Chicago News
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A rendering of the 187-unit affordable housing campus being built near the western end of The 606's Bloomingdale Trail. [Chicago Department of Planning and Development]
Chicago’s Near Northwest Side is set to see a surge of new residential development as at least three significant major new developments in the area are lined up for zoning approval on Tuesday. A 40-story Fulton Market tower, a pair of Goose Island industrial warehouses and an addition to the Greater Chicago Food Depository’s Southwest Side campus are also on the agenda for Tuesday’s 11 a.m. meeting of the City Council Committee on Zoning, Landmarks and Building Standards.
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Ald. Michele Smith (43) during a City Council meeting.
A new ethics package set to be introduced during Wednesday’s City Council meeting would expand the city’s conflict of interest reach, hike fines for flouting the ethics code and end former aldermen’s City Council floor privileges.
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Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29), and Streets and Sanitation Deputy Comm. Michael Lacoco speak during a committee meeting on Friday.
Following unanimous approval from a key committee on Friday, a proposal that would ensure victims of car theft are no longer required to pay towing and storage fees incurred while their cars are stolen is set for final City Council approval on Wednesday.
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A lawsuit up for settlement on Monday calls on the city to end its practice of allowing Chicago police to “cover up the misconduct of their fellow officers.”
A lawsuit filed earlier this year called on a judge to order more decisive action to snuff out the Chicago Police Department’s endemic “code of silence” that protects officers from repercussions for their misconduct. Instead, a City Council committee will likely approve a $200,000 payment from taxpayers to make the lawsuit disappear.
The $200,000 payment to settle the lawsuit brought by Esael Morales is one of three police misconduct settlements up for approval by the City Council Committee on Finance during its 10 a.m. meeting on Monday. The committee is also scheduled to approve more than $6 million in tax-increment financing payments for new infrastructure projects at a bundle of schools and parks around the city.
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A rendering of Related Midwest and Rivers Casino’s plan to build a casino at “The 78” [Related Midwest]
A special City Council committee designed to vet proposals for a Chicago casino is set to hold its first-ever meeting on Monday. And while the timeslot is billed for an informational review only, it will likely put a magnifying glass on the local opposition that has gathered against all three locations — including from the aldermen who represent them.
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Developer Jeff Shapack shows renderings of his proposed mixed-use tower at 170 N. Green St. before and after it took feedback from the Chicago Committee on Design.
A new 40-story tower approved by the Chicago Plan Commission on Thursday could set a new precedent for open space, affordable housing and sheer size in the city’s fast-growing Fulton Market District, the city’s top planning official said.
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An ordinance introduced by former Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson (11) weeks before his forced resignation from the City Council that aimed to protect car theft victims from towing fees is set for a second life on Friday. And aldermen advanced the appointment of a disability advocate to the Chicago Transit Board.
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A rendering of the 187-unit affordable housing campus being built near the western end of The 606's Bloomingdale Trail. [Chicago Department of Planning and Development]
Logan Square is primed to get nearly 90 affordable apartments on the western end of The 606’s Bloomingdale Trail — the first phase of a years-long project aimed at stopping displacement in the rapidly gentrifying area — after a key city panel approved the project this week.
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From left: Ald. Leslie Hairston (5), Chicago Chief Financial Officer Jennie Bennett and Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza (10) speak during a City Council committee meeting on Wednesday.
Aldermen narrowly voted Wednesday to advance Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s $12.5 million proposal to relieve 150,000 Chicagoans from high gas prices after a more than hour-long public debate over the city’s spending priorities, climate policy and election year politics. It was one of a half-dozen items taken up by the City Council Committee on Budget and Government Operations, including new multi-million-dollar initiatives designed to prop up single-room occupancy hotels and local food banks.
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A rendering of the hotel-apartment high rise proposed at 170 N. Green St. [Department of Planning and Development]
A proposal for yet another new Fulton Market high-rise, new apartment complexes in Edgewater and Logan Square and a smattering of new shipping warehouses proposed across the city are set for approval by a key city commission on Thursday.
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Supporters of the People’s Coalition Map and the Chicago United Map speak during different news conferences. [Alex Nitkin/Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]
With less than a month for aldermen to broker a deal on the city’s new ward map before it’s officially put to voters to decide, tensions have reached new heights as the two opposing groups argue for their proposals and take jabs at people who helped draw the opposing maps.
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Chicago Department of Housing Comm. Marisa Novara makes a presentation on a state-enabled tax incentive during a committee meeting on Tuesday.
Aldermen voted overwhelmingly on Tuesday to override their colleague by approving a tax break for a new 300-unit apartment complex planned near the Cumberland CTA Blue Line station that the local alderman, Ald. Anthony Napolitano (41), has staunchly opposed. The development will be a test case in Chicago for the new tax sweetener, which was signed into state law last year in an attempt to incentivize the construction of more affordable homes.
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Chicago Chief Financial Officer Jennie Huang Bennett and Ald. Walter Burnett (27) speak during a committee meeting earlier this month.
Aldermen are set on Wednesday to consider approving the third version of a proposal from Mayor Lori Lightfoot to give away prepaid gas gift cards and transit cards as fuel prices remain high. It marks the mayor’s second attempt to win aldermen’s approval for the plan after it hit a wall earlier this month.






















