Chicago News

  • Deborah Witzburg during a virtual meeting of the City Council Committee on Public Safety Wednesday

    Aldermen on Wednesday pressed a city watchdog for answers on how the Chicago Police Department can speed the clock on a long list of federally mandated reforms following a week of unrest that inflamed existing tensions between neighborhoods and police.

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  • REPARATIONS RESOLUTION ON THE TABLE — Nationwide protests over racial injustice will provide a timely backdrop for Thursday’s scheduled meeting of the City Council Committee on Health and Human Relations, when aldermen are scheduled to explore the possibility of a city-led reparations campaign for descendants of slaves. The proposal (R2019-694) by Ald. Roderick Sawyer (6) would launch the Chicago Descendants of Enslaved African Reparations Commission, which would be charged with ensuring “equity, equality, and parity for citizens of African descent in Chicago who are mired in poverty.” The commission would consider “forms of redress” the city could take to close racial gaps in housing, education and health, and report its findings back to the council. Sawyer — who chairs the health and human relations committee — introduced the resolution in September, saying he wanted to “gauge the council’s temperature” on the idea. The committee is also set Thursday to consider a proposed ordinance (O2020-2254) from Ald. Maria Hadden (49) that would crank up public health standards in senior buildings during “public health emergencies.” The committee meeting is scheduled for 11 a.m. Thursday. (Alex Nitkin)

    REOPENING AMID UNREST — Amid lingering reports of looting and unrest throughout the city, Chicago entered phase three of its multi-tiered reopening plan Wednesday. Diners now have the opportunity to head to their favorite restaurant or bar and eat outdoors at a table spaced six feet from the next and attended to by a service staff in masks. The city is allowing restaurants without outdoor seating to expand service into the street or to adjoining parking lots, which may cause challenges considering some pockets of the city have been besieged by protesters since Saturday’s unrest downtown. Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Wednesday was chosen specifically as the partial re-opening date to give restaurants a “soft opening” to allow them to work out the new regulations before the weekend rush. But no one is required to open their doors yet. “Today is not a mandatory reopening,” she said. “It’s up to the individual to make the call and when.” Restaurants in neighborhoods hit hardest by looting will receive additional support, said Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection Comm. Rosa Escareño. Her department has also made it known they’re a resource for restaurateurs still hesitant to open their doors. “They want to be able to make that decision themselves,” she said. “We are telling them we are here to support you if you have concerns for yourself and your establishment,” Escareño said. “We are ready to work with them.” (Mark Guarino)
  • President Donald Trump’s threat to send “thousands and thousands” of U.S. troops to the streets of America’s cities to suppress civil disorder is unprecedented, constitutional experts say, but it would be legal despite the political fallout that would inevitably follow.
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  • In a televised speech late Tuesday, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot promised reforms she said would help the city heal from both racial injustice and police misconduct.
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  • Aldermen are poised on Wednesday to take a pause from neighborhood damage control to fill a key role in the marathon effort to reform the Chicago Police Department.
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  • CTA CUTBACKS TO STAY — Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Tuesday defended her decision to shut down the CTA overnight and said transit service will stay limited for the foreseeable future, saying the move was necessary to protect transit workers.
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  • Cook County law enforcement agencies deployed hundreds of deputies and tapped into a vast intelligence-sharing operation to help suburban police tamp down looting that spread outside Chicago Sunday, county officials announced Monday.
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  • With looting escalating Sunday, some lawmakers representing Chicago’s South Side say the police are overwhelmed and need help to put an end to the unrest that is showing no signs of slowing down.
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  • Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot intended to talk about her plan to expand outdoor dining in June, but then she preempted those remarks to address President Donald Trump.
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  • Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi is trying to pull off a feat the county has never accomplished before: a vast expansion of property tax reassessments, all squeezed into a truncated timeline to make sure bills can be calculated and sent out on time next year.
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    After pledging that the city would only loosen restrictions once guidelines are in place, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Tuesday she was comfortable announcing a date for the city to move into phase three: Wednesday, June 3.
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    Owners of small apartment buildings, independent hotels and restaurant spaces are likely to benefit most from an ambitious plan by Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi to bake the economic impact of Covid-19 into the assessed values of properties all over the county.
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    Chicago businesses now have restriction guidelines for reopening in early June. In talking with reporters Wednesday, Deputy Mayor Samir Mayekar said the guidance, announced Wednesday, is a result of a collective of about 200 industry leaders.

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    Consultants from the William Everett Group gave an update on Wednesday to members of the Cook County Complete Census Commission about efforts to boost responses to the U.S. Census.


    Dozens of small groups using public dollars to help spread awareness of the U.S. Census are running up against a problem: they have not been able to spend the nearly $1 million they were originally given, and next week they are scheduled to receive more.
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    A pair of North Side aldermen want to give their constituents more time to force a ban on cannabis dispensaries from opening in their immediate neighborhoods.  They say launching petition drives during a stay-at-home order is virtually impossible.
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