Chicago News

  • article-image
    The Chicago Police Department emblem outside of Chicago's public safety headquarters is pictured in this file photo. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]

    The City Council is expected to vote Thursday on the arbitration option for police officers accused of serious misconduct, the only outstanding provision of the new contract between the city and Chicago Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) yet to be adopted. 

  • article-image
    City Hall is pictured in this file photo. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]

    The City Council Committee on Finance on Wednesday approved four agreements totaling millions of dollars to settle lawsuits stemming from injuries allegedly caused by the actions of Chicago Police officers.

  • article-image

    The city’s license committee recommended explicitly exempting shoeshine and shoe repair businesses from the city’s checkout bag tax, and the city is attempting to intervene in a lawsuit to throw the real estate transfer tax increase off the March ballot.

  • article-image
    Chicago Public Health Comm. Olusimbo Ige is pictured during a press conference on migrant housing on Jan. 29, 2024. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]

    The Committee on Health and Human Relations held an introductory hearing with Chicago Department of Public Health Comm. Olusimbo Ige, giving alderpeople the chance to ask questions of the new health commissioner in a public forum for the first time since she was appointed. 

    Mayor Brandon Johnson appointed Ige last fall after he terminated Allison Arwady in August. Whether or not Ige should receive a confirmation vote from the City Council became a point of contention during Tuesday’s hearing.

  • article-image
    The historic Hoyt building is pictured. [Commission on Chicago Landmarks]

    A City Council panel gave the OK to a tax incentive for a project to rehabilitate and reuse a vacant historic building in the Cermak Road Bridge District.

  • article-image

    Alderpeople will on Wednesday consider adding a new exemption to the city’s paper and plastic bag tax law and consider approving the annual special events ordinance. Additionally, the council’s finance committee will consider approving millions of dollars in police-related legal settlements.

  • article-image
    Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36), the chair of the Committee on Economic, Capital and Technology Development, is pictured in May 2023. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]

    The City Council Committee on Economic, Capital and Technology Development will meet Tuesday morning and consider appointments and reappointments for multiple Special Service Areas, a resolution calling for a hearing on data storage security and a tax incentive for the redevelopment of the historic Hoyt Building. 

    The committee will meet at 9:30 a.m. in council chambers.

  • article-image
    Chicago Public Health Comm. Olusimbo Ige is pictured during a press conference on migrant housing on Jan. 29, 2024. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]

    Alderpeople on Tuesday are expected to hold their first hearing with acting Chicago Department of Public Health Comm. Olusimbo Ige, who was appointed by Mayor Brandon Johnson to lead the health department last fall.

  • article-image
    Chicago's skyline is pictured in this file photo.

    Following a monthslong public outreach campaign, city planners are likely to prioritize additional pedestrian-only streets, public safety, outdoor spaces and affordable housing when crafting the 20-year update to the guiding document for the downtown area.

  • article-image
    Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36) attends a City Council meeting in October 2023. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]

    The mayor and 15 alderpeople are backing legislation (O2024-0007305) that would effectively ban current forms of natural gas energy from being used for heating or appliances in new construction.

    Advocates say it’s a necessary first step, as about 68 percent of Chicago’s greenhouse gas emissions come from the built environment. While having a limited effect on existing buildings, the legislation is seeking to make sure the emissions share doesn’t increase with new developments. 

    But another group representing more than half the City Council is supporting a measure that calls for a cost analysis of the proposal before any decisions are made.

  • article-image
    A vehicle parked in a Chicago bike lane. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]

    Acting Chicago Department of Transportation (CDOT) Comm. Tom Carney said the city aims to begin a pilot program this summer to use cameras to deter drivers from endangering cyclists and pedestrians by parking in bike and bus lanes and in crosswalks.

    Carney’s comments were made during a subject matter hearing on the city’s Complete Streets Ordinance at Tuesday’s Committee on Pedestrian and Traffic Safety meeting.

  • article-image
    Ald. Anthony Beale (9) said he's opposed to the Bring Chicago Home ballot measure because he's worried it could stymie investment in Black communities like those in his ward. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]

    A Far South Side alderperson and a member of the Cook County Board of Review spoke out against the Bring Chicago Home proposal during a virtual meeting hosted by the Neighborhood Building Owners Alliance (NBOA) on Tuesday.

  • article-image
    The outside of City Hall is pictured in this file photo. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]

    The City Council Committee on Contracting Oversight and Equity will meet Wednesday and consider two ordinances, including one to audit the city’s adherence to its contracting equity goals on an annual basis. The contracting committee will meet at 11:30 a.m. in City Council chambers.

  • article-image
    Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29) is pictured during a City Council meeting in October. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]

    Alderpeople on the Committee on Police and Fire on Monday debated a proposal to raise the retirement ages for sworn members of the police and fire departments by two years — a proposal on which the city’s police and fire department disagreed.

    Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29), the committee chair and sponsor of the ordinance, told The Daily Line the proposal could be split due to the departmental divide, but a vote is not yet slated. Taliaferro’s earliest estimation for a vote was March. 

  • article-image

    The City Council Committee on Pedestrian and Traffic Safety will hold a hearing on the city’s Complete Streets Ordinance on Tuesday, and the mayor announced an appointment to the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority.