• River Flood Warning - Click for Details
    ...FLOOD WARNING FOR AN ICE JAM NOW IN EFFECT UNTIL EARLY MONDAY MORNING...
    Expires: January 05, 2026 @ 2:00am
    LOCATION
    WHAT...Minor flooding is occurring and minor flooding is forecast.
    INFO1
    WHERE...Rock River at Moline.
    INFO2
    WHEN...Until early Monday morning.
    INFO3
    IMPACTS...At 12.0 feet, Minor Flood Stage. Water affects residences near the 27th Street bridge. Water is over portions of 60th St south of Green Valley Sports Complex and portions of 56th Ave along the north side of the river.
    INFO4
    ADDITIONAL DETAILS... - At 8:30 AM CST Thursday the stage was 12.1 feet. - The river is ice affected. Rapid localized fluctuations in river levels near the jam can be expected. - Forecast...The river is expected to remain around 12.1 to 12.2 feet through Friday, although fluctuations are possible. It will begin to fall on Saturday, dropping below flood stage by Sunday evening. - Flood stage is 12.0 feet.
    PRECAUTIONS
    Motorists should not attempt to drive around barricades or drive cars through flooded areas. Caution is urged when walking near riverbanks. The next statement will be issued byFriday morning at 930 AM CST.

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U.S. House vote on employee bargaining met with ‘political theater’ criticism

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)The Center Square) – An Illinois congressman praised a vote to restore collective bargaining for over one million federal workers while critics say the U.S. Senate won’t pass the Protect American Workers Act.

In a video posted to social media, Illinois U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen, D-Rockford, said the House approved a measure that would rescind President Donald Trump’s executive order affecting more than one million federal workers, including employees at the Rock Island Arsenal in western Illinois.

“Republicans crossed the aisle to vote with Democrats on this important issue,” Sorensen said. “We both realized that the president’s order was a slap in the face to public servants who deserve to have their voices heard. It cut right at the fundamental right for workers to organize for fair wages and safe working conditions.”

Critics say the “worker rights” rhetoric masks the real issue, whether unions should have mandatory bargaining power over federal agencies, with Freedom Foundation researcher Maxford Nelsen arguing supporters rely on generic talking points that misrepresent federal labor law.

“What you see under the status quo is mandatory collective bargaining in the federal workforce, which is incredibly inefficient and far less protective of employee rights than many people realize,” Nelsen said. “For example, wages generally are not subject to collective bargaining in the federal government. The power of the purse belongs to Congress, which, despite its many flaws, is a better steward of the nation’s financial resources than government unions would be.”

Nelsen said the measure’s prospects in the Senate are slim.

“I think it’s extremely unlikely that the legislation is considered or receives a full vote in the Senate, much less passes,” he said, citing the 60-vote threshold needed to overcome a filibuster. He added that even if the bill reached the White House, a presidential veto would be likely.

Nelsen also suggested that some Republican support reflected political calculation rather than policy agreement.

“These are generally Republicans who are either personally pro-union or come from union-dense areas,” Nelsen said. “This is a relatively low-cost way to signal their pro-labor bona fides back home without risking too much, because they know the legislation isn’t going to become law anyway.”

Sorensen framed the vote as consistent with his long-standing support for organized labor, saying unions helped build the country and strengthen the middle class.

“The people of our district will always be able to count on me to fight for the working men and women to have a voice on the job,” said Sorensen.

According to Nelsen, the central issue is not union membership but compulsory collective bargaining.

“The real question is whether such organizations should have a legal right to have special access and special say over how federal agencies operate through mandatory collective bargaining,” he said. “And that’s really the issue.”

Nelsen said federal employees had advocacy groups before collective bargaining was mandated in the 1970s, lobbying lawmakers like other interest groups.

“But they view that as insufficient,” Nelsen said. “What they want is this legal protection that allows them to force federal agencies to sit down with them at the negotiating table for months or years and ultimately write hundreds of pages of legally binding contracts dictating minute details of agency operations.”

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