Chicago News

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    Aldermen advanced a measure on Monday designed to give restaurants more flexibility in their dealings with third-party delivery apps. And the City Council’s rules committee is set to resuscitate stalled proposals to establish a guaranteed income program and a permanent shared e-scooter network.

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    Hacked emails offer a rare glimpse at the grinding process by which civilian police oversight went from a lofty campaign promise to an ordinance on the brink of passage to a political dead end, leaving the issue open for more than a year.  [Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago]

    Aldermen over the weekend appeared within striking distance of a deal with Mayor Lori Lightfoot oa blueprint to establish civilian oversight of the Chicago Police Department, an agreement that has eluded the parties for more than a year. 

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    A proposal by city Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin to fight inequitable home lending, an infrastructure agreement surrounding the Michael Reese Hospital site and a $1.2 million police settlement are among multiple big-ticket items on tap for approval by the City Council Committee on Finance during its 10 a.m. meeting on Monday.

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    Aldermen in the City Council’s Committee on Budget and Government Operations approved the allocation of $113.4 million in new grant funding. The city’s Deputy Inspector General for Public Safety briefed aldermen on CPD’s delay in responding to a report that found “gaps of constitutional proportion” in how well-equipped the department is in producing documents. And the council's license committee is set to consider a cap on third-party delivery fees.

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    Renderings of the 34-story apartment tower proposed for 1215 W. Fulton St. [Department of Planning and Development]

    Nearly one-third of apartments in a towering new Fulton Market development could be set aside at below-market rents, representing a “model” for a coming wave of residential development in a section of the neighborhood that has thus far banned it, members of the Chicago Plan Commission said Thursday.

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    From left: Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29), Ald. Harry Osterman (48) and Ald. Nicholas Sposato (38) during the June public safety committee hearing. 

    Proponents of a grassroots-backed police oversight ordinance have been inching toward an agreement with Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s office over a long-delayed plan to establish an independent commission to oversee the Chicago Police Department, multiple aldermen told The Daily Line on Thursday.  

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    Ald. David Moore (17) speaks after a June City Council meeting. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line] 

    Thursday’s meeting of the City Council Committee on Budget and Government Operations came to an abrupt pause after Ald. David Moore (17) took issue with a community organization being tapped to receive federal grant money to help the city with health literacy. 

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    Lincoln Property Company is seeking to turn a surface parking lot at Weiss Hospital into a 12-story apartment building. [Courtesy 46th Ward Office]

    This article was first published in Block Club Chicago.

    UPTOWN — A developer’s plan to turn a Weiss Hospital parking lot into a 12-story apartment complex received critical city backing Thursday, bringing the controversial development one step closer to approval.

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    The next phase of the Roosevelt Square project on the Near West Side is nearing full City Council approval.

    This article was first published in Block Club Chicago.

    CHICAGO — A key city panel green-lit plans Thursday to bring over 200 new residential units across four buildings at the former Chicago Housing Authority-owned ABLA Homes on the Near West Side.

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    An artist's rendering of the police training facility in development. [provided]

    This article was originally published in Block Club Chicago.

    A city plan to establish a new Boys & Girls Clubs of Chicago on the grounds of a much-maligned police and fire training facility is moving forward.

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    Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough is ready to start calculating property tax rates after initially refusing to do so, her office announced. And City Council committees are set to take up ordinances on a range of issues, from remote administrative hearings to car impoundments. 

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    Plan Commissioners are set to consider the next phase of the Roosevelt Square mixed-income development on Thursday. 

    The Chicago Plan Commission is set for a marathon meeting Thursday as commissioners prepare to consider approving the next phase of the Roosevelt Square mixed-income development, a controversial luxury housing development in Uptown and nearly a dozen additional development proposals combining for more than 1,000 new homes across the city.

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    Chicago Department of Housing Comm. Marisa Novara reviewing a map of applications from the last round of the Emergency Rental Assistance Program.

    Aldermen advanced two measures on Wednesday designed to prevent a wave of renters from being displaced as state and federal moratoria on evictions are on track to expire at the end of this month.

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    Ward-level officials who oversee garbage pickup and street cleaning should not be immune from court-mandated hiring restrictions, according to a city watchdog. [Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago]

    Aldermen are violating federal hiring rules by hand-picking the officials responsible for trash collection and street sweeping in their own wards, a city watchdog declared in a report published Wednesday.

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    Aldermen are scheduled on Wednesday to consider the sale of the former Michael Reese Hospital site for the ultimate development of the "Bronzeville Lakefront" campus.

    Aldermen on Wednesday are set to consider the sale of the former Michael Reese Hospital to the developer planning to build a 48-acre housing, office and life sciences campus on the Bronzeville property.  

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