Chicago News

  • Ben Lieberman, a grieving father who lost his 19-year-old son in a car accident, took center stage at a public safety committee hearing to consider new technology to detect when a driver has been distracted by a phone. The solution is the so-called Textalyzer, a program plugged into a cell phone to log swiping, typing, or voice activation.

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  • Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s office announced Thursday he had reached a new five-year deal with 31 unions representing 7,700 city workers, who will get an average annual raise of 2.1 percent.

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  • Nearly a month after a hearing into Chicago Public Schools officials improperly denied some special education students services they were entitled to under federal law, critics of the school district will take center stage at City Hall.

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  • With thousands of Chicagoans homeless every night, the Committee on Housing and Real Estate will consider a measure at its meeting set for 9:30 a.m. Friday to earmark $500,000 to help homeless Chicagoans find a permanent home.

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  • Ald. Marty Quinn (13) has successfully banned home-sharing booked through sites like Airbnb and VRBO in half of his ward, and has more planned in the coming weeks. Aldermen also approved an increase to maximum booting fees, and licensing costs for those booting companies.

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  • Concerned that smartphone-obsessed drivers are contributing to an epidemic of crashes caused by distracted drivers, two powerful aldermen will ask the Chicago Police Department to start using technology to crack down on those who text while driving.

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  • One day after Ald. Ricardo Muñoz (22) invoked a rarely used rule to force the City Council’s Committee on Education and Child Development to hold a hearing on whether Chicago Public Schools officials improperly denied some special education students services they were entitled to under federal law, a hearing was scheduled for 2:30 p.m. on Jan. 12.

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  • More than a dozen current and former city employees told aldermen in blunt terms Wednesday the Chicago Water Department remains rife with racism and sexism — despite a scandal that toppled a commissioner and cost three high-ranking employees their jobs earlier this year.

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  • Aldermen approved the redevelopment of a former Chicago Housing Authority site, a new 23-story building on Milwaukee in River West, and a new development near the Ravenswood Metra. Two of the biggest items on the Zoning Committee’s agenda were deferred and await Plan Commission approval, while one item notably absent from the agenda led to one couple getting ejected from the meeting and an alderman blocking an affordable housing organization on Twitter.

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    The Chicago Federation of Labor, the umbrella organization for Chicago and Cook County's labor unions, publicized a selection of endorsements in countywide races in the upcoming March 20 primary. The group neglected to endorse in a few key races, opting to write “TBD” for the 2nd, 4th, 5th, 8th, 10th, 11th, and 16th district races, and for county assessor.

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  • Assessor Joe Berrios’ petition challenges against both Frederick “Fritz” Kaegi and Andrea Raila’s campaigns are expected to be overturned, the non-incumbents said Tuesday.

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  • Another aftershock of the political earthquake caused by the decision of U.S. Rep. Luis Gutiérrez not to run for re-election to Congress hit City Hall Tuesday.

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  • Ald. Ricardo Muñoz (22) Tuesday invoked a rarely used rule to force the City Council’s Committee on Education and Child Development to hold a hearing on whether Chicago Public Schools officials improperly denied some special education students services they were entitled to under federal law. Ald. Scott Waguespack (32) said late Tuesday the mayor’s office has agreed to hold the hearing on Friday at 2:30.

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  • A plan to expand one of the few parks in Logan Square adjacent to the 606 — otherwise known as the Bloomingdale Trail — got the green light Tuesday from the Committee on Special Events, Cultural Affairs and Recreation.

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  • After months of revelations about rampant racism and sexism in the Chicago Water Department, the Human Relations Committee will hold a hearing at 10 a.m. today into the scandal that has already toppled a commissioner and cost three high-ranking employees their jobs.

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