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  • WGLT's The Leadoff is everything you need to know for Friday, Aug. 27, 2021. You'll hear about the governor's new mask mandate and vaccination requirements. Plus, why the town is building out infrastructure in west Normal.
  • WGLT's The Leadoff is everything you need to know for Monday, Aug. 30, 2021. You'll hear about Rivian's plans to go public, possibly by the end of 2021. Plus, an interview with the IDOT chief about electric and autonomous cars.
  • There's a campaign to cut the thousands of traffic collisions and hundreds of injuries that happen in Bloomington Normal each year. A strength and conditioning graduate student at ISU hopes to go to a place few women do, the NFL. Saxophonist Lisella Martin never thought she'd play music professionally until one day at church the guitarist tapped her on the shoulder and asked her if she ever thought about it. Martin says she thought she wasn't good enough. Martin was wrong. Hear her before the Front Street Music Festival. Plus a play premiering at Illinois State University looks at how artificial intelligence disrupts the arts. Director Carol Kelleher tells you about "The Hologram in the Mirror."
  • WGLT's The Leadoff is everything you need to know for Friday, Aug. 20, 2021. You'll hear from McLean County residents who just got vaccinated, and why they waited. Plus, an interview with U.S. Rep. Rodney Davis about Afghanistan.
  • WGLT's The Leadoff is everything you need to know for Tuesday, Aug. 24, 2021. You'll hear about efforts to stop evictions in Normal. Plus, Bloomington-Normal parents discuss their anxiety about the great unknowns.
  • Unit 5 schools recently rolled out a diversity action plan to address racial discrepancies and disparities, coupled with the release of a diversity audit of what the district already is doing.
  • WGLT's The Leadoff is everything you need to know for Monday, Aug. 23, 2021. You'll hear about interest in making it easier to get disaster relief funds in central Illinois. Plus, a closer look at how COVID's impact on the fitness business.
  • Some parents of Bloomington Normal school children say they worry about COVID safety and wish state authorities had authorized remote learning for this year. Meanwhile parents of special needs children say they hope their kids can have a normal school year and make up lost ground. Municipal rent assistance programs had been getting criticism for giving out dollars too slowly. They're getting more popular now. The Town of Normal says the pace has also picked up as other programs run out of money. And State Representative Dan Brady wants to make it easier to trigger federal disaster aid. Brady also hopes a lawsuit will take away legislative redistricting powers in Illinois.
  • Not everybody has a lawyer when they go to court, but a new grant from the State Supreme Court Commission on Access to Justice will help increase collaboration and resources for people who represent themselves in McLean County and around the Eleventh Judicial Circuit.
  • Rural EMS agencies are closing. Ambulance response times are lengthening. One EMS coordinator says consolidation is better than no service at all. And a new rural food coalition tries to expand markets and selling seasons. Some McLean County residents who waited months to get the vaccine are changing their minds and accepting the jab. Vaccinations on the rise. Plus, Congressman Rodney Davis says we've had soldiers in South Korea and Germany for decades, why not Afghanistan?
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