Pritzker goes to Jacksonville to announce money for downtown revitalization projects
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
Gov. JB Pritzker's running mate is a fellow Chicagoan, but says he will ‘represent all of Illinois'
During an appearance at a Bronzeville restaurant on Wednesday with his new running mate, Gov. JB Pritzker dismissed any suggestion that he was ignoring other areas of the state when he chose a fellow Chicagoan for his 2026 reelection bid. The governor a day earlier announced he had selected Christian Mitchell, a former state representative for parts of the South Side and a former deputy governor, to run as lieutenant governor, and their visit to Peach's restaurant on 47th Street was their first public joint appearance. 'When you're a state rep, you don't just represent the people in your district. You are also are voting on things that are good for people all across the state,' Pritzker said, standing next to Mitchell by a case of sweet drinks and cake in the crowded restaurant. 'We have passed bills that have been highly beneficial to job creation, expansion of health care, funding of education for people who live in — whether it's Anna, Carbondale or Quincy or Champaign.' Pritzker's partner in his first two terms, Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, is running to succeed retiring U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, which left the position open. Stratton and Mitchell are both Black and live on the South Side, bringing a different perspective to the ticket than the governor. The Chicago versus downstate dynamic in has been an source of friction in state politics for years, and Pritzker's choice figures to play into that issue going forward. For his part, Mitchell, 38, said he is ready to meet people from all over Illinois. 'In a tavern, at a bar, at a coffee shop, I'm willing to go anywhere, because my goal is to represent all of Illinois,' he said, after he and Pritzker spent about a half hour greeting a crowd of supporters and early lunch customers at Peach's, whose website features a photo of former President Barack Obama at the restaurant's counter. Mitchell's agenda as a legislator meshed closely with Pritzker's initiatives during the governor's two terms. Mitchell was among a group of legislators who called for a task force to study the possible legalization of recreational marijuana, and he introduced a proposal to eliminate cash bail — both ideas that eventually became reality after Pritzker became governor. During the 2018 election cycle, Mitchell also served as executive director of the Illinois Democratic Party, becoming the first African American to hold the position. He was a deputy governor in the Pritzker administration from 2019 to 2023 and a lead strategist on energy issues, including the landmark 2021 Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. Since 2023, he's overseen government relations and other offices at the University of Chicago, his alma mater. Pritzker has repeatedly said the next lieutenant governor will have to fill the legacy being left by Stratton. Stratton raised more than $1 million in her first quarter as a Senate candidate, according to her campaign, trailing fellow Democratic candidate and U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi of Schaumburg, whose campaign reported it raised more than $3.1 million. Krishnamoorthi, one of the top fundraisers in the House, ended the quarter with $21 million on hand, according to his campaign. Stratton has only had a few months to build up her operation, Pritzker noted when asked about the fundraising numbers Wednesday. The extent to which Pritzker, a billionaire who spent $350 million on his first two campaigns for governor, ends up supporting Stratton financially remains to be seen. 'You have to remember that Juliana has not had to raise money as lieutenant governor for me, and so she's going against people who have raised money for the last number of years,' Pritzker, who quickly endorsed Stratton this spring, said. 'She doesn't need to have as much as anyone else in the race. She is somebody that people all across the state know and admire.'


