Illinois quick hits: Ag incentives announced; Cook County announces increased budget
Ag incentives announced
The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency and the Illinois Department of Agriculture have announced $67 million in funding to offer cost-share/financial incentives to producers and landowners who implement no-till or strip-till starting in the fall of 2025.
The program intends to promote the implementation of no-till and strip-till via the Partners for Conservation Program and the State of Illinois Priority Climate Action Plan.
CWD testing results by phone
The Illinois Department of Natural Resources will use a new automated notification system to relay chronic wasting disease test results to deer hunters, starting with the current deer season.
Hunters who provide provide a mobile phone number with their CWD sample and have a valid email address linked to their “ExploreMoreIL” account will receive text and email notifications of test results.
The check CWD test results website is still available to hunters regardless of whether they receive text or email notifications.
Cook County announces increased budget
Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle has unveiled a proposed $10 billion budget recommendation for Fiscal Year 2026.
Preckwinkle said the budget does not include layoffs, tax increases or cuts to essential services.
Cook County’s budget increased from $5.2 billion in fiscal year 2018 to $9.94 billion for 2025.
Latest News Stories
Advocates call on tax reform to reduce national debt
Supreme Court allows mail-order abortion drugs
McCuskey, coalition of AGs urge SEC to review OpenAI
Springfield strains for balanced budget; Illinois revenue forecast shifts down
DOJ targets healthcare fraud in California, Arizona, Nevada
Illinois Quick Hits: University of Chicago to offer free tuition
Human capabilities focused in student, teacher artificial intelligence guide
U.S. House to vote on bills targeting fraudulent, foreign election donations
Responses due in Virginia redistricting appeal
Illinois Republicans blame taxes, lawsuits after Morton Salt exits Chicago
Data center regulations weighed; some worry over jobs, energy, taxes
Solutions differ for Chicago Public Schools’ potential $1B deficit