
Letters: Why bike lanes are important for the Northwest Side and Chicago as a whole
Parents worry every time their kids leave the house on a bike. Without safe routes, young riders are forced to navigate busy streets next to fast-moving traffic, making what should be a simple, healthy activity, dangerous. The Long Avenue bike lanes begin to change that story.
This project doesn't just benefit one block or one community. It builds on Chicago's growing bike network that links Belmont Cragin, Portage Park and surrounding neighborhoods. It creates safer corridors for families, reduces barriers between communities and encourages more people, especially first-time riders, to choose biking as their first option for traveling to school or work or just exploring the city.
Last year, I was riding on Diversey Avenue near Laramie Avenue, and for the first time since I started riding my bike, a driver struck me. I walked away with a couple bumps and bruises, but I felt scared for the first time to ride my bike again. I started to really realize the importance of how protected bike lanes, neighborhood greenways and lower speed limits can save lives. I tested out the Long Avenue bike lanes, and they felt safe.
If we truly want to transform mobility on the Northwest Side, we need to continue to invest here. The city should continue listening to residents, who shouldn't have to worry about a car hitting them while biking.
Bike lanes are not just about transportation. They're about equity, safety and connection. The Long Avenue project is a step forward, and it's also a call to action.
Let's keep pushing for the infrastructure that will allow every Chicagoan — from teens to grandparents — to move freely, safely and confidently across our city.On July 31, I stood behind Gov. JB Pritzker as he signed Senate Bill 1560 into law. Cameras flashed, hands clapped, and yet the weight of that moment settled deeper than the ceremony. This isn't just a policy win. It is a refusal to let youth mental health remain an afterthought; it is a powerful declaration that students should no longer be the last ones asked or the first ones forgotten.
SB1560 is the first law of its kind in the U.S. It requires that Illinois public schools offer annual, voluntary, no-cost mental health screenings to students in grades three through 12 starting with the 2027-28 school year. Parents will be able to opt out, and the program will be implemented with privacy, consent and care.
This kind of system is long overdue. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in 2021, over 40% of U.S. high school students reported persistent feelings of sadness or hopelessness, the highest level in over a decade. In Illinois alone, nearly 39,000 high school students attempted suicide in 2021, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health.
This law doesn't replace therapy or fix every broken system. But it does open a door, shifting the culture from silence to support, from reacting after collapse to stepping in before the cracks form. And it affirms something too long denied: Emotional health is not optional.
Pritzker was right to call this issue 'too often overlooked or ignored,' but if Illinois wants to stay ahead, SB1560 must be the foundation, not the final chapter. That means fully funding school counselors and social workers. It means investing in trauma-informed training for every teacher, coach and staff member. And it means treating youths not as subjects to be studied but as stakeholders — and co-authors of the systems meant to serve us.
Because when young people are included, we don't just speak — we organize. We write legislation, draft testimony and build coalitions that outlast us. From climate strikes to student-led mental health summits to youth advisory boards, we are not waiting to be rescued. We're shaping what comes next.
That's why this work matters. Because the future of tomorrow begins with the courage we show today, in how we listen, how we legislate and how we love. Healing is not a solitary journey. It's something we do together. And together, we're rewriting the story.The article ('Transit cuts in Philly may offer lessons for Chicago Transit,' July 27) comparing Philadelphia's Septa transit system with its counterpart in Chicago cites two of the most vocal Philadelphia activists for public transit to suggest that vast public support exists for devoting more tax money to funding Septa. Relying on such sources is misleading and muddles the comparison with Chicago, which has better public transit than Philadelphia.
The article misses the point of Septa's funding crisis, which boils down to this: Not enough people ride Septa to justify subsidizing bus and train rides to the massive extent that Septa claims is required to avoid service cuts. Marketing efforts have not changed the ugly truth that Septa is unreliable and expensive and often doesn't go where people want to go when they want to go there.
People have voted convincingly with their feet. Low ridership means that the per-passenger cost of operating many of Septa's routes requires taxpayer subsidies that make the amount of the fares collected look very small by comparison. Low ridership also means that there aren't enough voters who are as outraged by the proposed cuts as the vocal transit activists interviewed for the story.
Too few people use Septa's services to make shrinking the system the catastrophe that the agency and advocates have sought to portray.Aug. 6 and 9 are the 80th anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, respectively, in the closing days of World War II.
On Aug. 6, 1945, at 8:15 a.m., the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, killing 140,000 people. On Aug. 9, 1945, at 11:02 a.m., a second bomb exploded in Nagasaki, and 74,000 people perished. In both bombings, the great majority of victims were civilians, with 38,000 of them children.