Chicago Tribune
2 days ago
- Chicago Tribune
Gov. JB Pritzker's running mate is a fellow Chicagoan, but says he will ‘represent all of Illinois'
During an appearance at a Bronzeville restaurant on Wednesday with his new running mate, Gov. JB Pritzker dismissed any suggestion that he was ignoring other areas of the state when he chose a fellow Chicagoan for his 2026 reelection bid. The governor a day earlier announced he had selected Christian Mitchell, a former state representative for parts of the South Side and a former deputy governor, to run as lieutenant governor, and their visit to Peach's restaurant on 47th Street was their first public joint appearance. 'When you're a state rep, you don't just represent the people in your district. You are also are voting on things that are good for people all across the state,' Pritzker said, standing next to Mitchell by a case of sweet drinks and cake in the crowded restaurant. 'We have passed bills that have been highly beneficial to job creation, expansion of health care, funding of education for people who live in — whether it's Anna, Carbondale or Quincy or Champaign.' Pritzker's partner in his first two terms, Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, is running to succeed retiring U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, which left the position open. Stratton and Mitchell are both Black and live on the South Side, bringing a different perspective to the ticket than the governor. The Chicago versus downstate dynamic in has been an source of friction in state politics for years, and Pritzker's choice figures to play into that issue going forward. For his part, Mitchell, 38, said he is ready to meet people from all over Illinois. 'In a tavern, at a bar, at a coffee shop, I'm willing to go anywhere, because my goal is to represent all of Illinois,' he said, after he and Pritzker spent about a half hour greeting a crowd of supporters and early lunch customers at Peach's, whose website features a photo of former President Barack Obama at the restaurant's counter. Mitchell's agenda as a legislator meshed closely with Pritzker's initiatives during the governor's two terms. Mitchell was among a group of legislators who called for a task force to study the possible legalization of recreational marijuana, and he introduced a proposal to eliminate cash bail — both ideas that eventually became reality after Pritzker became governor. During the 2018 election cycle, Mitchell also served as executive director of the Illinois Democratic Party, becoming the first African American to hold the position. He was a deputy governor in the Pritzker administration from 2019 to 2023 and a lead strategist on energy issues, including the landmark 2021 Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. Since 2023, he's overseen government relations and other offices at the University of Chicago, his alma mater. Pritzker has repeatedly said the next lieutenant governor will have to fill the legacy being left by Stratton. Stratton raised more than $1 million in her first quarter as a Senate candidate, according to her campaign, trailing fellow Democratic candidate and U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi of Schaumburg, whose campaign reported it raised more than $3.1 million. Krishnamoorthi, one of the top fundraisers in the House, ended the quarter with $21 million on hand, according to his campaign. Stratton has only had a few months to build up her operation, Pritzker noted when asked about the fundraising numbers Wednesday. The extent to which Pritzker, a billionaire who spent $350 million on his first two campaigns for governor, ends up supporting Stratton financially remains to be seen. 'You have to remember that Juliana has not had to raise money as lieutenant governor for me, and so she's going against people who have raised money for the last number of years,' Pritzker, who quickly endorsed Stratton this spring, said. 'She doesn't need to have as much as anyone else in the race. She is somebody that people all across the state know and admire.'


Politico
2 days ago
- Politico
Christian Mitchell joins Pritzker's ticket
Good Wednesday morning, Illinois. My barbecue menu keeps growing. TOP TALKER PRITZKER's No. 2: Gov. JB Pritzker has tapped Christian Mitchell, a former deputy governor and veteran state representative, to be his lieutenant governor running mate in 2026. The move surprised some Democrats, who expected the governor to select someone with geographic diversity. Mitchell is a Chicagoan, though he did grow up in suburban Maywood. Mitchell brings legislative chops, and sometimes sharp-elbows, to the job. He's credited with negotiating the landmark Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, helping land the $45 billion Rebuild Illinois capital plan, and he managed the stockpile of supplies when the state was living through the Covid-19 pandemic. Maybe it's because of those trying times that Pritzker knows what Mitchell is made of. 'He's someone I have grown to trust,' Pritzker told reporters Tuesday at a bill signing. 