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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.”

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By Susan Sarkauskas | Daily Herald

West Dundee is ramping up its efforts to redevelop the site of the former Spring Hill Mall, using a computer model of what it could look like with housing and stores.

But a consultant and village officials, including Village President Chris Nelson, stressed in a presentation Monday night that the interactive model is just a starting point for developers to envision what they would want to build on the site near routes 31 and 72.

On Monday, West Dundee trustees got a glimpse of what could go on the former Spring Hill Mall property. The concept design plans serve as a starting point for a redevelopment of the site. | Courtesy of Houseal Lavigne Associates

“It’s really just to service marketing material and to signal that the village is open to development of the site that sort of meets this character and intent,” said Devin Lavigne, co-founder of Houseal Lavigne Associates, a planning and design firm the village hired to come up with the model. “This is to court developers.”

The presentation contained two concepts: “Urban village” and “Mixed-use boulevard.” Drawings of both showed tree-lined, pedestrian-friendly streets and turning the current stormwater pond in to a park amenity.

The urban village concept suggests 778 housing units in buildings up to five stories tall, with 320,000 square feet of retail space.

The mixed-use boulevard suggests 1,326 housing units could be built, and 400,000 square feet of retail space.

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The state saw a drop of over 10% in the period from 2014 to 2024, five times the national rate.

By Rich Witzel | Illinois Policy Institute

Illinois public schools are losing students at a faster rate than in nearly every other state.

From fall 2014 to fall 2024, public elementary and secondary school enrollment dropped 10% in Illinois, according to a recently released report by the National Center for Education Statistics. The national decline was 2%.

Public school enrollment is falling across much of the country, but some states are losing students at a far faster rate than others.

Illinois ranked fourth-worst in the nation for enrollment loss percentage in the period, behind only West Virginia, Mississippi and New Hampshire.

The struggling system

At least some of the drop can almost certainly be attributed to Illinois’ ongoing outmigration problem. Still, it is not difficult to guess why fewer Illinois families are choosing public schools for their children.

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Former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore leaves the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse on July 21, 2025, after being sentenced to two years in prison. | Eileen T. Meslar/Chicago Tribune

By Jason Meisner | Chicago Tribune

A Chicago federal appeals court on Monday said there was “compelling” evidence against former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore and lobbyist Michael McClain in the “ComEd Four” case and that prosecutors were free to retry it if they saw fit.

The highly anticipated 16-page opinion comes two months after the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the convictions of Pramaggiore and McClain in a scheme to influence then-House Speaker Michael Madigan and ordered them released immediately from federal prison.

As expected, the three-judge panel made it official Monday that the convictions for both could not stand given recent rulings by the U.S. Supreme Court curtailing the use of federal statutes involving bribery and making false statements.

But the opinion also was clear the government had presented “significant and compelling evidence” in the case, and rejected arguments from the petitioners that they should be acquitted outright.

“Do not misread our opinion,” the judges said at the conclusion of the ruling. “We are not suggesting that Pramaggiore and McClain are innocent, only that their convictions were flawed and that they have a right to see their sentences vacated.”

The opinion puts the ball squarely in the court of the U.S. attorney’s office, which will have a tough decision to make. A retrial is possible, though it would have to be under different legal theories, or potentially a new indictment that could vastly change the scope of the evidence, legal observers have said.

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The District 220 Board of Education meets this evening at 6:00 PM at the District Administration Center, 515 W. Main Street. Items on their agenda include:

  • FOIA Reports
  • Revised Personnel Report
  • Finance Reports
  • Consideration to Approve the Board of Education authorize the Assistant Superintendent of Business Services to approve contracts for the procurement of natural gas and electricity and to elect and designate the price terms of such contracts. The price terms of such contracts shall not exceed forty-three and ninety-three hundredths cents ($0.4193) per therm for natural gas and eight and nine hundred eighty-seven thousandths cents ($0.08987) per kilowatt hour for electricity, for periods not to exceed thirty-six (36) months.
  • Consideration to Approve Notice to Remedy
  • Consideration to Approve Action Regarding Employment Status of Educational Support Personnel Employee
  • Consideration to Approve Amended Board of Education Regular Meeting Schedule

A copy of the agenda can be viewed here. The meeting will be live streamed on the district YouTube channel.

Related:Over $100,000 in Special Interest Funding gifted to 220 Board member’s campaign in failed bid for State Rep job,” “New Evidence of Chan Ding’s Policy Violations and Conflicts of Interest,” “The D220 Board of Ed gets another ‘F’ in accountability & transparency,” “The Real Issue in Barrington 220 Isn’t Parking or Levies — It’s Leadership Culture,” “BOARD OF ED VOTES, MEMBER CHAN DING MADE FLAGRANT POLICY VIOLATIONS – Part 2,” “BOARD OF ED VOTES, MEMBER CHAN DING MADE FLAGRANT POLICY VIOLATIONS,” “District 220’s Lack of Transparency (Updated),” “District 220’s Lack of Transparency

 

By Steve Zalusky | Daily Herald

More than two years since the death of Barrington High School student Marin Lacson, Barrington community members are still waiting for pedestrian safety gates at the Hough Street crossing where she was killed.

