How to vote in Illinois in 2026: Early voting begins this week for most of the state


Voters in most of the state’s counties can cast their vote in the March primary as soon as Feb. 5 at their local election authority. Chicago and suburban Cook County offer early voting beginning between Feb. 12 and March 2, depending on where you live.


by Jenna Schweikert & UIS Public Affairs Reporting
Capitol News Illinois


Capitol News Illinois has launched its revamped 2026 Election Guide to coincide with the opening of early voting throughout much of the state.

The guide has a rundown of key dates, information on how to register and vote early, and a lookup tool to put voters in touch with their local election authority. It also links to our coverage of the various races for statewide office.


Access the guide here


Early voting opens

The guide launched this week to coincide with early voting opening on Feb. 5 for the March 17 primary in most of the state, outside of Cook County. Early voting kicks off on Feb. 12 in downtown Chicago and either Feb. 18 or March 2 in suburban Cook County, depending on where you live. Early voting for all jurisdictions ends on March 16.

Most early voting takes place at the local election authority’s offices, which for most residents is their county clerk’s office. Some churches, libraries, colleges and universities and other government buildings are also offering early voting. Voters can find local polling locations and hours at the Illinois State Board of Elections website.

Registration is also open at most polling locations through Feb. 17. Grace period registration, available at some polling locations, opens Feb. 18 and closes on Election Day, March 17.

Registration is also open online at ova.elections.il.gov until March 1 and will reopen on March 19.

Registration identification

Any voter who needs to register for the first time or file an address change must present two forms of ID, one of which shows the voter's current address.

Valid forms of identification include work, school, state and military ID, passports and drivers licenses, leases and mortgages, utility bills, vehicle registration, credit and debit cards and insurance cards.

Voters who do not present a valid form of ID if needed can cast a provisional ballot and present ID to the election authority by March 24.

ID requirements vary at polling locations, but election authorities recommend bringing at least one form of identification in case of any questions.

Mail-in ballots

Mail-in ballots will also be sent to voters who’ve requested them beginning Feb. 5. The last day to request a mail-in ballot is March 12.

They must be postmarked by Election Day, but county clerks recommend mailing these ballots at least a week in advance of the election, due to United States Postal Service changes that could delay mail.

Election authorities will also accept mail ballots delivered by hand, and some have drop boxes where ballots can be delivered. Voters who requested a mail-in ballot can still vote in person but must surrender the mailed ballot before doing so.

Polls will be open 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Election Day. If voters are in line before the polls close, they are guaranteed a chance to vote.


Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.






Low-dose radiation offers new option for osteoarthritis treatment in East-Central Illinois


Low-dose radiation therapy has been used for decades in Europe to treat joint pain and inflammatory conditions. OSF HealthCare Bobette Steely Hegeler Cancer Center is expanding its services to include low-dose radiation therapy for osteoarthritis.


DANVILLE - Long known for cancer care, OSF HealthCare Bobette Steely Hegeler Cancer Center is expanding its services to include low-dose radiotherapy, or LDRT, for patients living with osteoarthritis and other inflammatory or degenerative conditions affecting joints, tendons and soft tissues.

The therapy uses radiation at doses far lower than those used in cancer treatment to reduce inflammation and pain. While the approach may be unfamiliar to many U.S. patients, LDRT has a long clinical history and is widely used in parts of Europe to treat noncancerous musculoskeletal conditions.


Radiation Oncologist Dr. Edie Krueger at OSF
Photo provided


Edie Krueger, MD
Radiation Oncologist
Hegeler Cancer Center




“People who have tried other treatments but are not ready for surgery are great candidates for LDRT,” said Dr. Edie Krueger, a radiation oncologist at Hegeler Cancer Center. “This is a safe, effective and noninvasive treatment that can significantly reduce pain and stiffness, possibly avoiding the need for surgery.”

A century-old idea gaining renewed attention

Low-dose radiation has been used for more than 100 years to treat painful inflammatory conditions, predating many modern medications and surgical techniques. For decades, it has been applied to disorders such as plantar fasciitis, tennis elbow and other degenerative joint diseases. In recent years, interest has returned as researchers reexamined its anti-inflammatory effects and potential role in managing osteoarthritis, the most common form of arthritis.

Osteoarthritis affects an estimated 32.5 million adults in the United States. It occurs when cartilage that cushions joints gradually wears down, leading to pain, stiffness and reduced mobility. Knees and hips are most commonly affected, often limiting daily activities and quality of life.

“People with painful knee osteoarthritis often face a difficult choice between the risks of side effects from pain medications and the risks of joint replacement surgery,” said Dr. Byoung Hyuck Kim, a radiation oncologist at Seoul National University College of Medicine and principal investigator on a recent clinical trial. “There’s a clinical need for moderate interventions between weak pain medications and aggressive surgery, and we think radiation may be a suitable option for those patients, especially when drugs and injections are poorly tolerated.”

