Chicago News

  • Von Humboldt school at 2620 W. Hirsch St. has sat vacant since 2013 when the district closed a record 50 schools.
    MINA BLOOM/BLOCK CLUB CHICAGO


    A proposal to turn the vacant Von Humboldt Elementary School into an 107-unit apartment complex and five townhomes geared toward teachers now has the tentative support of Ald. Daniel La Spata (1) and is set to be considered by the Chicago Plan Commission Thursday.

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  • Forest Preserves Police officers must be “equipped to handle” dangerous people Cook County Forest Preserve Police Chief Cynthia Lance told commissioners. [Alex Nitkin/The Daily Line]
    Police in the Cook County Forest Preserves will be equipped with tasers and body cameras under a measure (19-0491) approved by the preserves’ Board of Commissioners on Tuesday.

    The board — whose members are the same as the Cook County Board of Commissioners — voted 13-2 to approve a five-year, $1.28 million contract with Axon Enterprises, the same company that provides the Chicago Police Department with its body cameras.
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  • Ald. Carrie Austin (34), left, and Ald. David Moore (17), tally up the 10-9 vote to advance a six-month ban on the sale of marijuana in Chicago. [Heather Cherone/The Daily Line]
    A measure that would prohibit the sale of pot in Chicago until July 1 in order to ensure that firms owned by people who were hurt by drug laws can profit from the sale of cannabis advanced Tuesday on a 10-9 vote, setting up a final vote on Wednesday that pits the City Council’s Black Caucus against Mayor Lori Lightfoot.


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    Mayor Lori Lightfoot, left, and Black Caucus Chair Ald. Jason Ervin (28). [Heather Cherone/The Daily Line]
    The final full City Council meeting of 2019 promises to showcase a truly rare occurrence: a knock-down, drag-out floor fight with no clear projected winner.

    Ten aldermen defied Mayor Lori Lightfoot Tuesday and sent a measure that would prohibit the sale of pot in Chicago until July 1 in order to ensure that firms owned by people who were hurt by drug laws can profit from the sale of cannabis.

    That vote sets up a rare showdown between Chicago’s mayor and Chicago’s aldermen, who have more often served as a rubber stamp than an independent legislative body with its own set of priorities.

    Related: Aldermen advance six-month ban on weed sales because lack of Black dispensary owners

    If the measure passes over the mayor’s objections, that could trigger the first mayoral veto since 2006 — and perhaps triggered a full-scale rebellion by those already angered by the mayor’s decision to create a website — chicagobudgetvotes.com — to blast aldermen who voted against her 2020 spending plan.

    At the same time, aldermen are braced for Lightfoot to renew her effort after the holidays to roll back aldermanic prerogative by attempting to rewrite the city’s zoning code — and perhaps looking for an opportunity to remind the mayor that a majority of the City Council makes laws for the city.

    Related: At 6-month mark, Lightfoot’s effort to scale back aldermanic prerogative a work in progress

    Ervin’s measure is not the only marijuana-related proposal on the agenda for the City Council meeting set to start at 10 a.m. Wednesday.

    Aldermen will also weigh (O2019-8484) which would allow cannabis company Cresco Labs to relocate its MedMar dispensary from a 900-square-foot office at 3812 N. Clark St. to the 5,000-square-foot former home of the bar John Barleycorn at 3524 N. Clark St.

    Related: ‘Give the brothers a piece:’ Aldermen narrowly OK dispensary amid criticism over lack of Black owners

    That proposal advanced on a 7-5 vote Dec. 10 after an hour-long debate also centered on whether proposals from firms owned by Black and Latino entrepreneurs should be allowed to advance.

    On firmer ground is another attempt by Lightfoot to push through another ethics reform measure designed to fulfill her central campaign promise to clean up city government and root out corruption. 

    Aldermen are set to advance a measure that would ban them from working as lobbyists to press other elected officials on city-related matters.

    The measure (O2019-8541), which has 31 co-sponsors, is set for a final vote despite several aldermen saying they were concerned it would open the city up to litigation. They also said it was unnecessary, even amid the federal investigations swirling around City Hall and the State Capitol.

    The ban was prompted by the arrest of former State Rep. Luis Arroyo (D-Chicago) in October on charges that he allegedly offered to bribe a state senator by paying him $2,500 a month in exchange for the senator’s support on legislation that would benefit a client he was working for at the city level. But that state senator was wearing a wire for the FBI.

    Related: ‘The feds are all around us:’ Ban on aldermen working as lobbyists advances despite concerns

    In addition, the proposed city ordinance bans elected officials who represent other jurisdictions from lobbying city officials or city agencies. 

    The ordinance carves out an exemption for elected officials who are also lawyers representing clients who have asked Chicago officials or agencies for an official action and are required to register as a lobbyist under state or local laws.

    Aldermen on Wednesday are set give final approval to a number of items:

    • O2019-9121 — A measure authored by Ald. Matt O’Shea (19) that would allow aldermen to use their aldermanic office budgets to host document shredding and electronic recycling events.

