Chicago News

  • Advocates of an ordinance that would strengthen at-home health protections for seniors say the measure is set to pass a key hurdle on Monday.  The measure comes one month after an earlier version of their proposal hit a roadblock in the City Council.
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  • Chicago Inspector General Joe Ferguson gives aldermen a timeline of his office’s look at the CPD-CPS police in schools program.


    Chicago Inspector General Joseph Ferguson on Thursday said the city’s current school resource officer program requires reform as alderman debated the merits of keeping police in Chicago Public Schools (CPS).
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  • Cook County finance officials don’t expect sales tax revenues to match December 2019 levels until next fall. [Cook County]
    A suite of new taxes on pot, sports betting and online retail sales will help Cook County forge a path through its nightmarish two-year budget outlook, officials said Wednesday.
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  • Victor Salvo of The Legacy Project gives a tour of the Halsted Street pylons that contain histories of LGBTQ figures in history.


    This fall, public schools across Illinois will be amending their history curriculums to include the contributions of LGBTQ figures like astronaut Sally Ride and social work pioneer Jane Addams.
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  • JB Pritzker with allies on the day he signed Illinois’ $15 minimum wage bill into law at the Governor's Mansion in Springfield on Feb. 19, 2019. The state's minimum wage will increase to $10 an hour on Wednesday. [Hannah Meisel/The Daily Line]
    Minimum wage workers in Illinois will see more money in their pockets starting Wednesday when the state increases their hourly wage.
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    Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot address President Donald Trump at an event Monday.


    Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot called on President Donald Trump Monday to stop politicizing violence in the city and to support it through a litany of efforts, including greater access to healthcare.
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    In any other year, Opening Day for Major League Baseball marks a rebirth of possibilities for both the ballclubs and fans.

    This year poses a lot of legal and health risks.
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    Entrepreneurs looking to open new cannabis businesses will have to boost their efforts to engage neighbors under new requirements issued Friday by the Zoning Board of Appeals in an attempt to adapt to the Covid-19 pandemic.
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    Several times in recent weeks 33rd Ward Alderman and democratic socialist Rossana Rodriguez-Sanchez has tweeted out about having City Council conversations regarding policing reform.

    Yet, conversations vary in type and quality and can range from exceedingly delicate engagement to something a bit more one-way. Whatever conversations are undertaken by Chicago’s six democratic socialist City Council members, though, it will be a major clue at what we can expect from them in years to come.

    In theory, the community measures that prominently featured in the last municipal election cycle could have sparked wide-ranging conversations about civic transformation: Reinvestment in Chicago Public Schools, reopening mental health clinics, and changing policing to better help people experiencing mental health crises. These all enjoy sizeable support from across the city, a strong indication that other ideas for a more just and equitable municipality could also be as welcome.

    In practice, though, these measures were often collapsed into #NoCopAcademy, frequently creating a false and highly-charged dichotomy that reduced the space in which people of good faith could discuss everything from ways to support and lift up youth to the finding of the 2017 U.S. Justice Department report that better Chicago Police Department training would reduce misconduct. Although this partitioning of issues rallied some voters, it also masked otherwise widespread agreement and narrowly channeled Chicagoans’ attention and dialogue.

    In our current civic moment, the quality of conversation will affect the quality of any eventual reform. If a lightning rod policy position like #NoCopAcademy develops, it risks limiting the scope of discussion and making Chicagoans disengage from the process, although it likely will not derail reform altogether; the broader public is committing itself to addressing long-festering systemic problems, and that alone should further spur on Mayor Lightfoot and a wide swath of City Council to pass some sort of measures.

    Beyond today’s conversations, though, is the larger question of what type of profile and presence will Chicago’s democratic socialist aldermen establish.

    On the one hand lies the path associated with the Democratic Socialists of America, where touchstone issues forge intense internal solidarity but also create strong in group/out group boundaries.

    For example, #NoCopAcademy has had a long afterlife, leading to continuing social media professions that “Lightfoot’s a cop.” To the extent that an alderman chooses this path, they may strain and sacrifice political relationships, but they can continue to put issues on the radar and push them as they prioritize movement-building. But, their ability to jump offices will be limited to what any given district will bear. City and statewide positions will also be out of reach for the foreseeable future, as Alderman Carlos Ramirez-Rosa found out when his unbreakable adherence to the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict cost him his position on Daniel Biss’s gubernatorial ticket.

    On the other hand lies the more traditionally tactful electoral politicking increasingly evident in DSA superstar Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez. She diplomatically responded to charges of a toxic online presence by some Sanders supporters with a judicious reminder that organizing involves listening and inclusion. Her crossover appeal is still not so strongly constrained by her commitment to standard socialist causes, despite her perpetual demonization by the Rupert Murdoch media ecosystem.

    Either path is possible, and the choice is up to each of the aldermen. For the rest of us, the question is what kind of texture will city politics have, and how soon will we see democratic socialists viably contend for a broader range of offices in Chicago and Illinois.

    David Mihalyfy has a Ph.D. in the History of Christianity from the University of Chicago, and his writing has appeared in the Atlantic online, Religion Dispatches, Contingent Magazine, Jacobin, and Inside Higher Ed. He ran against 11th Ward alderman Patrick Daley Thompson in the 2019 municipal election cycle.
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    The preliminary budget deficit for 2021 is the highest Cook County has faced since 2011.


    Cook County is staring down a nearly $410 million budget deficit for 2021, the highest mid-year gap projected by county officials in a decade.
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    The city of Chicago's spending on the Covid-19 emergency—about $31 million to date—has been held to account by a little-known aldermanic working group. But its future is uncertain.
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