Chicago News

  • : The Cook County Democratic Party Central Committee held a virtual meeting Monday to vote on judge retention endorsements.


    Cook County Democratic Party campaign literature will urge voters in November to send two county judges into early retirement, following a vote taken by the party’s 80 committeepeople during a meeting on Monday.
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  • News in brief: Department of Housing affordable housing task force releases report; Mayor Lightfoot releases “equitable TOD” plan; Chicago Board of Ethics to enforce new lobbying restrictions
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  • Police attempt to clear protesters onto the sidewalks in Lincoln Park as another night of chaos hit Chicago, Illinois on May 31, 2020. | Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago


    Aldermen introduced a slew of new legislation this month aimed at getting a handle on the city’s surging crime, ranging from a blueprint for reallocating the city’s police budget to a proposal to crack down on looters and a mass surveillance system pitched to operate out of residents’ doorbells.
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  • News in brief: Watchdog dings COPA on case dismissals; Cannabis firm to testify against competitor at zoning board
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    The city hopes two new programs can help homeowners get rid of lead service lines — but it will take years and billions to remove all of the pipes in Chicago.

    CHICAGO — The city will soon begin to help residents who want to get rid of lead water lines, with a focus on people who are low-income.

    There are about 380,000 lead service lines in Chicago, many of them used by single-family and two-flat homes, according to the city. It will take years and cost an estimated $8.5 billion for all of those lines to be replaced — but the city’s new initiative will allow homeowners to kickstart the process and cut down on how much it will cost them.

  • Ald. Matt O’Shea (19) and Mayor Lori Lightfoot during a virtual City Council meeting on Wednesday


    The Chicago City Council voted overwhelmingly during a relatively drama-free meeting on Wednesday to ban the sale of flavored vape products, tighten oversight of the short-term rental industry and codify a measure to protect Woodlawn residents from potential displacement.
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  • The City Council is set Wednesday to emerge from its August recess facing one of the grimmest fall budget seasons in memory, offering a test of Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s grip on the council as the city faces wrenching violence and a staggering $2 billion, two-year budget deficit.
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  • Calumet High School at 8131 S. May St. and the former Young Women’s Leadership Academy at 2641 S. Calumet Ave. [Wikimedia Commons/Google Streetview]

    Aldermen gave a nod on Tuesday to a proposal allowing the city’s Department of Family and Support Services to open temporary homeless shelters at two Chicago Public Schools buildings, acknowledging in the process that the city’s Covid-19-related housing crisis is only beginning.


  • The “Chicago Connected” initiative aims to provide free internet to 100,000 low-income students. Lex Photography/Pexels


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  • A proposed ordinance to ban the sale of flavored tobacco faces stiff backlash from store owners, law enforcement and some aldermen.


    The sale of most flavored vaping products will be banned under a compromise ordinance advanced by aldermen on Friday intended to crack down on teen smoking without opening a new black market or inflicting too much pain on businesses.
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  • A 15-story condo tower proposed by Sulo Development at 19 N. May St. is scheduled to receive zoning approval on Tuesday. [Chicago Department of Planning and Development]
    A proposal by Sulo Development (O2018-9330) to build a 15-story condo building in the West Loop is one of dozens of proposals set to be approved by the City Council Committee on Zoning, Landmarks and Building Standards during its meeting scheduled for 10 a.m. Tuesday.
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    Survey released this week finds that Black men are most likely to have negative experience with CPD.


    Maggie Hickey, the Chicago attorney tasked to oversee the federal consent decree with the Chicago Police Department (CPD), released a report Wednesday that shows “an alarming disparity” between responses regarding police interactions with the population as a whole and those between the police and young Black men.
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    The Chicago Board of Education on Wednesday debating the SRO program.


    The Chicago Public Schools Board of Education Wednesday voted to approve renewing its one-year contract with the Chicago Police Department to keep officers in schools whose parents and faculty vote to keep them.
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