Gov. Pritzker awards over $10M in IL grocery initiative grants
Governor JB Pritzker says he joined the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) and 'local leaders' to announce awards through the Illinois Grocery Initiative 'New Stores in Food Deserts Program' and 'Equipment Upgrades Grant Program' to address food deserts and prevent grocery store closures in Illinois. Officials note grantees were selected through competitive Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) processes.
'When I signed the Illinois Grocery Initiative into law the vision we had in mind was reducing costs, fighting food insecurity, and boosting the local economy,' said Governor JB Pritzker. 'This $10 million investment will go directly toward construction and renovation of quality, affordable grocery options in neighborhoods across the state. From Champaign to Marion to Venice, we're fighting food insecurity while investing directly into the lifeblood of our economy, supporting farmers, small businesses, and working families.'
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New stores in food deserts program
Officials say the 'New Stores in Food Deserts Program' awards will support the establishment of new grocery stores in food deserts as defined by the Illinois Grocery Initiative Act. This funding will support construction and renovation costs for new stores, as well as many first-year operations costs, such as employee wages, utility costs and initial inventory of food.
AL RAAWI LLC of Marion, Illinois, received $2,399,975 for a new construction project.
'At Economic Security Illinois, we believe that families and communities should have the resources they need to live fulfilling lives, from access to banks, to good schools, to affordable food in grocery stores,' said Erion Malasi, Director of Policy and Advocacy, Economic Security Illinois. 'When major life staples are lacking in the market, we want to harness the power of community and government to come together and provide a public option. We are proud to have funded the feasibility study for this effort, and proud to see funds for a new municipal-owned grocery store come to Venice. We're grateful to Governor Pritzker, Deputy Governor Andy Manar, and leaders in the General Assembly for advancing this critical effort.'
Officials say after providing approximately $6.9 million through Round I of the Illinois Grocery Initiative New Stores Grants, DCEO opened Round II in October of 2024. Applicants were selected based on various requirements including:
Must be located in a food desert
Must earn less than 30% of revenue from alcohol and tobacco sales
Must accept SNAP and WIC
Must contribute to diversity of fresh foods available in community
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Equipment Upgrades Grant Program
Governor JB Pritzker's office says the Equipment Upgrades Grant Program awards will support energy-efficient equipment upgrades for existing grocery stores, with priority given to those located in food insecure communities across the state. This program is designed to strengthen existing grocery stores and preserve access to fresh food in food insecure communities, in an effort to stop the formation of new food deserts.
Willjo, Inc. of Marion, Illinois, received $132,234 for the complete replacement of walk-in freezer, HVAC system.
State officials say after providing $1 million through Round I of the Illinois Grocery Initiative Equipment Upgrades Grant Program, DCEO opened Round II in January of 2025. This is a rolling grant opportunity which will remain open until December 15, 2025, or until funding is exhausted. Applicant qualifications include independent grocers or cooperatives with fewer than 500 employees and no more than four grocery locations.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Chicago Tribune
13 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Over objections, Gov. JB Pritzker vetoes nonprofit investment bill, citing extremism concerns
