Illinois
Another round of severe weather threatens Illinois, Indiana as more than 100,000 remain without power
More than 43,000 people in Illinois and more than 84,000 in northwest Indiana were without power Friday morning after severe thunderstorms swept through the Chicago area, leaving behind major storm damage, including downed power lines and snapped trees that fell on houses and cars.
The damage comes as another round of potentially strong-to-severe storms threaten the Chicago area, starting in the afternoon.
As of 5:20 a.m., 43,674 Illinois customers were facing power outages, ComEd’s outage map showed. The majority of those outages were in Cook County, where more than 30,000 people were without power.
Thousands of power outages were also recorded in Will County, the map showed, along with hundreds more in McHenry, Lake and DuPage Counties.
In an alert on ComEd’s website, the utility company said crews were actively working to restore outages.
“Based on the history of similar storms of this size, across the ComEd service area, we expect 80% of outages to be restored by 11 p.m. on Friday, 5/16 with remaining outages restored by 3 p.m. on Saturday, 5/17,” the alert said.
In northern Indiana, NIPSCO said approximately 84,600 customers were without power due to heavy rainfall and 60 mile-per-hour winds.
“Due to the extent of the damage and the ongoing inclement weather conditions, an estimate of when power will be restored is not able to be determined at this time,” the utility said.
In Chicago, the storm delayed Beyoncé’s show at Soldier Field for several hours, with photos and video posted to social media showing rain pouring down on the venue.
The storms also led to area-wide tornado watches, and briefly caused a ground stop at O’Hare International Airport.
In the suburbs, multiple wind gusts of nearly 70 miles per hour were reported in DeKalb County, with powerful winds knocking down traffic lights in suburban Lombard.
Branches were broken, trees snapped in half and roof damage was reported in an area of Manhattan near Sweedler Road and Gougar Road after the storms tore through Will County, officials said.
Large hail was also present all around the area, especially in Lake County in Illinois, where golf ball-size hail was reported in Winthrop Harbor and Gurnee, according to trained weather spotters.
Lake County also saw plenty of wind damage, with a tree smashing into a house in Antioch.
In Chicago’s West Ridge neighborhood early Friday morning, photos showed a massive downed tree on parked cars and blocking the entire road.
More severe storms possible
Friday’s forecast calls for a warm and mostly sunny day with highs in the mid 80s. And while most of the area is expected to stay dry, there is a chance for an isolated, strong-to-severe storm in the afternoon and evening, the NBC 5 Storm Team said, especially to the southeast and in northwest Indiana.
According to the Storm Prediction Center, northwest Indiana and some of Chicago’s southeastern suburbs including Kankakee, were at a “slight” risk of severe weather, which ranks as level two of five. The rest of northeastern Illinois was at a “marginal” risk, which ranks as level one.
“Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible late this afternoon into early this evening,” the National Weather Service said, “mainly for areas along and east of Interstate 55.”
According to the NWS, the main severe weather threats are large hail and damaging winds, with gusts outside storms as high as 45 mph.
Fire weather watch
All of northeastern Illinois will go under a fire weather watch beginning at 10 a.m. due to the strong, southerly winds and low humidity.
“Any fire that develops will catch and spread quickly,” the NWS said. “Outdoor burning is not recommended.”
Into the weekend, temperatures are expected to dip, the NBC 5 Storm Team said, with more spring-like weather in the 60s.
Illinois
Illinois State throws 5 interceptions but still stuns No. 1 NDSU in FCS playoffs
Tommy Rittenhouse threw five interceptions Saturday. He atoned big time when it mattered most.
The Illinois State quarterback threw two touchdown passes to wide receiver Daniel Sobkowicz in the final three minutes and completed a gutsy 2-point PAT as the unranked Redbirds defeated No. 1 North Dakota State 29-28 in the second round of the FCS playoffs in the Fargodome on Saturday.
The Bison (12-1), the No. 1 seed, were defending FCS champions and had not lost since Nov. 23, 2024. The Bison won the FCS title 10 times from 2011 to 2024 and had beaten the Redbirds 14 straight times.
“I’ll do it again if we win by 1 point, I don’t care,” Rittenhouse said of his five INTs. “My first three interceptions were tipped at the line of scrimmage. They (NDSU) did a great job all game. That’s a really tough defense to go against, but I just trusted the guys around me. Everyone was coming up to me saying it, and I knew I was going to. That’s all I could do to give us a chance.”
WE TOLD Y’ALL ABOUT THAT RITTENHOUSE TO SOBKOWICZ CONNECTION 🤯 https://t.co/Qt7MuPLLKr pic.twitter.com/2dVZxKMTnT
— Illinois State Football (@RedbirdFB) December 6, 2025
Illinois State head coach Brock Spack said his team was partly motivated by their 42-10 defeat to UC Davis in the second round last year.
“Sometimes what happens in the last game of the season is good for you,” Spack said. “That (loss) really bothered them. That’s what I told them today, lets just be us. Just be us. That’s all you gotta do and you can win the game.”
By most measures, the Redbirds (10-4) had little chance of winning. The Bison returned one of Rittenhouse’s picks 73 yards for a touchdown and another one 21 yards to the Illinois State 4, leading to a touchdown that gave NDSU a 28-14 lead with less than 13 minutes remaining in the game.
