Chicago News
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Ald. Susan Sadlowski-Garza (10).
Former Mayor Rahm Emanuel spent most of his two terms in office at loggerheads with Chicago’s biggest unions — and consigned most of their legislative priorities to purgatory.
But Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s selection of Ald. Susan Sadlowski-Garza (10) to chair the City Council’s Workforce Development Committee indicates a seismic shift is underway in Chicago politics. If Lightfoot’s picks are confirmed by the City Council Wednesday, she will replace former Ald. Pat O’Connor (40), Emanuel’s floor leader and one of his closest allies.
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Mayor Lori Lightfoot spent her first full day as mayor meeting behind closed doors with members of her cabinet, and capped it off by announcing a full slate of picks for her cabinet — some of whom will stay on after serving Emanuel administration.
Samantha Fields, who served as former Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s budget director, will be charged with guiding Lightfoot’s agenda through a City Council put on notice that business as usual — and their veto power over projects in their wards — has come to an end as the mayor’s senior advisor for legislative counsel and government affairs.
Fields sailed through her City Council confirmation hearings in the spring of 2017 and won praise for her handling of Emanuel’s election year budget — one that included no tax hikes or fee increases.
Manuel Perez, who managed Lightfoot’s runoff campaign, will serve as the managing deputy director of legislative counsel and governmental affairs, and focus on shepherding the mayor’s agenda through the final weeks of the legislative session in Springfield. That could include changes to a measure that would end mayoral control of the Chicago Public Schools.
Related: Let Senate vote on elected school board bill, aldermen-elect, supporters urge
Tiffany Sostrin will serve as deputy director of legislative counsel and governmental affairs, charged with overseeing “council relations” and advocating “for legislation on behalf of the mayor’s office. Sostrin will be a familiar face for veteran aldermen, having worked during the Emanuel administration as the chief legislative liaison for the Department of Finance and before that an attorney for the City Council’s Legislative Reference Bureau, led by former Ald. Margaret Laurino (39), where she prepared legislation for aldermen as well as legal guidance.
Lightfoot also filled two newly created positions designed to make good on her promises to prioritize neighborhood — rather than Downtown — development and to tackle the city’s massive shortage of affordable homes.
Marisa Novara, will serve as commissioner of the Department of Housing, which former Mayor Richard M. Daley disbanded in a cost-cutting measure in 2008 and Emanuel resurrected a decade later — before announcing that he would not run for another term as mayor.
While vice president at the Metropolitan Planning Council, Novara helped author a study of the cost of racial segregation and advocated for changes to city law to encourage more affordable housing. Her appointment requires City Council confirmation
Samir Mayekar, will serve as deputy mayor for neighborhood and economic development after working in the Obama White House and at a federal infrastructure finance agency.
Lifghtfoot also moved to replace Brian Bannon as the head of the Chicago Public Library in a repudiation of Emanuel’s leadership of the agency. Lightfoot said she would nominate Andrea Telli to lead the library, which has been under fire from Inspector General Joseph Ferguson for failing to adequately staff its libraries after cuts pushed through in 2011 by Emanuel.
Related: Library staffing still ‘insufficient:’ watchdog
However, six of Emanuel’s highest profile cabinet members will stay in their jobs. They are:- Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson
- Chicago Public Schools CEO Janice Jackson
- City Colleges of Chicago Chancellor Juan Salgado
- Chicago Transit Authority President Dorval Carter
- Chicago Park District CEO Michael Kelly
- Chicago Housing Authority CEO Eugene Jones
In addition, three high-profile commissioners who departed with Emanuel will be replaced on an interim basis by their deputies:- Alison Arwady will replace Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Julie Morita when she steps down June 18 on an interim basis while a national search is conducted for Morita’s replacement.
- Thomas R. Carney will replace former Department of Transportation Commissioner Rebekah Scheinfeld while a search is conducted.
- Eleanor Gorski, the deputy commissioner of planning, historic preservation and sustainability, will replace former Department of Planning and Development Commissioner David Reifman while a search is conducted.
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Commissioners are set to advance plans Wednesday to create three county commissions to tackle some of Cook County’s most pressing issues.
They include proposals to open up the county’s books to outsiders, ensure a full Census count, and to ensure Cook County is a “leader in combating global warming.”
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City Hall regulars — including reporters — took note when the divider between the fifth floor of the City and County building reopened hours after Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s inauguration after being closed for years.
The now-open doorway between the city and county building on the 5th floor. [A.D. Quig/The Daily Line]
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Department of Central Management Services officials told lawmakers they have at least partially implemented the recommendations included in an audit released last year — but lawmakers who sit on the Legislative Audit Commission are skeptical of real change within the agency.
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Despite her lengthy inaugural address, Mayor Lori Lightfoot touched on a just few of her administration’s key priorities — while her campaign website teemed with white papers crafted during the past year.
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Mayor Lori Lightfoot took office Monday and immediately struck at the heart of aldermen’s ability to veto — or green light — licenses and permits in their wards in an effort to fulfill her promise to root out corruption at City Hall.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot signs an executive order she said "ended" aldermanic prerogative. [Heather Cherone/The Daily Line]
The new mayor's inaugural address built around the words of Chicago poet Gwendolyn Brooks, centering on Lightfoot’s pledge to increase equity in Chicago and govern with the poor, the threatened and scared uppermost in mind.
“‘We are each other’s harvest,’ she said, quoting the former poet laureate. “‘We are each other’s business; we are each other’s magnitude and bond.’”
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LORI LIGHTFOOT'S INAUGURAL ADDRESS
(Delivered at Wintrust Arena, May 20, 2019)
Thank you.
Thank you so very much.
I stand here as your mayor, humble and hopeful, honored to be the 56th mayor in the history of this great city.
