Ryan T. Mitchell Appointed to Board of Directors of The First National Bank of Allendale and Allendale Bancorp

The First National Bank of Allendale is pleased to announce that Ryan T. Mitchell has been appointed to the Board of Directors of the Bank and its holding company, Allendale Bancorp, effective June 16, 2026.

A lifelong resident of White County, Mr. Mitchell serves as Vice President, Engineering at Mitchell Drilling Company, a family business established in Carmi in 1939. In that role, he provides executive leadership for engineering, operations, and strategic business initiatives, and is responsible for capital investment decisions, regulatory compliance, risk management, and long-range planning.

Mr. Mitchell currently serves as President of the Illinois Oil and Gas Association and is a former board member of the Carmi Chamber of Commerce. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Tennessee. He and his wife, Jara, have three children and are active members of First Christian Church in Carmi. Ryan T. Mitchell

“We are delighted to welcome Ryan to our board,” said Bryan Loeffler, Chairman of the Board. “Ryan’s deep roots in our community and his proven record of leadership in a long-standing local business make him an outstanding addition. His experience guiding a respected family enterprise through decades of growth and change reflects exactly the kind of judgment and perspective that strengthens our institution.”

“Ryan has spent his life and career in this community, and that kind of firsthand knowledge is invaluable to a bank like ours," said Donald W. Price, President and Chief Executive Officer. "He understands the families, farmers, and businesses we serve because they are his neighbors too. We are fortunate to add his judgment and perspective to our board."

IECC ANNOUNCES PLANNED RETIREMENT OF CHRIS SIMPSON; NAMES RYAN HAWKINS VICE CHANCELLOR FOR FINANCIAL OPERATIONS AND PRESIDENT-DESIGNATE OF OLNEY CENTRAL COLLEGE

 The Illinois Eastern Community Colleges Board of Trustees has accepted the retirement notification of Chris Simpson, Vice Chancellor for Business Operations and President of Olney Central College, effective May 17, 2027.

Simpson will conclude four years of service to Illinois Eastern Community Colleges, where he has provided leadership to both Olney Central College and district-wide business operations. Since joining IECC in 2023, Simpson has helped guide the institution through the post-pandemic environment, supported implementation of the district's one-college organizational model, and overseen key operational functions including business services, food services, and bookstore operations.

Prior to joining IECC, Simpson served as Superintendent of Richland County Community Unit School District No. 1 and brought extensive educational leadership experience to the college district.

"Chris joined IECC during a period of significant change and immediately became a trusted leader," said Chancellor Ryan Gower. "His experience, professionalism, and steady approach helped position both Olney Central College and the district for continued success. More importantly, he has been an outstanding colleague and friend, and I am grateful for his service to our students and communities."

As part of a planned succession strategy, the Board also appointed Ryan Hawkins as Vice Chancellor for Financial Operations and President-Designate of Olney Central College effective July 1, 2026.

Hawkins currently serves as Chief Financial Officer for IECC and has been instrumental in the district's financial planning, budgeting, facilities development, and long-range strategic initiatives. Under the transition plan, Hawkins will continue to oversee district financial operations while spending the next year working alongside Simpson to learn campus operations and prepare to assume the presidency of Olney Central College upon Simpson's retirement.

The year-long transition reflects the district's commitment to leadership continuity and provides a unique opportunity for mentorship and knowledge transfer before the formal leadership change next spring.

The appointment also advances IECC's ongoing efforts to align district-wide and campus-based business functions under a unified leadership structure, strengthening coordination and operational effectiveness across the institution.

"Ryan has demonstrated exceptional leadership and a deep commitment to the mission of IECC," Gower said. "This transition allows us to build upon Chris's outstanding work while creating a thoughtful and deliberate pathway for future leadership. The opportunity for Chris and Ryan to work side-by-side over the next year is a tremendous advantage for the college, our employees, and our students."

Simpson said he is excited about the coming year and the opportunity to help prepare the next generation of leadership at Olney Central College.

"I have thoroughly enjoyed my time at IECC and remain excited about the work ahead of us during the coming year," Simpson said. "I look forward to welcoming Ryan more fully into the campus, sharing what I've learned, and helping ensure a smooth and successful transition next May. Olney Central College has a bright future, and I am confident it will be in excellent hands."

Hawkins said he is honored by the Board's confidence and grateful for the opportunity to work alongside Simpson during the transition period.

"I am thankful for the opportunity to work with Chris to learn from his experience over the next year," Hawkins said. "I look forward to continuing to serve the district, supporting Olney Central College, and building upon the strong foundation already in place."

Simpson will continue serving as Vice Chancellor for Business Operations and President of Olney Central College through May 17, 2027. Hawkins will assume the presidency of Olney Central College and continue serving as Vice Chancellor for Financial Operations following Simpson's retirement.

IECC Board Meeting Summary

The Board of Trustees of the Illinois Eastern Community College District No. 529 met Tuesday, June 16, 2026 at Olney Central College, Olney, Illinois.