    • O2019-9252 — A measure authored by Ald. Raymond Lopez (15) that would allow aldermen to use their expense accounts — which will grow by $25,000 in 2020 — to publish “an annual calendar regarding citywide and ward specific information, events and holidays.”

    • Twenty-three budgets for Special Service Areas across the city, including the approximately $300,000 budget for the Six Corners Special Service Area (O2019-7765), which was the source of controversy after Ald. Jim Gardiner (45) said he would vote against the budget unless the organization’s bylaws were changed.

    • Eighteen appointments to the boards of Special Service Areas across the city.

    • O2019-8545; O2019-8548; O2019-8556 — Three property tax breaks for commercial developments in the 14th, 21st and 11th wards.

    • O2019-9126 — A measure authored by Ald. Tom Tunney (44) that will allow the plaza outside Wrigley Field to operate through March 29 as negotiations over a long-term agreement continue.

    • O2019-9127; O2019-9128 — Two measures to ban home-sharing services in the 26th and 15th precincts of the 13th Ward.

    • O2019-8528 — A measure authored by Ald. Silvana Tabares (23 )to ban home-sharing services in the 35th precinct of the 23rd Ward.

    • Seven measures regarding the sale of packaged liquor.

    • O2019-6853 — A proposal by the Chicago Housing Authority to build an 80-unit addition to the Chicago Housing Authority’s Edith Spurlock Apartments at 2604-2742 N. Sheffield Ave. in the 43rd Ward.

    • O2019-8478 — A proposal by Marquis Capital to build a four-story mixed-use building with six residential units and ground-floor commercial space at 1057-59 W. Taylor St. in the 25th Ward.

    • O2019-7963 — A proposal by Joseph Perillo to build a 131-stall parking garage at 6301 N. Western Ave. in the 50th Ward.

    • O2019-4103 — A proposal by Thomas McCauley to build a six-story mixed-use building with 35 residential units and ground-floor commercial space at 3347 N. Southport Ave. in the 44th Ward.

    • O2019-8476 — A proposal by Culver’s franchisee Justin Obreicht to build an 18-unit mixed-use building at 3500-02 N. Clark St. in the 44th Ward.

    • O2019-7967 —  Permission to allow the Ivy Hotel to install a retractable structure to enclose its existing rooftop terrace. The expansion triggers the city’s density bonus program, requiring a $101,500 payment into the Neighborhood Opportunity Fund.

    • O2019-9258; O2019-9255; O2019-9256; O2019-9257 — Four measures that would terminate four tax-increment financing districts early.

    • Or2019-513 — A payment of  $1.3 million to settle a lawsuit filed by the family of 18-year-old Tevin Jones-Rogers, who was killed in a crash during a 2017 police pursuit.

    • Or2019-512 — A payment of $1.2 million to settle a lawsuit filed by the family of 24-year-old Heriberto Godinez, who died in police custody in July 2015. 

    • Or2019-511 — A payment of $850,000 to settle a lawsuit that alleges Shaquille Gillespie was charged with a crime to cover up the fact that police officers used excessive force while arresting him in a West Side alley in March 2013.

    • Or2019-514 — A payment of $175,000 to settle a lawsuit brought by Gertrude Matanky, who was crossing La Salle Drive at Lake Street in a crosswalk outside City Hall when she was struck by a car driven by Chicago Police Officer Phillip Flannagan while he was on duty.

    • O2019-8005 — A measure to extend the Music Box Foundation’s $1 lease of a former South Shore fire station at 6843 S. Harper Ave. to allow its community center to remain open until 2026.

    • O2019-8017 — A measure to spend $100,000 from the Central Park Tax Increment Financing District to purchase property to expand a park at 724-726 N. Kedzie Ave. in the 27th Ward

    • Eleven sales of city property.

  • Even before Chicago property tax owners start paying the $18 million property tax hike included in the city’s 2020 budget, nine Chicago Public Library branches will open on Sunday afternoons, Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced Monday.

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  • A commission charged with doling out millions of public dollars to boost Cook County’s response to the 2020 U.S. census called off its Monday meeting, marking the group’s third cancellation in the span of a single month.

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  • Ald. Jason Ervin (28) will get another chance to advance a proposal that would prohibit the sale of pot in Chicago until July 1 in order to ensure that firms owned by people who were hurt by drug laws can profit from the sale of cannabis. Meanwhile, elections officials are working to update their rolls as the primary approaches.

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  • The Cook County Land Bank's Transactions Committee considers a proposal to buy a property in Franklin Park in November. [Alex Nitkin/The Daily Line]
    A burgeoning Cook County agency dedicated to transforming neglected properties into new homes is set to accelerate its operations next year, even as it faces an impending probe of its buyers and persistent criticism from county Treasurer Maria Pappas.

