Pritzker signs bill to phase out subminimum wage for disabled workers

Organizations must implement changes by 2030

By BEN SZALINSKI
bszalinski@capitolnewsillinois.com
Capitol News Illinois 

CHICAGO — Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday signed a long-awaited bill to stop Illinois organizations from paying less than the minimum wage to workers with disabilities.

The bill applies to businesses and other facilities that hold what is known as a 14(c) certificate, named after the section of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 permitting lower wages for disabled people. Organizations receiving the exemption are allowed to pay a “commensurate wage” based on the worker’s individual productivity in proportion to the wage and productivity of workers who do not have disabilities but are performing the same or a similar task.

“Illinois is closing an era of an outdated two-tier wage system that lets disabled workers make less money for their hard work,” Pritzker said at a signing ceremony in Chicago. 

The governor signed House Bill 793, which, beginning in 2030, will prohibit businesses and other residential facilities in Illinois from claiming an exemption allowing them to pay workers with disabilities less than minimum wage. Illinois is the 19th state to eliminate the subminimum wage for workers with disabilities. Organizations must phase in the full minimum wage by the end of 2029.

The bill received bipartisan support in the General Assembly in 2024 following lengthy negotiations that began more than five years ago. It creates a transition grant program designed to provide financial support for organizations to continue employing people with disabilities while paying them at least the state minimum wage. It also establishes a task force to oversee the transition.

Money for the transition program would come from the Illinois Department of Human Services’ line item for transforming the state’s developmental and intellectual disability system. That line item includes $20 million for various programs for the current fiscal year, but lawmakers and advocates had previously discussed using $2 million to fund the transition grant program.   

Illinois has 59 programs currently receiving a federal exemption. Those programs employ about 2,500 people, according to the U.S. Department of Labor

Pritzker called on the new Trump administration to end 14(c) exemptions nationwide — a process that began under former President Joe Biden’s administration. 

“People with disabilities dream big,” said Erin Compton, a person with disabilities who advocated for the law. “Let's prove that people with disabilities are not broken people in a normal world, but normal people in an inclusive world.”

Opposition in Springfield came from some of the state’s largest operators of “sheltered work” programs, which employ people with disabilities to perform work for less than minimum wage and often do work that is outsourced from other businesses. 

Those organizations, and people with family members participating in them, argued the bill will force those programs to end at places that can’t afford to pay minimum wage for potentially low-productivity work.

Sen. Jil Tracy, R-Quincy, voted against the bill and told a Senate committee in November her brother has a disability and is paid less than minimum wage to shred paper for a business.

“How in the world are they going to be able to pay minimum wage is my question? What happens if that shredding paper employment goes away?” she said.

Read more: Bill to phase out subminimum wage for disabled workers clears General Assembly

Lawmakers and stakeholders agreed to create a task force and five-year phase in period to work out issues that arise from the transition with the goal of keeping people who benefit from the programs employed. 

“My excitement today is not just because we are making history here in Illinois, but also because of all the hard work advocacy and activism that it took to get here,” bill sponsor Rep. Theresa Mah, D-Chicago, said Tuesday. “To say that this was a challenging bill to pass would be an understatement. There was a lot of opposition.”


Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. 


Potential immigration raids spark fear, protests on Inauguration Day 

Illinois among states to file early challenge to one of Trump’s executive orders

By ASHLEY N. SORIANO,
ISMAEL M. BELKOURA,
& BEN SZALINSKI
Medill Illinois News Bureau
& Capitol News Illinois
news@capitolnewsillinois.com

CHICAGO – Immigrant communities around Illinois braced Tuesday for threatened mass deportations. But the Little Village neighborhood in Chicago, facing subzero temperatures, saw little foot traffic and no anticipated raids as of Tuesday afternoon on the second day of the Trump Administration.

Trump has vowed to carry out the “largest mass deportation in history.” He wasted no time on Inauguration Day before signing multiple immigration-related executive orders, including ones reinstating the “Remain in Mexico” policy and pausing refugee admissions.

Several states quickly moved to block Trump’s executive order seeking  to end birthright citizenship, which grants citizenship to all people born in the U.S., even in cases where the parents are not citizens.  