Jim Reed, representing the Illinois Community College Trustees Association (ICCTA), presented Dr. Ryan Gower with the recognition for his leadership and dedicated service to Illinois Eastern Community Colleges. The Board of Trustees also recognized Dr. Gower for his ten years of service to Illinois Eastern Community Colleges, including his roles as President of Lincoln Trail College and Chancellor. Trustees expressed their sincere appreciation for his commitment to student success, employees, and the communities served by IECC, and extended their best wishes to Dr. Gower and his family as he begins his well-earned retirement.

The Board approved the minutes of the Board of Trustees regular meeting held on May 19, 2026. The semi-annual review of executive session minutes as mandated by Section 2.06 of the Open Meetings Act was conducted and the Board approved the proposed recommendations.

The Board accepted the 2026-2027 IECC academic catalog. It can be found on the IECC website at (https://iecc.edu/catalog).

A Memorandum of Understanding with the Richland County Health Office and Olney Central College was approved. This MOU provides access to the OCC gymnasium and parking lot as a location to distribute medication and/or vaccinations in the event of an emergency.

The Resource Allocation and Management Plan (RAMP) for Fiscal Year 2028 was approved by the Board and will be submitted to the Illinois Community College Board (ICCB).

The Board approved the purchase of a new video display system for the Frontier Community College Athletic Facility currently under construction. The project, funded through a partnership with the FCC Foundation, includes a large video board, digital scorer’s table, shot clocks, locker room game clocks, and related installation and technical support provided by Watchfire of Danville, Illinois.

The Board approved the annual purchase of desktop computers, laptops, monitors, and instructional technology to maintain and enhance IECC’s technology infrastructure. The investment, funded through the Fiscal Year 2026 operating budget and the Wattleworth Hall third-floor remodel project, will ensure employees and students have access to up-to-date, secure technology across the district.

Beginning in Fall 2026, the Automotive Technology Associate in Applied Science program will relocate from Frontier Community College to Olney Central College. As part of this transition, the Board approved the purchase of required equipment through the OCC 2

Bookstore for the program, necessitating the addition of a cost recovery fee to the academic catalog. The fee will be assessed at the actual cost of the equipment, ensuring students have access to the tools needed for the program while reflecting a change in the method of purchase rather than a new program requirement.

A resolution was adopted to authorize certain expenditures from the Operations and Maintenance Fund, such as utilities, O&M salaries and other soft expenses.

A resolution was adopted authorizing inter-fund loans during the 2026-2027 fiscal year, allowing the District to loan dollars between funds provided the loans are repaid to the original fund within the academic year.

Approval was given for the district to pay accrued bills for a short period following the end of the fiscal year June 30th. By July 30th all accrued bills received during this run-out period will be paid and a report given to the Board of Trustees the following month.

Lease agreements were renewed between the District and certain locations and entities throughout the District.

A resolution was adopted authorizing the transfer of approximately up to $190,000 in interest earned in the Working Cash Fund to the General Fund on or before June 30, 2026.

Several new and renewed clinical affiliation agreements were approved to provide student with required hands-on learning experiences in healthcare settings throughout the region.

The Board waived a second reading and approved revisions to the following policies:

• Defense and Indemnification, Policy 100.45 is a new policy that is replacing and deleting former Policy 100.19 (Retaining Legal Counsel) related to the retention of legal counsel. The updated policy establishes a more comprehensive framework outlining the District’s authority to provide legal defense and indemnification for employees and officials acting within the scope of their duties, while also identifying circumstances in which those protections may be denied.

Updated logos were approved for the colleges and major divisions of IECC to create a more unified institutional identity while preserving the unique character of each campus. The new branding will be implemented gradually through the normal replacement and updating of materials.

A new auxiliary Cash Management and Athletics Sinking Fund Operating Procedure was approved to address athletic deficits and strengthen long-term financial accountability. The procedure establishes repayment plans, annual reporting requirements, and oversight measures designed to reduce existing deficits while preserving athletic opportunities for students.

The Board approved a long-term financial planning framework authorizing the administration to begin evaluating future investments in public health and safety, facilities, career and technical education, and athletics. The action initiates project planning and financing analysis but does not authorize any specific projects or bond issuances.

The relocation of the August 18, 2026 Board of Trustees meeting from Frontier Community College to Olney Central College was approved.

The Board authorized administration to begin development of vehicle specifications and procurement documents for the acquisition of a District vehicle for the Chancellor position, utilizing either a competitive bid process or approved cooperative purchasing program as appropriate, and establish a project budget not to exceed $70,000.

The Board authorized the Chancellor to bind the District’s annual property, casualty, and liability insurance coverage effective July 1, 2026. The renewal is expected to increase by no more than 14.3% as the District continues to navigate a challenging insurance market.

The AY27-28 Moving Forward Strategic Plan & Operational Framework was approved as presented by Chancellor Gower.

The Board approved the acceptance of the bid from Wolls Asphalt LLC for the maintenance and re-painting of the asphalt parking at Lincoln Trail College.

Approval of employment was given for John Duty as Mining & Industry Instructor effective July 1, 2026; McKenna Blevins as TRIO Student Support Services Academic Advisor, LTC effective June 29, 2026; Kamille Johnson as Coordinator of Marketing & Communications, WVC effective July 6, 2026; Rhoda Shugars as Coordinator of International Admissions & Compliance, LTC effective June 22, 2026; and John Spruance as Head Men’s Basketball, WVC effective June 22, 2026.

