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Engineer John Zimmerman, left, and Commissioner George DeMent, right, view an automatic coin collector at the toll gate of the Calumet Skyway on April 10, 1958, to be opened to traffic. | George Quinn/Chicago Tribune

By The Editorial Board | Chicago Tribune

Illinois tollways were meant to be freeways decades ago.

Gov. JB Pritzker promised to reform the Illinois Tollway before he was elected, the latest in a long line of governors, from Rod Blagojevich to Jim Thompson, who vowed reform.

Remember, the tollways aren’t even supposed to be tollways anymore. The tolls were meant to be temporary until the bonds issued to build the roads were paid off. Many of our readers may remember that old promise that by 1973, our dear tollways would become freeways.

“Toll free in ‘73,” it turns out, is just another empty promise long forgotten.

After decades — and billions of dollars — in paid tolls later, drivers are further away than ever from those cost-free roads.

Now, they’re staring down the prospect of another toll hike.

The Illinois Tollway board is in the process of implementing a 45-cent toll increase for I-Pass users, meaning a 70-cent toll today could become $1.15 in 2027.

And the toll hikes won’t stop there. Starting in 2029, the proposal to be considered by the Illinois Tollway board sets up CPI-indexed toll hikes every two years.

Editorial continues here.

Andrew Boutros, U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, announces federal domestic terrorism charges on Nov. 19, 2025, against Lawrence Reed for allegedly setting a 26-year-old woman on fire on a CTA Blue Line train. | E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune

By J.R. Davis | Special to the Tribune

For more than a century, the Chicago Crime Commission has evaluated crime trends, monitored the criminal justice system and supported efforts that improve public safety throughout the Chicago region. Since our founding in 1919, we have remained independent, nonpartisan and committed to one guiding principle: Results matter.

That principle applies equally to law enforcement agencies, prosecutors, elected officials and civic organizations. The public deserves institutions that are effective, accountable and focused on protecting communities from serious crime.

Viewed through that lens, the first year of Andrew Boutros’ tenure as U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois merits recognition.

The Northern District is one of the most important federal jurisdictions in the nation. Its prosecutors are responsible for addressing a wide range of threats, including violent crime, organized criminal enterprises, drug trafficking, public corruption, financial fraud and offenses that can have far-reaching consequences for public safety and public trust.

By most objective measures, the office has become significantly more active under Boutros’ leadership. Federal prosecutors have pursued a substantial number of cases involving some of the region’s most serious criminal conduct. Just as importantly, the office appears focused on restoring a culture of proactive enforcement and accountability.

That progress should not come as a surprise. Before entering private practice, Boutros spent years as an assistant U.S. attorney in the Northern District. He understands the office, its mission and the standards that historically earned it a reputation as one of the premier prosecutorial offices in the country.

Public service often requires sacrifice. It is worth noting that Boutros left a successful private-sector career to return to government service. Regardless of political affiliation or ideology, that decision reflects a commitment to public duty that deserves respect.

At the same time, no institution is immune to mistakes. Effective leadership is not measured by the absence of problems, but by how problems are addressed when they arise. When concerns emerged regarding grand jury practices in a recent case, the office moved to dismiss the affected indictments and implemented reforms designed to strengthen oversight and prevent similar issues in the future.

For organizations charged with protecting the public, transparency and corrective action are essential. Those steps should be viewed as evidence that accountability remains a priority.

The Chicago Crime Commission’s responsibility is not to engage in political debates or weigh in on every controversy. Our focus is on whether public safety institutions are effectively carrying out their missions and whether they are making meaningful progress against the crimes that pose the greatest threat to our communities.

From that perspective, the broader picture is encouraging. The Northern District is actively pursuing significant criminal cases, addressing complex threats and demonstrating renewed energy in the enforcement of federal law.

The challenges facing the Chicago region remain substantial. Violent crime, organized criminal activity, public corruption and sophisticated fraud schemes continue to demand vigilance and resources. Success will require cooperation among federal, state and local agencies, along with sustained public confidence in the institutions responsible for enforcing the law.