Barrington officials, however, insist the project is proceeding, even though the village has filed for a six-month extension of its interim order with the Illinois Commerce Commission, which is hearing the petition of the village and the Illinois Department of Transportation.

“I would say that we see continuous movement, at all of our status hearings,” Deputy Village Manager Marie Hansen said. “Whether or not that movement is as much as we would like.”

But she added the village does not control the review and approval process.

The request to extend the June 18 deadline to Dec. 18, officials said, is to make sure the village remains eligible to receive reimbursement from the state for engineering and design work at the Union Pacific crossings receiving the gates — Hough Street, Main Street, Cook Street and Hillside Avenue.

Village officials say they have spent their own funds to help move the project forward.

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Subcontractors said they’re owed millions as the $850M presidential center prepares to open after years of cost overruns and delays | Obama Presidential Center (Obama.org, Getty)

By TRD Staff | The Real Deal

Contractors on the Obama Presidential Center say their invoices are going unpaid, reportedly missing millions in payments and jeopardizing the future of businesses.

The Obama Center has gone hundreds of millions over its original $300 million cost estimate. The 19-acre museum and library’s construction cost has ballooned over the years to a staggering $850 million, nearly tripling the projected budget.

African American Contractors Association president Omar Shareef said that a total of seven separate subcontractors have contacted him for help with pursuing missing payments in the past several months, according to Crain’s. Some of the contractors are owed seven figures. They’re willing to settle for less, as long as they can keep their businesses running.

“It’s to the point that they wished they had never done (the project),” Shareef told the outlet.

The delays and skyrocketing costs were caused in part by the pandemic and in part by a half-decade legal battle. By the time the groundbreaking ceremony was held in 2021, the cost was pegged at $830 million. The center will finally open on next Friday, the Juneteenth holiday, and the public will gain access to the work of roughly 475 subcontractors, according to the outlet.

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The Barrington Countryside Fire Protection District (BCFPD) Board of Trustees should be meeting tonight at 6:30 PM at 22222 N. Pepper Road in Lake Barrington according to there website that  states, “Meetings are held on the 3rd Monday of the month.”

No agenda is posted, and the last time they published an agenda was in April. For more information on District activities and events, call 224-848-4800.

Related:Website posting requirements for local governments in Illinois

The recently painted West Dundee water tower sits just north of the Spring Hill Mall site. |Paul Valade/pvalade@dailyherald.com

By Alicia Fabbre | Daily Herald

For the past 10 years, the fate of Spring Hill Mall property has been a concern for West Dundee officials.

As the mall floundered, village officials looked for ways to breathe life into the regional shopping center that straddled West Dundee and Carpentersville.

Ultimately, West Dundee spent more than $13 million to buy the mall, demolish it and clear the way for redevelopment. Now the former mall is gone, and all that remains on the site is a Cinemark Theater.

West Dundee trustees Monday will get a glimpse of what could go on the former Spring Hill Mall property. The concept design plans serve as a starting point for a redevelopment of the mall. | Courtesy of Houseal-Lavigne Associates

On Monday night, West Dundee trustees will get a glimpse of what a reimagined mall property could look like with a mix of housing, retail, dining and other commercial uses. Consultants with Chicago-based Houseal-Lavigne Associates will present visualization plans that give off town center vibes, focused on a walkable community.

The plans are meant to be a starting point and can evolve as the site is redeveloped.

“This is really just putting down a marker so we can just start the conversation not only with residents but also with interested developers,” West Dundee Village President Chris Nelson said.

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The Hoffman Estates Board of trustees will meet Monday at 7 PM at 1900 Hassell Road.

As previously reported, “(The Plum Farms) data center development will not appear on the agenda of Monday’s village board meeting.” However, Friday South Barrington Mayor Paula McCombie posted:

“The Plum Farms property zoning on rt 59 and 72 across from the Woods of South Barrington is not presently on the schedule for the Village Board meeting in Hoffman Estates on Monday, but while Mayor McCleod and the Hoffman Estates Trustees decide whether or not to take the Plan Commissions recommendation against the change of zoning allowing a data center, I encourage you to attend their next meeting on Monday the 15th. This gives their leaders time to consider residents voices while contemplating the way they will vote.”

A copy of the agenda can be viewed and downloaded here. Monday’s meeting will be available live via YouTube and the link can be found here.

Related:Hoffman Estates board won’t consider rezoning for potential data center Monday