Changes in status were approved for Dr. Cathy Robb as Interim IECC Chancellor effective July 1, 2026 – August 14, 2026; Ryan Hawkins from Chief Financial Officer to Vice Chancellor of Financial Operations & OCC President-Delegate effective July 1, 2026 – May 17, 2027; and Jamie Carman from Director of Academic Advising to Director of Advising Systems effective June 22, 2026.

The Board approved contracts for Dr. Timothy Taylor, Chancellor effective August 15, 2026 and Ryan Hawkins, Vice Chancellor of Financial Operations & OCC President effective May 18, 2027.

An administrative contract buyout was approved for Dr. Matt Fowler effective December 31, 2026.

Resignation ratifications were approved for Lisa Hoipkemier as Physical Therapist Instructor, WVC effective July 31, 2026; Adam McIntire as TRIO Upward Bound Academic Counselor, LTC effective May 14, 2026; and Robin Zachary as Custodian, LTC effective June 10, 2026.

Retirement ratifications were approved for Dr. Ryan Gower as IECC Chancellor effective June 30, 2026 and Chris Simpson as OCC President & Vice Chancellor of Business Operations effective May 17, 2027.

The next regular meeting of the Board of Trustees will be Tuesday, July 21, 2026, at 6:15p.m. at Wabash Valley College, Mt. Carmel, IL.

Fantastic 4th Fireworks Could Be Biggest, Best Ever

This year's Fourth of July fireworks show in Mt. Carmel is expected to be the biggest in recent memory.

During Friday's "Ask the Mayor" program on WSJD, Mayor Joe Judge announced that the city has significantly expanded its investment in the annual fireworks display as part of the community's America 250 celebration.

Judge said the city typically spends about $12,500 on the fireworks show each year, but that amount has been increased to $17,500 for 2026. In addition, the city will receive an extra $5,000 worth of fireworks at no cost from its longtime fireworks provider as part of a loyalty incentive program.

As a result, residents can expect a much longer show than usual.

According to Judge, Mt. Carmel's fireworks display normally lasts around 45 minutes. This year, he expects the show to run between an hour and 15 minutes and an hour and 30 minutes, depending on the timing and sequencing of the fireworks.

The expanded display is one of several special events planned as part of Mt. Carmel's Fantastic 4th and America 250 celebration, which features more than a week of activities leading up to Independence Day.

The fireworks show is scheduled for the evening of July 4th and will once again light up the skies over the Wabash River as the community celebrates the nation's 250th birthday.

Plans Announced For Emergency Simulation In August

Wabash District #348 students and staff will take part in a countywide emergency response exercise when school resumes in August.

During Monday morning's Board of Education meeting, Superintendent Dr. Chuck Bleyer reported that the district is working with Wabash County emergency management officials to conduct a large-scale emergency simulation on August 24th.

Bleyer said the exercise will involve multiple agencies, including law enforcement, firefighters, ambulance services, hospital personnel, and other first responders. While details are still being finalized, the event is expected to be held at one of the district's school buildings and will likely be conducted as a half-day exercise.

The superintendent stressed that the simulation will not be a real emergency and said the district will make every effort to notify the public in advance. He plans to begin reminding residents about the exercise in July to avoid confusion.

School Resource Officer Eric Emmons is coordinating the event.

Bleyer said a similar exercise was held several years ago and provided valuable training opportunities for both school personnel and emergency responders.

While the exact scenario has not yet been determined, Bleyer said it will likely involve some type of emergency response situation. He noted that organizers are still deciding what type of incident will be simulated and how the exercise will be structured.

The primary purpose of the drill is to allow first responders to practice their response procedures in a school setting, while giving district staff an opportunity to observe and assist.

Students are scheduled to begin the 2026-27 school year on August 14th, with teachers reporting August 12th.

Southern Illinois man convicted in federal case involving 3D-printed guns  

Federal prosecutor said Yaroslav Vishnevski operated a “mini gun factory” while he described himself as a hobbyist

By MOLLY PARKER
Capitol News Illinois
mparker@capitolnewsillinois.com

Article Summary 

  • A federal jury this week found Yaroslav Vishnevski, 33, of Harrisburg, who used a 3D printer and other readily accessible tools to manufacture firearms at his home, guilty of five gun-related charges.  

  • Tom Leggans, an assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Illinois, described Vishnevski’s house as a “mini gun factory” in closing arguments. 

  • State and federal authorities across the country have struggled to regulate 3D-printed firearms.

  • Authorities said they searched Vishnevski’s home and seized the illegal weapons after New York customs officials intercepted a package containing two silencers from China. He intends to appeal. 

 

This summary was written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story. 

BENTON — A federal jury this week found a Harrisburg man guilty of five gun-related charges tied to what prosecutors described as a small-scale gun manufacturing operation run from his southern Illinois home that included guns made with a 3D printer.  

During a May 2024 search of property in Harrisburg belonging to Yaroslav Vishnevski and his then-wife, federal agents seized two unregistered homemade short-barreled rifles, silencers and two additional modified firearms that he illegally possessed, prosecutors said.