The work is far from finished. But strong leadership, a commitment to accountability and a focus on results are important foundations for progress. Those are qualities that deserve recognition wherever they are found.

J.R. Davis is chairman of the Chicago Crime Commission, which represents the Chicago business community’s commitment to reducing crime and combating public corruption. It partners with law enforcement agencies to advance public safety.

Surveillance video captured a half-dozen suspects forcing entry to ReStyle Designers of Barrington, 121 South Cook Street in Barrington, and stealing nearly all of the products in just a minute early in the morning on December 28. Cortney J. Shivers, 32, of Chicago, (inset left) and Jeremiah K. Brown, 21, (inset right) have both been charged in connection with the incident. | Background: Screengrab; Insets: Provided

By Sam Borcia | Lake & McHenry County Scanner

Police have announced charges against a second of six masked suspects who allegedly ransacked a boutique retailer in Barrington, stealing over $100,000 worth of merchandise in December.

The Barrington Police Department responded around 5 a.m. on December 28 to ReStyle Designers of Barrington, 121 South Cook Street, following reports of a disturbance.

Barrington Police Chief David Daigle said a resident living above the business called 911 after hearing multiple males yelling loudly outside and witnessing two vehicles speeding away from the scene.

Officers discovered that the front door of ReStyle Designers had been forced open.

The business owner, who was notified of the incident, responded to the scene and provided officers with surveillance footage that captured a burglary, Daigle said.

ReStyle Designers of Barrington said nearly all of the store’s inventory was stolen, leading to years of hard work and trust “gone in seconds.”

Report continues here.

 

(Click on image to enlarge)

Notice is hereby given that the President and Board of Trustees of the Village of Hoffman Estates, Illinois, will hold a Public Hearing pursuant to 65 ILCS 5/11-15.1-3 of the Illinois Municipal Code to consider an Annexation Agreement Amendment by and between the Village of Hoffman Estates and H.E. Holdings, LLC (Owner) related to the property located on the north side of Higgins Road between Canadian National Railway on the west and Illinois Route 59 on the east, consisting of approximately 145 acres. P.I.Ns: Lot 1 (01-28-301-004, 01-33-100-003, 01-33-100-004)

The hearing will be held on Monday, July 6, 2026, at 6:55 p.m. in the Hoffman Estates Municipal Building, 1900 Hassell Road, Hoffman Estates, IL.

The proposed Annexation Agreement Amendment would be an agreement that would terminate the Annexation Agreement dated May 1, 2017, and recorded in Cook County, Illinois, as document number 1712813016.

William D. McLeod
Village President
Board of Trustees
Published in Daily Herald June 18, 2026

Related:‘Wrong project, wrong place’: Critics push back on rezoning plan for potential Hoffman Estates data center,” “Change.org Petition: ‘Deny Rezoning of Plum Farms In Hoffman Estates’,” “South Barrington Mayor Paula McCombie shares an update on Hoffman Estates/Plum Farms Plan Commission meeting,” “Hoffman Estates plan commission rejects rezoning request for possible data center,” “Hoffman Estates Plan Commission rejects zoning change for new data center project,” “Hoffman Estates Plum Farm June 3rd Plan Commission Meeting Essentials,” “After being rejected in Naperville, company could build data center in Hoffman Estates,” “South Barrington Mayor Paula McCombie posts information regarding June 3 Hoffman Estates (Plum Farms) Plan Commission meeting,” “(Plum Farms) NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING JUNE 3,” “Hoffman Estates could see third data center campus with sale of Plum Farms property,” “Hoffman Estates approves sewer, water for development of 185 acres west of The Arboretum,” “Hoffman Estates approves tax incentive at routes 59, 72,” “District 220 lawsuit against Hoffman Estates, Plum Farms developers dismissed,” “South Barrington residents sue over Hoffman Estates development,” “Editorial: Listen to agencies that would feel consequences of Hoffman Estates development

By John Kass | John Kass News

Who brings a knife to a track meet, then stabs another athlete to death? Or who brings gasoline on public transit in Chicago, douses a young woman and burns her alive?

