Pritzker goes to Jacksonville to announce money for downtown revitalization projects
JACKSONVILLE, Ill. (WCIA) — The state will be issuing $30 million in grants to downtown revitalization projects across the state.
The projects are focused on either improving infrastructure or building out housing options
'Our state government treated these towns across the state as a relic of the past rather than a key part of our future,' Pritzker said. 'Main streets and downtowns were losing their small businesses, in part because they needed upgrades and improvements that local governments sometimes could not afford.'
Pritzker chose to announce the grants in downtown Jacksonville — a city that has utilized plenty of state grants to spruce up their square in downtown. Now, they will get an additional $2 million to build out workforce housing in a town that badly needs it.
'We need to fill these jobs,' Ezard said. There's jobs opening that we can't fill, but we need places for them to leave that are for the live that are affordable.'
Jacksonville Mayor Andy Ezard said the te face lift for downtown has given the town a spark, which they now hope to capitalize on with more projects and more investment.
'We have seen the vibe change completely,' Ezard said. 'There's an art scene, there's a culture, there's there's a renaissance of business is used to an aging downtown, which had many dead storefronts closed, just look ran down. We cleaned it up.'
Here is a full list of grants awarded provided by the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity.
RDMS Grantee
Economic Development Region
Award Amount
Project Description
Bubin Properties, LLC
East Central
$771,263
Phase 1 of the renovation planned for the vacant building at 48 East Main Street in Downtown Champaign and for adjacent properties.
City of Bloomington
North Central
$1,999,603
Initial element of 'Downtown for Everyone' Streetscape Program to revitalize downtown Bloomington through various roadway and infrastructure improvements.
City of East Moline
Northwest
$2,000,000
Improvements will support economic growth by transforming 15th Avenue – the City's 'Main Street' – into an accessible, connected corridor that prioritizes space for pedestrians, shops and restaurants.
City of Hillsboro
Central
$749,275
The City's Downtown Main Street Improvement Project Phase II addresses sidewalks, curbing, water service and lighting.
City of McHenry
Northeast
$771,263
Reconstruct Riverside Drive from Venice Avenue to just past Pearl Street in the City's downtown district.
City of Mendota
Northwest
$1,988,625
'Rise From the Ashes Revitalization Project' will develop a multi-purpose city-owned and city-managed downtown building impacted by devastating fire in 2022.
City of Morris
Northeast
$771,263
Design, engineering and installation of streetscape enhancements in downtown Morris recommended in the Morris Downtown Master Plan.
City of Nokomis
Central
$330,000
The Downtown Streetscape & Beautification Project will install storefront ADA sidewalk along Illinois Route 16 (W. State St.) from S. Spruce Street to Pine Street.
City of Rockford
Northern Stateline
$2,000,000
Madison Street Phase II streetscape improvements.
City of Spring Valley
Northwest
$695,430
The City of Spring Valley Downtown Revitalization Project will bring streetscape improvements enhancing access to the businesses in the 100 and 200 blocks on St. Paul St.
City of West Chicago
Northeast
$2,000,000
Streetscape project will improve the aesthetics, functionality, accessibility and state of repair of Main St. and Turner Ct. between Washington St. and Wilson Ave.
JAC Managing Member LLC
Southwest
$2,000,000
Restore Jacoby Building Renovation in Alton to develop a 1904 furniture company building into 18 apartments, a restaurant and an art center.
Re:purpose Development LLC
Southern
$771,263
Rehabilitation and redevelopment of Hoffman Hart building in downtown Centralia.
The Springfield Project
Central
$1,999,251
The CAP 1908 Innovation Center will be a business incubator, accelerator and co-working space, offering a wide range of small business and organization programming on Springfield's East Side.
Village of Lake Villa
Northeast
$855,013
'Station One' project will acquire and develop a vacant fire station building and mixed-use commercial property for mixed-use development that includes commercial, residential, civic and public recreation spaces.
Village of Walnut
Northwest
$297,750
This final phase of the Village's rehabilitation would include sidewalk replacement/improvements, new modern street light installation and installing a new asphalt pavement surface.
And here is the list of RISE grants, which are for affordable housing developments in the state.
RISE Grantee
Economic Development Region
Award Amount
Project Description
City of Carbondale
Southern
$2,000,000
Phase 2 of Washington Street Entertainment and Events Plaza – construction of a market-activity pavilion at the Carbondale Entertainment and Events Plaza.
City of Effingham
Southeast
$373,500
Purchase of 2.6 acres of property on Heritage Ave. to develop and provide affordable workforce housing.
City of Jacksonville
Central
$2,000,000
Project will acquire an identified site to develop workforce housing.
