Illinois Quick Hits: Bears want more from state
(The Center Square) – The Chicago Bears say a megaprojects bill passed by the Illinois House needs additional amendments in order to make Arlington Heights a feasible stadium site.
The Bears said in a statement that they support Illinois leaders as they determine the path to making essential changes and aligning on infrastructure funding.
The House passed Amendment 3 to House Bill 910 on Wednesday night.
MAN IN CUSTODY AFTER CENTRALIA SHOOTING
A Centralia man is charged with murder, attempted murder and several firearm-related felonies after a shooting left one person dead and three others hospitalized last Sunday.
Illinois State Police say Shavonte D. Samuels, 21, is in custody pending a hearing on the state’s request that he be denied pretrial release. Samuels is charged with killing Stephen McCary III, 19, and wounding three others.
STUDY RANKS LUCKIEST ILLINOIS CASINOS
A new report has ranked 11 commercial casino resorts in Illinois from luckiest to unluckiest.
The data study analyzed Tripadvisor reviews and found that Hollywood Casino Joliet ranked luckiest, followed by Par-A-Dice in East Peoria and Grand Victoria in Elgin. Jumer’s Casino Rock Island finished last.
The report pegged the economic impact of Illinois’ major casinos at $7.04 billion.
Latest News Stories
Over 100 pro-life organizations ask Congress to end forced taxpayer abortion funding
Measles outbreak continues along Arizona-Utah border
Value of movie and TV tax credits debated in California
Trucker in Florida triple fatal failed CDL exam 10 times
Multiple illegal border crossers killed after causing high-speed pursuits
Canada caves to pressure from Trump over Ronald Reagan ad
Exclusive: Colorado lawmakers split over limits on taxes
Americans on Social Security will see 2.8% benefits boost next year
Better-than-expected inflation report generates cut predictions
Op-Ed: 340B needs transparency to fulfill Its mission
India’s Reliance says it will abide with sanctions on Russian oil purchases
Critics warn Illinois’ ‘megaproject’ tax breaks shift costs to taxpayers