In the years that followed, many survivors faced leukemia and other cancers or other terrible side effects from the radiation. Furthermore, many descendants were born with deformities and mental conditions.
When I visited the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum in spring 2003, I had a conversation with some of the survivors. They described a Dante-esque scene, with dead children floating in the river and people of different ages running, screaming and falling down in pain while their bodies were melting.
While the impetus for the bomb's development was the fear that Germany was working toward one, three months had passed since the Germans' unconditional surrender when these two Japanese cities were bombed. Were these necessary acts? The U.S. government defended itself by saying that the bombings were to prevent more deaths.
Predictably, the United States couldn't maintain a monopoly on nuclear weapons. Currently, eight other countries possess nuclear weapons: Russia, France, China, the United Kingdom, Pakistan, India, Israel and North Korea.
Activists in Japan and worldwide advocate for the elimination of nuclear weapons. Some groups are the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons and the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.
No more Hiroshimas. No more Nagasakis!

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2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Which Republicans are seeking statewide office in Illinois? So far, hardly any
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'We have an opportunity in Illinois not only because Pritzker is such a trainwreck, but also because so many great things are happening with the leadership of this Republican president,' Illinois Republican Party Chair Kathy Salvi said in an interview. But winning statewide elections has been a daunting task for Illinois Republicans since President Donald Trump first entered the national political stage in 2016. Two years later, in 2018, a 'blue wave' swept the nation in Trump's first midterm election and Pritzker was elected governor. Since that year, Democrats seeking statewide offices have cruised to victory. Thus far, just two lesser-known Republicans have expressed interest in challenging Pritzker in 2026. A similar group of lesser-known candidates is considering a U.S. Senate run, but there has been no news about anyone running for comptroller, treasurer or secretary of state. It's still early in the election cycle — the petition gathering period began last week and runs through October — and Salvi said she expects there will be a Republican candidate in November for each statewide office. GOP's 2026 message The Illinois GOP isn't going to shy away from Trump, Salvi said, even though the party often tried to ignore his influence under her predecessor, Don Tracy, who is considering a run for statewide office. Salvi said embracing the One Big Beautiful Bill will be a key part of her party's message in 2026 that she believes will resonate with voters. She encouraged voters to find common ground on areas they agree with Trump and ignore things they disagree with. 'Look at the success of this White House,' Salvi said. 'Go to the White House website every week, or more than that, and learn what's happening. And if there's something you don't like, then fine. Just don't talk about that. Look to what you do like. Find what we have in common.' That's a welcome strategy for the Illinois Freedom Caucus, a group of the General Assembly's most conservative lawmakers that has criticized the party for not embracing Trump in recent years. Collin Moseley, the caucus' state director, said in an interview they want the party to support Trump-aligned candidates, but the Illinois party still has too many leaders who disassociate with Trump. 'I think that it's mostly being stifled by people who hate Donald Trump in our own party, people who are clinging with a death grip to hold our party further to the left instead of moving to the right to the issues that working families care about,' Moseley said. 'We are stuck in this old-fashioned way of campaigning and the old Republican Party that mostly has lost its way.' Salvi is also hoping to capitalize on Trump's performance in Illinois in 2024, in which he cut down 17-point losses in 2016 and 2020 to about 11 points, largely due to a falloff in Democratic votes. Meanwhile, Republicans did not lose seats in Springfield despite Democrats targeting several vulnerable districts. Pritzker beatable? Pritzker is beatable, Batinick argued, citing the results of a poll released Thursday conducted by his polling firm and commissioned by the conservative Illinois Policy Institute where Batinick also works as a policy analyst. It found Pritzker's favorability rating was at 47%. The poll conducted last month of 752 likely 2026 Illinois voters found 60% of voters say 'high taxes' is a top issue for them, while 26% named 'state governance' as a top issue. Batinick said Pritzker appears set to run on his record of governing the state, but also frequently discusses national issues. 'The issues that matter to Illinoisans aren't the issues that JB Pritzker is talking about right now,' he said. The primary race to challenge Pritzker is still taking shape with DuPage County Sheriff Jim Mendrick the most notable name seeking the office so far. Lake Forest businessman Joseph Severino, who has run for Congress as a Republican and independent, has announced his intention to run for governor, but has not filed a fundraising committee with the State Board of Elections. Batinick said that politicians seeking to 'climb the political ladder' benefit from running for office, but the risk of losing their current elected position is keeping Republicans from stepping into a race where their odds of winning are low in a state that leans left. 'Everybody has to give up what they got to run for something that they don't think they can win,' he said. 