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Illinois lawmakers adjourn without Bears’ stadium vote

By Thomson Reuters Jun 1, 2026 | 1:03 PM

Lawmakers in Illinois adjourned the 2026 spring legislative session Monday but didn’t pass a bill that could keep the Chicago Bears from building a new home in ​Indiana.

State Sen. Bill Cunningham (D-Chicago) proposed legislation permitting cities within ‌Cook County and populations greater than 70,000 — such as Arlington Heights and Chicago — to establish their own sports stadium authority. The Bears would foot the bill for construction — the team has dedicated $2 billion in funding toward the ‌project — ​on land owned by the public.

Under the ⁠proposed plan, the Bears would ⁠benefit from paying for the stadium construction by paying taxes only for the property surrounding the stadium. For example, in Arlington Heights, the franchise has a development plan for the ​land adjacent to the stadium site. The team would then hand the stadium over to the newly created sports authority ⁠and pay a stadium lease agreement.

The ⁠Illinois Senate passed the bill by a vote of ​37-17 at 3:39 a.m. Monday. However, the house adjourned less than ​an hour later without a vote. Unless Illinois governor ‌JB Pritzker calls a special legislative session, lawmakers won’t convene again until October’s fall veto session.

The Bears are deciding whether to build their new stadium in Arlington Heights, where they own a ⁠326-acre property at the former site of the Arlington International Racecourse, or in Hammond, Ind. The Bears have never played a home game outside ⁠of Illinois since ‌the franchise originated in 1920. But Indiana recently ⁠passed legislation, similar to Cunningham’s proposal, to ​get the ‌Bears to build a domed stadium in Hammond, ​located less ⁠than 30 miles from Chicago.

“We will finalize our evaluation of both Arlington Heights and Hammond and remain on the late spring/early summer timeline that we have previously communicated,” the Bears said in a statement. “We will provide an update when we have a decision to ​share.”

–Field Level Media