Chicago News
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Alderpeople will reconsider the appointment of the remaining nominated member of the city’s civilian police oversight body on Tuesday, the zoning committee will consider new regulations for vacant storefronts and the education committee will hold a hearing on a network of schools that target at-risk youth.
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The Cook County flag is pictured in this file photo.
The Cook County Board of Commissioners approved resolutions to authorize two affordable housing pilot programs worth a cumulative $15 million during its regular meeting Thursday.
“These two programs will help provide quality, single family homes to Cook County residents who need help the most,” Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle said in a news release Thursday.
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Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25), who chairs the Committee on Housing and Real Estate, is pictured in November 2023. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The City Council Committee on Housing and Real Estate approved a measure Wednesday to tweak language in the Affordable Requirements Ordinance (ARO) to specify the ways developers must comply with the requirements of the affordable housing law.
But the housing committee postponed a vote on an ordinance that would have continued an agreement between the city and Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) to allow the CHA to utilize city hearing officers to adjudicate matters raised through its tenant grievance process.
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Comm. Anthony Quezada is pictured during a county board meeting in October 2023. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The Cook County Legislation and Intergovernmental Relations Committee approved a resolution Wednesday that calls on the state legislature to eliminate the tipped wage statewide. The resolution will receive final consideration at Thursday’s County Board of Commissioners meeting, which kicks off at 10 a.m.
Comm. Sean Morrison (R-17), the sole Republican on the county board, was the only committee member to vote no.
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Ald. Sam Nugent (39) listens as Angel Rubi Navarijo speaks during a police and fire committee meeting Tuesday. [Livestream]
The City Council Committee on Police and Fire approved six of the mayor’s seven nominees to the city’s civilian police oversight commission on Tuesday but postponed a vote on one nominee over concerns the appointment could lead to a conflict of interest.
Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29), the committee chair, said he hopes to hold a meeting before next week’s City Council meeting to vote on the remaining nomination. The council could give final confirmation to the nominees approved by the committee next Wednesday.
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Ald. Pat Dowell (3), chair of the finance committee, is pictured. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Alderpeople on the finance committee approved the creation of a relief program for residents who have received sky-high water bills after underground leaks, but some implored the city to look at ways to expand program eligibility following a pilot period.
On Monday, the committee approved an ordinance (O2024-0008889) creating a two-year pilot program that will provide financial assistance to property owners whose water and sewer bills jumped as a result of a leak in their metered water service line.
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The Chicago Police emblem is pictured.
The City Council Committee on Police and Fire will vote Tuesday on Mayor Brandon Johnson’s nominees to the city’s civilian police oversight board.
The slate of seven candidates up for consideration to serve four-year terms on the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability (CCPSA) are the first batch chosen through a nominating committee process. The police and fire committee will meet at noon in council chambers.
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City Hall is pictured in this file photo.
The City Council Committee on Finance will meet Monday and consider a measure to create a pilot program to help customers that have experienced spiking water and sewer bills after leaks. The finance committee will also consider a legal settlement related to a woman’s death in police custody, the issuance of housing bonds to help build a new affordable development in Humboldt Park and multiple allocations of tax increment financing (TIF) dollars.
The finance committee will meet at 9:30 a.m. in council chambers at City Hall.
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DSS Comm. Cole Stallard speaks a Committee on Public Safety hearing Tuesday. [Livestream]
Despite steps taken by the city a few years ago to crack down on so-called “rogue towers,” consumers continue to be preyed upon by unlicensed tow truck companies or those that charge sky-high rates, alderpeople heard during a hearing at the Committee on Public Safety on Tuesday.
While the hearing was light on specific legislative steps the City Council would take next, Ald. Brian Hopkins (2), who chairs the public safety committee, said the information presented served as a wake-up call about the seriousness of the problem.
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Rev. Ira Acree, right, speaks to Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29) after his appointment to the RTA Board was approved by the transportation committee Wednesday. [Michael McDevitt/The Daily Line]
The City Council Committee on Transportation and Public Way voted Wednesday to approve the appointment of a West Side pastor to the Regional Transportation Authority (RTA) Board after a hearing during which the pastor said he was unaware of a looming multi-million budget shortfall facing the agency he is seeking to help oversee.
The RTA oversees the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA), Metra and Pace and is tasked with allocating funding to the three agencies’ service boards, capital planning, monitoring service performance and coordinating system-wide service and standards.
Just two alderpeople voted against the appointment, Alds. Scott Waguespack (32) and Andre Vasquez (40). The appointment goes to the City Council for final approval later this month.
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Ald. Bill Conway (34) is pictured in October 2023. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The City Council’s public safety committee Tuesday approved an ordinance that designates the area around a West Loop abortion clinic as a noise-sensitive zone, similar to noise sensitivity regulations placed around Chicago hospitals.
The proposal, which will go to the City Council for final approval later this month, is aimed at addressing frequent protests around the clinic that interfere with patients’ ability to access care and clinic operations.
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Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36) is pictured at a May 2023 council meeting. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The City Council Committee on Economic, Capital and Technology Development on Tuesday held an ordinance (O2024-0008201) requiring city data to “be processed, stored, transmitted and disposed of” within United States jurisdiction.
Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36), the sponsor of the measure and chair of the committee, said the proposal would be held after he received memos from the mayor’s office, sister agencies and from some city vendors such as Microsoft, Google and Amazon concerned about the proposal.















