Chicago News
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Lawyers for indicted Ald. Ed Burke (14) argued during a critical evidentiary hearing on Tuesday that key secret recordings by former Ald. Danny Solis should be thrown out as evidence in Burke’s upcoming extortion trial. A key City Council committee is set on Wednesday for the second time in less than one month to consider the appointment to head the city’s Civilian Office of Police Accountability. City leaders unveiled members of a new Museum Campus working group on Tuesday. And the Chicago Board Ethics released a list of lobbyists who have been fined for late registration.
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Snow covers a sidewalk and part of a crosswalk in Logan Square [Erin Hegarty / The Daily Line]
A proposal organized by Chicago residents asking city leaders to consider the clearing of snow from sidewalks as a municipal service is getting attention from some aldermen who are asking city officials to take a look at costs and logistics of such a service.
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Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas during a 2019 news conference. Pappas has repeatedly demanded information from the Cook County Land Bank on how many properties it hopes to acquire from the county’s upcoming Scavenger Sale. [Alex Nitkin/The Daily Line]
Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas stepped up her back-and-forth with the county Land Bank Authority with a special delivery on Friday to every elected county commissioner and to Eleanor Gorski, the land bank’s executive director.
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Menu dollars helped fund a new fieldhouse at Maplewood Park in the 1st Ward. [Chicago Park District]
Aldermen across the city’s 50 wards routinely use their $1.5 million in annual discretionary funding to pay for projects like improvements to Chicago Park District parks, CPS playgrounds and fencing, and landing pads for CTA buses.
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Large buildings in Chicago reported progress in lowering carbon emissions, but fewer buildings are sharing their data. And Chicago and Cook County leaders offered a mix of reactions to the early release of former Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke from prison on Thursday.
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More than 31,000 properties are set to go up for auction in this month’s Cook County Scavenger Sale. Nearly 12,000 of them were also offered at the last three Scavenger Sales and found no buyers. [Eric Allix Rogers on Flickr]
The biennial Cook Count Scavenger Sale, when investors are invited to bid on thousands of delinquent properties, will look different this year. For the first time, potential bidders will be able to sift through a public interactive database of properties in the county’s charge when the sale gets underway on Feb. 14.
But county Treasurer Maria Pappas hopes the next Scavenger Sale looks far more different.
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Ald. Michelle Harris, 8th, head of the Chicago City Council’s Rules Committee. (Don Vincent/The Daily Line)
As Black and Latino politicians continue to struggle for power on the Chicago City Council, the likelihood of a citywide referendum — followed by an expensive and lengthy court battle — grows along with political tensions.
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The city of issue issued bid requests for a guaranteed income pilot program that could begin issuing checks by the summer. [Giorgio Trovato on Unsplash]
City officials are hoping the outreach and recruitment processes for a planned $31.5 million guaranteed income pilot program can be launched in March with an initial batch of payments going out to qualifying households as early as May, according to requests from the city published this week.
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Chicago Chief Data Officer Nick Lucius (right) followed up on recommendations from Interim Inspector General William Marback (left) to clean up and centralize the city’s information technology systems. [Twitter/Inspector General’s office]
Chicago leaders embarked last month on an “aggressive 12-month plan” to modernize and centralize the city’s repository of data on everything from ambulance response times to overgrown weeds, according to the city’s data chief.
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Chicago’s new daily COVID-19 case rates are “getting close” to low enough for the city to drop its vaccination mandate for businesses, according to Chicago’s top doctor. A new City Council subcommittee on spending oversight is preparing its first meeting. And Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25) is joining a three-pronged effort to introduce City Council resolutions in Chicago, Minneapolis and Seattle proclaiming all three cities’ support for nationwide Starbucks unionization efforts.
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Deon Hudson was denied an apartment he had sought so he could live closer to his sister Darlene, for whom he works as a home health aide. [Provided]
Deon Hudson didn’t think much of the low-rise apartment community in south-suburban Chicago Heights where he sought to move last May. It was a dangerous area, and the building wasn’t a “five-star complex,” Hudson said.
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A rendering of the planned industrial complex and community center proposed by Related Midwest and 548 Development. [Provided]
This article was first published in Block Club Chicago.
In the early ’90s, the massive lot at Roosevelt Road and Kostner Avenue was home to one of the nation’s most notorious environmental justice disasters: an illegal dumping ground for hazardous waste that caused health issues for residents.
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Members of the City Council Latino Caucus walk into council chambers on Sunday.
Even after a more than two-hour Sunday meeting, aldermen did not appear any closer to agreeing on boundaries for the city’s new ward map that will be in effect for the next decade. Leaders of the City Council’s Latino and Black caucuses used the meeting to further dig in their heels on the number of wards each caucus is demanding.