A recent veto from Gov. JB Pritzker puts him at odds with nonprofits, labor unions and some state Democrats who say he blocked what would have been an advantageous investment option at a time when the organizations are feeling tightening pressure from Washington. The governor issued a veto late Friday on a three-page bill that would have allowed fellow Democrat Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs to create an investment pool for nonprofits and labor organizations. The treasurer would then be able to invest it in the same way he invests state treasury funds, resulting in potentially lower fees and greater returns than the options available to nonprofits now, according to bill supporters. In vetoing it, Pritzker said he had concerns extremist groups with nonprofit arms could also benefit from the pool. 'This is not an exercise in hypotheticals — hate groups are growing,' Pritzker wrote in a statement. He acknowledged there are safeguards against hate groups from qualifying for nonprofit status but added that 'recent changes in policies, rules and decision-making at the federal level suggest the trend is to accept extreme views.' The treasurer said in a statement that Pritzker's belief that hate groups would use the fund was 'misguided.' And nonprofit leaders said Monday that while they understand the governor's concerns over extremism, they're looking for any policy solutions that relieve some financial pressure, especially for smaller groups. 'Nonprofits are going to be on a big funding diet,' Horacio Mendez, president and CEO of the nonprofit Woodstock Institute, said about the atmosphere emanating from President Donald Trump's administration that is curtailing giving to nonprofits. 'So every dollar matters in terms of fees you're paying.' For Mendez's nonprofit, which focuses on accountability in financial services, the current options for the organization to manage money in an affordable way aren't tailored to the group's values, including investing in bank stocks or oil companies, he said. He said he preferred the offerings that would have been possible through the state. The treasurer manages the state's assets and makes investments in areas such as U.S. Treasury notes and Illinois banks. The Woodstock Institute joined some 150 others — AFL-CIO of Illinois, the nonprofit membership group Forefront and the Sierra Club, among them — and the state treasurer in expressing support for the bill before it was vetoed. The Illinois Bankers Association, Community Bankers Association of Illinois and the Illinois Credit Union League filed witness slips opposing the bill during the legislative session. Ben Jackson, executive vice president at the Illinois Bankers Association, said his group welcomed the governor's veto to avoid a situation where the fund could 'compete unfairly with community banks who are serving nonprofits in their neighborhoods.' Democratic state Rep. Rita Mayfield of Waukegan, one of the bill's main sponsors, said she thought the issues with ideologically extreme groups could be solved through rulemaking 'so that individuals that were part of hate groups would not be allowed to take advantage of the pool.' But Pritzker said making rules on a government program, including restrictions on ideology, 'could give rise to legal challenges.' Mayfield, the main House sponsor of the measure, said the legislature tried to work with the governor's office to address its issues, and that 'they provided us with language that basically would have just killed the bill.' Instead, lawmakers went with language provided by the treasurer's office. 'It would have been dead on arrival. They knew that. It was a poison pill,' Mayfield said of the governor's bill suggestions. State Sen. Adriane Johnson, a Democrat from Buffalo Grove and the main Senate sponsor of the legislation, said the effort to pass the measure was sparked by one of the townships in her north suburban district that has a food pantry. Her goal, she said, was to give nonprofits 'the same secure and reliable investment opportunities as government entities.' Despite the governor's veto, Johnson said she'd discuss the issue with Pritzker's administration and her legislative colleagues before and during October's two-week fall veto session with the goal of passing legislation 'that will uplift nonprofit organizations that so many people and constituents (in her district) and beyond rely on.' Lawmakers would need a three-fifths majority to override the governor's veto, votes the bill received in the House but not in the Senate during the spring session. In the House, the bill passed along party lines 73-39, while in the Senate, it passed largely along party lines, 33-17, just shy of the 36 that will be needed to override. During the brief House floor discussion about the bill May 28, state Rep. Jeff Keicher, a Republican from Sycamore who voted against the legislation, said he felt the legislation would enable the treasurer's office to give a 'state government endorsement' to organizations involved in social advocacy, climate policy and anti-corporate campaigns — causes that tend to divide the state's two major political parties. 'My concerns arise that the treasurer's office is now going to be able to host accounts that will be a platform to further political influence,' Keicher said. 'It's a slippery slope.'