How LDRT works

Unlike cancer radiotherapy, which targets and destroys malignant cells, LDRT is believed to work by modulating the body’s inflammatory response. Researchers say low doses of radiation can reduce the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and influence immune cells involved in chronic joint inflammation.

The precise biological mechanism is still being studied, but current evidence suggests LDRT dampens inflammation without damaging healthy cartilage. Reviews of experimental and clinical studies have found either neutral or beneficial effects on joint tissue when low doses are used.

“There is a misconception that medicinal, or therapeutic, radiation is always delivered in high doses,” Kim said. “But for osteoarthritis, the doses are only a small fraction of what we use for cancer, and the treatment targets joints that are positioned away from vital organs, which lowers the likelihood of side effects.”


Photo courtesy OSF Healthcare

The linear accelerator at OSF is a medical device that uses microwave technology to accelerate electrons to near light speed used for cancer treatment. The TrueBeam® model pictured was installed in 2022.

Who may benefit

Doctors say LDRT is best suited for patients with chronic joint pain who have not found sufficient relief from medications, physical therapy or injections, but who are not ready for — or are not candidates for — surgery.

“This therapy does not change the joint structure itself,” said Dr. Matthew Harkenrider, a radiation oncologist at Loyola Medicine. “Instead, it helps relieve the inflammation that contributes to pain.”

Research suggests about 70 percent of osteoarthritis patients experience some level of pain reduction or improved joint function after LDRT, according to Loyola Medicine. Many patients report improvements in mobility, allowing them to return to activities such as walking, gardening or golfing with less discomfort.

Side effects and safety

LDRT is generally considered well tolerated. Most studies report only mild, temporary side effects, such as slight skin irritation or short-term fatigue. Serious adverse effects have not been commonly observed in clinical trials.

Because radiation exposure is involved, the risk of secondary cancers is often raised as a concern. However, researchers note that the total doses used in LDRT — typically between 3 and 6 gray — are well below levels associated with a significant increase in cancer risk. In addition, treatment is localized to joints, which are not considered highly susceptible to malignancy, and most patients treated for osteoarthritis are older adults, reducing long-term risk.

Use beyond the United States

Low-dose radiation therapy for joint pain is widely accepted in countries such as Germany and Spain, where it is routinely offered as part of standard care. Awareness remains lower in the United States, partly due to limited large-scale randomized trials in the past and lingering assumptions about radiation risks.

Recent studies and growing clinical experience, however, have renewed interest among U.S. providers seeking noninvasive options for patients with chronic joint pain.

“For many osteoarthritis patients, low-dose radiation therapy offers a safe, effective and well-tolerated treatment that improves mobility and enhances overall quality of life,” Harkenrider said.

As OSF HealthCare Bobette Steely Hegeler Cancer Center expands its offerings, clinicians hope LDRT will fill a treatment gap for patients caught between temporary pain relief and major surgery, providing another option to manage chronic joint pain closer to home.

Treatment at Hegeler Cancer Center

At OSF HealthCare Bobette Steely Hegeler Cancer Center, LDRT treatments are delivered using the TrueBeam® linear accelerator, installed in 2022. The system allows clinicians to precisely target affected joints while minimizing exposure to surrounding tissue.

Each treatment session lasts about 15 minutes. Most patients undergo six treatments over a two-week period, followed by a check-in three months later. Depending on symptom response, a physician may recommend an additional round.

Patients must have a referral from a health care provider. Those interested are encouraged to speak with their care team or call the cancer center at (217) 431-4290. The center is located at 806 N. Logan Ave. on the campus of OSF Sacred Heart Medical Center.




TAGS: low-dose radiation therapy osteoarthritis Illinois, OSF HealthCare joint pain treatment, noninvasive osteoarthritis therapy Danville, Hegeler Cancer Center LDRT, radiation therapy for inflammatory joint conditions

Federal policy shift may cause student loan borrowers to face state and federal taxes on forgiven debt


Student loan borrowers in Illinois could face federal, state ‘tax bomb’ in 2026. Illinois is among 20 states whose tax codes automatically follow federal changes, potentially taxing forgiven student loans at the state level. Borrowers are should review repayment options and seek guidance.

Image: 3D Animation Production Company/Pixabay


by Sam Freeman & Medill Illinois News Bureau
Capitol News Illinois


SPRINGFIELD - For the first time in five years, certain forms of student loan forgiveness will be taxable following a change in federal tax policy this year.

This comes after a provision of the American Rescue Plan Act expired Dec. 31. That measure, signed into law in 2021 by former President Joe Biden, temporarily excluded student loan debt from federal income taxes.

