Illinois
Illinois touts improvements in making marijuana industry equitable, but critics say more needed
CHICAGO (WLS) — One of the goals of legalizing marijuana in Illinois was to repair the damage of mass cannabis convictions among people of color. And while some critics say not enough has been done to level the playing field, the state said it’s proud of the steps it’s made over the last four years to make the industry attainable for everyone.
“When cannabis was illegal, 80% of arrests were Black and brown people,” said Matthew Brewer, owner of Grasshopper Club. “My brother was one of the people in the 80% arrested for cannabis possession.”
His brother’s arrest was one of the reasons Brewer wanted to get into the marijuana industry. He is now celebrating his first year as the proud owner of Grasshopper Club, the first independent Black-owned dispensary in Chicago.
“It was a full circle moment when we opened this location and the first purchase ever here was my brother,” he said.
Brewer’s co-owners for the Logan Square shop are his brother Chuck and his mother Dianne. She never could have imagined this venture in her wildest dreams as a Black woman.
When recreational marijuana became legal in Illinois in 2020, the first cannabis businesses to open were 100% majority white-owned, and the state caught a lot of flak for that. Critics argued the barriers to entry were so extreme and costly, people of color were finding it nearly impossible to break into the industry.
The following year, Illinois launched its social equity program, which connects people and communities that have been historically impacted by the criminalization of cannabis to business ownership opportunities in the legal cannabis industry.
Erin Johnson, who oversees marijuana operations in Illinois, said as of 2021, anyone in the state seeking marijuana business licenses must meet social equity criteria.
“You really qualify by living in a disproportionately impacted area. So, disproportionately low graduation rate. Disproportionately high use of SNAP benefits. Those markers that are race neutral but really get at the folks who were harmed by the war on drugs,” Johnson said. “We are literally the most diverse industry in the country. We’ve led the way.”
According to state data from 2020 to 2023, Black-owned cannabis companies in Illinois increased from 0% to 27%; Latino-owned companies went from 0% to 5%; and women-owned companies increased from 3% to 16%.
“So we’re really doing things to make sure that our cannabis industry looks like Illinois,” Johnson said.
But critics like Abrose Jackson, CEO of the minority-owned cannabis company The 1937 Group, said the state could do so much more.
“These social equity license owners that were promised a dream have had that dream either deferred or squashed. There are a numbers of barriers of entry for this industry that they still are not able to overcome,” Jackson said.
Raising capital is a huge issues. Jackson said that to date, the state has not followed through on its legal obligation to provide funding to dispensary license holders via the Social Equity Cannabis Loan Program.
The state didn’t say what was behind the delay for the release of funds, but said they hope to start accepting applications this week.
“And we think that will be game changing. It will give folks that last little push they need to get open and over the hurdles,” said Johnson.
At Grasshopper Club, the owners are thankful to have not just one but two thriving dispensaries in Illinois, but Brewer wants to see more business owners who look like him.
“Frankly a little bit disappointing that it’s not more,” he said. “Navigating all of the requirements, the security requirements, the business plan, the purchasing and inventory, finding a space that’s zone properly… So when you layer all of those factors on top of each other, it creates a very complicated maze that’s tough to navigate.”
Critics say other barriers include extremely high cannabis taxes, which are among the highest in the nation, and the tight deadline for license holders to get their businesses open.
The state said it’s committed to ensuring the federal government passes the Safer Banking Act so that marijuana businesses can take advantage of the same loans other small businesses are able to access.
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Illinois
Four-Star Forward Quinton Kitt Commits to Illinois: How He Fits
Illinois scored a major early win in the 2027 recruiting cycle on Thanksgiving, securing a commitment from East Peoria native Quinton Kitt, a 6-foot-6 forward ranked No. 114 nationally by 247Sports.
Kitt becomes the Illini’s first pledge in the class and continues a trend that has become increasingly familiar under head coach Brad Underwood – top in-state talent choosing to stay home. His decision is another reminder that Illinois basketball is no longer simply competing on the national stage. It is becoming a program that players want to be part of.
forever thankful to represent to put on for my state… go fighting illini 🟠🔵 #home #happythanksgiving pic.twitter.com/MFynfw7rm1
— Quinton Kitt (@quintonkitt) November 27, 2025
Kitt’s commitment also reinforces the momentum Illinois has built over the past several seasons. Since Underwood’s arrival, he has resurrected the program and turned it from a middling Big Ten team into one of the most consistent winners in college basketball. The Illini have pulled top recruits, landed marquee transfers, developed NBA talent and built an identity centered around toughness and modern offensive spacing. When a top prospect commits this early, it signals more than momentum – it shows Illinois is becoming the type of powerhouse that can reload year after year with players who believe in what Underwood is building.
