Chicago News

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    Ald. David Moore (17) speaks to reporters after his long-stalled proposal to rename Lake Shore Drive was stymied by a parliamentary delay tactic on Wednesday

    The moment after a pair of aldermen maneuvered to sabotage Ald. David Moore (17)’s years-in-the-making push to rename Lake Shore Drive, Moore threatened to use a similar tactic to delay “everything” that came up through the City Council as long as his proposal was held in purgatory.

    He wasn’t bluffing.

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    Mayor Lori Lightfoot answers questions during a news conference Wednesday.

    A portion of a wide-reaching business relief package unveiled Wednesday by Mayor Lori Lightfoot was one of more than 20 newly introduced measures banished to the City Council’s Committee on Committee and Rules.

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    Mayor Lori Lightfoot discusses her proposal for civilian oversight of the Chicago Police Department during a news conference Monday.

    Aldermen and long-time community advocates for civilian oversight of the Chicago Police Department didn’t waste time poking holes in Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s long-awaited police oversight ordinance hours after she released the plan on Monday.

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    Wednesday’s scheduled vote to rename Lake Shore Drive after Jean Baptiste Pointe Du Sable is the culmination of a more than 18-month effort.

    The outer portion of Lake Shore Drive would be renamed after Jean Baptiste Point Du Sable if aldermen approve a long-stalled name change Wednesday. And another proposal up for a vote in the City Council would empower the city to shut down “rogue” towing companies operating in the city.

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    Attorney Steve Friedland showcases a plan to rehab a vacant McKinkley Park building into a 120-unit affordable housing complex.

    Aldermen voted on Tuesday to advance a plan to create 120 affordable apartments at the edge of McKinley Park, overruling a faction of their colleagues who said it could be dangerous to locate the homes several hundred feet from a polluting asphalt plant.

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    Ald. Leslie Hairston (5) ripped Ald. Scott Waguespack (32) and city attorneys for “watering down” legislation to launch a database of historic police misconduct.

    An attempt to legislate a city-managed database of historic police misconduct complaints fizzled for the second time in two months on Monday, as aldermen failed to reconcile an impasse between the measure’s supporters and the agency that would be charged with putting it into practice.

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    Jeff Brink and Malcolm Whiteside during Monday’s finance committee meeting.

    A proposal to establish an Urban Forestry Advisory Board stalled in committee Monday, as aldermen approved more than $1 million in legal settlements.

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    Ald. Nicholas Sposato (38) asked county commissioners not to rename Oct. 12 to Indigenous Peoples’ Day, arguing “this is about addition, not subtraction.”

    Elected officials and public commenters raised different arguments for and against renaming Cook County’s Columbus Day holiday during a well-attended subject matter hearing Monday.

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    A rendering of a building planned at 920 S Wells as part of the “North Union” campus planned next to the Moody Bible Institute.

    Aldermen are scheduled on Tuesday to give a zoning nod to JDL Development’s plan to spend the next decade building multiple towers with apartments and commercial space interspersed with parks on a 12-acre swath of the Near North Side.

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    Key sponsors of a police oversight ordinance include Ald. Harry Osterman (48), Ald. Leslie Hairston (5), Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35) and Ald. Roderick Sawyer (6).

    A key committee vote on civilian oversight of the Chicago Police Department will be taken next month, teeing up a possible vote by the full City Council June 23, Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29) told aldermen multiple times on Friday. 

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    Mayor Lori Lightfoot during an April 15 news conference and Inspector General Joseph Ferguson during a committee meeting the next day.

    A months-long legislative battle over police transparency is set to come to a head Monday afternoon as aldermen vote whether to compile two decades’ worth of police misconduct complaints into a public database.

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    The Urban Forestry Advisory Board would be responsible for recommending policies to reverse the decline of the city’s tree canopy. [Facebook/Chicago Region Trees Initiative]

    Aldermen are set on Monday to weigh a long-stalled proposal to establish an all-volunteer board that would advise Chicago leaders on how to reverse the decline of the city’s tree canopy.

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    Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough has been a “reluctant participant” in court-appointed hiring reforms, attorney Michael Shakman said.

    Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough has been a “reluctant participant” in a federally mandated effort to insulate her office from clout-based hiring practices, according to veteran anti-patronage attorney Michael Shakman. Shakman also doubled down against Gov. JB Pritzker’s attempts to free the governor's office from a federal anti-patronage probe, saying his administration is “not there yet” on a series of mandated reforms.

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    In 1969, an idealistic young lawyer named Michael Shakman filed a lawsuit with the goal of breaking the stranglehold that the Democratic Organization of Cook County — the political “machine” run by Mayor Richard J. Daley — held on Chicago’s government and elections. More than a half-century later, Shakman isn’t finished yet. The Daily Line’s Alex Nitkin talked to Shakman about the history of the “Shakman decree,” how it’s transformed the way governments work in Illinois, why it’s so hard to root out Chicago’s decades-old legacy of patronage — and what it will take to end the 52-year-old federal legal case.

    Listen Now! 

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    A proposed 120-unit affordable housing development faced blowback in the Chicago Plan Commission due to concerns about environmental racism. [Department of Planning and Development]

    A divided Chicago Plan Commission voted on Thursday to allow a new affordable housing development about 650 feet from the McKinley Park MAT Asphalt plant, as multiple commissioners said they feared the move would perpetuate environmental racism against the developments future residents who are extremely likely to be Latino.