Starved Rock mine controversy aired in Springfield

SPRINGFIELD -- Longtime resident Merlin Calhoun compared LaSalle County to an apple that has been repeatedly bruised – bruised by mining.

Woman fights removal of trees on Beardstown levee

BEARDSTOWN – A plan to remove trees from the Beardstown harbor has prompted a local woman to start a petition drive to save the trees, which she says provide habitat for wildlife.

Cullerton: Pension changes likely to mean frugal teacher contracts

SPRINGFIELD Downstate school districts could pay more toward their teachers' pensions by negotiating more frugal contracts with teachers, Illinois Senate President John Cullerton told The State Journal-Register editorial board on Monday.

Legislator challenges ban on recording police

SPRINGFIELD -- Legislation to roll back steep penalties in cases where citizens make audio recordings of police officers on the job has been proposed in the Illinois House.

Parents of JDC residents worry about their children's futures

JACKSONVILLE -- Like many of the parents of Jacksonville Developmental Center residents, Earnest Jones saw the tough transition his son, Carl, 48, had to make when he was moved to Jacksonville from the Lincoln Developmental Center when that facility closed 10 years ago.

Bernard Schoenburg: No ‘formal’ vote in tea party McCann nod

To some in the tea party movement, endorsing state Sen. SAM McCANN, R-Carlinville, in his primary run in the new 50th Senate District was a no-brainer.

Pension switch could lead to teacher layoffs, superintendent says

SPRINGFIELD -- One local school superintendent predicts that massive teacher layoffs will be the result if legislators decide to shift the cost of paying for teacher pensions from the state to local districts.

Union members rally in front of Quinn's office to demand raises

SPRINGFIELD -- Demanding raises that Gov. Pat Quinn has canceled, dozens of members of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees rallied Thursday in front of the governor's office, causing a brief confrontation with Secretary of State police officers.

Quinn's State of the State: Illinois 'moving forward'

SPRINGFIELD -- Gov. Pat Quinn called Wednesday for additional tax cuts and education spending, but avoided any details about how the state would pay for the initiatives or otherwise resolve its ongoing financial problems.

Original Copy of Amendment that Ended Slavery 1 at Presidential Museum

It officially started the process to free the slaves, and now you'll be free to see it starting February 1 through May 31 at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum in Springfield.

A fully signed and recently restored copy of the Congressional resolution for a 13th Amendment to the Constitution, the official act that would abolish slavery in the United States, will be on display in the Museum's Treasures Gallery starting February 1, the 147th anniversary of its signing.

Thousands Could Overlook Valuable Tax Credit

Thousands of Illinois workers could overlook a special federal tax credit because they don't know about it. As a result, they could miss out on up to $5,751 extra in their federal income tax refunds through the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC). On average, the credit boosted refunds for eligible Illinois workers by $2,250.

Local March for Life Attendees Met with Congressman Shimkus

Area residents from Effingham, Sigel, Neoga, Mason, and Teutopolis met with Congressman John Shimkus on January 23 while in Washington D.C. for the March for Life.

Report targets state workers, retirees

SPRINGFIELD -- State government employees and retirees would get hit in the pocketbook if the General Assembly adopts recommendations from the Chicago-based Civic Federation designed to avoid a financial meltdown.

State officials hope Illinoisans get taste for Asian carp

SPRINGFIELD -- To save the environment, would you eat a piece of it?

'Jobs, jobs, jobs' to be focus of State of State

SPRINGFIELD -- Gov. Pat Quinn will deliver his State of the State speech Wednesday, an address expected to focus on past accomplishments and lay out an agenda for job growth and economic development in Illinois.

Bernard Schoenburg: Scherer gets poll help from high places

SUE SCHERER, the first-grade teacher from Decatur who is backed by the organization of House Speaker MICHAEL MADIGAN, D-Chicago, for the Democratic nomination to the Illinois House from the new 96th House District, got an infusion of help recently from Madigan’s political committee.

Kirk office continues routine during stroke treatment

SPRINGFIELD -- Doctors said Thursday that U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk remains in serious but stable condition after doctors removed two destroyed pieces of brain tissue Wednesday.

Bernard Schoenburg: Friends and foes alike rooting for Kirk

It’s great to hear that U.S. Sen. MARK KIRK, R-Ill., is making good progress as he recovers from a stroke suffered over the weekend. Doctors say he is expected to make a full mental recovery, but could lose some movement ability — his left arm, for instance, was affected by the stroke.

Supreme Court to allow cameras in trial courts

SPRINGFIELD -- The Illinois Supreme Court will announce Tuesday a policy allowing cameras and audio recording devices in trial courts on a "limited, experimental" basis, according to court spokesman Joseph Tybor.

Brauer calls for independent actuary to review pension systems

SPRINGFIELD -- State Rep. Rich Brauer, R-Springfield, is calling for the creation of a new constitutional office to get “partisan politics” out of Illinois’ five pension systems.


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