Illinois
Chicago weather: Heavy downpours pound northeast Illinois, with rain lasting all day
Many in the Chicago area were waking up to a wet and rainy morning as periods of showers and thunderstorms continue at times Thursday.
As of 5:25 a.m., Live Doppler 5 radar for Illinois showed heavy rain pounding down across counties to the north, northwest and west, including DeKalb, McHenry, Lake and Kane. Some areas to the southeast were also seeing downpours, including Joliet, Braidwood, Channahon, Manhattan and Morris.
On the I-294 tollway in Lake County, street lights showed heavy rain hammering the drive. The rain could snarl the morning commute for some, NBC 5 traffic reporter Kye Martin said, as it continues to create slick and slippery conditions.
At 6 a.m., Martin noted crashes on I-294 at 115th, and a ramp crash on I-290 at Mannheim going northbound.
According to the NBC 5 Storm Team, the rain will continue for the most part through the late morning hours, with rain to the southeast lifting northward into central Cook County.
Rain in the morning hours will be perhaps the heaviest, NBC 5 Storm Team meteorologist Alicia Roman said with showers becoming more spotty through the afternoon. The rain would continue on-and-off through the evening.
“Still keeping rain chances pretty much at every time, but not everyone will see it,” Roman said, of the scattered spread. Severe weather was not expected.
Temperatures Thursday will be in the 60s, with a bit of a breeze.
“That’s a couple degrees below average for this time of year,” Roman noted.
Friday looks to stay mostly dry during the daytime, though another wave of rain could move in around 7 p.m. in counties to the north and west. That rain will lift northward overnight, Roman said, with a low-end chance of showers continuing through the early Saturday morning hours.
Temperatures Friday will remain in the 60s, Roman said. The weekend looks to be cooler, with temperatures in the 50s and 60s.
The NBC 5 10-day Chicago area forecast showed warmer and brighter days next week, with more dry time and higher temperatures.
Illinois
Illinois making progress shrinking gender pay gap, but disparities persist: report
CHICAGO (WLS) — A new report shows Illinois is making progress shrinking the gender pay gap, but disparities in pay still persist, particularly for some minority workers.
Professor Robert Bruno, director of labor education and the Project for Middle Class Renewal at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, joined ABC7 Chicago Monday to talk more about it.
ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch
He discussed the study and how it was conducted, its key findings about the gender pay gap, what was learned about minority workers and why some industries were more impacted than others.
SEE ALSO: Bronzeville celebration focuses on pay gap between Black women, white men
He also touched on his recommendations from the report.
“Ensuring pay equity does more than protect justice in the workplace,” Bruno said. “Paying workers fairly regardless of race or gender contributes to a lifetime of higher earnings.”
Visit https://lep.illinois.edu/project-for-middle-class-renewal for more information.
Copyright © 2025 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.
Illinois
Illinois church Nativity shows baby Jesus zip-tied by ICE agents
EVANSTON, Ill. – An Illinois church is facing criticism for displaying a Nativity scene that depicts baby Jesus with his hands zip-tied and guarded by figures styled as Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents.
Lake Street Church of Evanston is displaying the scene outside on its grounds. Baby Jesus is wrapped in a thin blanket resembling aluminum foil, which the church said is a reference to the emergency blankets used in detention facilities. Masked centurions, officers in the ancient Roman army, are depicted in sunglasses and green vests labeled “ICE.”
It also shows Mother Mary wearing a respirator mask “to protect herself from tear gas,” according to the church. Joseph is also masked.
In a Facebook post last week, the church said the installation reimagines the Nativity as a scene of forced family separation, drawing parallels between the Holy Family’s refugee flight and modern immigration detention practices.
“This installation reimagines the nativity as a scene of forced family separation, drawing direct parallels between the Holy Family’s refugee experience and contemporary immigration detention practices,” the post reads.
“‘The Holy Family were refugees. This is not political interpretation, this is the reality described in the stories our tradition has told and retold for millenia,’” it continues. “‘By witnessing this familiar story through the reality faced by migrants today, we hope to restore its radical edge, and to ask what it means to celebrate the birth of a refugee child while turning away those who follow in that child’s footsteps.’”
The church, which also hangs Black Lives Matter banners and social justice banners, said the zip ties on the baby’s wrists directly reference children who were zip-tied by agents during a raid on a Chicago apartment building earlier this year. The church claims most residents were U.S. citizens in that incident. It called the display a stark reminder that “enforcement terror does not discriminate by documentation status.”
In recent days, it appears Mary’s gas mask has been removed, while the zip ties have been cut from the baby Jesus’ hands.
The Facebook post and display drew both criticism and praise from commenters.
“Joseph and Mary went to Bethlehem because they had to return to Joseph’s ancestral home to be counted in the census,” one person wrote. “So Trump is just following that example and sending people HOME per a legal requirement. If they want to immigrate LEGALLY, they can fill out the paperwork before they leave and self-deport.”
“Blasphemy!!! Father forgive them, they know not what they do,” another wrote.
A different commenter argued the church had misinterpreted the Bible: “The Holy Family were refugees… do you guys read the Bible? Mary and Joseph travelled as required by Caesar’s census requirement, NOT refugees.”
Others supported the display, with one user calling it “very powerful art.”
“Out of all the tragedy affecting my community, I’m glad powerful art is being used to address the issues that trolls make fun of,” one person wrote. “Hoping more displays like this come out to trigger the masses in a positive way.”
Lake Street Church has staged politically themed Nativity scenes before. In 2023, it set up a display showing Baby Jesus alone amid rubble as an homage to civilians trapped in the war in Gaza, according to the Chicago Tribune.
Rev. Michael Woolf, a senior minister at Lake Street Church of Evanston, was among 21 people arrested on Nov. 14 outside the ICE processing facility in Broadview, Illinois.
Read more at FoxNews.com
Illinois
Tennessee football vs. Illinois tickets? Best prices for Music City Bowl
Tennessee football will play Illinois in the Music City Bowl. It will be a 5:30 p.m. ET kickoff on Dec. 30 at Nissan Stadium in Nashville.
Nissan Stadium holds roughly 69,143 people, so there are plenty of tickets available.
Buy Tennessee vs Illinois
Here’s how much tickets cost and where to buy them.
Tennessee vs Illinois in the Music City Bowl
Ticket prices for the Tennessee vs Illinois start at $68 on VividSeats and $77 on StubHub. Prices in the lower bowl range from $68 to $488 on both sites.
To see a full list of ticket prices, visit StubHub.
When does Tennessee play Illinois in the Music City Bowl?
Tennessee will play Illinois on Dec. 30 at Nissan Stadium in Nashville, Tennessee.
Tennessee vs Illinois score predictions
Tennessee 35, Illinois 28
Kamryn Jackson covers high school and college sports for the Spartanburg Herald-Journal, Greenville News and Anderson Independent Mail, and the USA TODAY Network. Please email her at KEJackson@gannett.com and follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter, @KamxJack.
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