Investigators also recovered what they described as a workshop for making and modifying weapons, including three 3D printers, a Ghost Gunner milling machine, and a drill press with firearm-specific jigs. They also hauled off nearly 80 pounds of aluminum shavings that prosecutors said were a byproduct of machining gun components.

“The evidence shows that he was running a mini gun factory out of his house,” Tom Leggans, an assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Illinois, told the jury on Tuesday afternoon during closing arguments of the two-day trial in Benton.

The trial offered a rare glimpse into the growing world of home gun-making — and the challenges facing law enforcement as readily available 3D printers and other tools enable the production of increasingly sophisticated privately made firearms that often can’t be traced, earning them the nickname “ghost guns.” The legality of 3D printing firearms varies by federal and state laws. The term “ghost gun” is often used to describe a variety of unserialized firearms.

Not all are 3D-printed, but unserialized 3D-printed firearms are often described using that term. Under federal law, privately made firearms may be legal, even without a serial number, though certain firearms and explosives are subject to registration and other requirements.

Ryan Propst, a special agent with the Illinois State Police Firearms Investigations Unit, testified that customs officials in New York contacted his agency after intercepting a package containing two silencers mailed from China to Vishnevski.

Propst said agents executed a search warrant at Vishnevski’s home after he accepted the package, which was delivered under surveillance.

Vishnevski did not testify at trial. His attorney, Joshua Richards, argued that he was a firearms hobbyist who made and modified the weapons solely for himself. At the time, Vishnevski had a valid Illinois Firearm Owner’s Identification card and concealed-carry license and had no prior criminal record. 

“My client liked to tinker with guns, and he liked to make guns with his 3D printer,” Richards told the court, adding that he “tried to follow the law as he understood it.”

The jurors, most of whom identified themselves as gun owners during jury selection, deliberated for about 30 minutes before returning guilty verdicts on all five remaining counts.

He was found guilty of failing to satisfy federal registration and taxation requirements before manufacturing or possessing two short-barreled rifles, a shotgun and silencers subject to those rules, as well as for possessing an imported shotgun with an obliterated serial number. The government had previously dismissed a sixth charge.

Vishnevski vows to appeal

Vishnevski, 33, had been on home confinement at his mother's residence near Boston while awaiting trial. He was taken into custody following the verdict and is being held at the Franklin County Jail in Benton pending sentencing.

He vowed to fight the jury’s guilty verdicts. 

“I am surprised that people do not value their own Second Amendment rights,” Vishnevski texted. “The Constitution is the foundation of this country, and the Second Amendment is an inherent natural right. The Founding Fathers couldn't have made it more clear: ‘not to be infringed.’ The government has no place to trespass on a founding principle of this nation.”

Vishnevski, communicating with Capitol News Illinois by text message from jail, said he believes he was under government surveillance long before the raid on his home and alleged he was targeted because of his Ukrainian background. After his arrest, Vishnevski said a Homeland Security officer questioned him about his views on Ukraine and any associations he had with people living there.

Vishnevski moved from Ukraine to Greece at age 6 and immigrated to the United States with his parents at age 7. He is now a U.S. citizen.

He graduated magna cum laude from Boston University in 2014 with a degree in biochemistry and molecular biology.

Vishnevski said he then completed Air Force officer training and enrolled at the St. Louis University School of Medicine under orders to serve as an Air Force physician after graduation. He left the program before earning his degree and was later transferred to the Individual Ready Reserve. Vishnevski and his wife moved to Harrisburg in 2020, attracted by the opportunities and freedoms he believed the small town could offer them.

According to a forensic evaluation conducted after his arrest and provided to Capitol News Illinois, Vishnevski told a psychologist that registration requirements and expanding gun regulations were eroding constitutional protections, particularly with respect to privately made firearms. He described himself as a person who wanted to be prepared: He maintained a bunker, emergency food supplies and a stockpile of firearms for what he described as security reasons.

“I am not a crazy person,” he told the psychologist, according to the report, adding that most people, if given the opportunity, would want to be financially secure, self-sufficient and prepared for emergencies. He compared his preparations to the contingency planning undertaken by governments.

3D-printed guns test law enforcement

State and federal authorities across the country have struggled to regulate 3D-printed firearms.

In a 2021 audit, the U.S. Department of Justice's Office of the Inspector General criticized the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives' efforts to monitor 3D-printed guns. While ATF had identified only a small number of criminal cases involving 3D-printed guns, auditors said the figure likely understated their use because ATF had no way for law enforcement agencies to specifically report whether a recovered firearm had been made using a home 3D printer, and because many lack serial numbers, thus earning them the nickname "ghost guns."

Jeffrey Bodell, an ATF firearms enforcement officer who specializes in 3D-printed firearms, testified during the trial that he has spent the past year and a half operating a federal testing lab that 3D prints firearms almost daily from publicly available designs to better understand how they work and what federal laws they fall under.

Illinois has some of the nation's strictest gun laws. In 2022, Gov. JB Pritzker signed legislation banning most unmarked homemade firearms, or “ghost guns.” The Illinois law requires privately made firearms to be serialized through a federally licensed dealer. Vishnevski, however, was prosecuted under federal law, not Illinois' ghost-gun statute. He said he rejects the term “ghost gun” because it attempts to tie gun-making hobbyists to criminal activity. 