'I've seen him usher enormous legislation through the legislature.' Mitchell, 38, also brings a youthfulness to the job at a time when the Democratic Party is looking for new faces and to address calls for generational change. And there's the Anne Caprara factor. Pritzker's chief of staff is a force in the governor's office and someone Mitchell works well with, and vice versa. That would be important should Pritzker become preoccupied with other, national endeavors. The lieutenant governor slot opened up when Juliana Stratton, who now holds the job, decided to run for the U.S. Senate seat that opened for the 2026 election. Here's Mitchell's introduction video. He sat down for a Q&A with WGN's Tahman Bradley Here are more details about his back story, by the Tribune's Olivia Olander Worth noting: It's the most low-profile statewide office in Illinois, by Lee Enterprises' Brenden Moore THE BUZZ MEGA MOVES: Illinois Democrats are criticizing the U.S. Senate's passage of President Donald Trump's sweeping tax and spending bill — a measure they say will devastate working families. 'Hundreds of thousands of people are going to lose their health care if this gets signed into law,' Pritzker told reporters at an unrelated news conference Tuesday. 'This is shameful.' The governor said Illinois isn't able to make up for the federal cuts. 'No state in the country can cover the cost of reinstating that health insurance that is today paid for, mostly by the federal government [and] partially by state government,' he said. In spite of the 'enormous' impact, Pritzker said provisions in the megabill aren't likely to take effect until next year, 'so we'll have to evaluate what changes we have to make in order to deal with it' in a possible special session or during veto session. Sen. Tammy Duckworth called the bill 'morally and fiscally irresponsible,' and Sen. Dick Durbin warned of rural hospitals having to close. It's the kind of messaging Democrats are sure to use as they face Republicans in 2026 and, even, 2028. Democratic activists zeroed in on Illinois' three Republicans in the House — which will vote on the Senate version of the bill with all its tax cuts and billions of dollars to address immigration at the border. A group delivered petitions to Congressman Mike Bost's Murphysboro office, urging him to vote against the megabill. And another group is driving a mobile digital billboard in Congressman Darin LaHood's district, where activists say 24,000 constituents would be affected by the Medicaid cuts proposed in the megabill. LaHood is leaning toward supporting the measure, telling the Sun-Times's Tina Sfondeles, 'Republicans have a responsibility to prevent the largest tax increase in American history and deliver on promises we made to the American people.' A national takeaway: Some House Republicans are shocked at what the Senate did to the first version of the bill, by POLITICO's Benjamin Guggenheim and Jordain Carney. RELATED — The scramble to return to DC for megabill vote: Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi hosted a virtual town hall while at the wheel of a 14-hour drive from his suburban Chicago home to Washington, by POLITICO's Aaron Pellish — How the megabill will impact local food pantries given Illinoisans could lose SNAP benefits, by Greg Trotter for the Block Club — Vance's potential 2028 Democratic rivals want him to be the face of the megabill, by POLITICO's Cheyanne M. Daniels If you are Mike Bost, Playbook would like to hear from you! Email: skapos@ WHERE'S JB At Peach's Restaurant at 11:45 a.m. with Christian Mitchell for a campaign event WHERE's BRANDON No official public events Where's Toni In Humboldt Park at 9:30 a.m. to celebrate the completion of the first two homes that are part of the Cook County Modular Homes Pilot Program Have a tip, suggestion, birthday, new job or a (gasp!) complaint? Email skapos@ BUSINESS OF POLITICS — NEW IN IL-09: State Rep. Hoan Huynh has filed his paperwork with the Federal Election Commission declaring he's running for the 9th Congressional District seat now held by U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky. The Democratic state representative won his first statehouse race in 2022 after knocking on the doors of every street in his district on Chicago's North Side. Huynh is planning a kick-off rally Tuesday. Details here — Endorsement: Daniel Biss, the Evanston mayor running for Congress in the 9th District, has been endorsed by state Sen. Mark Walker, a Democrat from the Arlington Heights 27th District. In a statement, Walker called Biss, 'one of the most ethical, hardworking, courageous and effective public servants I have ever seen. He will be a game changer.' — Democratic state Rep. Abdelnasser Rashid will report more than $500,000 cash on hand in the upcoming quarterly filing, including about $230,000 raised in the second quarter, according to his reelection campaign. 'This level of support ensures we'll have the resources to define any race on our terms,' said Campaign Chair Clem Balanoff in a statement. THE STATEWIDES — AG Kwame Raoul joins suit against Trump administration over immigrant Medicaid data: 'The suit, announced Tuesday, seeks to stop federal immigration officials from securing more health documentation or using the already obtained Medicaid records of millions nationwide to target enrollees for immigration enforcement,' by the Sun-Times' Violet Miller. — Pritzker signs health care legislation: 'The bills put more controls on the pricing of pharmaceutical drugs sold through insurance plans while expanding insurance coverage for certain kinds of hospital costs,' by Capitol News' Peter Hancock. — The cost of entry is crushing Illinois' cannabis entrepreneurs: 'Almost half of all marijuana business permits issued to date in Illinois — mostly held by social equity entrepreneurs — have not opened for business and are sitting