The centerpiece of Kitt’s game is his premier skill: high-level spot-up shooting. At 6-foot-6, he possesses clean mechanics, fluid footwork and a natural rhythm that makes him one of the best floor spacers in the Midwest for his age. Underwood has made three-point shooting a priority in roster construction, and Kitt fits that philosophy seamlessly. He projects as an immediate shooting threat who can open the floor for Illinois’ guards and bigs, whether stationed in the corners, popping off screens or trailing in transition.
Quinton Kitt (class of 2027, Meanstreets 15U) has caught my eye as a shooter to remember in the coming years. As he grows, he has a high level trait to hang his hat on with his jumper pic.twitter.com/2DLDiBJdEy
— Rich Stayman (@RichStayman) July 6, 2024
Although shooting is the headliner, Kitt isn’t a one-dimensional piece. He’s not the twitchiest athlete in the class, but he gets to the rim with efficiency, using size, stride length and composure to finish through contact. He has the IQ to make the right reads – finding cutters, swinging the ball to shooters and delivering simple but effective passes that keep an offense flowing. That feel for the game elevates his value well beyond spot-up scenarios.
“Be one of them ones.”
Meanstreets EYBL 2027 Wing Quinton Kitt (@quintonkitt ) drops 29 points to lead the 16U to a 1-0 start in Peach Jam Pool Play with 73-65 win over AB Elite.
Ⓜ️💨#RespectTheStreets pic.twitter.com/ogzzhFtiZc — Nike Meanstreets (@MeanstreetsEYB) July 16, 2025
All of this makes Kitt a classic Underwood-style Swiss Army Knife. He can dribble, pass, shoot and play multiple spots without needing plays run for him. He enhances spacing, connects actions and fits into virtually any lineup construction Illinois might throw onto the floor. For a program that has thrived with multipositional, high-IQ wings, Kitt checks every box.
Landing Kitt sets a strong tone for the 2027 class – and again shows that Illinois doesn’t have to leave the state to find talent that fits its growing powerhouse identity.
Illinois
11 reasons Illinoisans can be thankful this year
This Thanksgiving, Illinoisans should give thanks for Illinois’ heritage, opportunities, wins against new taxes and educational freedom.
From Rockford to Carbondale, towns and cities across Illinois are creating opportunities, increasing liberty and decreasing the burden of taxes.
Here’s a look at 11 items worthy of gratitude.
Growing pride
1) Illinois grows more pumpkins than any other state.
Producing 85% of the world’s canned pumpkin, Illinois farmers produced about 485 million pounds of pumpkins. Illinois produced one-third of the nation’s pumpkins as Morton, Illinois, is dubbed the “pumpkin capitol of the world”
2) Illinois lawmakers end ban on nuclear energy
The state’s 40-year moratorium on large-scale plants has ended. Lifting the ban is a positive step towards competitiveness and reliability and a much-needed step toward energy independence and affordability.
3) Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed 5 bills to help fix Illinois education
Illinois lawmakers passed five education reforms focused on literacy, transparency and career pathways. Pritzker signed these bills into law, signaling a renewed effort by state lawmakers to improve student outcomes, empower parents, invest in literacy and diversify career pathways.
4) Chicago ordinance will remove college degree requirements for most city jobs.
Breaking down employment barriers for disadvantaged groups, new pathways to prosperity open. By endorsing a shift toward skills-based hiring, city leaders recognized some simple but powerful truths: a college degree isn’t the only path to career success and isn’t the only – or even the best – indicator of competency.
Decreasing tax burdens
5) Rockford cut property tax rate almost in half since 2017
The mayor’s office cut back on anything piling on unnecessary expenses, such as printing costs, centralizing printers and defaulting them to black and white. The city also re-bid routine contracts and merged back-office tasks.
6) Kane County, six townships and Bensenville vote “no” to more taxes
More than 75% of Kane County voters rejected a ballot question which would raise county taxes by 0.75% for public safety costs. Voters in Kane County, the six townships and Bensenville have loudly said “no” to tax increases. Taxes are too high, and local leaders who raise grocery taxes, gas taxes or property taxes do so without the consent of those who gave them power to govern.