And who pays the blood price for this anti-white racism, most of it institutionalized by the left, and protected in Western Culture?

We do. The middle class. And we’re sick of it.

Nausea builds as we realize, finally, that the center does not hold and we’re about to be cast adrift into the left’s dystopian nightmare that they have planned for us for years. We refuse. Our anger builds and grows.

And as the culture descends into racial tribalism predictably promoted by so-called “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion,” programs baked into American politics and policy, our fingers defensively twitch for rocks, clubs, triggers to fend off the tribalism.  What does this signal? The end of civil society.

Somewhere, Marx and Lenin are laughing.

In his article in Spiked online, Brendan O’Neill addresses the recent atrocities in Ireland that reflect similar horrors here in America, where a man in Belfast was nearly beheaded by a Sudanese migrant who crept into the country with the aid of the left-wing government.

“People are sick of paying the blood price of bourgeois virtue. That is increasingly how it feels to working-class communities – that they are expected to absorb the risk of letting in tens of thousands of unvetted men, while their betters absorb the glow of righteousness that comes with crying ‘Refugees welcome’. The activist class in their leafy suburbs are shielded from the social consequences of their moral theatre. It is the lower orders who suffer the fallout. Working-class girls who suddenly have 800 men from f#### knows where in the hotel at the end of their road. “Women like Rhiannon Whyte, murdered by a Sudanese ‘asylum seeker’ from the very migrant hotel she worked in. This poor man in Belfast. It seems their suffering is a small price to pay for the moral gloating of our rulers.”

Americans are sick of it, too.

Article continues here.

The Barrington Hills Park District Board/Riding Cult of Barrington Hills will hold a closed session meeting Monday at 6:00 PM. The sole topic on their agenda is:

  • To discuss the purchase or lease of real property for the use of the public body, including meetings held for the purpose of discussing whether a particular parcel should be acquired pursuant to 2(c)(5) of the Open Meetings Act; and to discuss the setting of a price for sale or lease of property owned by the public body pursuant to 2(c)(6) of the Open Meetings Act

A copy of the agenda can be viewed here.

Olufemi I. Olaifa, 40, of Schaumburg, (inset) was taken into custody after being charged with felony sexual assault of a woman who was a resident of Alden Estates of Barrington, located at 1420 South Barrington Road in Barrington, while he worked at the facility as a nurse. | Background Photo: Google Street View; Inset: Provided

By Sam Borcia | Lake & McHenry County Scanner

Police say they have arrested a male nurse accused of sexually assaulting a female resident while working at an assisted rehabilitation facility in Barrington.

The Barrington Police Department announced Tuesday that they had arrested Olufemi I. Olaifa, 40, of Schaumburg.

The police department received a report on February 22 of a sexual assault at Alden Estates of Barrington, located at 1420 South Barrington Road, according to Barrington Chief of Police David Daigle.

The report involved a 30-year-old female resident of the facility being the victim.

Detectives immediately initiated an investigation and learned that the victim was sexually assaulted by a male nurse who was employed at the facility, Daigle said.

DNA evidence was collected from the victim and submitted to the crime lab for forensic analysis.

Daigle said the results confirmed a DNA match to the suspect, identified as Olaifa.

Report continues here.

Jussie Smollett, the actor charged with lying to police about an alleged fabricated attack, is surrounded by media as he waits for a car at the Leighton Criminal Court Building in Chicago on March 26, 2019. | José M. Osorio/Chicago Tribune

By The Editorial Board | Chicago Tribune

We have some advice for Gov. JB Pritzker, Mayor Brandon Johnson, Cardinal Blase Cupich, Rev. Michael Pfleger and others who rushed out statements following images of a burning cross in Grant Park circulating online and, naturally, then being amplified by algorithms that feed like blood-thirsty vampires on controversy.

Take a breath and let the police investigate for a day or two before you trot out a statement destined to land in international media and feed someone’s need for publicity. Just tell reporters: We’re going to let the police ascertain the facts first.

