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By Elgin Symphony Orchestra

On Tuesday, Dec. 3, the Elgin Symphony Orchestra will bring its brass and percussion sections to Prince of Peace Lutheran Church in Schaumburg for a festive holiday concert. The concert will be at 7 p.m. in the church’s worship center at 930 W. Higgins Road.

“We are excited to bring this special concert to Schaumburg as part of our ESO Presents series,” said Marc Thayer, CEO of the Elgin Symphony Orchestra. “The holiday season provides a unique opportunity to showcase our brass and percussion musicians as much of the fanfare of traditional holiday music is demonstrated through these instruments. This concert is guaranteed to put you in the holiday spirit.”

Led by ESO Music Director Chad Goodman, the 80-minute concert will feature Christmas favorites, including “Silent Night,” “O Holy Night,” “Sleigh Ride,” and holiday traditions such as “O Tannenbaum,” selections from “The Nutcracker,” and “Carol of the Bells,” among others.

General admission seating is $20 or $5 for students and youth. Tickets are available online at ElginSymphony.org or through the ESO box office, open Tuesday through Friday from 10 a.m. to noon and 1 to 3 p.m., at (847) 888-4000. Tickets also will be available at the door.

The condo building, center, at 9 W. Walton St. in Chicago’s Near North Side neighborhood on Nov. 25, 2024. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)

By JEREMY GORNER, and BOB GOLDSBOROUGH | Chicago Tribune

In such a polarized country, even billionaires like JB Pritzker and Ken Griffin won’t let their political archrivalry get in the way of doing business.

The Illinois governor earlier this month paid the founder of the Citadel investment firm $19 million for the top two floors of a 38-story luxury building on Chicago’s Near North Side where Griffin once resided, sources familiar with the transaction told the Tribune.

The combined purchase at the 9 W. Walton St. building represents the highest price anyone has paid this year for a Chicago-area residence, and it’s the fourth-highest price anyone has ever paid for any home within Chicago’s city limits. But it also meant that Griffin, who relocated to Florida along with his company two years ago, lost more than $15 million on the two condominiums in the real estate deal with his political nemesis.

An entrance to the condo building at 9 W. Walton St. in Chicago’s Near North Side neighborhood on Nov. 25, 2024. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)

A Pritzker spokesperson would only say “the Governor and First Lady recently purchased a condo in Chicago. They love the city and Chicago has been home to them for many years.” A spokesperson for Griffin did not immediately respond for comment.

The Pritzker-Griffin rivalry goes back to at least 2018, when the Democrat largely self-funded his campaign to defeat one-term Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner, a wealthy equity investor whose reelection bid was backed by more than $20 million from Griffin.

The battle of the billionaires escalated two years later, when Pritzker spent more than $56 million of his wealth to unsuccessfully push a proposed state constitutional amendment to switch Illinois to a graduated-rate income tax system with higher levies based on wealth. Griffin led the opposition to the proposed amendment, also spending nearly $54 million of his own money.

Read more here.

Capitol News Illinois reporter Hannah Meisel is covering the corruption trial of ex-Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan from the Dirksen Federal Courthouse in Chicago.

The former speaker, who left office under growing pressure related to the FBI investigation surrounding him in early 2021, faces 23 counts of racketeering, bribery, extortion and wire fraud.

To summarize, prosecutors allege he used his political power and various offices – including as a partner in his law firm – as a “criminal enterprise” to protect and enhance his power while enriching himself and his allies. But his defense attorneys argue the state is trying to criminalize the political process and baseline constituent services.

His co-defendant Mike McClain, a veteran Statehouse lobbyist and longtime Madigan confidant, was already convicted on public corruption charges last year in the separate but related “ComEd Four” trial.  The feds are again trying to show McClain is an “agent” of Madigan, while his defense attorneys say he simply engaged in legal relationship maintenance, a core function of lobbying

Below is a rundown of the coverage from the courtroom – where the trial is scheduled each Monday through Thursday well into December. This page will be updated as the trial progresses.

WEEK FIVE: NOV. 18 – 21 

Thursday, Nov. 21

Ex-Chicago Ald. Danny Solis, who secretly recorded Madigan for FBI, takes witness stand: As trial neared its conclusion for the week, ex-Chicago Ald. Danny Solis took the stand for what could be weeks of testimony. The star witness had cooperated with the FBI for years and told the jury that a bribery charge against him would be dropped if he testified against Madigan. The jury also learned that Solis’ wiretapped conversations with Madigan helped make the ex-speaker a target of the investigation in 2017, a year after Solis began cooperating. Read the story here.


