would give 97 percent of Illinois taxpayers a break.
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Powerful lobbying group AARP Illinois on Wednesday unveiled a pair of bills that would provide a tax credit for family caregivers who pay out-of-pocket for home care expenses and would force nursing homes in Illinois to abide by the state’s minimum staffing requirements.
State Sen. Jacqueline Collins calls for crackdown on nursing home violations, safeguards for residents and their families. [Illinois Senate Democrats]
The measure would also curb the practice of giving nursing home patients psychotropic drugs without express permission.
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The starvation death of 2-year-old Ta'Naja Barnes last month — even after the girl had been the subject of multiple investigations by the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services — has roiled Central Illinois, and on Tuesday a House panel questioned DCFS’ interim chief about how the toddler slipped through the cracks.
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The managed care organizations that act as intermediaries between hospitals and a majority of Medicaid recipients in Illinois are getting rich from denying payment to hospitals, according to several Democratic lawmakers who said Tuesday it may be time to end the program.
Senate Majority Leader Kim Lightford (D-Maywood), flanked by State Rep. Will Guzzardi (D-Chicago) and Gov. JB Pritzker speak with reporters at the Capitol. [Hannah Meisel/The Daily Line]
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The Illinois Municipal League is demanding Illinois return to sharing 10 percent of its income tax revenue with local governments — practice abandoned in the last eight years — while also combining the more than 650 downstate police and fire pension funds, which are in varying levels of fiscal health.
Illinois Municipal League officials said Monday that local governments are hard pressed to survive on their share of the state's income tax. [Submitted]
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In a break from past practices, First Lady M.K. Pritzker will have her own office in both the Illinois Capitol and the James R. Thompson Center. Meanwhile, the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability is concerned with the long term trend of more lower-paying jobs in Illinois and fewer higher-earning jobs in Illinois.
Gov. JB Pritzker and wife M.K. take photos with supporters in the Old State Capitol on Jan. 13, the day before Pritzker’s inauguration. [Hannah Meisel/The Daily Line]
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If Illinois wants to achieve its self-imposed goal of recording zero new HIV infections by 2030, officials remove barriers between those most at risk for the disease and the medication that can prevent its transmission, lawmakers heard Friday.
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An ambitious bill unveiled in Springfield Thursday would set a deadline to move Illinois to 100 percent renewable energy by 2050 — a dramatic increase from the 4 percent renewable energy Illinois currently uses, and the 25-percent goal by 2025 set by a previous law.
A coalition of groups and lawmakers unveiled an ambitious bill to move Illinois to 100 percent renewable energy by 2050. [Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition]








