Chicago News

  • The slate of ordinances and measures awaiting a vote by the full City Council Wednesday is fairly bland–save for a zoning change for Jefferson Park that’s already been the subject of three meetings and two lawsuits.
    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • With the decline in state and federal aid for substance and mental health programs, especially for the current and formerly incarcerated, city and county officials are looking for ways to combine resources to address the revolving door of the criminal justice system.
    To Read More Please Login or Join


  • After three hours of both pro and con testimony from 104 people Monday afternoon, the City Council Zoning Committee passed by voice vote a zoning change from a B1-1 to a B3-5 and a planned development for a proposed storage facility at 5150 N. Northwest Hwy. in the Jefferson Park neighborhood. While the five-story project from LSC Development was nominally about a storage, the testimony, protests and a press conference held earlier that afternoon was much more about neighborhood resistance to increased density, accusations of racism and old battle lines redrawn for the 2019 45th Ward Aldermanic campaign.
    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • After sitting in Rules Committee for nearly a year, an ordinance reinstating the city’s head tax was sent to Finance on Monday morning. The ordinance’s sponsor, Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35), intended to bring the ordinance directly to the floor for a vote at Wednesday’s full City Council meeting. He filed the Rule 41 request with the City Clerk as is required under the Council’s Rules of Procedures.

    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • The Council’s Health Committee has two resolutions on its 11:00 a.m. Tuesday agenda: one calls on aldermen to re-enforce the city’s litter laws and combat “filthy neighborhoods”, the other requests members of the Urban Wildlife institute brief aldermen on the state of urban wildlife in Chicago.

    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • The Council’s Zoning Committee on Monday morning approved a new member for the Zoning Board of Appeals and a seven-story, 111-unit mixed-use development for Rogers Park that includes a new Target store and 65 units reserved for Chicago Housing Authority voucher holders.

    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • Amidst routine approval of spending Open Impact fees on local projects ($40,000 for planning a River Park near Pilsen and $1.7 million to turn a plaza into a turf field at Wells Community High School), Ald. Brian Hopkins (2) took the opportunity to question the Department of Planning and Development’s Meg Gustavsen on the appropriate use of developer fees. It was one way to tell the administration and fellow aldermen: hands off the fees from the North Branch PMD.
    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • The Chicago Board of Ethics met Monday, but didn’t dole out any penalties related to improper lobbying. “The Board voted to issue one letter of probable cause on a matter that had been deferred at the April [meeting], and dismissed one of the subjects in another matter in which it earlier found probable cause,” Executive Director Steve Berlin told The Daily Line.
    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • High recidivism rates in Chicago and Cook County will be the topic of discussion of today’s 11:00 a.m. Public Safety Committee hearing.

    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • The Council’s Budget Committee meets briefly this morning at 10:00 a.m. to approve a $186,000 federal grant for the Department of Transportation. The grant from the National Safety Council as part of its national Road to Zero initiative–a goal to eradicate traffic fatalities across the country. 

    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • Chicago Department of Aviation officers pack the room for an Aviation Committee hearing, May 22, 2017.


    Aviation Committee Chairman Michael Zalewski told reporters Monday, “The consensus is, there’s no consensus,” about the future of security officers at Chicago’s airports. Aviation Commissioner Ginger Evans once again faced off with aldermen as more than two dozen Chicago Department of Aviation (CDA) officers looked on, sometimes shaking their heads or correcting her under their breath. While the meeting’s purpose was to clarify when City of Chicago employees can remove someone from an airplane, Monday’s discussion waded into a labor battle over whether CDA officers should be designated as police officers or security officers.
    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • Comm. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia (D-7) has proposed a small donor match system for countywide elections. The system, which wouldn’t launch until after the 2018 cycle, would cost roughly $4 million every three years, Garcia estimates. Holding up a copy of the Sun-Times with a story about billionaire Ken Griffin’s $20 million donation to Gov. Bruce Rauner, Garcia heralded the system as a way to "get big money out of politics" and restore confidence in government. The proposal was new to commissioners, and to County Board President Toni Preckwinkle’s staff.
    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • Aviation Department officials are likely in for another verbal rebuke from aldermen today, as the Committee on Aviation considers an ordinance that would prohibit any City of Chicago employee “from assisting airline personnel in the removal of any passenger from a plane at O’Hare International and Chicago Midway airports.”
    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • 15 cases related to unreported or unregistered lobbying tagged by the city’s Board of Ethics are up for discussion at its monthly meeting this afternoon. Last month, the Board identified probable cause in 13 cases stemming from the release of Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s personal emails, and said potential fines for violations were “very significant.” Those emails, released after FOIA-related lawsuits from the Better Government Association and the Chicago Tribunerevealed more than two dozen likely cases of improper lobbying.
    To Read More Please Login or Join
  • The Council’s Zoning Committee meets twice today, once in the morning for regularly scheduled business, and again in the afternoon to once again consider a plan in Jefferson Park that’s divided the neighborhood. Highlights of the regular agenda include: confirmation of a new Zoning Board of Appeals member, an alderman seeking to downzone a mile long commercial strip to residential, and a CHA-partnered development in Rogers Park.
    To Read More Please Login or Join