“The President has no authority to amend the Constitution or supersede the Citizenship Clause’s grant of citizenship to individuals born in the United States,” argued a lawsuit filed by Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and attorneys general in Oregon, Arizona and Washington state.

Eighteen other states had earlier announced a similar lawsuit. 

But raids previously alluded to by the Trump administration hadn’t occurred as of Tuesday afternoon. 

A Wall Street Journal report said around 100 to 200 ICE officers would be sent to the city to execute the operation. Following leaks about raids targeting Chicago, and after initially telling Fox News the raids would begin as early as Tuesday, “border czar” Tom Homan later said he was reconsidering the operation’s details due to officer safety concerns.

At an event hosted by local Republican groups in December, Homan, former ICE acting director, named Chicago “ground zero” for the Trump Administration’s mass deportation plan.

Gov. JB Pritzker said at an unrelated news conference Tuesday he spent part of Monday in some of Chicago’s Hispanic neighborhoods. He described businesses that were “relatively empty because people were afraid to show up” with the threat of action by ICE looming. But he said he hadn’t heard anything from the Trump administration. 

“They've not communicated with us, so we don't know when exactly those enforcement actions might take place. We have heard that they are targeting as many as 2,000 people, initially in the city of Chicago alone,” Pritzker said. 

The governor has reiterated in recent months he supports immigration authorities deporting people living in the U.S. without legal permission who have been convicted of violent crimes, but he said he is worried law-abiding undocumented Illinois residents will get caught up in deportations as well.  

Advocacy organizations have been mobilizing resources to inform immigrants of their rights and try to protect undocumented people from the crackdown targeting Chicago and other sanctuary cities.

Mayor Brandon Johnson did not return requests for comment but posted to X Sunday that Chicago “will continue to fight for the justice and safety of all who call this place home.” At the start of the year, Johnson also reaffirmed Chicago’s Welcoming City Ordinance, which does not allow city employees and agencies to help civil immigration enforcement.

An ICE spokesperson told Capitol News Illinois Saturday that questions about post-inauguration activities would need to be directed to the incoming administration.


Hundreds march in Inauguration Day protest

In freezing temperatures, hundreds of protesters and more than 80 organizations gathered at Federal Plaza in downtown Chicago around the same time as the new president’s swearing-in ceremony in Washington, D.C., on Monday.

Chants of “No hate, no fear, immigrants are welcome here” echoed blocks away, as the group marched through Chicago’s Loop and ended the rally across the river from Trump Tower.

Nadiah Alyafai, an organizer for the U.S. Palestinian Community Network, was one of the first speakers and said the organizations were not “blind to the reality” that the incoming administration would target members of marginalized communities.

“We have seen how Trump weaponized fear and bigotry and how he perpetrated harmful stereotypes that fuel violence, discrimination and hate, and we know that these policies will continue, starting today,” Alyafai said to the crowd.

Martín Unzueta, the executive director and founder of Chicago Community and Workers Rights, urged people who are concerned or confused about their immigration status to reach out to their alderpersons and local organizations.

“We are part of this country,” Unzueta said in a speech spoken in Spanish. “No one is going to run us out. Here is where we’ll defend ourselves.”

Unzueta also reminded protesters that Chicago remains a sanctuary city. Last week, the Chicago City Council temporarily blocked a proposal that would have allowed the Chicago Police Department to help ICE officers in some deportation cases.

The Chicago Police Department confirmed to Capitol News Illinois Tuesday it would not assist federal immigration authorities with civil enforcement. CPD also does not document immigration status.

“To be clear, the Chicago Police Department will not assist or intervene in civil immigration enforcement in accordance with the City of Chicago Municipal Code,” a CPD spokesperson said in an emailed statement. “As always, we will continue to enforce the law if a crime occurs, regardless of the citizenship status of those involved.”

Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott began busing migrants to Chicago in 2022 as part of what critics, including Illinois’ Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker, called a political stunt. Since August 2022, nearly 52,000 people seeking asylum arrived by bus and plane through Dec. 18, 2024, according to city data. The governors of Arizona and Florida also bused migrants to various cities, including New York City and Washington, D.C.

