Chicago News
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Chicago Department of Buildings Comm. Matthew Beaudet and Chicago Journeymen Plumbers Local Union 130 president Jim Majerowicz came down on opposite sides of a debate over plumbing regulations on Thursday.
A procession of city buildings officials, developers and engineers championed a push on Thursday to relax Chicago’s plumbing regulations, saying a widely-used form of plastic piping can dramatically cut construction costs across the city. But an influential plumbers’ union is resisting the plan, saying the flammable material could “jeopardize safety” in the case of fires.
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Advocates for the Empowering Communities for Public Safety ordinance rallied outside Ald. Taliaferro’s ward office Monday [Erin Hegarty]
Aldermen are set on Friday to discuss a years-in-the-making proposal to establish civilian oversight of the police department as Mayor Lori Lightfoot continues working on her own measure.
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Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36) explains his proposal to license tow truck operators.
A proposal to license towing companies to target “rogue” truck operators is headed to the City Council floor.
Members of the City Council Committee on License and Consumer Protection gave unanimous approval on Wednesday to the ordinance (SO2020-4817), which Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36) introduced in October and has tweaked multiple times since. The measure is lined up for final approval by the City Council next Wednesday.
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An aerial view of the 12-acre "North Union" development planned on the Moody Bible Institute campus [Department of Planning and Development]
A decade-long plan to build more than 4,000 new homes along multiple blocks of the Near North Side (O2021-1024) will headline Thursday’s 10 a.m. meeting of the Chicago Plan Commission.
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Cook County leaders will use preliminary census data to draw their 17 new district boundaries by the end of summer. Chicago will hire a full-time adviser on water policy thanks to new private grants. And a potential overhaul to the city’s plumbing code will be the topic of a zoning committee hearing Thursday afternoon.
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A revised ordinance would compel the city to open a public database of closed police misconduct files going back to 2000. [Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago]
Updated May 19, 6:18 p.m.— Leaders of a Chicago watchdog agency on Wednesday tore into a curtailed version of a police transparency ordinance held up as a compromise between Mayor Lori Lightfoot's administration and a pair of key aldermen. The series of substantial edits to the measure would "profoundly limit its transparency value," a spokesperson for Inspector General Joseph Ferguson wrote in a statement.
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Ald. Roberto Maldonado (26) expressed frustration during a Tuesday committee hearing on the lengthy regulatory process required to sell city-owned lots.
Aldermen called on Tuesday for city planning and real estate officials to chart out their progress on reviewing applications for city-owned land, blaming legally required environmental checks for a backlog of vacant lots in their wards.
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Lincoln Towing, based at 4882 N. Clark St. in the 47th Ward, has kept its business license despite attempts by state regulators to shut it down.
Aldermen are scheduled to again consider an ordinance that would regulate “rogue” tow truck operators by requiring companies to be licensed with the city after the measure stalled in committee last month.
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Ald. Pat Dowell (3) chairs the City Council Committee on Budget and Government Operations.
Aldermen are scheduled Wednesday to consider appropriating more than $55 million in federal grant money toward vaccination efforts in the city and allowing the commissioner of the Department of Assets, Information and Services to contract out work.
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Members of the Chicago Aldermanic Black Caucus during an October 2019 news conference [Alex Nitkin/The Daily Line]
The City Council’s Aldermanic Black Caucus voted to endorse the Empowering Communities for Public Safety Ordinance, adding a powerful tailwind to the civilian police oversight plan as Mayor Lori Lightfoot prepares to release her long-awaited counterproposal.
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Ashish Sharma discussed mitigating the urban heat island effect Monday.
Researchers and city officials told aldermen on Monday that combatting the phenomenon of urban heat islands in Chicago will require a “mix of solutions” as the city’s tree canopy shrinks and temperatures rise.
The more than two-hour meeting of the City Council Committee on Environmental Protection and Energy on Monday included a subject matter hearing on the effects of heat islands and potential remedies to the issue.
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A chart in the 2020 Chicago Region Tree Census Report shows Chicago’s canopy coverage has dropped from 19 percent in 2010 to 16 percent in 2020. [The Morton Arboretum]
Aldermen are scheduled on Monday to discuss the urban heat island effect in Chicago and consider various ways to combat the phenomenon that causes temperatures to soar in areas with little tree cover.
The subject matter hearing, scheduled at 10 a.m. in the City Council Committee on Environmental Protection and Energy, is the result of a resolution (R2020-452) introduced by Ald. George Cardenas (12), who chairs the committee.
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Officials are weighing whether to establish a permanent e-scooter program in Chicago. [Hannah Alani/Block Club Chicago]
City-logged complaints about e-scooters fell sharply last year, and people who do not ride the devices are less resistant to a permanent citywide scooter program than they may have been before, according to a report released by city transportation officials on Friday.
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Jitu Brown speaks during a news conference outside City Hall on Wednesday
A coalition of labor and community groups is raising the volume on its demands that Mercy Hospital keeps operating at full capacity for at least the next 10 years and that neighbors have seats on the hospital board after it’s sold to a new owner later this month.