Federal law does not explicitly prohibit people from making firearms with a 3D printer.

Instead, federal law requires certain weapons regulated under the National Firearms Act to be registered in the National Firearms Registration and Transfer Record maintained by the ATF and taxed, regardless of whether they are made or modified at home or purchased from a federally licensed dealer. Those include machine guns, silencers, destructive devices, rifles with barrels under 16 inches, shotguns with barrels under 18 inches and firearms with an overall length under 26 inches. 

‘A place that valued freedom’

The property authorities described as a “mini gun factory” sits in a quiet, unassuming neighborhood in Harrisburg, just a few blocks from the town square. For Vishnevski, he said it represented his chance to stake out a piece of the American dream.

Property records show that he and his then-wife each purchased one of two small, nearly identical white homes on East Logan Street in 2019 and 2020, paying $29,000 for both. One was purchased in his name, which was rented as an Airbnb, and the other in her name. A fifth-wheel camper parked between the two houses was also rented out as an Airbnb at times, he said.

Vishnevski said he liked the idea of living in a small town where his money could go farther — and it was close enough to family of his then wife, whom he met online while in medical school. 

“Homes were affordable. I could buy them with the money I saved. Taxes were low,” he texted. “It seemed like a place that valued freedom where I could establish independence.”

Aside from attending medical school on an Air Force scholarship, Vishnevski had worked at a variety of jobs: at a pharmaceutical company, for a collections company, as a security guard and in an ophthalmologist's office, according to the forensic evaluation conducted by DOJ while he was jailed in Chicago. He told the psychologist he was dissatisfied with repetitive work and had been fired or “induced” his firing by not doing it.

At one point, he started his own computer business, refurbishing computers and selling equipment. He also reported earning significant income through cryptocurrency investments, in addition to his Airbnb business in Harrisburg.

Neighbor: ‘He got carried away’

Ron Crutchfield, a retired Harrisburg High School history teacher who lives across the street, said the homes had fallen into disrepair and he was pleased that Vishnevski and his wife bought them and fixed them up. Crutchfield said he didn’t meet Vishnevski until a few years after he moved to town, but the two have since grown close.

Crutchfield attended the trial and later told a reporter that he does not believe Vishnevski intended to do anything wrong.

“He fell into a hobby and the hobby happened to be weapons, and I think he got carried away. He kept trying to perfect his weapons,” Crutchfield said. “He probably should have been an engineer as opposed to trying to be a doctor.”

“It was unfortunate,” he added. “It got out of control.”

Despite the years between them, Crutchfield said they developed a close friendship over time. Sometimes, he said, Vishnevski would make him 3D-printed trinkets such as dragon figurines because he knew Crutchfield liked dragons.

Crutchfield said authorities questioned him about whether he had purchased any guns from Vishnevski. He said he had not, but he came to believe authorities suspected Vishnevski was trafficking firearms or were suspicious that he was involved in activity much broader than what he was ultimately charged with and found guilty of.

Vishnevski believed he’d been watched for years

Vishnevski also believed the government had been interested in him long before the May 2024 raid on his home. He shared with CNI dozens of pages of notes, screenshots, photographs, recordings and other documents that he said support his claims of innocence and show a pattern of scrutiny predating the investigation.

Among the events he pointed to is the purchase of a Ghost Gunner 3 machine for about $3,000 in August 2023. The desktop milling machine is marketed for manufacturing firearm components. Not long afterward, Vishnevski said, Banterra Bank notified him that it was closing his account. An audio recording he provided appears to show a bank representative describing his account activity as "risky" but declining to elaborate when he asked her how that determination was made.

Vishnevski viewed the closure as evidence of outside scrutiny or government involvement months before he ordered the metal tubes from China that he described as fuel filters and federal prosecutors said were intended to function as firearm silencers.

The provided records also alleged an employee at a different bank questioned his wife about their marriage and finances, accused him of possible money laundering related to cryptocurrency proceeds he had transferred to her, and restricted access to funds in her account.

Based on phone calls reviewed as part of his forensic evaluation, the report noted Vishnevski believed some residents of Harrisburg viewed him suspiciously because he was born in Ukraine. According to the evaluation, he reported that he’d heard people in the community had referred to him as a "Ukrainian terrorist" and that authorities may have viewed him as either a terrorist or a gun dealer.

The investigation and prosecution, he said, carried significant personal and financial consequences. After the raid, he could no longer rent out properties he owned through Airbnb; his homes, he said, fell into disrepair while he was jailed. His wife filed for divorce, and he said she later experienced homelessness. Among the materials he shared were videos of her in distress filmed inside one of their homes. 

Many of the documents reflect Vishnevski's belief that authorities and others were monitoring him. He created videos of packages delivered to his home with small tears that he believed showed postal workers had opened them. He identified people he suspected were cooperating with investigators and filed official complaints against numerous individuals, including a federal ATF agent, a nurse practitioner, the Harrisburg postmaster and his first attorney. He has prepared outreach to civil rights attorneys for a potential legal claim against the government, claiming he can show their actions have resulted in close to $1 million in economic damages to him. 