Chicago has been a sanctuary city for immigrants since 1985 and reaffirmed the protections during the first Trump administration.

A lone counterprotester stood across the street during Monday’s demonstration, swinging an American flag back and forth chanting “America first!” He declined to give his name. 


Advocacy organizations warn undocumented clients

Since late last year, advocacy organizations have been warning and preparing their undocumented clients by hosting “Know Your Rights” sessions, including roleplay workshops on what to do if a loved one is detained.

La Villita Community, an organization in the majority Hispanic Little Village neighborhood, provided instructions on social media ahead of reported ICE activity.

Other groups like the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights serve Illinois communities beyond Chicago.

Dulce Ortiz, the ICIRR board president, came to the U.S. from Mexico without documentation when she was 10 years old. The now 43-year-old is a U.S. citizen, and she’s providing resources to people who are in the same shoes as she was as a child.

"I had to make some decisions when I was young, (and) I hope young women will never have to make those decisions in order to become a U.S. citizen,” Ortiz said.

ICIRR, which primarily serves Lake County and parts of McHenry County, defines its mission as to empower and integrate immigrants into their communities.

The organization recommends preparation ahead of possible confrontations with ICE officers, including renewing any visas or permits five months ahead of their expiration. Ortiz, the ICIRR board president, suggests a three-step process: don’t open your door, remain silent and ask for a lawyer.

“We don't want to create even more fear in our community, but at the end of the day, the fear is already there,” Ortiz said. “And I rather argue to be ready and prepared and alert and aware than us, you know, trying to protect their feelings and do nothing.”

Ortiz and other ICIRR advocates have been meeting with state legislators, ensuring staff and volunteers are keeping an eye out for any ICE presence and hosting mental health workshops.

Another group, Immigrant Solidarity DuPage, provides services to immigrants in the Chicagoland area, organizer Cristobal Cavazos said.

Cavazos attended the Federal Plaza protest alongside a dozen members of the organization, saying that although there is fear, it’s important to translate that fear to action.

“We want to show Trump that we are many and we are more united than ever,” Cavazos said in an interview conducted in Spanish. “He’s not going to make us feel like strangers in our own home.”

Ashley N. Soriano and Ismael M. Belkoura are graduate students in journalism with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications, and Fellows in its Medill Illinois News Bureau working in partnership with Capitol News Illinois.

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.

Mt. Carmel Man Sentenced To Six Years In Prison On Aggravated Domestic Battery Charge

21 year old Krieg Addison of Mt. Carmel has been sentenced to 6 years in prison after pleading guilty aggravated domestic battery.

Addison was arrested by Mt. Carmel Police following an incident on July 12th at his residence in the 500 block of West 5th Street. State’s Attorney Kelli Storckman said Addison was charged with a Class 2 felony of aggravated domestic battery after strangling and beating up his girlfriend. When officers arrived at the home, Storckman said Addison was dragging the battered girlfriend across the floor by her feet.

An additional misdemeanor child endangerment charge was filed after Addison knocked over a television that nearly struck an infant that was in a car seat.

Addison was to have gone on trial last month but abruptly changed his plea to guilty just as jury selection was scheduled to begin on December 2nd. The guilty plea came with no assurances as to what his sentence might be.

Yesterday, Addison was sentenced to the 6 year term of which he will have to serve at least 85%. Upon his release, he’ll be on four years of parole.

The sentencing hearing was interrupted when Addison’s mother fainted and emergency personnel were summoned to the court room. After she refused medical treatment, the hearing resumed.

Body Of Missing Newburgh Man Pulled From Ohio River

The body of Hunter Conner, 22, of Newburgh was recovered from the Ohio River Saturday at 5:10 p.m. CT by Conservation Officer divers.

The incident is still under investigation. 

Update as of Jan. 17, 2025, at 11:31 a.m.

Sonar search efforts are underway for a missing man who was last seen in the Ohio River.

At 9 a.m., emergency responders were notified of a person missing in the water approximately 1 mile east of the Grandview boat ramp. 

Initial investigation revealed that Hunter Conner, 22, of Newburgh, was waterfowl hunting, when the kayak he was in capsized as he tried to retrieve a duck. 

