Chicago News
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Ald. Bennett Lawson (44) questions members of DOB and CFD during a zoning committee hearing on single-stair apartment reforms on June 4, 2026. [Livestream]
Citing fire safety concerns, representatives from the city’s Department of Buildings (DOB) and Chicago Fire Department (CFD) on Thursday threw cold water on a proposal from a North Side alderman to allow some mid-size residential buildings to have just one exit stairway, creating an uphill battle for housing advocates that support it.
Proponents plan to continue to negotiate, as they believe the ordinance will help increase the city’s housing stock, make it easier and cheaper to build, drive down rents and incentivize larger, family-sized dwellings.
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Ald. Matt Martin (47), sponsor of the single-stair reform ordinance, is pictured at a City Council meeting on April 15, 2026. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The City Council Committee on Zoning, Landmarks and Building Standards on Thursday will hold a public hearing on a proposal from a North Side alderperson to allow some mid-size residential buildings the flexibility to only install one set of exit stairs, a policy that could make it cheaper to build housing.
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Mayor Brandon Johnson is pictured at a City Hall press conference on April 1, 2025. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration is proposing a sweeping update of the city’s Residential Landlord and Tenant Ordinance (RLTO), which would mark the first major modernization of the rental code since it was established four decades ago.
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Mayor Brandon Johnson presides over a City Council meeting on Oct. 30, 2024. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Mayor Brandon Johnson and the city Department of Housing on Monday unveiled a new program to help some prospective homeowners with down payments and closing costs. The grant program is the latest to be funded through Johnson’s $1.25 billion Housing and Economic Development bond package.
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Ald. William Hall (6) is pictured during a City Council meeting on Oct. 9, 2024. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Members of the City Council are once again mulling proposals to crack down on large gatherings of teens that have the tendency to turn unruly and violent.
The start of summer and recent “teen takeover” events over the long Memorial Day weekend that included violence have brought the issue back to the forefront.
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Ald. Daniel La Spata (1) is pictured at a City Council meeting in July 2022. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
A Logan Square alderman has put forward a proposal to establish a new zoning district in the city code to better protect historic churches, schools and other cultural landmarks from demolition.
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Mayor Brandon Johnson presides over a City Council meeting on April 15, 2026. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Mayor Brandon Johnson this week touted new research that said his administration’s cancellation of a gunshot detection technology contract two years ago led to positive public safety results but offered no update on an ongoing procurement process to replace it.
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County Assessor Fritz Kaegi speaks at a press conference on Jan. 29, 2025. [Livestream]
Cook County will change the way it assesses commercial properties beginning this tax year in accordance with the suggestions of a working group. The change in methodology aims to make property tax bills more consistent after several consecutive years of volatility.
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The joint City Council ethics and police and fire committee was told on Tuesday that most of the impact from the implementation of a study into ways to more consistently allocate Chicago Police Department (CPD) staff and resources could be seen and felt in the upcoming fiscal year’s budget.
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Police Supt. Larry Snelling comes before the City Council in September 2023. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
A joint panel of alderpeople on Tuesday will hold a hearing on a study of how the Chicago Police Department (CPD) allocates its officers and other staff.
The City Council Joint Committee on Police and Fire and Ethics and Government Oversight will meet at 11 a.m. in council chambers.
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Ald. Lamont Robinson (4) voices support for the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, Sr. Fairness in Democracy Ordinance at a City Council meeting on May 20, 2026. [Livestream]
The City Council on Wednesday approved an ordinance (SO2026-0024036) backed by Mayor Brandon Johnson and pushed by voting rights groups to enact and study policies to safeguard and improve access to the ballot box and protect rank-and-file election workers from targeted harassment.
The ordinance is named after the late Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr., a champion of the protection and expansion of voting rights, and was spurred by fears about intimidation or from the Trump administration that could restrict access this November.
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Renderings show the proposed mixed-use development at 3301-3315 S. Justine St. in McKinley Park. [Chicago Department of Planning and Development]
The Chicago Plan Commission on Thursday approved developments adding several hundred new units of housing in McKinley Park and Avondale.
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Original One Fair Wage Ordinance sponsor Ald. Jessie Fuentes (26) is pictured at a City Council meeting on April 15, 2026. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
In the latest chapter of the saga over the elimination of a separate wage for tipped workers, alderpeople approved a measure Wednesday that will temporarily pause the One Fair Wage Ordinance, as well as give a more gradual phase-out of the tipped wage for small businesses.
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Mayor Brandon Johnson presides over a City Council meeting on April 15, 2026. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The City Council on Wednesday approved measures to bar police from participating in extremist groups, multiple developments adding hundreds of new housing units and the next inspector general and leader of the transportation department.
