City of Monmouth
West Central
$1,504,646
Project includes the reconstruction/streetscaping of Main St. from 2nd Ave. to 1st Ave. and from Archer Ave. to Boston Ave., with the previously reconstructed Public Square between the two sections of the project.
City of Pana
Central
$1,245,000
Develop three-parcel lot in downtown Pana into outdoor event space, including service hook-ups for food trucks, ADA-compliant restrooms and outdoor seating.
City of Red Bud
Southwest
$932,041
Infrastructure development for the Red Bud Business Park.
City of Woodstock
Northeast
$1,047,750
Renovate the Opera House's Stage Left Café and its west annex as a reception and bar area, and Woodstock will install three dual-screen interactive kiosks on the Square to engage residents and visitors in music and art, holiday celebrations, cultural events and Opera House and Stage Left Café performances.
McLean County Regional Planning Commission
North Central
$250,000
Fund the Housing Coordinator position over the two-year grant performance period.
Village of Flanagan
North Central
$895,361
Dredging of Lagoon at wastewater treatment facility.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
From the Farm: Estate tax failure
CENTRAL ILLINOIS (WCIA) — The Illinois General Assembly has recessed for the spring term after passing a budget, but the big issue that agriculture wanted was not included. The Family Farm Preservation Act was designed to overhaul the estate tax on farms, which frequently requires substantial amounts of land to be sold to pay the tax. However, it was not called for a senate vote because of the concern it would reduce state tax revenue when the state needs money. From the Farm: Illinois Corn Grower testifies on new Farm Bill Rep. Charlie Meier, a farmer from Oakville and the top Republican in the House Ag Committee, opposes the whole concept of the estate tax. It's doubtful that Meier will get his wish though. Other lawmakers supportive of the Family Farm Preservation Act plan to push it during the fall veto session. It is a perennial issue for agriculture and will be until the cows come home. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Pritzker's signature next step in Sterling's bid to land millions in Riverfront Reimagined investment
Jun. 5—STERLING — Sterling is one step closer to receiving a designation that could provide up to $50 million in tax incentives for economic development work the city already has started along its riverfront. ExpandAutoplay Image 1 of 5 Sterling is close to a designation that could provide a tax incentive on Riverfront Park. Construction is underway Wednesday, June 4, 2025. (Alex T. Paschal) Sterling Mayor Diana Merdian told Shaw Local that although House Bill 1919, which the city's lobbyist, Matt Hughes of MRH Solutions, advocated for earlier this year, did not pass its third reading in the Illinois Senate, its language has been included as part of the state's omnibus budget package, House Bill 2755. The state's fiscal 2026 budget comprises three components: the state operating budget, a budget implementation bill and the revenue omnibus bill. The Illinois House and Senate on Saturday, May 31, approved all three bills just hours before the midnight deadline for the end of the spring session. The Illinois House approved HB 2755 with a vote of 71-43, followed by the Senate's approval with a vote of 31-25. The bill is now headed to Gov. JB Pritzker for approval. In a news release issued by Pritzker on Sunday, June 1, he indicated that he intends to sign the state budget before the fiscal year begins Tuesday, July 1. Once the state's budget is signed, Sterling officially will receive the River Edge Redevelopment Zone designation. "The passage of the fiscal 2026 balanced budget is a testament to Illinois' fiscal responsibility," Pritzker said. "Even in the face of [President Donald] Trump and congressional Republicans stalling the national economy, our state budget delivers for working families without raising their taxes while protecting the progress we are making for our long-term fiscal health. "I'm grateful to [House] Speaker [Chris] Welch, [Senate] President [Don] Harmon, the budget teams, and all the legislators and stakeholders who collaborated to shape and pass this legislation. I look forward to signing my seventh balanced budget in a row and continuing to build a stronger Illinois." According to the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, once a city is designated, certain areas are allocated as a "River Edge Redevelopment Zone." The RERZ program provides investors and municipalities that are eligible with several tax incentives, including property tax abatements and sales tax exemptions. In Sterling's case, it would assist in redevelopment along the Rock River. Merdian said that without the designation and those tax incentives, the city's riverfront redevelopment work would be almost "impossible" to complete. "I have been working to secure this designation for nearly my entire term, and I know a lot of people did not think it would be possible," Merdian said. "It wasn't easy, but one of the things we do here is we work hard to do what's best for this community." Merdian said once Pritzker signs the bill, the city will need to fill out an application with the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity. "That is, we have to have a map, we have to have a public hearing," Merdian said. "We have to have the ordinance, or the information that stays up for so many days, and we have to have everything on the national registry." Hughes lobbied for both HB 1919 and Senate Bill 1309 as part of his strategy to help Sterling secure its designation. Merdian