7) Peoria Heights mayor vetoes grocery tax
“…I know we can and we will balance our budget without balancing it off the backs of families at the grocery checkout.”
Boosting housing affordability
8) Chicago and Lamont boost development, housing supply to address housing shortage
Chicago is expanding where accessory dwelling units can be built, cutting parking minimums near transit and converting ground floors of commercial spaces into residential units. Lombard allows smaller lots to lower cost.
Protecting against government overreach
9) Highly opposed “Homeschool Act” stalls on Illinois House floor
Lawmakers failed to advance a bill riddled with troubling provisions to limit families’ educational options and create government intrusion into families’ privacy
10) Pritzker signed 7 bills into law to make it easier to work
To reduce the number of government permission slips needed to earn a living, Pritzker signed seven bills into law that expand the ability of professional to work in Illinois. With the 38th-worst unemployment rate in the country, the state cannot afford barriers that block people from jobs they are qualified for.
Calling out corruption
11) Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan was found guilty on 10 counts of bribery, conspiracy and wire fraud by a federal jury.
Madigan ruled the Illinois House for 36 years, building a political machine that controlled Springfield. The end of one man’s corruption is the start to increasing transparency and trust between lawmakers and constituents.
Illinois is taking steps to relieve the burden of corruption and high taxes. The commitment to pursue economic and educational freedom must prevail over partisan politicians working in their own self-interest.
Illinois still has its issues, but these 11 beams of hope show the state can be turned around.
Illinois
Three Ways Iowa Can Beat Western Illinois
On paper, the Iowa Hawkeyes and Western Illinois Leathernecks are a combined 10-0. The Leathernecks have won their only road game of the year, but Iowa is 3-0 at Carver-Hawkeye Arena.
After a successful trip to Orlando for the WBCA Showcase, Iowa saw a huge jump in the AP Poll. They are now No. 11, one spot away from entering the Top 10. Wins over No. 7 Baylor and Miami certainly boosted their status in the eye of the public as they are now massive favorites against Western Illinois.
While Iowa shouldn’t necessarily need to score 100 to beat a team like Western Illinois, it doesn’t hurt to shoot for the stars. Head coach Jan Jensen’s team didn’t make a field goal in the final eight and a half minutes against the Hurricanes, yet somehow they managed to take them down, 64-61.
After a pair of low scoring games in Florida, Iowa returns home on Thanksgiving Eve for yet another non-conference showdown. This is one of two “tune-up” games before they open B1G play at Rutgers on December 6.
Western Illinois has allowed 75+ points in their last two games. Sure, they’ve won both of them, but allowing that point total to Chicago State and Bradley shows the state of their defense. The Hawkeyes should have no issues scoring against them.
Once again, it’s impossible not to understate just how important Chit-Chat Wright is to this team. Jensen is closely monitoring her status, but the transfer guard will not be playing in the Hawkeyes return to Carver. That said, it’s safe to assume that Taylor Stremlow will once again get the start.
As long as Stremlow plays to the quality she was playing against the Bears and Hurricanes, Miami will be just fine. They also have Taylor McCabe, Kylie Feuerbach, and Addie Deal. With both McCabe and Feuerbach being seniors, this is the perfect game to get Deal even more minutes to showcase just how dominant she’s going to be in the coming years.
.ʎɐpǝɯɐ⅁ pic.twitter.com/4k1kcPdpQ6
— Iowa Women’s Basketball (@IowaWBB) November 26, 2025
In the Leathernecks first game of the year, they dropped 116 points. They’ve scored 80+ in their last two, something that was necessary to win knowing how much their defense has given up.
Their leading scorer, Mia Nicastro, is averaging 25.8 points per game. That’s ten more points per game than Iowa’s leader, but it’s shocking to note that Nicastro has only shot four three pointers this entire season.
As a team, Western Illinois is shooting 40% from three. That’s eight percent higher than the Hawkeyes, and is something that could absolutely make the difference. Allie Meadows is shooting 50% from three point range while fellow senior Addi Brownfield is shooting 46.2% herself. The Leathernecks don’t shoot a ton of threes, but they’re extremely efficient from three-point range.
Don’t forget to bookmark Iowa Hawkeyes on SI for the latest news. exclusive interviews, recruiting coverage and more!
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