Wednesday, Nov. 20

Madigan ally testifies he was rewarded with no-work contracts as ‘good soldier’ for speaker: Ed Moody held several political offices by the end of his career, thanks in large part to time he spent knocking doors on behalf of Madigan. He testified that Madigan and McClain helped him secure a $4,500 monthly contract through which he was paid indirectly by ComEd. Though he did little to no work for the utility, Moody said the payments were contingent on continuing his political work for Madigan. Read the story here.


Tuesday, Nov. 19

Wiretap: In pushing for Madigan-backed appointment, ex-ComEd CEO sought to ‘take good care’ of ‘our friend’: Chicago businessman Juan Ochoa, who was named to ComEd’s board after Madigan spent 1 ½ years pushing for the appointment, took the witness stand Tuesday. Jurors heard wiretaps regarding the appointment, including one of then-outgoing ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore telling McClain she set up a meeting between her replacement Ochoa. “You take good care of me, and so does our friend, and so I will do the best I can to take care of you,” she said. Read the story here.


Monday, Nov. 18

Madigan jury sees ‘Magic Lobbyist List’ seized from co-defendant during FBI search: McClain’s habit of printing out emails made FBI agents’ job a bit easier on May 14, 2019, as they searched his home office, another office area in the basement featuring a wall of filing cabinets and his car in the garage. The jury this week saw several of the seized documents from a series of coordinated raids, including McClain’s “magic list” of prominent Statehouse lobbyists with close ties to Madigan. Read the story here.

Coverage continues here.

For the full background on the trial, the yearslong investigation and Madigans’s fall from power, read Meisel’s preview story here: 4 decades after rising to power and nearly 4 years since his fall, former Speaker Madigan goes to trial

By | Daily Herald

Barrington and the Illinois Department of Transportation will petition the Illinois Commerce Commission to allow pedestrian gates at several railroad crossings in town.

But the process, which will seek gates for crossings at Hough Street, Main Street and Hillside Avenue, likely will run into 2026.

The lack of pedestrian safety gates emerged as an urgent issue for the village earlier this year, after the death of 17-year-old Barrington High School student Marin Lacson. She was struck and killed by a Metra train at the Hough Street crossing Jan. 25.

Officials said IDOT will lead the filing process. The petition is likely to be filed early next year following legal review.

“Right now, that draft petition is being reviewed by our legal counsel and the state’s legal counsel,” Deputy Village Manager Marie Hansen said. “A year and a half is probably the short end of this process.”

In the interest of efficiency, the village will perform engineering work while the petition is pending. The ICC, which is responsible for regulating railroads and railroad crossings in Illinois, must approve the gates.

More here.

By | Daily Herald

Barrington village trustees gave the green light Monday for a new 110,400-square-foot Porsche dealership on the Motor Werks campus, despite objections from its neighbors.

However, trustees said no to red LED lights required by Porsche on the new building. A Motor Werks representative said that could pose a problem for the project at the corner of Dundee Road and Grove Avenue.

Motor Werks of Barrington received village approval Monday for a new Porsche dealership, but a request to add red LED lights on the new building has been rejected. | Courtesy of Barrington

The board’s approval followed a long review process involving both the village’s plan and architectural review commissions. Neighbors from surrounding subdivisions packed those hearings, arguing that the new facility would aggravate existing problems with car-carrying trucks, test drives and traffic.

The plan commission ultimately recommended a scaled-down plan for campus expansion, eliminating a parking deck with accessory restaurant and retail uses from the initial proposal.

Motor Werks took issue with three recommendations from the plan commission: the ban on the red lighting; the requirement for 24-hour site management to ensure transport vehicles aren’t parking, idling, loading or unloading on Barrington Road, Dundee Road or Grove Avenue; and prohibiting Motor Werks from displaying three vehicles outside the dealership.

The village board gave way on one of the issues, permitting the vehicle display instead of recommended landscape screening.

Motor Werks attorney Betsy Gates-Alford warned that the elimination of the red lights — which neighbors said would be intrusive — could lead Porsche to seek other locations.

“The red LED lighting aspect is part of Porsche’s branding and design,” she said. “This is a design requirement that Porsche has, and that they would require Motor Werks to commit to for the construction of the new building.”

Read more here.