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  • Mayor Lori Lightfoot and her two top schools officials CEO Janice Jackson and Chief Education Officer LaTanya McDade field questions from the news media. [Heather Cherone/The Daily Line]
    By Yana Kunichoff, Chalkbeat Chicago

    Mayor Lori Lightfoot is making moves to reexamine the way Chicago budgets its billions for schools, starting with a new working group tasked with leading the charge.

    The working group, which will gather information from the community engagement sessions and then propose recommendations, includes several formidable players in Chicago education policy, though in some cases the members are rarely on the same side of the table.

    Members of the city’s appointed school board and its teachers union are on the committee. Find the full membership below.

    The plan, announced by Chicago Public Schools on Thursday, builds on a key promise from candidate Lori Lightfoot to revisit school funding and consult the public about how to do that.

    Chicago’s weighted school funding formula has come under fire for unequally distributing resources between schools that advocates argue need more resources, as well as pushing schools who are losing students into a funding loss spiral that makes it difficult to recover.

    Related: Change could be imminent in how Chicago approaches spending low-income students

    Any proposed changes yielded from the working group proposals and community engagement process wouldn’t come in all at once, the district said. Potential changes would be implemented over a multi-part timeline.

    In a shift in recent practice, the school board is also leading committees around critical issues of diversifying the teacher pipeline and early childhood education. The first meeting about workforce diversity is next week.

    Along with district network chiefs, board members and members of mayoral committees, the group includes leadership of local charter networks and teachers union researchers.

    Here is who’s on the list:

    • Sendhil Revuluri, vice president, Chicago Board of Education

    • Elizabeth Todd-Breland, member, Chicago Board of Education

    • Carlos Azcoitia, former CPS principal and board member, and professor emeritus National Lewis University

    • Krystal Burns, parent representative and member of the Harold Washington Elementary School Local School Council

    • Bogdana Chkoumbova, chief schools officer, Chicago Public Schools

    • Maureen Delgado, principal, Clinton Elementary School

    • Vanessa Espinoza, parent representative and member of the Gunsaulus Elementary School LSC

    • Rachel Garza Resnick, retired CPS administrator

    • Kurt Hilgendorf, Chicago Teachers Union

    • Pavlyn Jankov, Chicago Teachers Union

    • Josh Long, principal, Southside Occupational High School

    • Sybil Madison, deputy mayor for education, City of Chicago

    • Matt McCabe, chief of staff and public affairs, Noble Network of Charter Schools

    • Cameron Mock, chief of staff and senior fiscal adviser to the deputy governor

    • Candace Moore, chief equity officer, City of Chicago

    • Robin Steans, president, Advance Illinois

    • Maurice Swinney, chief equity officer, Chicago Public Schools

    • Ricardo Trujillo, deputy chief of Network 5, Chicago Public Schools

    • Two students from the CPS Student Voice and Activism Council

    • One teacher representative from the Teacher Advisory Council


    The district plans to get feedback from the public through a series of meetings starting in late January. Here’s the full list of community meetings, which kick off Jan. 29, 2020:

    • Wednesday, Jan. 29, 6 p.m. – 8 p.m. at Amundsen High School, 5110 N. Damen Ave.

    • Thursday, Jan. 30, 6 p.m. – 8 p.m. at Michele Clark High School, 5101 W. Harrison St.

    • Saturday, Feb. 1, 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. at Corliss High School, 821 E. 103rd St.

    • Wednesday, Feb. 5, 6 p.m. – 8 p.m. at Hammond Elementary, 2819 W. 21st Pl.

    • Thursday, Feb. 6, 6 p.m. – 8 p.m. at Dyett High School, 555 E. 51st St.

    • Saturday, Feb. 8, 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. at Roberto Clemente High School, 1147 N. Western Ave.

  • Ald. Jason Ervin (28) invoked a rarely-used rule to force a vote on a proposal that would prohibit the sale of pot in Chicago until July 1 in order to ensure that firms owned by people who were hurt by drug laws can profit from the sale of cannabis.

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  • The agency responsible for sopping up flood runoff and cleaning Cook County’s wastewater will see its budget shrink in 2020, reducing its share of property taxes on the average home.

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  • Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25) said the poor results of the city's affordable housing rules “staggering.” [Alex Nitkin/The Daily Line]
    The city’s flagship affordable housing policy has failed, and the Development for All ordinance is the solution, a parade of affordable housing advocates told members of the City Council on Wednesday.

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  • Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi and Chief Valuations Officer Donald Meyer explained how property tax assessments are changing. [Alex Nitkin/The Daily Line]
    Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi sought to soothe the nerves of real estate investors on Wednesday by peeling back the curtain on the multi-agency process by which property owners’ tax bills are calculated. 

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  • Officials are scheduled on Thursday to sign off on a $1.09 billion budget for agency that cleans sewage, fights flooding and protects drinking water and for the 5.2 million people who live in Cook County. 

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  • Another skirmish in the battle over Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s effort to roll back aldermanic prerogative ended Wednesday, as aldermen advanced a proposal to end a Northwest Side tax-increment financing district.

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