Chicago Tribune
21 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Column: Eateries that survived COVID continue to thrive
It was five years ago this summer when Lake County's restaurants should have been having a hot time. That is, until COVID-19 interrupted their business. Their customers began learning to 'distance dine' under state social-distancing rules issued in May of 2020. Those allowed at-risk resumption of operations with only outdoor seating and tables six feet away from each other. Many Illinois restaurants were going out of business, caught in the lockdown ordered by Gov. JB Pritzker in March as the coronavirus pandemic raged. The lives of just under 1,500 Lake County residents were lost to the virulent virus in 2020. The outdoor dining option was a boon for the state's hospitality industry that had been almost completely shut down. Many restaurants rushed to have huge tents installed on their properties to serve diners under the state guidelines. Among them was The Shanty complex in Wadsworth, at Route 41 and Wadsworth Road. Just months before, Dimitri Kallianis of the destination eatery between Chicago and Milwaukee was selling his stocks of meats, liquor and wine to keep the restaurant rolling. Fifteen years prior, the Kallianis family took over the fabled location and pumped in millions of dollars in investment to expand their culinary footprint. This year, they mark 20 years at the spot which battled through the epidemic, emerging stronger. Indeed, the 'Shantytowne' complex now includes the Wadsworth Inn, south of the parking lot which serves The Shanty site and an expanded Captain Porky's. The Wadsworth Inn is the latest iteration at the location which over the years also was named The Buggy Whip, Doug's on 41 and Savannah House. 'We're one big restaurant family,' he said. 'There's four completely different concepts and we all work together in synergy.' The family also owns The Duck Inn in downtown Wadsworth, where the notable bar is now teamed with The Quonset, the well-known Waukegan pizzeria at Grand Avenue and McAree Road, for an expanded food menu. Around the time COVID-19 caused us to mask up was the last time I had spoken at length with Kallianis, 42, whose family members continued to battle the effects of the pandemic on the hospitality industry. That was until the governor said in 2023 that most of us survived COVID-19 and dining restrictions were completely relaxed. By mid-year 2020, hospitality groups were predicting that 60% of pandemic-closed restaurants would not open again. Many didn't. More than 110,000 restaurants in the nation shut their doors in 2020, either temporarily or permanently, according to the National Restaurant Association. Some Lake County restaurants failed to make the cut, as customers and sales dropped dramatically. The fallout continues to this day across Chicagoland. The National Restaurant Association reports that even without an epidemic, there is a 30% failure rate across the U.S. restaurant industry. Other data suggests that might be a high figure, with other research showing that since the pandemic, only 17% have failed in the first year; 51.4% of restaurants are still operating after five years. Launching and growing a successful independent and local restaurant is expensive and takes a lot of hard work. Which is something Kallianis grew up with, starting at the original Captain Porky's near Sheridan and Wadsworth roads by the Beach Park/Zion border. He still sweeps The Shanty parking lot most mornings. Of course, his isn't the only family-owned restaurant group to come out of the pandemic seemingly stronger. Khayat Enterprises, known for its Primo and Fatman's locations centered in Gurnee, among others, has remade the old Gurnee Holiday Inn at Grand Avenue west of the Tri-State Tollway into Ten Hotel, a combination of convention center, hotel, restaurant and luxury apartments. The firm is soon expected to open Pop's Uptown Supper Club on Route 45 in rural Antioch, just south of the Wisconsin border. After surviving the challenge of the COVID-19 pandemic and climbing inflation during the administration of President Joe Biden, Kallianis now cites tariffs slapped on products many restaurateurs depend on coming from our North American trading partners as another obstacle for the industry. Government data released last week showed a 38% jump in the wholesale price of vegetables in July. Despite grappling with such trials, The Shanty brand continues to grow. That includes taking the 'Shantytowne experience on the road,' through a traveling smoker and the 'Tipsy Pony,' a portable bar and entertainment setting fabricated in Texas. It 'brings the Wadsworth vibe' to back yards or corporate events, he said. 'We're excited about this,' he added. There are nearly a dozen events scheduled for the wandering catering wagons this month, he noted. Those include fish boils, something usually associated with Wisconsin's Door County. At the same time, Kallianis remains a frequent video visitor on a number of media platforms, including five national cooking appearances on programs still running in syndication. Yet, he remains focused on family and the county's restaurant scene. 'Still, at the end of the day, we're a neighborhood place,' he said of his 'Shantytowne' concept. Since 2005, it has been the core of a culinary village in Wadsworth.