idle,' by Crain's John Schroyer. CHICAGO — NASCAR race is on track this weekend, but its future is unclear: 'Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd) sent a letter to NASCAR Chicago Street Race President Julie Giese requesting a post-race meeting to discuss the event's impact and future. The letter was also signed by Alds. Bill Conway (34th), Pat Dowell (4th) and Brendan Reilly (42nd),' by the Block Club's Melody Mercado. — Skeptical aldermen urge Chicago police to not work with ICE on Trump deportations: A City Council committee ordered police, emergency dispatchers and Mayor Brandon Johnson's administration to share more information about a June 4 deportation raid in which federal immigration agents clashed with protesters and several aldermen, by the Tribune's Jake Sheridan and Nell Salzman. — CPS is reducing assistants assigned to some special ed classes, worrying educators and parents, by WBEZ's Sarah Karp — Trump Tower to pay $4.8M in settlement to resolve complaint about fish killed in the Chicago River, by Fox 32 — Canadian expats in Chicago flock to Hopleaf to celebrate Canada Day, denounce Trump, by Bob Chiarito for the Sun-Times TAKING NAMES — Cardinal Blase Cupich met with Pope Leo XIV at the Vatican, via Per Mariam's Michael Haynes — Precious Brady-Davis, a commissioner with the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, has been selected to attend the Harvard Kennedy School Senior Executives in State and Local Government program. — Graham Grady has been named board chair of the Lloyd A. Fry Foundation after serving on the board since 2008. The foundation provides grants focused on community violence intervention. Grady is a noted civic leader who by day is an attorney at Taft Stettinius & Hollister. — Carlos X. Montoya has been named chair of the Latino Leadership Council. In his day job, Montoya is CEO of I-ON Digital. He's also the former head of Republic Bank of Chicago and the former chair of the Illinois Property Tax Appeals Board. — Giving props: Paul Crimmins led the Mayer Brown team that advised Lake Forest-based Packaging Corporation of America on its $1.8 billion purchase of Greif Inc., a containerboard company. Also on Crimmins' team from the firm's Chicago and New York offices: Debra Hoffman, Mae Rogers, Mike Serafini, Kim Leffert and Jaimy Hamburg, and associates Alexander Aschi, Ben Crosby and Hannah Vanderlaan. MEDIA MATTERS — Lynn Sweet, who for years has headed the Sun-Times' D.C. coverage, is taking on an innovative new role working with the audience team to report news and offer quick explainers on a range of media platforms, including TikTok and Instagram. She'll work across the newsroom and with marketing and other departments, too. And Tina Sfondeles is now national political reporter in Chicago, according to the Sun-Times' Jennifer Kho. — Amy Jacobson, the conservative radio personality, is out at AM560 due to 'a cost-cutting move.' But she's already launching a podcast. Her radio co-host Dan Proft will continue on the air, via the Illinois Review. Reader Digest We asked what event you missed because of work. Laura Kotelman: 'The Cubs World Series Parade. What was I thinking?!' Jim Lyons: 'Two of my cousins' weddings. Was working an afternoon shift and could not get anyone to cover for me.' Luis Narváez: 'Celebrations for the Cubs, Blackhawks and Sky.' Alexander Sutton: 'Argentina's President Milei came to speak in my town. I had tickets. Work had other plans!' Timothy Thomas: 'The millennium celebrations held Dec. 31, 1999, due to manning a post at Navy Pier.' NEXT QUESTION: Who puts on a jaw-dropping fireworks show in Illinois? THE NATIONAL TAKE — Some good news about political polarization: It can change, by POLITICO's Holly Otterbein — Column: Trump's National Security Council is flailing, by POLITICO's Nahal Toosi — Trump makes up with DeSantis at 'Alligator Alcatraz': 'You'll always be my friend,' by POLITICO's Kimberly Leonard IN MEMORIAM — Kenneth Norgan, stalwart patron of Harris Theater, dies, by Bob Goldsborough for the Tribune KUDOS — Stomping Ground Strategies won six Bulldog PR Awards, including the Grand Prize for Best PR Campaign of the Year for 'More Plants on Plates Illinois,' a multilingual campaign that addressed plant-based school lunch options across Illinois. Transitions — Michael E. Holden is now a senior partner in Romanucci & Blandin's Chicago office. He's been with the firm since 2005, starting as a law clerk while in law school before becoming an attorney and partner. TRIVIA TUESDAY's ANSWER: Congrats to Christine Svenson and Ed Mazur for correctly answering that the Honorable Ilana Diamond Rovner was born in Riga, Latvia. She was the first woman appointed to the Seventh Circuit TODAY's QUESTION: Who was the Cubs outfielder who made a sparkling catch to preserve Don Cardwell's no-hitter? Email skapos@ HAPPY BIRTHDAY Illinois Senate Minority Leader John Curran, state Rep. Will Davis, Chicago Ald. Bennett Lawson, Illinois Central College VP and former state Rep. Mike Unes, Illinois Supreme Court Commission on Professionalism Chief Counsel Mark Palmer, Illinois AFL-CIO Chief of Staff Samantha McClain, Stricklin & Associates VP Jennifer Stricklin, former SEIU executive director Jerry Morrison, The Parent Collective CEO Sam Chapman, political consultant Bill Velazquez, attorney and organizer Stacey Rubin Silver, CRE Digital Content Researcher Jennifer Zucker Healy, lifestyle blogger Zondra Hughes and restaurateur Curtis Duffy -30-