By Edward J. Pinto | Newsweek

Progressive governors of the blue states of California, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, and Massachusetts have vowed to resist or fight against Trump 2.0. New Jersey governor Murphy said he would “fight to the death.” Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Colorado Gov. Jared Polis have formed a nonpartisan group focused on countering “threats of autocracy” and note “they’re talking to other Democrats and Republicans about joining the effort, which will have its own staff and researchers.” The resistance is focused on climate action, deportations, limiting gun rights, and reproductive freedom.

These efforts are misdirected. The surest sign is that Americans are fleeing from the places these governors and their #Resistence reign—and fleeing to red states where policies like those proposed by Trump have won out. For the past 30 years, progressive policies have fueled a mass exodus of the citizens of California, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, and Massachusetts, whether with high-, middle-, or blue collar incomes. From 1990 to 2021, net domestic migration fleeing their states has totaled 13 million, as reported by the IRS.

Meanwhile, the red states of Florida, Texas, North Carolina, Arizona, Tennessee, Nevada, and South Carolina have had net in-migration of 13 million over the same period.

Policies fueling this blue state exodus include out-of-control public pensions and other spending, a plethora of ineffective and expensive subsidized housing programs, ineffective public schools, opposition to school choice, high crime, unaffordable housing, excessive taxes of all types, and rising levels of homelessness.

It is no coincidence that these five states are the ones with the highest levels of net out-migration over the last 30 years. According to the IRS, between 1990 and 2021, California led the nation with net domestic out-migration. 4.6 million people left the state. The trend continued for the next three years, as 307,000 individuals left California, making it again the state hemorrhaging the most residents.

California was followed by New York, which lost similar numbers of residents, many of whom decamped to Florida and New Jersey. Interestingly, those leaving New York had incomes $17,000 higher than those migrating to New York.

Illinois lost 2 million residents during the 1990s and early 2000s, and another 90,000 from 2020-2021. Massachusetts came next, losing 50,000 residents since 2020 and almost 1 million residents in the decades before. And again, those leaving had incomes $5,000 higher than those migrating to Illinois.

Read more here.

By Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner | Wirepoints

It’s the only reasonable conclusion. Illinois politicians who continue to oppose pension reform via a constitutional amendment should be booted from office. The latest state-by-state pension report from Fitch Ratings demonstrates why.

At $172 billion,* Illinois has the nation’s biggest pension shortfall by far, the agency says. Fitch also calculates that Illinois’ pension debt as a share of its economy is the largest in the country. Either way, Illinois is the nation’s extreme outlier.

To get an idea of just how out of whack Illinois is, consider the pension shortfalls of its neighbors. Indiana’s is just $11 billion. Michigan’s, $8 billion. Wisconsin’s, $4 billion. Iowa’s, $2 billion.

Politicians from both sides of the aisle have made this mess over the past few decades. They’ve doled out benefits far faster than Illinois taxpayers could ever pay for them, which we’ve documented in great detail here and here. Lawmakers continued to sweeten those benefits – like compounded colas – even as the crisis deepened. Illinois politicians were even charged by the SEC for securities fraud from 2005 to 2009 when they misled municipal bond investors about the state’s approach to funding its pension obligations.

It’s impossible to overstate just how menacing those massive pension shortfalls are to the future of this state and to the future of everyday Illinoisans. Illinoisans already pay the nation’s highest property taxes. Home values have barely kept up with inflation since 2000 – Illinois has had the country’s worst housing performance. And a net of more than 1.5 million residents have been squeezed out of the state over the last two decades. Households across the state are being impoverished and families are being broken up, in large part due to the crushing cost of pensions.

Read more here.

State Rep. Martin McLaughlin, R-Barrington Hills (left) and Democratic nominee Maria Peterson. |
Sun-Times file and provided

By Mitchell Armentrout | Chicago Sun*Times

A northwest suburban GOP state representative appears poised for reelection by a margin of just 47 votes over a better-funded Democratic challenger.

With the final ballots counted this week in the hotly contested 52nd House District that includes Algonquin, Wauconda and Mundelein, Republican state Rep. Martin McLaughlin, R-Barrington Hills, had 29,520 votes — about 50.04% of the total — compared to 29,473 for Democratic challenger Maria Peterson.

The Associated Press had not called the race as of Wednesday afternoon.

McLaughlin held a narrow lead on election night before two weeks of counting mail-in ballots. He declared victory three days after the Nov. 5 election, calling his lead “insurmountable.”

But Peterson’s campaign manager, Josh Kilroy, noted Wednesday that the challenger had cut McLaughlin’s margin by about 400 votes since the incumbent declared victory.