Responders completed unsuccessful water surface and bank searches of the area yesterday.

Other agencies assisting on scene include the Spencer County Sheriff’s Department, Indiana State Police, Spencer County Emergency Management Agency, Spencer County Emergency Ambulance Service, Grandview Fire Department, Chrisney Fire Department, Lewisport Fire Department, Yelvington Fire Department, Boonville Fire Department, Owensboro Fire Department, Daviess County (Kentucky) Fire and Rescue, Air Evac, and Hancock County (Kentucky) Emergency Management .

Indiana Conservation Officers strongly encourage the use of life jackets while participating in activities on or near the water.

Second Individual Arrested for Assisting Suspect in Orange County Shooting

Floyd County:  A second person has been charged after investigators believe he participated in assisting the suspect wanted in the shooting of an Orange County Deputy Sheriff on January 3rd, 2025.

On January 3rd, just before 1:00 AM, Orange County Deputy Sheriff Zac Andry stopped to check on a disabled vehicle in the roadway at US Highway 150 and State Road 56.  During the interaction with the driver, Austin Schepers, Schepers shot Deputy Andry multiple times and fled the scene.  Hours later, Schepers fled to a residence in the 1800 block of Market Street in New Albany.

Through their investigation, State Police Detectives Clay Boley and Steven Peyton believe 37-year-old James Adams of Commiskey had arrived at the apartment on Market Street on January 3rd at the request of Schepers.  Investigators believe that Adams was of full knowledge of the situation that Schepers was in, and that he was instrumental in helping Schepers get to Craig Street in Louisville.  Craig Street is one block west of Wheeler Avenue, where Schepers was ultimately found on January 4th.

Adams was already incarcerated in the Scott County Jail on unrelated charges.  The warrant for his arrest through Floyd County was served on Adams at the Scott County Jail.

The Indiana State Police insists that those responsible for assisting criminals within their efforts to elude capture by law enforcement will be investigated and charged for their actions.

Arrested and Charges:

James Adams, 37, Commiskey, Indiana

  • Assisting a Criminal, Level 5 Felony

  • False Informing, Class B Misdemeanor

Wabash District #348 Agenda

WABASH CUSD #348 BOARD OF EDUCATION MEETING

Mt. Carmel Elementary School Library

Tuesday January 21, 2025

Regular Board Meeting 7:00 p.m.

Regular Board Meeting Agenda

1. Call to Order/Roll Call

2. Pledge of Allegiance

3. Consent Agenda

a. Board Minutes

i. December 16, 2024 Regular Meeting

b. Monthly bills

c. Financial Reports

d. Correspondence

e. Administrative Reports

4. Superintendent’s Comments

5. Report by MCJSH Principal Amy Duckworth

6. Public Comments

7. Executive Session pursuant to Section 2(c)(1) of the Open Meetings Act: “The appointment, employment, compensation, discipline, performance, and dismissal of specific employees’’

8. New Business

a. 2024-2025 Updated School Calendar

b. Employment of Personnel

9. Adjournment

Mt. Carmel City Council Agenda

AGENDA

CITY OF MOUNT CARMEL

REGULAR COUNCIL MEETING

Tuesday, January 21, 2025 at 4:00 pm

· Call to Order

o Pledge of Allegiance

o Roll Call

· Approve Minutes

o Minutes of meeting held on 01/06/2025.

· Visitors (topic discussed by visitor(s) is limited to 5 minutes)

· Reports and Communications

o Mayor Judge

o Commissioner Meador Streets, Cemeteries and Parks

o Commissioner Ikemire Finance and Senior Citizens

o Commissioner Meeks Water and Sewer

o Commissioner Zimmerman Fire, Health & Safety, City Hall and Garbage

· Staff Reports

o Ryan Turner Derek McCullough Luis Garcia

o Michael McWilliams Francis Speth Mike Gidcumb

o WEMA Representative

New Business

o Consent Agenda

§ Pay all bills by providing proper signatures.

o Removal of items from the Consent Agenda

o Old Business-

o Executive Session- Discuss the possibility of purchasing land for development.

o Motion to Adjourn-

o Liquor Control Meeting-N/A