And those tax implications could extend to Illinois state taxes as well unless lawmakers act.

President Donald Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” enacted last summer, did not make the student loan tax forgiveness provision permanent. As a result, student loans that are canceled or partially forgiven in 2026 and beyond will see taxes owed on those forgiven amounts, advocates said. These taxes could amount to as much as $10,000, depending on the borrower’s income.

This includes income-driven repayment plan-related forgiveness; some closed school discharges — where 100% of a student loan obligation is wiped out if a school closes — and private settlements. Meanwhile, some forms of loan forgiveness remain tax-free, such as public service loan forgiveness, teacher loan forgiveness, and death and disability discharge programs.

According to a report from Protect Borrowers, a nonprofit organization dedicated to eliminating the burden of student debt, two-thirds of people who receive loan cancellation under income-driven repayment plans earn less than $50,000 a year and have less than $1,000 in savings.

“A tax bomb on people with that amount of assets and that amount of income, it could be really financially devastating,” said Jennifer Zhang, a researcher for Protect Borrowers.

Illinois State Graphic A group of congressional Democrats, including U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, sent a letter to Treasury Secretary and Acting IRS Commissioner Scott Bessent on Nov. 9  calling the tax reinstatement a “financial disaster for working-class Americans.”

Illinois will also tax loan forgiveness

In addition to federal taxes, some borrowers will also face a similar tax hike at the state level. Illinois is one of 20 states whose tax codes automatically conform to the federal change. This means that unless Illinois legislators decouple the conforming provision before taxes are due next year, student loan forgiveness amounts will also be taxed by the state.

“I would certainly be supportive of (decoupling),” Sen. Mike Halpin, D-Rock Island, said, although it’s currently not an issue that has reached the Illinois state legislature.

Lawmakers passed a bill in their fall veto session to decouple the state and federal tax code as it pertained to certain corporate taxes to head off a budget shortfall for the upcoming year. But it did not address student borrowing.

Other challenges facing student loan forgiveness are also expected to take effect this year:

Student loan forgiveness under Biden’s Saving on Valuable Education, or SAVE, plan has been blocked for more than a year after some Republican-led states mounted legal challenges, claiming the program is illegal. As a result, 7 million borrowers have been stuck in forbearance, which does not count toward loan forgiveness under income-driven repayment plans or the public service loan forgiveness provision.

The SAVE plan is an income-driven repayment plan for federal student loans created to lower monthly payments, limit interest from ballooning payments, and accelerate loan forgiveness.

If a proposed settlement agreement between the U.S. Department of Education and the state of Missouri is approved, the SAVE plan will end entirely. That would require borrowers to switch to another plan, like an income-based repayment plan, to qualify for loan forgiveness. This change shouldn’t result in any loss of loan forgiveness credit.

Income-based repayment  currently is the only student loan repayment plan that remains preserved by the One Big Beautiful Bill. Trump’s bill removed the partial financial hardship requirement from the income-based repayment, which makes it easier for borrowers with higher incomes to enroll.

Income-based repayment is a federal student loan plan that caps monthly payments at a percentage of the borrower’s discretionary income. It is intended to benefit borrowers who have a high debt relative to their income.

The SAVE lawsuit also suspended student loan forgiveness under the Income-Contingent Repayment, or ICR, plan and Pay As You Earn, or PAYE, plan. The Department of Education agreed to resume processing student loans that had reached their 25-year or 20-year eligibility thresholds, after a lawsuit challenge.

Although loan forgiveness under ICR and PAYE is expected to resume in February, these plans will be phased out under Trump’s bill by July 2028. As with SAVE, borrowers enrolled in ICR and PAYE will need to switch to an income-based repayment plan or a new Repayment Assistance Plan, or RAP, that is supposed to launch later this year.

RAP includes lower payments for some borrowers, an interest subsidy that will prevent loans from ballooning over time, and a 30-year repayment term before a borrower can qualify for student loan forgiveness. This repayment term is longer than current IDR options.

“When people have that much of a continual financial strain, they don't build up their savings. They might not ever buy a home. They might not ever have kids,” Zhang said. “They might not ever achieve these different kinds of financial milestones.”

RAP also will require higher monthly payments for the lowest-income borrowers.

Finally, borrowers with federal Parent PLUS loans, who are typically limited to the ICR plan, also could face changes to their repayment options.

“Individuals with questions about their loans should call our Student Loan Helpline, 1-800-455-2456, which can direct struggling student borrowers to free resources about repayment options and information on avoiding default,” Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul said in a statement.

Borrowers can also use the Federal Student Aid website’s loan simulator to calculate monthly payments, evaluate repayment plan eligibility and choose the repayment plan that best suits their needs.


