Boston.com Today
Sign up to receive the latest headlines in your inbox each morning.
Disdain for wildlife killing contests is an space of widespread floor for Illinoisans who hunt and people who don’t. Throughout these grisly occasions, which generally happen in January and February, rivals kill coyotes and foxes by the a whole lot for frivolous prizes.
As soon as the killing ends, contributors pile up the bloody our bodies for images. The animals are then dumped — they aren’t killed for his or her meat, and the high-powered rifles render the fur worthless.
Remington Analysis Group, a revered bipartisan agency, not too long ago performed a ballot that confirmed 73% of Illinois residents help a ban on killing contests. Illinoisans all through the state don’t tolerate mindless actions precipitated upon wildlife. Rivals ignore the ethics of truthful chase, sportsmanship and respect for wildlife. These occasions are a shame and injury the popularity of Illinois.
SEND LETTERS TO: letters@suntimes.com. We wish to hear from our readers. To be thought-about for publication, letters should embrace your full identify, your neighborhood or hometown and a telephone quantity for verification functions. Letters must be a most of roughly 350 phrases.
Hunters and wildlife company professionals throughout the nation have condemned the contests as unethical, scientifically indefensible and a risk to the looking group. When Washington state prohibited contests, Kelly Susewind, the director of the Washington Division of Fish and Wildlife, stated: “A part of my job, and admittedly a part of my soul, is to advertise looking, to get our youth looking, to actually have this be a core piece of what our society helps. And admittedly, that job is loads tougher if we’re condoning a lot of these contests.”
Wildlife is just not owned by the small proportion of those that take part in killing contests. Wildlife is vital to everybody, and our public insurance policies ought to replicate that. The Illinois Division of Pure Assets should finish these wasteful occasions.
Christine Pado, Third Lake
I used to be dismayed to study wildlife killing contests happen proper right here in our state. These competitions painting hunters, the overwhelming majority of whom don’t compete in these occasions, in a nasty mild.
Contributors perpetuate baseless myths to justify their actions. Killing contests are out of step with science and are counterproductive to sound wildlife administration. Randomly killing coyotes is not going to forestall conflicts with cattle and will even improve them. It additionally received’t cut back coyote numbers or end in extra deer or turkeys for hunters.
It’s simply killing for “enjoyable,” bragging rights and money, which is unacceptable to most individuals. Let’s be part of different states — together with Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Washington, Massachusetts, Vermont, Maryland and California — which have banned the occasions. Urge the Illinois Division of Pure Assets to outlaw this callous bloodsport.
Shari Dove, Kildeer
I used to be so saddened to listen to that residents of the South Aspect have been making an attempt to dam immigrants coming to the newly renovated college, the place they might be settled. Does anybody keep in mind the Nineteen Fifties and Sixties the place Alabama residents did the identical factor to African Individuals? Has nothing modified in over 50 years?
Janet Flores, Bellwood
Local News
A GoFundMe page has raised more than $5,000 to assist with memorial service costs for a West Springfield woman who was found dead earlier this month in Springfield’s Forest Park.
Joann Garelli, 56, was found dead Jan. 7 in the Camp Star Angelina area of Forest Park, according to a Facebook post from Hampden District Attorney Anthony Gulluni.
Garelli’s death is currently under investigation by the Hampden District Attorney’s Office and the Springfield Police Detective Bureau’s Homicide Unit.
Andrew Santiago created the GoFundMe page to help his wife, Elizabeth Herd, pay for her mother’s memorial service, according to the page. On the page, Santiago called for an end to violence against women.
“[T]he violence and abuse of women are not taken seriously and we all need to come together as one to help prevent these attacks on women!” Santiago wrote.
The page was created Jan. 9 and will remain open until Garelli’s memorial service, which is scheduled to be held Jan. 21.
Sign up to receive the latest headlines in your inbox each morning.
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. – A controversial bill aimed at tightening restrictions on hemp products in Illinois failed to gain traction in the state legislature, leaving the future of the industry in limbo.
Illinois House Bill 4293 sought to impose strict licensing requirements on hemp businesses, similar to those for cannabis dispensaries.
What we know:
Governor JB Pritzker supported the bill, calling it a priority to address concerns about unregulated hemp products like Delta-8, which can produce a psychoactive effect.
Critics, however, argue that the proposed regulations would disproportionately impact small businesses. The Illinois Black Hemp Association raised concerns about high licensing costs and lengthy approval processes, warning that many entrepreneurs could be forced out of the market.
What they’re saying:
“I found that it helped me out in a wellness perspective but also saw it as an opportunity to create generational wealth in the Black community,” said Sam Wilson of the Illinois Black Hemp Association. “Unfortunately, now that dream is in jeopardy because the American dream is under attack and is under attack by our billionaire governor.”
For small business owners like Misty Nelson, who runs Sunkissed Greenz in Mokena, hemp is essential. She and her husband started their business in 2020 using their pandemic stimulus checks and now rely on hemp sales for 40% of their profits.
“If there’s a complete ban, our small business would go up in smoke,” said Nelson, who supports regulating Delta-8 rather than banning it outright. “We want to protect children, too. Instead of a ban, we’d like regulations that ensure safety while letting our clientele access natural remedies for sleeping, pain, and anxiety.”
Some lawmakers agree that regulation, not prohibition, is the way forward. State Representative La Shawn Ford supports age restrictions similar to those for tobacco and cannabis.
“We definitely need to regulate Delta products,” Ford said. “If we passed that today, I would be very happy.”
What’s next:
The Delta-8 issue of whether to regulate, ban, or not change anything is expected to return when the new General Assembly convenes.
SPRINGFIELD, MA (WGGB/WSHM) – Authorities have released the identity of the person whose body was found last week in Forest Park in Springfield.
Last Tuesday evening, Springfield Police responded to the area of Trafton Road for a reported body found. When they arrived, they found a woman dead in the area of Camp Star Angelina.
On Thursday, the Hampden District Attorney’s Office identified the body as 56-year-old Joann Garelli of West Springfield.
The case remains under investigation by the D.A.’s office, in conjunction with the Springfield Police homicide unit.
Western Mass News will continue to follow this story and will have more information as it becomes available.
Copyright 2025. Western Mass News (WGGB/WSHM). All rights reserved.
Meta is highlighting a splintering global approach to online speech
Metro will offer free rides in L.A. through Sunday due to fires
Las Vegas police release ChatGPT logs from the suspect in the Cybertruck explosion
Photos: Pacific Palisades Wildfire Engulfs Homes in an L.A. Neighborhood
Four Fraternity Members Charged After a Pledge Is Set on Fire
Meta Drops Rules Protecting LGBTQ Community as Part of Content Moderation Overhaul
Trump trolls Canada again, shares map with country as part of US: 'Oh Canada!'
Amazon Prime will shut down its clothing try-on program