“We’re waiting with bated breath for the final results,” Kilroy said. Peterson has not conceded — and has not ruled out requesting a recount.

All voting precincts have been tallied up, but results aren’t official until they’re certified by county clerks and the Illinois State Board of Elections.

The 52nd District includes parts of four counties: Cook, Lake, McHenry and a small sliver of Kane.

The official canvass of votes was released Tuesday for Kane County, which accounted for a mere 73 votes in the race — 48 for McLaughlin and 25 for Peterson.

Results will be certified Friday for Lake County, which covers the biggest portion of the district. Peterson led there with 19,332 votes to 18,569 for McLaughlin.

Results are expected to be certified Nov. 25 in McHenry County — where McLaughlin led with 6,216 votes to 5,701 for Peterson — and by Nov. 26 in Cook County, where McLaughlin’s advantage was 4,687 votes to 4,415 for Peterson.

The state Board of Elections is expected to certify all general election results by Dec. 6.

If the numbers hold, they’ll hand a third term to McLaughlin and a second straight electoral heartbreaker to Peterson, a retired attorney for the U.S. Department of Labor. The North Barrington resident lost her 2022 state Senate bid by only 385 votes to former Senate Republican Leader Dan McConchie in the 26th District.

There are no automatic recounts under Illinois law. Peterson would have to request a recount within five days of certification — and pay for it, too.

Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch put major Democratic Party chips behind Peterson in hopes of adding the purple district’s seat to his caucus’ statehouse super-majority. As it stands, Democrats appear likely to maintain their 78-40 advantage over Republicans in the chamber.

“After the Speaker and Majority Democrats provided my opponent with over [$3 million] in campaign contributions to misrepresent my record and positions, the great people of the 52nd District were nevertheless still able to see through these negative lies and provide me with another opportunity to represent our interests in Springfield,” McLaughlin said in a statement.

More here.

@properties’ John Morrison and Mimi Noyes with 7 Fox Hunt Road in Barrington Hills | @properties, Google Maps

By Kelli Duncan | The Real Deal

A 70-acre estate has hit the market in Barrington Hills for $22 million, a listing that would set a record for the northwest Chicago suburb if the home sells at that price. 

Built in the style of a classic English Country Manor, the estate, known as Hidden Ponds, is located at 7 Fox Hunt Road in Barrington Hills. It has 8 bedrooms and 14 bathrooms, and spans 30,600 square feet for a list price of $719 per square foot, or $314,000 per acre, according to public listing information. 

The listing is another sign of growing interest among ultra-luxury buyers to invest in the suburbs. 

“The buyer profile is really somebody who likes to remain private — celebrities, sports athletes, or a large corporate person,” said Mimi Noyes of Morrison Home Team at @properties Christie’s International Real Estate. Noyes has the listing along with John Morrison, owner of Morrison Home Team. 

Noyes was also involved in the deal the last time the home sold, in 2012. Its sale price of $7.5 million ($245 per square foot) set a record for Barrington Hills back then as well, she said. 

By far the priciest listing in the village, the Hidden Ponds estate’s asking price will test the top of the market in Barrington Hills. 

A mansion that appeared in the TV show “Empire” came close with an original listing price of $15.3 million, but its price was cut nearly in half after the property sat on the market for over a decade and failed to sell at an auction last summer. That 17,600-square-foot estate at 45 Lakeview Lane, which is owned by Sam and Geralyn Cecola, was priced just shy of $7.9 million over the summer, but it has since been removed from the market. 

Read on here.

By Todd Feurer | CBS Chicago

After nearly 30 years on the Chicago scene, Blue Man Group is nearing its final curtain call, preparing to end its longtime run at the Briar Street Theatre early next year.

“I am honored and humbled to be part of the historic evolution of Blue Man Group, which started in New York back in 1991, and so it is with deepest gratitude to announce the final performances in Chicago,” said Blue Man Group managing director Jack Kenn. “Blue Man Group is unlike anything else in the world and is undeniably one of the most recognized and successful entertainment productions because of the hardworking cast, crew and creative team. It was because of them that these shows captured millions of hearts night after night, and we give our utmost thanks.”

The show featuring three men in bald caps and blue grease paint takes visitors through an experience filled with unique sights and sounds.

Blue Man Group still has ongoing shows in Boston and Las Vegas, and will begin performing in Orlando in April 2025.

The final performance in Chicago is Jan. 5.