Springfield News
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A framework for a much-anticipated capital bill is unlikely to emerge any time before May, Democratic senators said Thursday, as they embark on a six-city statewide “listening tour” that will last until late April — trying to gather as much public input as possible about capital needs in Illinois.
A crack in a steel beam shut down Lake Shore Drive for 24 hours in early February. [Photo courtesy of Ald. Brian Hopkins (2)]
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Gov. JB Pritzker received raucous applause during his inaugural address last month when he promised to do his part to fulfill the “most basic responsibilities” of state government — proposing, debating and passing a balanced budget.
Gov. JB Pritzker delivers his first Budget Address in Springfield on Wednesday. [Lee Milner]
“Balancing the budget means lowering the cost of government while delivering the high quality services Illinoisans deserve,” Pritzker said Jan. 14, moments after being sworn in.
The new governor got his chance to propose that balanced budget Wednesday when he addressed a joint session of the General Assembly and his administration released hundreds of pages of budget documents to the public. But whether Pritzker’s budget proposal is truly balanced is up for debate.
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Gov. JB Pritzker will present his framework for a state budget on Wednesday, after dropping breadcrumbs for the last week about what his administration may rely on in order to balance a budget that incorporates campaign promises of increased spending. Meanwhile on Tuesday, lawmakers who served on the Illinois Senate’s Sexual Discrimination and Harassment Task Force introduced six pieces of legislation inspired by more than a year’s worth of hearings.
Gov. JB Pritzker previewed his budget plan, set to be unveiled Wednesday. [Hannah Meisel/The Daily Line]
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Illinois will start down the path toward a $15 minimum wage after Gov. JB Pritzker signs his first major bill in Springfield on Tuesday — the result of weeks of pushing from the Pritzker administration to have the bill be done by the time the governor gives his budget address on Wednesday. Also on Tuesday, the Illinois House Energy and Environment Committee will hear testimony on ethylene oxide emissions.
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A bill that raises Illinois’ minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2025 will be sent to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk after it passed mostly along party line votes Thursday after two hours of debate.
State Rep. Will Guzzardi (D-Chicago) defends SB 1, the minimum wage hike bill, during House floor debate Tuesday. The bill passed with 69 yes votes and now moves to Gov. JB Pritzker's desk. [Lee Milner]








[Hannah Meisel/The Daily Line]

