Chicago News

  • A report issued by the Chicago Inspector General Tuesday reprimanded the city Board of Ethics for lax efforts to identify and keep records of all active lobbyists, making it harder to levy fines for lack of disclosure. The report called for the BOE to issue higher fines to those who fail to properly disclose lobbying activity. The report comes as a follow-up to a scathing March 2016 report, charging that the BOE only relies on public complaints, rather than its own recordkeeping.

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  • The southern portion of the North Branch Industrial Corridor. (Image from city report.)

    That sound you hear are the shouts of joy from thousands of developers, contractors and assorted land use professionals as every last square inch of the North Branch Corridor is prepared for alteration, following Monday night’s release of the Draft North Branch Industrial Corridor Plan. While the plan for the strip along the Chicago River North Branch includes the name “industrial”, the result will be a lotless industrial than it is today, as the 125 page framework calls for converting much of the current Planned Manufacturing District zoning to residential, commercial and open park space.

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  • Wednesday’s Cook County Board meeting promises to be dominated by talk of a proposed compost facility in the 9th District, where the presiding commissioner, citing conflict, has recused himself from proceedings and quit his side law job over a proposed composting facility. About 40 people have signed up to testify on the item, which is on the agenda in the normally uneventful zoning committee.


    Commissioners are also being asked to approve payments for the Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management. DHSEM, which is in the middle of an overhaul, misspent more than $1 million without getting prior approval, and has lost its executive director. A code change to put the department under oversight of the Bureau of Administration and give the board more oversight of memoranda of understanding is one of the new agenda items. President Preckwinkle has also introduced a new member for the board that oversees the county’s health and hospitals system: Bob Reiter, a public face of the Chicago Federation of Labor.


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  • Chicago’s Chief Financial Officer Carole Brown told reporters that the city is working to close a $100 million budget gap for Chicago Public Schools and to devise a long-term solution to address the school’s structural operating deficit by June 30th, the end of the district's fiscal year. In addition, the city is still waiting on $596 million in delayed block grants from the state. But for now, it appears the city's only stated plan is to “hope” the state will come through with a funding bill before then.


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  • Proponents of a controversial zoning change in Jefferson Park that’s stirred up an unprecedented amount of debate in the neighborhood used Tuesday's Zoning Committee meeting to stage a protest.


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  • Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle is joined by Democratic members of the Illinois Congressional delegation at an event in response to the House vote on the American Health Care Act, Monday, May 8, 2017.

    It was a double header for advocacy on Monday, as Cook County Health and Hospitals System (CCHHS) CEO Dr. Jay Shannon and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle used a morning press conference and an afternoon City Club speech to drive home the potential negative impact of the American Health Care Act (AHCA) on uncompensated care costs and the “shameless act of political cowardice” on the part of Congressmen–including Illinois Republicans–to vote for it last week. 


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  • Commissioners have a straightforward agenda at the County Board today, with a morning of consent calendar items followed by two routine committee meetings. The Technology Committee will consider a $17 million contract extension, and the Litigation Subcommittee will meet in executive session for updates on several pending lawsuits against the county.

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  • Proposals to build a 27-story, 250-unit residential building in Hyde Park and to replace a gas station at the corner of North and Ashland Avenues in Wicker Park with an eight story hotel are on tap for today’s Zoning Committee meeting.


    One item that’d allow for an upzone of a warehouse building near the Jefferson Park Transit Station is noticeably missing from the agenda–it’s an application that’s been the subject of hours of testimony at two separate zoning meetings–one held by the Plan Commission in February, the other by the Zoning Committee in March.


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  • Mid-afternoon Monday, calls and emails went out from the mayor’s office to aldermen: There will be no briefings this week on how the city plans to bail out Chicago Public Schools to prevent the district from ending the school year three weeks early on May 30.

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  • The collective bargaining agreement between the city and the union representing the rank and file officers of the Chicago Police Department is one of the most expensive and politically fraught contracts a mayor can encounter. Typically a three year agreement, the contract between the city and the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7 (FOP), representing the rank and file officers of the Chicago Police Department, costs the city hundreds of millions of dollars a year in salaries to the city’s more than 11,000 police officers. And, since those officers are required to live in the city boundaries, they and their family members’ happiness with the contract has a direct impact on the mayoral election.


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  • Happy Saturday!

    Friday morning I sat down with Chicago Teachers Union Vice President Jesse Sharkey for an extensive interview. We touched on a lot of issues, but there’s five biggies that came out.

    1. He Thinks CPS CEO Forrest Claypool Is A “Disaster” But Says He Doesn’t Think He’s Working Hand-In-Glove With Mayor Emanuel

    “I think Forrest Claypool deserves no credit. He has been a disaster. And I mean that in all seriousness. Forrest doesn’t know much about schools at all. I think he shows it in many, many ways,” said Sharkey. But when I pressed him on whether or not he and Mayor Rahm Emanuel (who have worked together since the early 1980’s) are planning out the politics of schools, he demurred.

