Chicago News
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Dr. Allison Arwady answers reporters questions, as Mayor Lori Lightfoot looks on. [Heather Cherone/The Daily Line]
An angry Mayor Lori Lightfoot closed the entire Lakefront Trail, the Riverwalk and The 606 trail on Thursday, hours after stir-crazy Chicagoans defied a statewide stay-at-home order designed to stop the spread of the coronavirus.
Chicago Police blocked access to all of the parks east of Lake Shore Drive and warned that those who did not turn around and head home could face $500 fines or even arrest.
“Dear God, stay home, save lives,” Lightfoot said. “We can’t mess around with this one second longer.” -
Metra trains sport messages urging Cook County residents to complete the Census. [Twitter/@Metra]
The coronavirus pandemic instantly scrambled the city, county and state’s coordinated multimillion-dollar campaign to pump up responses to the U.S. Census. But if early results are any indication, those efforts may already be paying off.
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The busy lakefront trail Wednesday. JUSTIN LAURENCE/ BLOCK CLUB CHICAGO
Mayor Lori Lightfoot warned Chicagoans who flocked to the Lakefront Trail to stay home, saying she was prepared to shut down the city’s trails and parks to enforce Gov. JB Pritzker’s stay-at-home order designed to stop the spread of coronavirus.
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On paper, Tammy Wendt was never supposed to win the Democratic primary for a seat on the Cook County Board of Review.
Tammy Wendt campaigns in a picture posted to her Facebook page on March 7. [Facebook]
The Palos Heights attorney and first-time candidate faced Abdelnasser Rashid, a rising star in the Cook County Democratic Party, who boasted the near-unanimous backing of high-ranking elected officials, regional unions and newspaper editorial boards.
But she won anyway.
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A New York federal appeals court affirmed a ruling on Monday that prohibits elected officials from blocking people or deleting critical comments on social media, bolstering rules from the Chicago Board of Ethics that regulate regulate how aldermen use Facebook and Twitter.
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Mayor Lori Lightfoot addresses the news media. [Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago]
Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced her administration would house as many as 5,000 Chicagoans who are sick from coronavirus or awaiting test results in five hotels across the city, as she said she had lost confidence that the federal government will help cities cope with the pandemic.
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When employees in the Cook County Clerk’s office report back to their offices after the coronavirus pandemic, they could be under the microscope wielded by a new federal watchdog.
Local government reform fixture Michael Shakman answers questions from reporters. [A.D. Quig/The Daily Line]
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Chicago officials will stop ticketing, booting and impounding cars that do not pose a public safety threat through April 30 as part of an effort to help Chicagoans facing a cash crunch caused by the Coronavirus pandemic, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Wednesday.
Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot addresses the news media. [Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago]