Following the raid, two orders of protection were filed against him. The first, filed in September 2024 by that nurse practitioner at Eldorado Primary Care, was granted on an emergency basis but later dismissed. A second petition, filed in December 2024 by an individual employed by both the Egyptian Health Department and Point Blank Range in Harrisburg, an indoor shooting range, was granted and remains in effect after an unsuccessful appeal by Vishnevski.

After the second order of protection was sought, Vishnevski’s bond was revoked and he spent eight months in jail awaiting trial. He remained jailed until August 2025, when he was released to live with his mother, Ruzhena Vishnevski, in Massachusetts. While awaiting trial, he was permitted to work and took a job at the Audi dealership where she also works. She traveled to southern Illinois this week to attend the trial.

After the verdict, his mother texted a reporter that she believed the case was a setup and described the prosecution as an effort to "make him a criminal."

"He was good for community," she wrote. "Now he's in jail, houses all damaged, without people. They made bonuses to catch such a terrorist."

Sentencing has been set for Sept. 24 at the federal courthouse in Benton.

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.


Police raided the Harrisburg, right, in May 2024 after customs officials in New York intercepted a package addressed to him that prosecutors said contained two silencers.

Illinois lawmakers seek to streamline contracting for service providers

Amid federal funding uncertainty, nonprofit groups are pushing for greater efficiency

Article Summary

  • The Illinois General Assembly passed a bill that would address concerns from service providers that contract with the state.

  • Providers cite frequent delays in receiving contracts and late pay for their services.

  • This legislation comes as federal cuts threaten funding sources, leaving the state looking to fill the gaps.  

This summary was written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story.

By HANNAH WEBSTER
Medill Illinois News Bureau
news@capitolnewsillinois.com

CHICAGO — Community Assistance Programs, a Chicago-based nonprofit providing employment training and job placement, typically has to wait several months for payment from the state. 

Through a government contract, the organization has served more than 2,000 people per year in Illinois. But the state, in return, has not always made that easy, CEO Sheryl Holman said. Late payments and contract delays have created significant barriers for businesses like hers. 

In February, Holman submitted a bill to the state for contracted services provided the month before. The state finally paid the nonprofit in April, she said. 

“It’s like everything’s against you doing this,” Holman said. 

Community Assistance Programs is not the only organization expressing frustration with the state’s contracting processes. According to a 2023 survey of human services government contractors by the Health and Human Services Coalition of Illinois, a group of Illinois human services providers, at least 25% of state contracts were not paid on a timely, ongoing basis. 

The issue was especially prevalent for nonprofit contractors with small budgets and those serving or led by people of color, the survey found. 

“The most unconscionable thing is that the poorest neighborhoods were the ones that were not getting paid on time,” said Holman, referencing the survey. “So it puts some agencies out of business, because they can’t weather it.”

During the state’s two-year budget impasse that spanned parts of 2015-2017, Illinois’ backlog of unpaid bills ballooned to over $16 billion. But over the past nine years, it’s been whittled down, routinely hovering about $1.5 billion to $2 billion. A representative from the Illinois Comptroller’s office, which processes and pays vouchers, said the office typically pays within 14-15 business days. 

But the Comptroller’s office only tracks them based on the date received. Bills can be further delayed if the state agency involved in the contract doesn’t send them to the comptroller’s office in a timely fashion. 

House Bill 4340 aims to address delays occurring at the agency level. It does so by stating that agencies must send vouchers to the comptroller “within 30 calendar days of receipt” of a “proper” bill or invoice from a contractor. Agencies would also have 30 days to notify contractors of defects in a bill or invoice. 

In addition to late payments, contractors have also faced delays in receiving state contracts. According to the Health and Human Services Coalition study, over half of the respondents said that in fiscal year 2023, they did not receive their contracts before the start of the year. Late contracts can prevent organizations from providing services right away. 

Lauren Wright, executive director of Chicago nonprofit Illinois Partners for Human Service, said the government contractor survey was focused on finding “the biggest hurdles” in the contracting process for community-focused nonprofits dealing with the state. And, she said, what they found was there were barriers “at all stages of the process.”

State Sen. Mike Halpin, D-Rock Island, sponsor of the reform bill, said he hopes the package will “make government easier to work with,” especially for small nonprofit agencies. 

“Many of these nonprofits are, rightfully so, hyper-focused on the mission and the services that they provide, and it can be overly burdensome for them to try to apply for state grants, because of the paperwork delays and getting approval, delays in getting the money in hand,” Halpin said. “And so they face challenges that are different from some of the bigger vendors or bigger contractors that do business with the state.”

Legislative package

Aside from the measure addressing voucher delays, HB 4340 also requires that contacts be issued within 60 days of the start of the fiscal year or 60 days after the required documentation has been completed and makes changes to the Court of Claims process, the channel through which contractors can seek out late payments. 

If signed, HB 4340 will require that the court confirm, reject or notify the vendor of any issues for claims under $2,500 within 60 days of being notified of the claim by the attorney general. For claims $2,500 and over, the window is 90 days. The bill also raises the cap on awards that can be temporarily paid from the General Revenue Fund from $50,000 to $100,000. 

Halpin said that the bills required negotiations between contractors and state agencies. 