and Hughes recruited help from Rep. Maurice West, D-Rockford, and Sen. Michael Halpin, D-Rock Island, who filed the bills in January. In February, Hughes advised the Sterling City Council that both bills needed to advance out of committee by March 21 and pass both chambers by April 11. The city of Alton was later added to the legislation, following recommendations from West. Merdian told Sterling's Riverfront Reimagined Commission on April 2 that the bill had cleared both subcommittees and was likely to be wrapped into the state's budget package, "where similar bills go." Among the "nay" votes for HB 2755 were state Reps. Brad Fritts, R-Dixon; Tony McCombie, R-Savanna; and Amy Elik, R-Alton — all of whom co-sponsored HB 1919. State Sen. Li Arellano Jr., R-Dixon, who co-sponsored Senate Bill 1309 — Sterling's backup bill should HB 1919 fail — also voted against HB 2755. Shaw Local reached out to each of them for comment. "I was chief co-sponsor on HB 1919 because it directly affected a community in my district, Alton, which was added to the bill as another Redevelopment Zone community," Elik said when responding to Shaw Local's request for comment. "The bill that passed both chambers, which I voted against, HB 2755, eventually included language for Alton and Sterling, but also raised taxes by nearly $1 billion, and I have promised my constituents I would not vote for a tax increase. "In the waning hours of session, we often see omnibus bills that include language from many other bills, and although I support the language in the much smaller and more concise HB 1919, I could not support the massive tax increases in the significantly larger HB 2755, which will hurt communities across my district and the state." Fritts provided Shaw Local with the following response: "It's simple. I voted against HB 2755 because it was not just granting the city of Sterling's River Edge designation, but it was the entire fiscal 2026 revenue package with multiple tax increases. I would have proudly voted yes if this designation was in its own bill, like the originally filed HB 1919. Because of this deceptive tactic utilized by the majority party, I stood united alongside my state senator, Li Arellano, and voted no without hesitation. "Let me be clear: I will not vote in favor of a tax increase on the hardworking men and women of my district, even if that means also voting no on a local project that was shoved into an over 1,000-page bill. The process of putting multiple bills into one has to stop. It's just bad governance, and the people of Illinois deserve better." McCombie, who is House minority leader, agreed with Fritts in her budget vote response. "Speaker Welch said the quiet part out loud: tax-and-spend Democrats are thriving in Illinois ... at the expense of Illinois families," she wrote. "Rather than pursuing meaningful structural reforms to secure our state's future, Democrats chose to prioritize politician pay raises, steal from the rainy-day fund, and funnel money into their own pork projects." Arellano issued his response Sunday. "Illinois Democrats have just rammed through the largest and most reckless budget in our state's history: over $55 billion in spending, passed with zero transparency, minimal debate and no regard for the taxpayers who are footing the bill," he wrote. "This isn't leadership. It's political corruption, plain and simple, snuck in during a midnight vote. "To make matters worse, they're hitting working families with nearly a billion dollars in new taxes. Democrats keep demanding more from you while delivering less. Less public safety. Fewer job opportunities. Less economic growth. "This budget is not just bloated, it's dishonest and irresponsible. It's a slap in the face to the very people who keep this state afloat. I voted no because I refuse to stand by while one-party rule continues to drain our state to prop up its political machine."

Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
Illinois State Police gifted new, high-tech command vehicle
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WCIA) — The Illinois State Police is adding a new, state-of-the-art vehicle to its fleet, one that administrators hope will enhance public safety and improve emergency response coordination. It's a 2025 Freightliner command vehicle, which will replace a similar vehicle that is 18 years old and outfitted with antiquated technology. The new vehicle has high-definition cameras and monitors, state-of-the-art communications technology and real-time data access. It can also function as a conference room with dual slide-outs. Illinois appoints first female State Fire Marshal Administrators said in a news release that the vehicle will serve as a central hub for State Troopers during emergencies like natural disasters, large-scale accidents and search-and-rescue operations. ISP also plans to use it for training officers on responding to HAZMAT incidents. 'This command vehicle gives us the ability to respond faster, coordinate more effectively, and better serve our communities during critical incidents,' Director Brendan F. Kelly said. 'It's a mobile operations center that puts technology and leadership exactly where it's needed most—right on the ground at the scene of the incident.' The vehicle will also serve a purpose beyond emergency situations. To strengthen the connection between the Illinois State Police and the public, the vehicle will also be used for community outreach programs, safety demonstrations and public events. The Freightliner was provided to the ISP by the Office of Radiological Studies within the U.S. Department of Energy. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.