Springfield News

  • A city crew patches a pothole. [Quinn Ford, DNAinfo Chicago]
    The Illinois Chamber of Commerce on Thursday filed its own proposed capital bill Thursday — just one week after the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150 filed their own bill out of frustration with Gov. JB Pritzker’s office.

    The chamber’s plan is focused on “horizontal” projects — as in roads and bridges — which is similar to Local 150’s plan. The chamber’s plan aims to raise about $2 billion per year.

  • The Clean Energy Jobs Act would move Illinois to 100 percent renewable energy by 2050. [Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition]
    After a series of bills dealing with complicated energy issues emerged in the first half of the Spring legislative session, there is a movement to combine them all into one major package to make them palatable for the highest number of lawmakers.

  • Former state worker Mark Janus, the plaintiff in the U.S. Supreme Court case that struck down compulsory “fair share” union fees last summer, is continuing his quest for $3,000 in union fees AFSCME Council 31 had collected before the June ruling.

  • [Secretary of State Jesse White]
    More than 18 months after former Gov. Bruce Rauner signed a bill allowing automatic voter registration in Illinois, the program is still only partially in effect.


  • MAR 28, 2019
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    Bills bills bills



    The Daily Line is starting a new feature to track interesting bills introduced, passed in committee or passed on the floor. Tweet us @TheDailyLineIL or email [email protected] to flag bills that have caught your attention during a committee hearing or while listening to floor debate.

  • Gov. JB Pritzker proposes graduated income tax rates in his Capitol office. [Hannah Meisel/The Daily Line]
    More than two thirds of Illinoisans support the idea of a graduated income tax, a new poll out Tuesday from the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute found.

    But the 67 percent the poll found in favor of the idea of a graduated tax has fallen slightly in the last year, when the idea first got some time in the spotlight during the gubernatorial campaign.

  • A judge Monday ordered the arrest of two men who collected petition signatures for candidates that House Speaker Mike Madigan foe Jason Gonzales alleges were “sham candidates.”

  • The state’s crime lab remains months — and even years — behind in solving cases nearly four months after lawmakers first held a hearing on the backlog.

  • [Paul Simon Public Policy Institute]
    Just two months into the job, Gov. JB Pritzker’s approval rating is only 2 percentage points higher than his disapproval rating, according to a new poll out Wednesday. The Illinois Supreme Court said Wednesday it would not hear an appeal over HB 40, a 2017 law that expanded access to abortion for those on Medicaid and state workers. A bill that would force the State Board of Elections to report to the General Assembly will be amended after the board publicly opposed the legislation.

  • Illinois Manufacturers’ Association President and CEO Mark Denzler [Submitted]
    Now that Democrat JB Pritzker is governor, Illinois Manufacturers’ Association President and CEO Mark Denzler wants to pick his battles carefully.

    Denzler, who has been at IMA’s helm for only a few months after years of working under former leader Greg Baise, has long advocated for pro-business reforms, and is well-known for his ideas for overhauling Illinois’ workers’ compensation system.

    But in introducing IMA’s six-bill legislative agenda Tuesday, workers’ compensation reform was nowhere to be found.  

    “There are interest groups that have no interest in working on this, and I just don’t think we’re going to have any action in the House or Senate so we’re trying to focus on things where we can have movement this year,” Denzler said at a Capitol news conference.

    Instead of expending time and energy drafting legislation and lobbying on workers’ comp bills this session, the group is turning its attention to both measures with the potential for bipartisan support, and fighting against any progressive ideas coming from the governor’s office.