“We have to strike a balance between maintaining convenience and participation on the part of the organizations, but without compromising the integrity and the transparency and the responsibility that we have as a state to make sure that taxpayer money going out the door, goes out in an appropriate way,” he said. 

In a statement to Capitol News Illinois before the bill was passed, a spokesperson from Gov. JB Pritzker’s office said the office will monitor and review the legislation’s budgetary impacts. 

“Any legislation that requires additional state resources will be carefully reviewed with budgeteers to understand the fiscal impact,” the spokesperson said in a statement. 

The spokesperson did not respond to a question about contractors’ reports of delays in contracting and payment. 

Federal uncertainty

Since President Donald Trump began his second term, key sources of funding for human service providers have undergone significant cuts. The coalition pushed for the contracting reforms contained in HB 4340 as Illinois nonprofits grapple with the repercussions of these federal funding cuts.

At an April panel hosted by the Civic Federation, a nonprofit government research organization, Wright and other nonprofit leaders discussed how organizations in Illinois are navigating these changes.

Jewish United Fund Chief Impact Officer Emily Sweet said these changes are forcing organizations to make difficult decisions about which services to continue offering. She said the cuts have also encouraged organizations to collaborate with similar providers and search for new ways to collaborate. 

At the panel, Wright explained that even without an influx of state money, there are things the state can do to help human services providers during this difficult time. Among them, she said, are the state efficiencies the contracting bills would create. 

“And providers already know how to be efficient, because they have been stretching the dollar more than anyone for decades,” Wright said. 

Hannah Webster is an undergraduate student in journalism with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications, and a fellow 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.


IMAGE: Representatives from Illinois nonprofits discussed the impacts of federal funding cuts on human services at an April Civic Federation panel in Chicago. 

(Medill Illinois News Bureau photo by Hannah Webster)


Small food assistance nonprofits eligible for new state grant program

Funding is open to food assistance organizations without full-time employees

Article Summary

  • Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs announced a new grant for small nonprofits addressing food insecurity.

  • The program is open to organizations that don’t have full-time employees and were ineligible for the last round of grants in the program.

  • The grants come as thousands of Illinoisans are losing access to federal food assistance, placing more strain in local food pantries.

This summary was written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story.

By JENNA SCHWEIKERT 
Capitol News Illinois 
jschweikert@capitolnewsillinois.com 

Small volunteer groups that provide food assistance to Illinoisans in need could be eligible for a new round of grant money under a program announced this week.  

The Charitable Trust Hunger Relief Grant program will provide grants of up to $5,000 to 10 nonprofit organizations that don’t have full-time employees to purchase food for those in need. Applications opened June 1 and will remain open through July 31, Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs announced Wednesday. 

The announcement comes as food assistance groups experience increased need due to cuts to federal food assistance, including the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program. Feeding America, the country’s largest domestic hunger-relief organization,  states that for every meal the organization provides, SNAP provides nine.

“Hunger and food insecurity is a hidden epidemic afflicting children who cannot ask for help and adults who find it difficult to ask for help as they juggle two or more jobs,” Frerichs said in a statement June 10. “Small, local food pantries and soup kitchens are prepared to help these innocent lives because they see those suffering in the shadows. That is why we created this desperately needed hunger relief program, as these organizations try to help people get food as affordability remains a major concern.”

The hunger relief program is part of a larger charitable trust fund, created in 2007, that helps small nonprofits with annual budgets of $1 million or less and at least one full-time employee. 

The fund is supported by fees paid by larger nonprofit corporations when they file annual incorporation reports with the Illinois Secretary of State. This round, however, is open to organizations without full-time employees who did not previously qualify.

An 11-member committee, made up of appointees from state government agencies and private citizens, oversees management of the funds and selects grant recipients. 

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. 

 
 


Illinois distributes first $25M to local pharmacies to help them compete 

The funding was generated by a fee levied on pharmaceutical middlemen.

By MAGGIE DOUGHERTY
Capitol News Illinois
mdougherty@capitolnewsillinois.com 

Article Summary 

  • Gov. JB Pritzker announced nearly $25 million in funding to support 434 independent pharmacies across the state.

  • The funding, established through bipartisan legislation signed by Pritzker last year, is generated through fees levied on pharmacy benefit managers, the pharmaceutical middlemen responsible for negotiating drug pricing plans between drug developers and employer insurance plans.

  • Eligible pharmacies in rural and medically underserved communities will receive over $56,000 on Friday, aimed at keeping doors open and expanding services.

This summary was written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story. 

CHICAGO — Gov. JB Pritzker announced Friday that 434 Illinois pharmacies will receive nearly $25 million in support, the first distribution of annual funding established through legislation he signed last year.

The fund was designed to assist pharmacies most at risk of closure or financial strain, especially those in rural and low-income communities with limited healthcare access. The pot was split equally between all eligible applicants, with each pharmacy receiving $56,892. 

“Local pharmacies are often one of the most accessible and affordable points of care for working families, seniors, and Medicaid patients — providing medications, vaccinations, and trusted health care services,” Pritzker said in a news release. 

The money was established under bipartisan legislation Pritzker signed last July. The bill, known as the Prescription Drug Affordability Act, put new regulations on pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, companies that are responsible for negotiating drug prices between employer health insurance plans and pharmaceutical drug companies.

