Chicago News
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The Chicago Plan Commission unanimously approved plans for a 282-unit residential building proposed for 160 N. Morgan St.
A 282-unit Near West Side residential building approved by the Chicago Plan Commission on Thursday would be the first major development required to meet the demands of the city’s new Affordable Requirements Ordinance, officials said.
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Members of the Chicago Housing Justice League held a rally and marched to Ald. Harry Osterman’s (48) office last month to demand a hearing on the Just Cause Eviction ordinance. [Chicago Housing Justice League]
The chair of the City Council’s housing committee will make good Friday on a year-old promise to bring a sweeping eviction crackdown up for discussion — but the measure faces long odds in its current form.
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Cara Hendrickson (left) and Walter Katz are set for appointment to a search committee charged with finding Chicago’s next inspector general. [Arnold Ventures/Business and Professional People for the Public Interest]
The delayed process of finding a successor to departing Inspector General Joseph Ferguson is set to kick into higher gear on Friday, as aldermen vet two candidates for a search committee charged with finding a new leader for the watchdog office.
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Ald. Andre Vasquez (40) submitted a 229-page budget appropriation proposal that would hike fines for health and building code violations to pay for more mental health and homelessness services. [Alex V. Hernandez/Block Club Chicago]
Chicago’s budget process unfolds along the same lines every year: the mayor comes out with a top-to-bottom spending plan for the next year and aldermen push for tweaks, ultimately deciding whether to register dissent when it comes up for a final vote.
This year, one member of the City Council is trying to upend that routine.
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Ald. Jim Gardiner (45) paces at a City Council meeting on Sept. 14, 2021. [Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago]
The Board of Ethics voted unanimously Monday to issue a “notice of probable cause” that a city official matching the circumstances of Ald. Jim Gardiner (45) violated anti-retaliation rules in the city’s ethics code and should undergo a “full factual investigation” by the city’s inspector general.
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Mayor Lori Lightfoot speaking during a news conference after Tuesday's City Council meeting [Alex Nitkin/The Daily Line]
The City Council voted on Tuesday to approve a collective bargaining agreement with the Chicago Police Department’s rank-and-file employees, ending the union’s four-year absence of a contract.
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Mapmaking consultant Peter Creticos presents the most recent draft of the county’s new district map during a Redistricting Committee on Tuesday [Alex Nitkin/The Daily Line]
The Cook County Board of Commissioners has one more week to keep tweaking its once-in-a-decade remap of district boundaries. But to hear commissioners tell it, the job is all but finished.
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Finance committee chair Ald. Scott Waguespack (32) and Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson during a committee meeting on Monday
Aldermen punted Monday on a proposal to award damages to a man who was shot three times by a Chicago Police officer, shelving the settlement after an intense debate over the merits of the case, the city’s record of fighting lawsuits and whether discussions of police misconduct should be shielded from public view.
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Cannabis dispensaries would be allowed to open across most of Downtown under an ordinance set for consideration by the City Council during its Tuesday meeting.
The City Council is scheduled to vote during its meeting on Tuesday to loosen regulations for cannabis dispensaries and approve a $600 million, eight-year contract with the city’s rank-and-file police union, among dozens of other measures.
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Cook County Comm. Sean Morrison (R-17) and the most recent draft of Cook County’s redrawn district boundaries
After state lawmakers chopped up the only all-suburban Cook County Board of Review district earlier this year, politically dismembering the county’s Republican voting base, Cook County Comm. Sean Morrison (R-17) braced for a fight.
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The City Council overwhelmingly voted to install Ald. Jason Ervin (28) to the chairmanship vacated by indicted Ald. Carrie Austin (34). And two powerful aldermen moved to delay Chicago Inspector General Joseph Ferguson’s departure after he warned city leaders they’re not moving fast enough to pick his replacement.
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K J Payne/Flickr
This article was originally published by Block Club Chicago.
Chicago could take a “first step” Tuesday towards reining in the use of single-use plastics at city restaurants, but a more expansive ban won’t be pursued until the industry fully recovers from the hardships of the coronavirus pandemic.
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The city’s minority contracting program would be expanded and extended through 2027 under an ordinance approved on Friday. [Jeridan Villegas/Unsplash]
A City Council committee voted unanimously on Friday to advance a proposal extending and expanding city rules designed to give a leg up to construction firms that typically face discrimination in the industry. If the ordinance earns approval by the full City Council next week, it will renew the program with two weeks to spare before it was set to expire.
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Banks that apply to hold the city’s money would have to publish detailed information on their lending patterns under an ordinance set for consideration Monday.
Banks would be required to more thoroughly report their lending patterns before applying to hold the city’s money under a proposal set for consideration on Monday.