But NDSU senior quarterback Cole Payton, considered an NFL draft prospect, struggled for most of the game and completed 4 of 12 passes for 101 yards and one touchdown. He was injured after being strip-sacked by Jake Anderson, who recovered the fumble to give Illinois State the ball at the NDSU 23 with 1:51 left in the game.
Several plays later, on fourth down and goal from the NDSU 6, Rittenhouse scrambled right and threw to a leaping Sobkowicz for their third TD connection of the day to bring the Redbirds to within a point.
“I’m not the best at rolling to the right, throwing it back, and I found that good touch and Dan went up and made the play,” Rittenhouse said.
“The play (call) didn’t plan out how we wanted it to, but when you have Tommy at quarterback and he’s got his legs and scramble drill, you gotta make sure you’re doing everything you can to get open,” Sobkowicz said. “The scramble drill is the biggest thing in football that gets overlooked, and that a big thing that our team does really well, is the scramble drill, especially because we have Tommy.”
Rather than try a PAT kick and potentially send the game into overtime, Spack opted to go for 2. Rittenhouse fired a dart to Scotty Presson Jr. in the end zone to put the Redbirds on top.
Spack said he and his coaching staff had no hesitation about going for 2.
“I thought myself earlier in the week, we gotta for 2,” Spack said. “We met as a staff and I said, listen fellas, if it gets to that down here we need to go for 2. Lo and behold, it came up and we did. So, there was really no waffling. Everybody knew.”
REDBIRDS WITH A 2PT CONVERSION🤯🤯
📺ESPN+#ValleyFootball x #FCS x @RedbirdFB x @NCAA_FCS pic.twitter.com/llBWjZmnVm
— Valley Football (@ValleyFootball) December 6, 2025
Taking over at quarterback for the injured Payton, Nathan Hayes got the Bison to their own 44 but couldn’t convert on fourth down with 12 seconds left.
Illinois State will play the winner of the UC Davis-Rhode Island game in the next round. The FCS bracket is shown here.
Illinois
As AT&T plans to end landline service in Illinois, here’s why, a looming deadline and more
In a sign of changing times, AT&T, the nation’s largest wireless provider, will be switching from traditional landlines in favor of a more modern option.
Customers have received letters explaining the utility will be pulling the plug on landlines in March of 2027 across Illinois. AT&T previously announced its intention to eliminate copper-based phone services across all of its service areas in the United States by 2029.
The phasing-out process will take multiple years, a spokesperson said, and no customers will be left without access to voice or 911 service.
While the company claims customer interest has dipped in recent years, others maintain there’s still a need for traditional landlines.
Here’s what you need to know about the upcoming chance, what opponents say and how the replacement option will work.
What is happening and why?
The utility is phasing out landline use and upgrading its copper-based service to “newer, less expensive options ” including fiber optic networks.
According to AT&T, orders for traditional landline voice services have decreased 96% since 2014 and less than 2% of eligible customers are still using the legacy landline technology.
Citizens Utility Board response
The Citizens Utility Board, which opposes the shift, said the organization is of the belief that “there are still a significant number of people–many of them AT&T’s longest-standing and most loyal customers–who could benefit from the reliability and affordability of traditional phone service.”
“Traditional landline service was once the most reliable and affordable option for many customers who just wanted no-frills phone service,” Communications Director Jim Chilsen said. “It is sad and frustrating how AT&T in recent years has increased the price of traditional landline service, pushing many customers to more expensive and less reliable options–and now the phone giant is ending the service altogether.”
What is replacing traditional landlines? How does it work?
A digital home phone service that operates similar to a traditional landline – AT&T Phone — Advanced, also called AP-A, is offered at a comparable or sometimes lower cost, a company spokesperson said.
Customers who make the switch can keep their existing number and can even use their current hone, according to AT&T. It also works with a number of other technologies, including fax machines, alarms, elevators and medical monitoring devices.
Unlike the traditional landlines, AP-A uses AT&T’s wireless network and allows customers to stay connected during an outage by tapping into broadband connection as a backup, the utility explained.
Illinois
Illinois man charged with attempted murder after officer struck by vehicle
Antwan Ford | Chicago police
CHICAGO – A Ford Heights man has been charged after he allegedly struck and seriously injured a law enforcement officer with a vehicle while trying to flee arrest Tuesday on Chicago’s South Side.
What we know:
Antwan Ford, 27, was arrested Wednesday morning in Vernon Hills by Chicago police and the U.S. Marshals Great Lakes Regional Fugitive Task Force, according to police.
He is accused of hitting a member of the Cook County Fugitive Task Force with his vehicle as officers tried to apprehend him around 1:27 p.m. Tuesday in the 2500 block of East 74th Street in the South Shore neighborhood.
Ford was charged with attempted murder, aggravated battery to a peace officer and leaving the scene of an accident involving injury or death, all felonies, police said.
The injured officer suffered serious injuries, though authorities have not released additional details.
What we don’t know:
It was not immediately clear why authorities were trying to arrest him.
What’s next:
Ford is scheduled for a detention hearing Friday.
The Source: The information in this report came from the Chicago Police Department.
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