Illinois
Advocate will soon stop accepting some Blue Cross Blue Shield plans in Illinois
Advocate’s health group will soon stop accepting certain Blue Cross Blue Shield insurance plans in Illinois.
According to Blue Cross Blue Shield, Advocate Physician Partners will not be part of the insurance giant’s HMO Illinois network starting July 1, 2025.
An Advocate Health Care spokesperson confirmed the news to NBC Chicago, saying “certain providers will no longer participate in the BCBS HMO Illinois plan,” though the health system will “continue to work closely with Blue Cross and remain in network for a range of other Blue plans.”
The change won’t impact hospitals, according to the spokesperson.
“We will always act in the best interest of our patients, and we are committed to ensuring that any patient undergoing treatment maintains access to high-quality coordinated care,” the spokesperson said.
Blue Cross said Advocate will remain in its Blue Advantage HMO network, which is a more affordable health care plan.
According to the company, the following groups are among the Advocate partners leaving the BCBS HMO network this summer:
- Advocate Christ Hospital Physician Partners
- Advocate Condell Physician Partners
- Advocate Good Samaritan Physician Partners
- Advocate Good Shepherd Physician Partners
- Advocate Illinois Masonic Physician Partners
- Advocate Lutheran General Physician Partners
- Advocate Medical Group
- Advocate Medical Group West
- Advocate Sherman Physician Partners
- Advocate South Suburban Physician Partners
- Advocate Trinity Physician Partners
According to the Chicago Teachers’ Pension Fund, some residents began receiving letters in February about the change.
Illinois
Chicago school board votes against helping thousands of Chicago students
The Chicago Board of Education wants Gov. J.B. Pritzker to reject a federal program offering donated money to students.
A new Chicago Board of Education resolution urges Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Illinois lawmakers to reject a federal program that will provide donor money for students’ academic needs.
The measure passed 15-0 with three members abstaining.
Many on the board appeared to rely on the inaccurate claim that public money will be diverted for private education. But some seemed wary of blindly following the Chicago Teachers Union, which is less popular than ever.
Board member Jennifer Custer indicated she has seen a lot of community interest and that the feedback she’s heard is “50-50 for and against” the federal program.
Before the vote, board member Ellen Rosenfeld motioned to table the resolution indefinitely. While her motion was unsuccessful, Rosenfeld made clear she believed the issue belongs instead on the board’s legislative agenda.
If the state opts into the program, thousands of K-12 Chicago Public School students could receive donor money for tutoring, test fees, career coaching, books and more.
The money would be donated by taxpayers, who would get a dollar-for-dollar federal tax credit up to $1,700 each year. Any taxpayer can get the credit for a qualified contribution to a tax-exempt scholarship-granting organization.
That means the only cost to the federal government is minimal foregone income tax revenue. There is no cost to states, only the benefit of more help flowing directly to students.
If Pritzker does not opt Illinois into the program, residents will watch the money flow to other states.
Pritzker has until Jan. 1, 2027, to decide if over a million Illinois families and students will be able to access donated education money for their academic needs.
Illinois
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Illinois
Missing man’s body found in retention pond in Elk Grove Village, police say
ELK GROVE VILLAGE, Ill. (WLS) — The body of a missing man was found in a retention pond Thursday in the northwest suburbs, police said.
Chopper 7 was over the scene at a retention pond at Higgins and Innovation Drive in Elk Grove Village, in front of a number of warehouses in the area.
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There was a large police presence there for multiple hours, surrounding the water.
Chopper 7 witnessed dive teams go in and out of the water, and there were paramedics on scene.
Elk Grove Police confirmed a male body was found in the water in the 700 block of Innovation Drive. The Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office responded to the scene.
Police identified the body as a missing 26-year-old man named Alexis Ramirez.
Ramirez had been missing since March 10. Elk Grove Police were searching the same area after Ramirez went missing after he was the sole occupant of a single-vehicle crash near Higgins and Brennan Boulevard, which is right by the pond he was found in on Thursday.
Police believe he walked away from that scene before officers arrived. At that time, the police search led to no one being found.
ABC7 spoke to the family of Ramirez on the scene Thursday, and they appeared very emotional.
Police say there is no evidence of foul play at this time as they send out their condolences to the family.
No further information was immediately available.
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