Plan would have state taxpayers provide $50M for ICE-impacted businesses
(The Center Square) – The Illinois Senate is considering legislation that would provide $50 million in state taxpayer funds to businesses affected by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions during Operation Midway Blitz.
State Sen. Mike Simmons, D-Chicago, said Senate Bill 2810 would help small businesses make up for lost earnings.
“The Illinois Accountability Commission shared its final report recently, saying that small business owners reported a sustained drop in foot traffic and in-store transactions that threatened their already fragile margins,” Simmons told the Senate Appropriations Committee on Wednesday morning.
Simmons said the commission also found that some businesses canceled planned openings or postponed expansions.
SB 2810 provides that independently owned brick-and-mortar businesses with 25 or fewer employees as of September 9, 2025 would be eligible for the grants from a newly-created Small Business Restoration Fund.
State Sen. Don DeWitte, R-St. Charles, said similar grants were handed out during the COVID-19 pandemic and after businesses were affected by protests and looting following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
“And what was discovered was the huge amount of fraud that was conducted by these grants that were inappropriately requested, inappropriately applied for,” DeWitte said.
DeWitte said some of the grant money went to apartment buildings and private residences. He asked Simmons if measures were put in place to monitor where the grant applications would be coming from.
“I’m not opposed to the program, but so much of this money has been stolen in the process. I’m concerned that this is just going to be wash, rinse, repeat and another repeat performance of the last round of grants,” DeWitte said.
Simmons he thinks there are oversight responsibilities with the program.
“I certainly would work with the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity and small business delegate agencies to make sure the program is set up in such a way where we have guardrails in place to make sure that those who actually get to take part in the grant program are those that need to benefit from it,” Simmons said.
SB 2810 has a committee and third-reading deadline of May 15.
Latest News Stories
AG candidate seeks to reform SAFE-T Act
Op-Ed: Senate Bill 3070 provides sensible solution for students, manufacturers
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Washington Township Board of Trustees for March 2, 2026
Illinois millionaire’s tax moves closer to November ballot
Beecher to Implement ‘No Food’ Rule for New Police Station Community Room
Oldest preserve expansion pushes acreage past 24,000 milestone
Beecher Edges Gardner-South Wilmington 4-3 Behind Lane’s Perfect Day at the Plate
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Beecher Fire Protection District for February 26, 2026
Washington Township Trustees Approve Nearly $87,500 in February Disbursements
Beecher Renews IGA with Will County for License Plate Reading Cameras
Beecher Fire District Reports Over 1,300 Training Hours, Details Local Initiatives
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Executive Committee for April 9, 2026
On the road to 100 years: How the Forest Preserve District expanded