Forbes
a day ago
- Forbes
Tax Cutting Governors Also Embrace Tort Reform In 2025
Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker (D) signed Senate 328 last week, making it easier to sue companies that do business in Illinois but are based elsewhere. The new law requires 'companies registered to do business in Illinois to consent to what is known as the state's 'general jurisdiction,'' notes Joe Tabor, director of legal research as the Illinois Policy Institute, adding that SB 328's enactment will allow businesses to be sued in Illinois courts 'even if the plaintiffs were not from Illinois and even if the harm did not occur in the state.' 'What that means in practice is that any company registered to do business in Illinois would be opening itself up to a higher-than-normal level of litigation,' Tabor added. Governor Pritzker's red state counterparts, meanwhile, have sought to reduce the threat and cost of litigation in their states through tort reform, underscoring another aspect in which red and blue state lawmakers are pursuing contrasting policy goals. In April, Georgia Governor Brian Kemp (R-Ga.) signed into law Senate Bills 68 and 69, a two-bill tort reform package that aims to bring down insurance rates and other business costs. The reforms enacted in Georgia focused on 'phantom' damage awards and 'jury anchoring.' ''Phantom' damages are awards based on inflated medical bill amounts that were never actually paid — Georgia courts often base awards on these billed amounts rather than real payments,' notes the American Tort Reform Association (ATRA). 'Jury anchoring is a practice in which lawyers suggest an unreasonably large award before a jury with that number becoming an 'anchor' point in jurors' minds. The tort reform package enacted in Georgia this spring also addresses liability issues that were saddling employers with significant litigation costs. Protecting American Consumers Together, an advocacy group dedicated to ending lawsuit abuse that was the only outside group to run television ads in support of Governor Kemp's tort reform package, praised its enactment, saying that SB 68 and 69 will 'make Georgia more affordable for families and small businesses while fixing a broken system to ensure consumers and victims can still seek the justice they deserve.' SB 68 addressed the expansion of premises liability, which was causing Georgia business owners to be held liable for criminal acts committed on or even near the business property, even in instances when the business owner had no involvement and no ability to prevent the crime. Chris Clark, president and CEO of the Georgia Chamber said that the tort reform package signed into law by Governor Kemp this year 'fulfills the Georgia business community's promise to do right by Georgians by restoring balance to the civil justice system so our courts can focus on justice—not jackpots.' One month after Governor Kemp and Georgia lawmakers enacted tort reform, Governor Kevin Stitt (R) and Oklahoma state legislators followed suit. At the end of May, Governor Stitt signed Senate Bill 453, which sets a $500,000 maximum award for non-economic damages related to physical injuries, and a $1 million cap for permanent mental injury. Not only did Governor Stitt and Kemp both enact tort reform this year, they also both approved further income tax relief. The same week that Governor Stitt signed tort reform into law, he also signed legislation cutting Oklahoma's personal income tax from 4.75% to 4.5%. Meanwhile in Georgia, Governor Brian Kemp signed into law a retroactive income tax cut that will take the rate in 2025 from 5.39% to 5.19%, then down to 5.09% in 2026, followed by another cut to 4.99% in 2027. The enactment of tort reform in Georgia has been noticed in competing states. As Texans for Lawsuit Reform (TLR) noted shortly after the passage of tort reform in Georgia, many are 'urging Texas legislators to pass similar reforms through SB 30,' legislation introduced by Lt. Governor Dan Patrick (R). SB 30 aimed 'to prevent abusive lawsuit practices by many plaintiff lawyers that wrongfully inflate medical damages in personal injury lawsuits,' explains TLR. 'Critically, SB 30 would limit the evidence of medical damages that plaintiffs may submit at trial to 300% of the 2025 Medicare reimbursement rate with an adjustment for inflation,' TLR noted. 'The provision is meant to prevent lawyers from 'colluding with providers who over-diagnose, overbill and overtreat' victims to come up with inflated medical charges. Additionally, SB 30 makes clear that noneconomic awards cannot be used to punish defendants, make an example to others or serve a social good.' Another piece of the tort reform package that the Texas Senate passed this year is Senate Bill 39, legislation introduced by Senator Brian Birdwell (R) that clarifies the commercial vehicle litigation process in an effort to stop frivolous lawsuits that threaten the livelihood of truckers. 