Chicago News
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Following a presentation by zoning attorney Nick Ftikas, Ald. Brian Hopkins (2) urged his colleagues on Tuesday to oppose a 48-residential unit mixed-use development he said does not fit the character of the neighborhood along the 1600 block of North Wells Street in his ward.
Dozens of zoning-related proposals including affordable housing plans in Humboldt Park and North Lawndale sailed swiftly through a key committee Tuesday, but one alderman pushed his colleagues to reject a 48-unit housing development he says doesn’t fit the character of the neighborhood.
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The city collected $76 million for the CTA last year from a real estate transfer tax on sellers. The money will be used to pay down the transit agency’s pension debt. [Flickr/CTA]
Aldermen green-lit a routine budget measure on Tuesday aimed at helping the CTA pay down its pension debt — but not before firing a shot across the bow that the agency’s leaders need to spend more time in the limelight answering for incessant safety and reliability issues.
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Chicago Deputy Corporation Counsel Victoria Benson (left) and Ald. George Cardenas (12) speak during a City Council Committee on Finance meeting on Monday.
A key City Council committee narrowly voted to reject a legal settlement tied to a fatal 2013 police shooting, setting up a potential standoff over the city’s legal defense policy2 during Wednesday’s meeting of the full council.
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Chicago Department of Housing Comm. Marisa Novara presents details on the “encumbrance ordinance” during a City Council finance committee meeting on Monday.
Aldermen and city housing officials expressed hope on Monday that a pending ordinance will help spur private efforts to rehab long-abandoned properties on the city’s South and West Sides.
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Aldermen are set on Tuesday to vote on the relocation of Saint Anthony Hospital.
Aldermen on Tuesday could approve changes to the city’s construction codes and greenlight several new developments including the years-in-the-making relocation of Saint Anthony Hospital within Little Village.
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A City Council Committee on Monday approved a measure increasing the minimum wage for some contracted workers at the city’s airports. And another City Council committee is set on Tuesday to revisit a routine measure that was delayed last week when CTA President Dorval Carter was not available to answer questions.
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Andrea Kersten answers questions during a public safety committee meeting.
Aldermen stalled the approval of Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s choice to lead one of the city’s Civilian Office of Police Accountability over concerns about a report she oversaw recommending discipline for the late Officer Ella French who was killed in the line of duty.
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Ald. Matt Martin (47) and Ald. Maria Hadden (49) speak during a committee meeting on Friday.
If the discussion during a Friday City Council committee hearing was any sign, Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s proposal to sue gang leaders for their assets faces a tough road ahead.
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The Chicago Police Department was budgeted $82 million for legal settlements and judgements in 2022. [Tingey Injury Law Firm on Unsplash]
A City Council committee is set to approve a $14 million payout to settle a pair of lawsuits stemming from an overturned 1991 murder conviction, already gobbling up nearly 20 percent of the entire amount city attorneys budgeted for police misconduct settlements in 2022.
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Plan Commissioners on Thursday approved a proposal to build a 65-unit affordable housing development in North Lawndale.
Chicago planning officials said they were “blown away” on Thursday by a proposal to remove a portion of a police department parking lot in Lawndale and use the property to build a 65-unit affordable housing development.
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Mayor Lori Lightfoot defended her proposal to sue gang members during a post-City Council meeting news conference in September. [Alex Nitkin/The Daily Line]
Members of a City Council committee are scheduled on Friday to discuss two controversial measures, including Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s proposal that would allow the city to sue gang members and seize their assets.
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Aldermen advanced a measure allowing Chicago to implement a new state law that prohibits restaurants from marketing sugary drinks as part of kids’ meals. And the City Council’s fourth and final ward remap hearing scheduled for January is set to kick off Friday morning.
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Aldermen demanded on Wednesday that CTA President Dorval Carter answer their questions on how the transit agency plans to spend its money. [CTA]
Aldermen on Wednesday held up what could have been a routine remittance of property tax transfer revenue to the CTA when the transit agency’s President Dorval Carter could not appear before aldermen to answer their questions about how the $76 million would be spent.
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Chicago Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection Comm. Ken Meyers and Ald. Leslie Hairston (5) speak during a license committee meeting on Wednesday.
A proposal to clamp down on the market for stolen cell phones by tightening regulations on pawn shops glided through a City Council committee on Wednesday. But if police and city licensing officials don’t step up their enforcement of violations, the new rules could be toothless, some aldermen warned.























