Chicago News

  • The Council’s Zoning Committee temporarily stalled a Logan Square alderman’s efforts to zone a mile stretch along Milwaukee Avenue to one of the lowest density commercial districts.

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  • Clarification: This post was updated on Dec. 11 to clarify that Eamon Kelly, who is running for Evanston Township Democratic committeeman, did not withdraw his candidacy, but one of his two sets of petitions.

    Monday is an important Cook County filing day, as campaigns turn in the fruits of their days-long labor investigating the legitimacy of petition signatures. Meanwhile, Assessor candidate Fritz Kaegi boasted of three congressional endorsements, and the Chicago Teachers Union promised to let their members sound off on endorsements for governor and attorney general.
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  • CPS CEO Forrest Claypool announced his resignation, effective December 31, 2017. “When I took this job I knew it would be the toughest of my political career. It's lived up to that expectation,” he said Friday. Photo: A.D. Quig, The Daily Line.



    Chicago Public Schools CEO Forrest Claypool announced his resignation late Friday afternoon in the basement of CPS’ headquarters. He was flanked by dozens of somber assembled community members, Mayor Rahm Emanuel, and his successor, CPS Chief Education Officer Janice Jackson.

    "I regret my actions and I've apologized for them,” Claypool said. “I am experienced enough to know that I've accomplished all I can accomplish at CPS."

    The news broke hours before and followed a report from CPS’ Inspector General, accusing Claypool of misconduct and a coverup.

    Emanuel stood by his appointee and friend of more than 30 years. He said Claypool should be judged by the entirety of his service with the city, the Cook County Board, at the Chicago Park District, the Chicago Transit Authority, and in securing more funding for CPS students in a deal reached in Springfield earlier this year.

    “He can walk out with his head high because he did a job well. He will always be my friend. He did a great job for the children of the City of Chicago,” Emanuel said.

    The day before, Emanuel had urged others not to make a “snap judgement” about Claypool’s future. The two first met in 1980, working on David Robinson’s unsuccessful congressional campaign. Alongside David Axelrod, the three went on to found Axelrod & Company. Claypool later advised on Mayor Harold Washington’s 1987 campaign, and twice became Chief of Staff to Mayor Richard M. Daley. He served two terms on the Cook County Board of Commissioners, defeating Ted Lechowitz.

    Attendants of the packed the press room Friday included Rev. Leon Finney and Pastor Byron Brazier, two clouted pastors from the city’s South Side. Finney said Claypool was unlike any other superintendent he’d interacted with in his 50 years working with CPS.

    “No other head of this body had the nerve to sue the state of Illinois on the (school funding) formula,” Finney said. “We owe Forrest a debt of gratitude for his courage and commitment.”

    All speakers credited Claypool for owning up to his mistake, but neither the mayor, nor Claypool, Jackson, or Clark took questions as reporters shouted after them.

    “Did you make a mistake by backing Claypool?”

    “Did the board learn nothing from the SUPES scandal?”

    “What does it say to the children of Chicago that Claypool was praised so much right now? That it’s okay to lie?”

    Next Steps


    Dr. Janice Jackson, the district’s chief education officer since 2015, has been elevated to acting CEO. The Board of Education will affirm her status at its January meeting, Board President Frank Clark said Friday.

    Her mantra during her tenure as chief education officer, she told Crain’s last year, was “stability, stability, stability,” in a district that has seen leadership scandals and funding troubles that brought it to the brink of insolvency.

    Jackson started as a social studies teacher at South Shore High School then moved up to become founding principal of Al Raby School for Community and Environment. She moved on to help open George Westinghouse College Prep. She went on to lead Network 9, one of the CPS’ 13 school zones that includes Bronzeville, Hyde Park, and Woodlawn. That zone has 26 schools and serves 14,000 students.

    Jackson holds a bachelor’s in secondary education, a master’s in history from Chicago State University, a master’s in leadership and administration, and a doctorate in education policy studies and urban school leadership from the University of Illinois at Chicago.

    She takes over as the district still struggles with finances, and as it moves to close and consolidate several schools.

    Outside Reaction




    CTU VP Jesse Sharkey said union members are “delighted” to see Claypool go, and he looks forward to having an educator at the helm of the district. Photo: A.D. Quig, The Daily Line.



    Claypool’s resignation, following Supt. Barbara Byrd Bennett’s indictment, led some to repeat the call for an elected school board.

    “For some time now we have been saying that the superintendent of the Board of Education should be a educator and that the board of education should be an elected board,” Ald. Ricardo Muñoz (22) told The Daily Line, “I hope would seize the opportunity to move in that direction.”

    Jesse Sharkey, the vice president of the Chicago Teachers Union, agreed, saying he was optimistic that an educator would be at the helm of CPS for the first time in roughly 20 years, when Paul Vallas was in charge.

    “Emanuel has now chosen three failed CEOs to run the third-largest school district in the nation, but Chicagoans deserve a qualified educator at the helm of our schools, and one who is vigorously vetted through a publicly transparent review process and found to be both highly qualified and without ethical stain or conflicts of interest. This should ultimately be the responsibility of the elected, representative school board that Chicago residents have overwhelmingly demanded,” he said in a statement.

