Chicago News
-
Concept art for development around the future 130th Street Red Line station [Chicago DPD]
The Chicago Community Development Commission on Tuesday gave initial approval of the sale of nearly 18 acres of city-owned land to the CTA for $1 to make way for the planned Red Line Extension on the city’s Far South Side.
-
A photo of St. Adalbert Catholic Church from a Department of Planning and Development presentation. [City of Chicago]
A beloved church in Pilsen took the first step in the process of becoming an official Chicago landmark Monday after community members have pushed for years to protect the building.
The Commission on Chicago Landmarks during a special meeting on Monday voted unanimously in favor of a preliminary landmark recommendation for St. Adalbert Catholic Church, setting off a monthslong process of reports, requests and potentially a public hearing while also granting additional protections to the church.
-
Outgoing CDOT Comm. Gia Biagi speaks during a news conference in April 2021.
A group of transportation advocacy groups on Monday sent Mayor Brandon Johnson an open letter detailing the characteristics they want to see in a new leader for the Chicago Department of Transportation (CDOT).
The letter signed by 16 groups, including Active Transportation Alliance, Sierra Club Chicago, Access Living and Better Streets Chicago, comes one week after CDOT Comm. Gia Biagi announced that Friday will be her last day helming the department.
-
Cook County's flag is pictured outside the county building in downtown Chicago. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The 2024 Cook County budget will be affected significantly by a change in how the state will allocate the county’s portion of personal property replacement tax (PPRT) revenue.
While the revenue the county has gotten from PPRT spiked in recent years, the county is expecting that revenue to drop heading into the next fiscal year.
-
Chicago Inspector General Deborah Witzburg speaks about the findings of an inquiry into the Chicago Police Department’s misconduct complaint process in a livestream Aug. 3, 2023. [Livestream]
The Chicago Police Department (CPD) has failed to allow officers to properly report allegations of misconduct without potentially facing retaliation, the Office of Inspector General (OIG) found in a report published Thursday.
-
Members of the Urban Forestry Advisory Board met Thursday at City Hall. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]
Tree trimming crews in Chicago have been able to trim more than triple the number of Chicago trees this year compared to 2022 under the city’s new grid-based system.
Malcolm Whiteside, head of the forestry bureau under the city’s Department of Streets and Sanitation, announced the status of the tree trimming program during a meeting of the city’s Urban Forestry Advisory Board Thursday.
-
Mayor Brandon Johnson speaks during a news conference Wednesday. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]
Mayor Brandon Johnson on Wednesday pushed back against the notion that migrants were being moved out of a police station in the South Loop in preparation for the upcoming Lollapalooza music festival set to begin in Grant Park on Thursday.
-
O’Hare Airport was recognized by a travel magazine for its dining experience for the fourth year in a row, and the county treasurer released a guide to help educate the public about how property tax administration works. Mayor Brandon Johnson told reporters on Wednesday he is taking a “deliberative” approach in selecting the new police superintendent.
-
Ald. Maria Hadden (49) speaks during a committee meeting last week. [City of Chicago livestream]
The deadline for the City Council to approve a referendum question for the 2024 General Primary Election asking Chicagoans if they support the so-called Bring Chicago Home proposal is Jan. 2, and the lead sponsor of the proposal is confident the measure will pass by the end of the year.
Alderpersons largely voiced support last week for the Bring Chicago Home proposal that would increase the real estate transfer tax for the sale of properties over $1 million and put the revenue toward affordable housing and homeless services.
Related: Alderpersons voice support during housing committee hearing on Bring Chicago Home proposal
-
During a Tuesday news conference, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle announces a deal to supply 24 percent of the county’s electricity using a new solar plant near Springfield beginning in 2025. [Office of the President]
County officials announced the county’s first power purchase agreement with a new solar energy facility Tuesday. The agreement to supply solar energy to the county is expected to make a dent toward achieving the county’s clean energy goals.
Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle announced the deal to purchase electricity from the Double Black Diamond Solar farm during a news conference joined by Jamie Meyers, deputy chief for the County Bureau of Asset Management, County Chief Sustainability Officer Deborah Stone, Comm. Maggie Trevor (D-9) and Comm. Frank Aguilar (D-16).
Officials from Swift Current Energy and Constellation Energy, the developer of the solar site and retail supplier respectively, were also present.
-
Less than 7 percent of the more than 100 eligible cases referred to a pilot program that uses mediated discussion to resolve police misconduct cases underwent mediation, and even fewer than that ended in an agreement or resolution, an investigation by the city’s Office of Inspector General found.
The pilot program was launched in October 2022 under former Mayor Lori Lightfoot and was mandated as part of the federal consent decree. The program was established with the Center for Conflict Resolution and uses dialogue between the complainant and the accused police officer facilitated by a neutral mediator to address police misconduct complaints.
-
The Forest Preserves of Cook County seal is pictured on a podium during a July 2023 board meeting. [Michael McDevitt/The Daily Line]
The Forest Preserves of Cook County have begun to take advantage of millions of dollars in new revenue stemming from a property tax levy increase authorized by voters last fall.
The forest preserve district is using the additional funds to make headway on projects and initiatives that were previously constrained by budgetary tightness, district spokesperson Carl Vogel told The Daily Line.
-
Advocates that make up a coalition supporting Bring Chicago Home rallied in the lobby of City Hall Thursday ahead of the hearing on the proposal. [Michael McDevitt/The Daily Line]
Though the city has floated a marginal rate structure and at least two exemptions for the Bring Chicago Home proposal, a coalition of groups pushing for the real estate transfer tax increase are still set on a flat tax.
Bring Chicago Home proposes to raise the real estate transfer tax by 1.9 percent on property sales over $1 million and use the new revenue to fund affordable housing and services for people experiencing housing instability.






