'The explosion of lawsuits (many of them frivolous) against trucking companies in Texas has caused insurance rates to skyrocket, hurting Texans and our businesses,' Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said back in April after the Senate passed SB 39. 'By passing SB 39, the Texas Senate has taken a major step toward providing judges a clear approach to collision cases. These changes will speed up collision trials involving commercial motor vehicles so victims get justice quicker while decreasing legal costs for Texas businesses.' Florida's Tort Reform Success Story Lt. Governor Patrick, Senator Birdwell, and other tort reform proponents in Texas can see the benefits of tort reform by looking at what has transpired in Florida. A July report from the Consumer Protection Coalition (CPC), a group affiliated with the Florida Chamber of Commerce, highlights how insurance rates have plummeted since Governor Ron DeSantis (R) and the Florida Legislature enacted lawsuit abuse reform in 2023. The CPC touts the fact that the amount of litigation in the state has declined by 30% since Governor DeSantis signed legislation in 2023 that 'reduced risk-free litigation through the elimination of the one-way attorney fee statute that forced insurers out of business or out of the state.' 'In addition to the property insurance stabilization, auto insurance costs are also dropping in Florida with major companies recently filing for rate reductions between 6% to 10.5%,' the group added. 'For 2025, Florida's top five auto writer insurance groups are indicating an average -6.5% rate change, down from an average +4.3% in 2024 and a staggering average of +31.7% in 2023,' noted a July 29 statement from the Florida Office of Insurance. 'The top five auto writer insurance groups amount to 78% of Florida's auto market. In addition to optimistic auto rate changes, Florida is reporting a remarkable reduction in the personal auto liability loss ratio, down to a 53.3% on average in 2024—the lowest in the nation.' 'Thanks to Governor DeSantis and recent strong legislative reforms, Florida's auto insurance market is turning the corner,' said Blaise Ingoglia, Florida's Chief Financial Officer. 'When the top insurers in the state are cutting rates by up to 11.5%, that's not just a statistic, it's money back in the pockets of Florida residents.' Tort Reform Opponents Helped Finance Texas Walkout It's not lost on many in the Texas capitol that the same interests who blocked tort reform from passing during the regular session earlier this year also helped finance Texas Democrats' latest quorum-blocking walkout. As the Texas Voice recently reported, 'campaign finance records show that one of the leading groups working to thwart Republican redistricting efforts has received significant funding from George Soros and personal injury trial lawyers.' 'The political arm of the American Association for Justice, a national trade association for personal injury trial lawyers, has donated $50,000 to the National Democratic Redistricting Committee so far this year,' the report added. It's not surprising that trial lawyers would work against a redistricting effort that could result in more tort reform supporters being elected to office. Though tort reform was not part of the final version of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that President Donald Trump signed into law on July 4 on account of reconciliation constrictions, its inclusion in the House-passed version of the bill indicated that tort reform is a priority for many in Congress. Democratic takeover of the U.S. House next year would mean that federal tort reform is no longer an imminent threat, so it's logical that the trial bar would want to help thwart congressional redistricting in Texas that would make a Democratic House takeover in 2026 less likely. Texas is notably the place where trial lawyers most recently defeated tort reform. Though the aforementioned reforms passed out of the Texas Senate this year, they subsequently died after Texas House members added poison pill amendments. Many expect those proposals to be reintroduced at some point in the future, likely for the next regular session in 2027. Aside from Texas, tort reform also came up short this year in South Carolina. Despite those setbacks, proponents of tort reform notched significant legislative victories in 2025, which will likely be emulated by lawmakers in other state capitals in the coming year. The results from Florida, meanwhile, will likely encourage tort reform proponents in Texas, South Carolina, and elsewhere to persist, as will the actual experiences of employers. Trial lawyers can continue to bring legislators campaign checks, but lawmakers in Austin, Columbia, and other state capitals will continue to field employer complaints about rising insurance rates and litigation costs.