'They're looking at a Trump midterm; they're looking at a lack of money; they're looking a lack of excitement at the top of the ticket for governor and senator to date.' Batinick thinks the right Republican candidate can beat Gov. JB Pritzker and overcome his spending power. 'A Republican candidate is going to have to work hard on the ground and we're going to have to band together to really match the money that he can just buy,' Batinick said. 'Republicans are going to have to do it with volunteers. It's possible, you just need somebody that is inspiring to the public.' Other offices In the Senate race, four Republicans have filed paperwork with the Federal Election Commission and are actively raising money. Former Illinois Republican Party Chair Don Tracy is reportedly considering running for either governor or Senate and is expected to make an announcement soon. Ted Dabrowski, the president of conservative research site Wirepoints, is also considering running for governor. Bob Fioretti, who has unsuccessfully run for several offices as a member of both parties, is reportedly circulating petitions to run for attorney general. 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Margaret Croke, D-Chicago, and Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim in the race as other Democrats also consider jumping in. But even as some Democrats gear up to compete against each other, much of the party's focus this summer has been on national politics, including currently hosting Democrats in the Texas House who left their state to prevent a vote on redrawing Texas' congressional maps. After the Illinois Democratic Party hosted Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin last week for one of several news conferences in the western suburbs with Texas Democrats, the Illinois Democratic County Chairs' Association will host U.S. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jefferies at their annual brunch on Wednesday in Springfield as part of State Fair festivities. 'Illinoisans face unprecedented harm from Donald Trump and Elon Musk and I cannot think of a better national leader right now to talk to our party about how to meet this moment,' association President Mark Guethle said in a statement. 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Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
Pritzker, Klobuchar, Gallego flock to NH: Are they considering a run for president 2028?
Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Arizona, is set to visit New Hampshire Aug. 22, becoming the latest high-profile politician to fuel 2028 presidential race speculation by making a stop in the Granite State. "I'll be on the ground in New Hampshire... taking on the GOP's billionaire agenda and standing up for working families," Gallego, who was elected to the Senate last fall, said in a July 29 post on X. He follows Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who in April caught attention for delivering a searing speech in New Hampshire aimed at 'do-nothing' Democrats, and Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., who in July campaigned for U.S. Senate candidate Chris Pappas. (Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., also visited New Hampshire in July, but then announced her run for South Carolina governor.) They join about a dozen Democratic politicians who have already begun to make moves seemingly towards a 2028 run. Former U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg spoke about existential questions facing Democrats and the country at a veterans-focused forum in Iowa in May, and California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Kentucky Gov Andy Beshear, and Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., have all trekked through South Carolina. Gallego's New Hampshire visit comes after he toured the Iowa State Fairgrounds on Aug. 8. He has also already visited states like Pennsylvania and Alaska. Gallego and other hopefuls are still being cagey about their intentions. (Gallego said it was "too early" to talk about 2028 in Iowa.) But they are 'testing the waters,' said Andy Smith, the Director of the University of New Hampshire Survey Center. 'And that doesn't mean the Atlantic,' said Smith. 'They're kind of brushing up their reasons to why they should be president, or should consider a run for president, and then trying those arguments out against people here in the state to go out and win an election.' Smith said that candidates often start visiting New Hampshire up to six years before the election year they're aiming for. Rather than trying to win votes, however, Smith said that the politicians are coming to the state to win the support of the people in the state that run campaigns. In New Hampshire, that would be people like Ray Buckley, the Chair of the New Hampshire Democratic Party. 'They're more likely not to try to make their events open to the public widely, because, frankly, they're not pros at this yet,' Smith said. 'This is also a chance for candidates to come up here and try out their message with some small groups of voters and work on the stuff to make it better.' According to WMUR, Gallego is expected to make a Politics & Eggs address to the New England Council, join a town hall with U.S. Rep. Maggie Goodlander and stop at a fundraiser for U.S. Rep. Chris Pappas, who is running for U.S. Senate. New Hampshire should expect to see many more candidates in the months to come, Smith said. An open primary in 2028, on both sides The shadow campaign is leading up to a race that some political observers believe will be among the Democratic party's most consequential presidential primaries in decades. It comes at a time when the 'party's brand is in the toilet,' Matthew Dallek, a historian and professor of political management at George Washington University, told USA TODAY. The party is facing abysmal approval ratings, and the only way to improve it, said Dallek, is through the next presidential nominee. "The stakes, in that sense, are higher,' Dallek said. 