They have been the target of intense scrutiny in recent years, facing accusations of steering patients toward their own affiliated pharmacies and designing healthcare pricing formulas that boost their own profits rather than patient savings, including a lawsuit from the Federal Trade Commission against the three largest PBMS for their alleged use of anticompetitive practices to artificially inflate insulin prices.

The legislation prohibited PBMs from steering customers toward large pharmacies in which they have a financial interest — often to the detriment of smaller independent pharmacies — and required they pay a fee based on the number of individuals in the state enrolled in the PBM’s plans. 

At the time the legislation passed, a lobbying organization representing the PBMs criticized the bill as “misguided” and said it would have little to no impact on high prescription drug prices set by “Big Pharma.”

Read more: Pritzker signs health care legislation

The first $25 million in fees collected were placed in a special fund for independent pharmacies, which can use the money to support existing operations, as well as expansions of business hours and new offerings, such as telepharmacy services, remote consultations and medication delivery.

But the funding is not constrained to specific spending options, allowing pharmacies to use it however they see fit. For a Sav-More pharmacy in Virden, Illinois, that looks like a new parking lot.

“Limitations with parking, the lack of a drive-through, and space constraints have made it difficult to expand the services our community deserves,” said Sav-Mor Pharmacies President David Falk. 

The funding has allowed the Virden location to partner with Carlinville Hospital to construct a new 3,500 square-foot facility next to a new clinic, featuring “ample parking, modern technology, (and) a drive-through,” and employing additional staff.

“This project would not have been possible without the vision and commitment of Governor Pritzker and his administration,” Falk said, adding that PBM reimbursement practices had hindered independent pharmacies like Sav-More.

The program, administered by the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity and the Illinois Retail Merchants Association, granted funding to pharmacies in 252 cities scattered across 94 of the state’s 102 counties. 

Prioritized were pharmacies in rural or medically underserved communities and small independent pharmacies with fewer than 10 locations.

A full list of pharmacies receiving the support can be found here: https://dceo.illinois.gov/content/dam/soi/en/web/dceo/downloads/illinois-pharmacy-support-program.xlsx 

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.


Over 430 pharmacies in rural and medically underserved areas across Illinois received funding from a $25 million fund on June 12, 2026, to keep their doors open and broaden healthcare services. (Photo courtesy of the National Cancer Institute via unsplash.com)

New state program will expand access by libraries to digital databases for research, education

The program makes digital information available to all Illinoisans.

By NIKOEL HYTREK
Capitol News Illinois
nhytrek@captiolnewsillinois.com

Article Summary

  • The Secretary of State’s office announced a program to give all Illinoisans access to a large number of online informational and educational databases through their library.

  • The state entered a contract with a digital library resource program that includes more than 50 databases with e-books, peer-reviewed journals, magazines, newspapers and research databases. 

  • The program’s goal is to close a longstanding gap for access to information, making it available to people regardless of their local library’s budget.

  • Databases include a variety of topics like business, hobbies, wellness, technology and more.

This summary was written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story.

Illinoisans now will have access to a large collection of high-quality digital information and educational resources for free by going to their local library or the Illinois State Library’s website. 

The Illinois Reliable Information Sources, or IRIS, program was announced Tuesday by Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias. The state entered a contract with EBSCO Information Services — a digital library resource program used by universities, schools and libraries — to provide access to more than 50 of their databases to all Illinois residents.

It could not be immediately determined how much money went into program. 

While it’s common for libraries to have resources for research, not all libraries are able to pay for these kinds of services. 

“Access to reliable information should not depend on a person’s ZIP code or the financial resources of their local library,” Giannoulias said in a news release. “This investment will ensure every Illinois resident has access to educational, professional and personal enrichment resources while helping libraries stretch limited budgets and better serve their communities.” 

The new service includes free access to online databases with e-books, peer-reviewed journals, magazines, newspapers and research databases. Those collections include a diverse range of topics such as business, education, health, technology, science and more. 

The program is also available for academic libraries, which means students and educators will be able to use these databases for research projects and instruction. 

Libraries that already subscribe to other digital information services will be able to use this program and redirect the subscription money to other needs.

Illinois libraries are funded by a mix of property taxes and state and federal grants. Librarians have said it’s often difficult to decide what to prioritize when budgets get tight, and many Illinois libraries have reported they don’t offer online database subscriptions.

As part of last year’s budget implementation bill, Giannoulias advocated for expanded eligibility for Equalization Aid Grants to support more public libraries across the state. That effort increased the number of libraries receiving these grants from 17 to 108. 

According to the Reaching Across Illinois Library System, a regional library system that serves libraries in northern and west-central Illinois, approximately one million Illinoisans live without access to public library services, and this program will cover them, too.

“This statewide database will have a profound impact on libraries,” Amy Byers, library director for Chatham Public Library and former president of the Illinois Library Association, said. “It will help us expand services and continue to provide great resources to our patrons without having to weigh the option of having good, quality online resources.”


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.


 The homepage for the Illinois Reliable Information Sources, or IRIS, program, a new source for finding digital informational and research databases through your local library or the State Library website. (courtesy Illinois State Library)