    Sharkey says the union’s priority with Jackson is on restoring funding to special education programs, securing more revenue for the district, and encouraging her to listen to teachers. He said he hadn’t spoken to Claypool in roughly two years.

    The union has previously taken a no-confidence vote in Claypool, and has criticized his handling of nearly every issue, from contract negotiations to school funding. Sharkey said his exit should not be remembered as a resignation, but a firing.

    Jesse Ruiz, the former Vice President of the Chicago Board of Education and its one-time interim CEO, said “It is time for Chicago to follow the lead of major cities around the country and move to an elected Board of Education. I believe an elected school board will increase transparency and accountability in the leadership of our public school system.”

    It’s no secret Claypool has rankled some aldermen, who often hear complaints about their neighborhood schools, but have little power over changing conditions. Ahead of this past budget season, Ald. Susan Sadlowki Garza (10), a former CPS school counselor, got up and left a briefing after she said Claypool told her he didn’t believe her about overcrowded classes in her ward.

    Other aldermen who wouldn’t normally speak up at briefings didn’t hold back that day, Garza said at the time, complaining of classrooms with leaky roofs and broken windows. “Aldermen are fed up, and people that usually don’t open their mouth did. And good.”

    Ald. Anthony Napolitano (41), who for months has testified about overcrowding at Dirksen Elementary, said the change in guard matters less to him than finding solutions. “No matter who’s in that seat they’re going see and hear me fight for our schools.”

    “I think he did the right thing,” said Ald. Anthony Beale (9) of Claypool’s decision to step down. “He would have been an ongoing distraction. He couldn’t lead with this hanging over his head.”

    Beale said he hopes the mayor conducts a national search for Claypool’s replacement. If Jackson keeps the job, “So be it.”

    “Today’s announcement is shocking but not surprising,” Ald. Raymond Lopez (15) said. Lopez has protested the district’s recent closure and consolidation plans, which would include the closure of Harper High School in his ward. “I hope his successor is willing to address the needs of our communities from a place of genuine collaboration and humility.”

    “After having hear Dr. Jackson talk with disdain for the prospects of the communities I represent, namely West Englewood, I am hopeful someone with a more open mind will be permanently chosen,” Lopez said.
  • The Council’s Aviation Committee has two meetings scheduled for Monday. The first is a joint meeting with Finance to address a soundproofing window program for homes near Midway airport. The second meeting, slated for the afternoon, concerns the collection of fees at O’Hare Airport.

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  • The final legal settlement to pass through City Council before the close of 2017– a $30.9 million payout stemming from the wrongful conviction of four teens in 1994 – is up for consideration in the Finance Committee Monday.

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  • In less than ten minutes, aldermen on the city’s Workforce Committee voted to include sexual harassment training within the city’s annual online ethics training. In-person sexual harassment training would be added to required training that aldermen, aldermanic staff, and senior executives in the city must take within 120 days of entering City service. That in-person training is repeated every four years.

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  • After some confusion and tangents on ice cream, City Council’s Health and Environmental Protection Committee passed new food inspection language that aligns the Department of Public Health’s mandate with new federal rules. The department is also moving to address a critique from Inspector General Joe Ferguson, who said the food sanitation division was vastly under-staffed and consistently behind on inspections. Without that staff in place, the city could lose out on close to $3 million in grants.

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  • Chicago Public Schools CEO Forrest Claypool and Cook County Assessor Joe Berrios attempted to extinguish calls for their resignations Thursday by placing blame elsewhere.

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  • Mayor Rahm Emanuel is looking to beef up the city’s restaurant inspection unit after a report from the Office of the Inspector General criticized the city’s public health department for falling behind on checks on food establishments. Rules governing the authority and fee structure of food inspections in Chicago are on the agenda for the City Council’s Health Committee.

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  •  No vote was taken on Ald. Ed Burke’s (14) proposal to penalize “cashless” businesses in Chicago. Requesting the delay, Burke said “there is a lot more that needs to be explored” and suggested the matter could be addressed after the holidays.

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  • As the state and nation grapple with a heightened awareness of sexual harassment and assault, City Council’s Workforce committee will take on a new ordinance mandating training for employees.

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  • More than 175 companies have RSVP’d for a pre-bid conference on Chicago’s renewed efforts to build an express train connecting the Loop to O’Hare Airport. That’s the number the Mayor’s office is touting six days after the Chicago Infrastructure Trust (CIT), a private public partnership Emanuel created in his first year as mayor, released the invite.

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  • As credit card companies and banks increase their promotion of cashless services by encouraging mobile apps over bills, the most influential member of the City Council suggests the practice “threatens to marginalize significant numbers of Chicagoans.”

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  • Lake County Judge Mitchell L. Hoffman granted Chief Judge Timothy Evans a temporary restraining order in Evans’ case against the county Tuesday afternoon, arguing Evans “has the right to control the manner in which the County’s budget appropriation is applied to the function” of the court.
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  • Cook County’s crowded 7th district race thinned somewhat, as Cook County Comm. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia’s (D-7) hand-picked successor, longtime ally Ald. Rick Muñoz (22), filed roughly 1,000 signatures Monday morning, then withdrew them before the end of the day. He threw his support to Garcia’s director of administration, Alma Anaya.

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