Sam Freeman is a graduate student in journalism with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications, and a fellow in its Medill Illinois News Bureau working in partnership with Capitol News Illinois.

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.




TAGS: student loan forgiveness taxable Illinois, federal student loan tax policy changes, income-driven repayment forgiveness taxes, Illinois student loan tax conformity, student loan forgiveness 2026 taxes

Unity, St. Joseph-Ogden send 11 wrestlers to Class 1A sectionals


SJO's Ben Wells wrestles Prairie Central's Andrew Patino at conference meet
Eleven area qualifiers emerged from Saturday’s regional meet at Ridgeview High School in Colfax. Five Spartans and six Rockets will compete Friday, February 13, at Olympia High School in the hunt for a berth to state.

SJO's Ben Wells wrestles Prairie Central's Andrew Patino at conference meet

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

St. Joseph-Ogden's Ben Wells defends himself against a shot from Prairie Central's Andrew Patino during their bout at the Illini Prairie Conference duals last month. Wells won the regional title for his weight class, advancing to sectionals this weekend.


COLFAX - The mat narrowed and the margins tightened Saturday at Ridgeview High School, where every takedown carried postseason weight and every whistle pushed area wrestlers closer to Olympia. By the end of the Class 1A regional, 11 wrestlers from Unity and St. Joseph-Ogden had done enough to keep their seasons alive, earning advancement to next Friday’s IHSA Individual Sectional at Olympia High School.

St. Joseph-Ogden sent five wrestlers through, highlighted by two regional champions who controlled their brackets. Sophomore Ben Wells (40-6) delivered a composed performance at 113 pounds, defeating Gibson City-Melvin-Sibley’s Ian Rotramel (30-13) by a 10-4 decision to claim the title. At 285, junior Cam Wagner (28-6) imposed his pace early and often, earning a major decision over GCMS’ Carson Sexton (32-12) to secure another championship for the Spartans.

Unity matched that top-end success with a dominant run from Abram Davidson. The senior capped his day as the Rockets’ lone regional titlist, scoring a technical fall at 3:58 against GCMS junior Cooper Miller (37-10) at 165 pounds, finishing with a 22-7 advantage that underscored his control from start to finish.

Depth carried Unity through the rest of the bracket, with five Rockets finishing as regional runners-up. AJ Daly (35-12) placed second at 138, Hayden Smith (36-12) followed at 144, Devin Glik (24-17) earned a runner-up finish at 150, Ben Mullins (33-14) placed second at 157, and senior Josh Heath (36-11) closed the group with a second-place showing at 175.

St. Joseph-Ogden added critical points and sectional qualifiers through grit in the placement rounds. Senior Vance McComas was the Spartans’ lone runner-up finisher, while Nathan Daly at 150 pounds and Coy Hayes at 165 battled back to secure third-place finishes, each doing enough to extend their postseason run.

Gibson City-Melvin-Sibley captured the team championship with 309.5 points. Unity finished second with 158 points, and St. Joseph-Ogden placed third with 142.5, placing both area programs firmly in the sectional conversation heading into Friday.

St. Joseph-Ogden competitors at the regional were: (106) Weston Hubbard, freshman (12-6); (113) Ben Wells, sophomore (37-6); (120) George Hale, sophomore (26-17); (126) Camden Getty, senior (35-9); (144) Alec Bowlin, junior (5-18); (150) Nathan Daly, senior (28-11); (157) Alex Vaughn, junior (25-10); (165) Coy Hayes, senior (35-7); (175) Devan Swisher, senior (18-13); (190) Vance McComas, senior (26-16); (215) Liam Carter, sophomore (29-15); (285) Cam Wagner, junior (25-6).

Unity’s regional lineup included: (106) Vincent Abon, sophomore (23-20); (120) Deklyn Thomas, freshman (5-25); (126) Bryson Williams, freshman (7-28); (132) Sam Hollett, freshman (7-21); (138) AJ Daly, freshman (33-11); (144) Hayden Smith, freshman (34-11); (150) Devin Glik, senior (21-16); (157) Ben Mullins, junior (31-13); (165) Abram Davidson, senior (38-6); (175) Josh Heath, senior (34-10); (190) Bradley Smith, sophomore (24-16); (215) Chason Daly, senior (27-17); (285) Cristian Sellers, senior (10-25).

The sectional round at Olympia High School awaits Friday, February 13, where only the top finishers will punch their tickets to state, and the stakes will rise with every bout.



TAGS: Unity High School wrestling sectional qualifiers, St. Joseph-Ogden wrestling regional results, IHSA Class 1A wrestling Olympia sectional, Ridgeview wrestling regional results, Illinois high school individual wrestling


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