Chicago News
-
DCA Developments received approval from the Plan Commission Thursday for a 213-foot building with 288 apartments at 1217 W. Washington Blvd. [Department of Planning and Development]
The West Loop building boom is not slowing down.
DAC Developments received approval from the city’s Plan Commission Thursday for a 213-foot, 19-story building at 1227 W. Washington Blvd.
-
Members of the Plan Commission on Thursday will consider Onni's proposal for a massive development on Goose Island.
A massive mixed-use development that would bring Goose Island its first residential units in decades and a 300-key hotel is expected to get an initial OK from the city during Thursday’s Plan Commission meeting.
-
A rendering of Glenstar’s proposal to build a 297-unit apartment complex near the Cumberland CTA Blue Line station [Department of Planning and Development]
A long-brewing plan to build nearly 300 new apartments near the Cumblerland CTA Blue Line station is set to face a key vote on Thursday, setting up a test of whether city planning officials, developers, interest groups and affordable housing organizers can overcome the opposition of the neighborhood’s alderman.
-
Ald. David Moore (17) (left) and attorney Colette Holt. As vice chair of the Committee on Contracting Oversight and Equity, Moore became acting chair upon Ald. Carrie Austin’s (34) resignation from the role.
Ald. David Moore (17) presided on Tuesday over an informational meeting of the City Council Committee on Contracting Oversight and Equity, saying he was leading in his capacity as committee vice chair because chair Ald. Carrie Austin (34) was “not available at this time” to lead the discussion of the city’s construction contracting rules.
But by the end of the meeting, Moore was promoted to the committee’s acting chair.
-
Signs posted in Logan Square urge the city to stop the use of ShotSpotter. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]
The ShotSpotter technology the city of Chicago uses to detect where guns are fired is not “effective” in “developing evidence of gun-related crime,” a report published Tuesday by the Office of Inspector General found.
-
Mayor Lori Lightfoot and city finance and budget officials gave a forecast on the 2022 budget earlier this month.
The Kroll Bond Rating Agency on Tuesday upgraded Chicago’s general obligation debt from “negative” to “stable,” but analysts remained wary about effects of the COVID-19 Delta variant and the city’s reliance on “non-recurring revenue.”
-
City officials may not directly raise money to pay off legal fees or else risk crossing the city’s ethics ordinance, a city board ruled Tuesday. [Stock]
City officials and employees are not allowed to directly raise money to pay off legal expenses unless the help is coming from “relatives or personal friends,” a city board ruled in an advisory opinion issued Tuesday.
-
Leaders of the venture behind the Lawndale Redefined development present their proposal during a news conference announcing request for proposal winners on Monday.
Four new mixed-use developments announced Monday are expected to bring more than 215 new homes, 40,000-square feet of commercial space and 900 jobs to the city’s South and West sides.
-
Ald. Carrie Austin (34) in 2019. Austin is set to preside over a meeting of the City Council Committee on Contracting Oversight and Equity for the first time since she was indicted last month. [Heather Cherone/The Daily Line]
Aldermen are set on Monday to consider a proposal that would expand the city’s roster of registered minority-owned and women-owned construction businesses, allowing a wider range of firms to benefit from an evolving set of rules designed to prevent white-owned builders from dominating contracts with the city.
-
Mayor Lori Lightfoot prepares to receive her second COVID-19 vaccine from Dr. Allison Arwady in Chicago's Gage Park neighborhood on Feb. 19, 2021. [Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago]
This article was first published in Block Club Chicago.
All city workers will soon be required to get vaccinated against coronavirus, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Monday.
-
An Aug. 4 draft map of new Cook County commissioner districts (left) and the county’s “map room” [Alex Nitkin/The Daily Line]
The scramble to redraw Cook County’s 17 commissioner districts pushed closer to completion on Friday, as commissioners digested new block-level U.S. Census data that will help reshape their constituencies for the next decade. But the numbers added a fresh dose of uncertainty to the future of the county’s political landscape, especially in the county’s south suburbs, north shore suburbs and on Chicago’s Near Northwest Side.
-
Since the beginning of the year, Former Ald. Proco “Joe” Moreno (1) has filed dozens upon dozens of amendments to his campaign account in a comprehensive audit dating back to 2013, perplexing election officials and at least one political consultant who says he was falsely tagged in Moreno’s expense reports — all while the former alderman’s account’s balance is stuck at more than $100,000 in the red.
-
Cook County Health CEO Israel Rocha speaking at a vaccination event in March
The sprawling Cook County Health system will grow its budget by more than $500 million next year in anticipation of expanding safety net insurance coverage and a hiring spree for nurses and mental health staff under a budget plan being rolled out by county leaders this month.
-
Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi speaking during a property tax forum in Pilsen on Monday [Maurico Peña/Block Club Chicago]
Local leaders and community groups in Pilsen are rushing to help landlords dispute a fresh round of property valuations they fear could set off a wave of tax hikes and displacement as a crucial deadline nears.