'It's not just the presidency. It's not just the nomination. There's a sense among Democrats that they need to do this, and there's a big debate." With no real front runner on either side, Smith expects many Democratic and Republican candidates to join the fray. It will be a far cry from the 2024 race, when former President Joe Biden, former Vice President Kamala Harris and President Donald Trump froze out most Democratic and Republican candidates. While some have said that Vice President JD Vance appears to be the heir apparent to Trump on the Republican side, Smith cautions that line of thinking. He pointed to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who was doing well in the 2024 polls early on but whose message didn't resonate with New Hampshire voters. 'You got to try yourself out on the road and see what voters actually think of you too, and also what the politicos, the people that have run campaigns, tell you whether or not you got a chance or not,' Smith said. 'Pretty evident when somebody comes up and tries to run campaign that may work for them in a different state or in a different environment, they come up to New Hampshire and try to use the same language that just crashes and burns.' Will NH be first in the nation again? Smith thinks it's likely that New Hampshire's first-in-the-nation primary status will be returned to the state in 2028. In 2024, the Democratic National Committee announced that South Carolina would be the first state to vote instead of New Hampshire to have a more diverse state lead the way. However, New Hampshire refused to break tradition and held an unsanctioned primary (before South Carolina's primary) where President Joe Biden's name was absent from the ballot. But through a write-in effort led by Democrats in the state, Biden won anyways, garnering almost 64% of the vote. Smith said that Biden dropping out of the race later in the year gives New Hampshire Democrats a case to argue that if Biden had run in a real primary in New Hampshire like usual, there may have been a different outcome. Contributing: Phillip M. Bailey This article originally appeared on Portsmouth Herald: Presidential hopefuls flock to NH: Are they eyeing a 2028 run?
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
Illinois governor says Texas Democrats who left will be protected amid arrest threats
The Illinois governor, JB Pritzker, has vowed to protect the Democratic members of the Texas house of representatives who left the state in an attempt to block Republican efforts to redraw Texas's congressional maps. 'We're going to do everything we can to protect every single one of them and make sure that – 'cause we know they're doing the right thing, we know that they're following the law,' Pritzker said at a press conference on Sunday in Illinois alongside some of the the Texas Democratic lawmakers. The Texas Democrats fled the state on Sunday in an effort to prevent the Texas house from reaching the quorum on Monday needed to vote on a newly proposed congressional map. Related: Texas Democrats leave state to prevent vote on redrawing congressional map In response to the Democrats' actions, Greg Abbott, the Republican Texas governor, threatened to expel the Texas Democrats from the state house if they do not return by Monday at 3pm CT – when the legislature is set to resume. Ken Paxton, Texas's Republican attorney general, also condemned their actions on Sunday and threatened their arrest. 'Democrats in the Texas House who try and run away like cowards should be found, arrested, and brought back to the Capitol immediately,' he said in a statement. 'We should use every tool at our disposal to hunt down those who think they are above the law.' But Pritzker, who said he will support the Texas Democrats, described their actions as 'a righteous act of courage', saying that they 'were left no choice but to leave their home state, block a vote from taking place, and protect their constituents'. Pritzker, a billionaire and potential 2028 presidential candidate, is reportedly helping the Democrats find lodging and meeting spaces, but is not assisting with the $500-a-day fine that each lawmaker will have to pay under new rules the house adopted in 2021, according to the Texas Tribune. The outlet reported that the Democrats have been fundraising from large Democratic donors to help pay that fine. The redistricting plan, unveiled last week by Texas Republicans, could allow Republicans to gain as many as five additional US House seats ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Currently, Republicans hold 25 of Texas's 38 seats, and in the overall House of Representatives, Republicans hold a small majority of 220-212. The proposal came after pressure from Donald Trump, who urged Texas Republicans to redraw the maps. 'There could be some other states we're going to get another three, or four or five in addition. Texas would be the biggest one,' Trump told reporters in mid-July. 'Just a very simple redrawing, we pick up five seats.' Abbott called a special session this summer and included on the agenda the redrawing of Texas's maps in addition to proposals to aid victims of the 4 July Texas flooding and other matters. Related: Texas redistricting: how new Republican maps will hurt Democrats Many of Texas's 62 house Democrats have gone to Illinois, with others attending the National Conference of State Legislatures in Boston this week and others meeting with the New York governor, Kathy Hochul, in Albany. 'We're leaving Texas to fight for Texans,' Gene Wu, the Texas house Democratic caucus chair who fled to Illinois, said in a statement on Sunday. 'We're not walking out on our responsibilities; we're walking out on a rigged system that refuses to listen to the people we represent' he added. During the news conference in Illinois on Sunday, Pritzker criticized the redistricting proposal, saying it would 'steal five congressional seats, silencing millions of voices, especially Black and Latino voters'. 'Let's be clear, this is not just rigging the system in Texas, it's about rigging the system against the rights of all Americans for years to come,' he added.