Did we learn nothing as a city after the actor Jussie Smollett reported a fake hate crime that he had actually staged himself in downtown Chicago, embarrassing any number of knee-jerk politicians (few of whom later apologized), wasting police time and trashing the city’s reputation all at once? Did that not motivate our leaders to say to their eager spokespeople, “Hang on a minute and let’s find out exactly what happened here?”

Apparently not. In this case, Pritzker immediately opined that the incident “speaks to what happens when the seeds of racism and fascism grow unchecked in our country.”

Then on Monday, WMAQ-Ch. 5 interviewed a 21-year-old college student from Naperville who told the station that he had placed a MAGA hat on top of the burning cross and that he actually was protesting the policies of President Donald Trump and didn’t expect his actions to be viewed in the context in which they were reported. The police now also have a suspect in custody. In other words, the man who talked to NBC 5 said his motivation was the precise opposite of what the governor said this incident represented.

We’ve no idea if that motivation was an after-the-fact invention of the suspect, or his lawyer, or even with certainty that it was the same person (no charges had been filed at press time), but we also know that anytime you see the words “after the image circulated online” in a shocking news story — and there were many such stories about this incident in national and local media, replete with the recounting of historical American inhumanity to man — it is a cue to be suspicious that not everything is as it first might seem.

Also a cue: anything purportedly happening in Chicago involving nooses, burning crosses and the other hateful detritus of America’s shameful past, especially from the South.

Editorial continues here.

The Arlington Park Metra stop adjacent to property owned by the Chicago Bears and the potential home to a new stadium in Arlington Heights, Illinois. | Jon Styf / The Center Square

By Jim Talamonti | The Center Square

A state representative has filed new legislation aimed at keeping the Chicago Bears in Illinois, but Gov. J.B. Pritzker says the Bears have to decide what they want first.

State Rep. Martin McLaughlin, R-Barrington Hills, filed the Taxpayer and Investment Protection Act on Monday.

House Bill 5797 applies to private developments with more than $2.5 billion of investments located in counties with more than one million people.

The proposal calls for the state to spend $1.2 billion on infrastructure for a Bears-owned stadium and surrounding development.

McLaughlin said the bill includes a negotiated property tax up front, based on the Bears’ $200 million land purchase in Arlington Heights.

“What that would be going forward, whether it’s three or four or $500 million, they set a 2.5% tax rate, and that goes up each and every year for 30 years,” McLaughlin told The Center Square.

McLaughlin said a third-party auditor would review the Bears, the state and local taxing bodies to prevent cost shifting.

Article continues here.

By Eric Peterson | Daily Herald

Hoffman Estates village board members Monday heard from critics of the proposed rezoning of the 186-acre Plum Farms property for a possible data center campus.

Although the issue wasn’t on the agenda, the board allowed half an hour for public comment.

Earlier this month, the village’s plan commission voted 4-2 against landowner Karis Critical of Florida’s request to rezone the site at Higgins Road and Route 59 to permit manufacturing. This classification could allow for a data center.

In January, Karis Critical’s proposal for a data center in Naperville was rejected by the city council there.

Monday’s opponents to the Hoffman Estates rezoning request included state representatives and candidates as well as the village presidents of neighboring South Barrington and Barrington Hills.

Critics from Hoffman Estates, South Barrington and Barrington Hills Monday voiced their opposition to rezoning of the 186-acre Plum Farms property at the northwest corner of routes 59 and 72 in Hoffman Estates that could allow a data campus there. Joe Lewnard/jlewnard@dailyherald.com, 2019

Republican state Rep. Martin McLaughlin of Barrington Hills spoke to infrastructure pressures like increased water and electricity demand, pointing out that even Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker had recently paused the state’s economic incentive for data centers.

“If you’ve opened up an electrical bill lately, you know increased electricity demand is one of the problems with AI centers,” McLaughlin said. “Unfortunately, this has not been planned for well by Springfield politicians. And now, with potential AI center draw, it’s a double-whammy for utility payers and I cannot support this.”

Article continues here.