    “I think that Forrest Claypool is out of sync,” with the Mayor, said Sharkey. That said, the Mayor has done little, in Sharkey’s mind, to improve his grade from the “F” CTU gave him starting in 2011. But asked a number of ways, he seemed unwilling to unload on Emanuel like he does on Claypool.

    2. He Thinks It’s Pointless To Seek State Money Until Local Revenues For Schools Are Increased First

    CTU and CPS have a common cause when it comes to getting additional funding from the state, but Sharkey believes CTU should not work with CPS until Mayor Emanuel (and the city’s wealthy) commits to higher city funding first.

    I asked Sharkey this question three different ways: Shouldn’t you be working together to get more state funding for Chicago schools? He refused to say CTU would work with CPS in Springfield until, “the Mayor and the city fathers of Chicago... commit to raising half a billion dollars for the schools in the city to keep the schools from going off a cliff.”

    3. CPS’ Constant State of Crisis Is Damaging Confidence In Chicago Schools

    Sharkey believes CPS’ continued fiscal woes are eroding the district’s brand, making CPS less attractive to parents, regardless of whatever improvements in test scores or graduation rates are being made. He lays this at the feet of Claypool in particular, since every few months Claypool announces a new financial emergency, leading Chicagoans to constantly wonder how long long the schools have until they collapse. “We’re at an inflection point now,” he says. “It’s produced a crisis of confidence. We’re seeing a trickle of people leaving the system, turning into a stream and now we worry about a flood.”

    4. Despite The Financial Problems, Sharkey Thinks CPS Is Improving

    “There’s plenty to be proud about with public schools,” he says. “Virtually every teacher I know has their kids in public schools. And that’s something. If you went back 30 years ago, that wouldn’t have been the case.”

    Part of the problem in CPS and CTU’s relationship is that the union doesn’t give CPS enough credit when it’s doing things right, he said. “Graduation rates are up. When I first started teaching in Chicago in ‘98, we used to pull our hair about why the freshman class had 800 students in it, why the senior class had 200 students in it. Literally you had that kind of drop-off in a lot our big schools. We know a lot more about that now, we’re a lot better at getting students to complete.”

    5. He Really Loves The Idea of An Elected School Board

    “You gotta have some democracy there,” he says. He believes that the current school board, which is controlled and named by the Mayor, is disconnected from citizens.

    And even though most Chicagoans–those without kids or who have aged out of caring about schools–would likely not pay attention to the school board, there are enough parents in Chicago that would participate, he thinks. “The people who are active in local school councils are the ones who go for report card pick up and are active in the elections. You have high participation in terms of the ones who are in and out of the schools,” and that’s enough he says.

    There’s a role for aldermen, too. “Right now, the people who get the phone calls about, ‘there’s a problem in my school…’ are aldermen, and yet those aldermen have extremely little control,” he said. “That’s a problem. Schools wind up being very local issues. People need to have governance that gives them confidence that their democratic voice is being taken into account.”  
  • One of City Council’s most pressing issues in the coming weeks is bound to be a solution for Chicago Public Schools’ fiscal woes. Two proposed solutions–handing over surplus TIF revenue or reinstating the city’s head tax–have both been floated for months in one form or another, and neither are particularly popular with the mayor’s administration.


    But dozens of ordinances and calls for hearings on once-hot button issues have sat in committee for months (or more than a year) without a vote, including reforms to the Chicago Police Department, public campaign financing, examinations of the city’s workers compensation program and redevelopment agreements, and more strict rules for establishing TIF districts. Our rundown and previous reports are below.


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  • Cook County’s Chief Financial Officer, Ivan Samstein, is leaving the administration in June to begin work as vice president and chief financial officer for the University of Chicago, “following a national search.” Samstein, one of the administration’s bigger personalities, has been with the county since 2012, and has been CFO for just over four years.


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  •  


    President Toni Preckwinkle’s new Deputy Chief of Staff Lanetta Haynes Turner was singled out in Cook County Independent Inspector General (OIIG) Patrick Blanchard’s latest report. It alleges she violated the county’s procurement code, misled commissioners, and “acted negligently in the performance of her duties in failing to properly vet a contractor for hire.” That vendor, Taylor Made, was the subject of a CBS 2 investigation from 2012 which found its head, Althea Taylor, had “ripped off” small businesses and lied about her qualifications.


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  • A five-year-old partnership between Chicago and Cook County created to leverage private and public dollars to support job training and placement centers was the subject of a lengthy hearing by the Council’s Workforce Committee. The objective, it seemed, was to determine if it’s in the city’s best interest to dissolve the partnership and put the city back in control of its own funds.  


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