We are a proud city with a proud history.
In this moment, I cannot help but look at all of you and think about what lies ahead and what we can be together. I’m looking ahead to a city of safe streets and strong schools for every child regardless of neighborhood or zip code. A city where people want to grow old and not flee. A city of sanctuary against fear where no one must hide in the shadows. A city that is affordable for families and seniors and where every job pays a living wage. A city of fairness and hope and prosperity for the many, not just for the few, a city that holds equity and inclusion as our guiding principles. -
Mayor-elect Lori Lightfoot claimed a “mandate for change,” while celebrating with supporters in the Grand Ballroom of the Hilton in downtown Chicago. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The Lightfoot era will dawn Monday in Chicago.
Mayor-elect Lori Lightfoot is set to become the 56th mayor of Chicago Monday after taking the oath of office in front of more than 8,000 well-wishers and admirers determined to usher her into office on a wave of goodwill, where she will face dozens of seemingly intractable problems including a massive budget deficit and pervasive violence.
Lightfoot vowed Friday not to shrink from those challenges as she released a 232-page report crafted by the 400 people who served on her transition committees. That roadmap details a plan to increase equity in Chicago and sets the tone for Lightfoot’s first 100 days.
“We are going to transform our city,” Lightfoot said. “No one person, no one leader — even if it's a woman — can change the city alone. We must do it together.”
Lightfoot told reporters she would direct city officials to no longer cut off water to residents who have fallen behind on their bills, calling water “a basic human right.”
The transition plan also calls for an end to the practice of funding Chicago Public Schools based on the number of students enrolled. It’s a practice that critics, including the Chicago Teachers Union, contend has drained neighborhood schools of resources pushed them to the brink of closures.
Lightfoot also pledged to toughen the city’s affordable housing rules and force developers of large projects that get a city subsidy or zoning change to build more units earmarked for low- and moderate-income residents on site, rather than paying a fee or building the units elsewhere. In addition, more of those apartments must be large enough for families.
The transition plan also urged Lightfoot to adopt a very different approach to gun violence than Mayor Rahm Emanuel by treating it as a public health problem and creating a mayor’s office of gun violence prevention that will be tasked with developing proactive strategies.
Lightfoot also ended weeks of fevered speculation and announced her picks for committee chairs. The slate must be approved by the City Council, which will vote on May 29.
Ald. Scott Waguespack (32) — the only alderman to endorse Lightfoot before the runoff — will take over as chair of the powerful Finance Committee, replacing Ald. Ed Burke (14), who was forced out of the position in January after he was charged with attempted extortion. Burke has said he did nothing wrong.
“Chicagoans expect us to deliver on our commitment to end the old way of doing business in City Council, and this proposal will begin to chart that course,” Lightfoot said. “We worked hard to ensure diversity in committee leadership, and to empower aldermen who will help achieve our mission of a more transparent and accountable City Council.”
Waguespack said he planned to clean house.
“It’s gonna be pretty intense,” Waguespack said Friday. “I think the key is to get in there, find out what the duties of each staff member is tasked with, what their responsibilities are, what are the overall needs of the committee, and really try to restructure it from there.”
Waguespack acknowledged that some alderman’s feelings had been bruised, but predicted the changes would be approved.
“I know there’s some very upset people, but there’s also a lot of new people coming in who want to see these changes, and it’s up to Mayor Lightfoot, I think, to help direct her agenda,” Waguespack said. “When she rolls this out for a vote, people will get behind her.”
Ald. Walter Burnett (27), who will remain chairman of the Pedestrian and Traffic Safety committee, said he anticipated some opponents might try to defeat Waguespack’s selection.
“Some folks don’t like Scott. I don’t have a problem with Scott, Scott is just different,” Burnett said. “He’s a different dude, I’ll give you an example – Lori gives a nod for Lincoln Yards, right? She said she’s cool with it, Scott still vote against it. He go by his own drum, he beats his own drum, he drums his own beats, you know? He’s different. Just cause he finance chairman doesn’t guarantee he’s always going to agree with Lori... He goes against you and look you in your face, all the time. That’s fine. I teach my young democrats we’ve got to agree to disagree.”
Ald. Tom Tunney (44) is set to chair the Zoning Committee, replacing disgraced Ald. Danny Solis (25), whom the Sun-Times reported traded sex acts, Viagra, free weekend use of an Indiana farm once owned by Oprah Winfrey and a steady stream of campaign contributions for City Council actions.
Tunney will also serve as vice mayor. He would replace Lightfoot if she is unable to serve.
Lightfoot moved to oust Ald. Carrie Austin (34), the longtime chair of the Budget Committee. Austin had pleaded with Lightfoot in the Sun-Times to keep her job, despite her endorsement of Toni Preckwinkle for mayor.
Ald. Pat Dowell (3) will replace Austin, and be charged with crafting a budget plan that fills a deficit Lightfoot estimated at more than $700 million.
Instead, Lightfoot tapped Austin to chair the new Committee on Contracting Oversight and Equity in an effort to keep tabs on whether the city is meeting its contracting goals for firms owned by women African Americans and Latinos.
Ald. Roderick Sawyer (6) will chair the Committee on Health and Human Relations, which was chaired by Dowell during the last term when it was the Committee on Human Relations.
Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36) will replace defeated and disgraced Ald. Proco Joe Moreno (1) as chair of the Committee on Economic, Capital and Technology Development and serve as the mayor’s floor leader.
“As long as everyone communicates, we’re going to be fine,” Villegas said.
Former Chicago Police Officer Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29) will replace Emanuel-ally Ald. Ariel Reboyras (30) as the chairman of the Committee on Public Safety, which will grapple with whether to establish civilian oversight of the CPD — and what form it will take.
Taliaferro said he has a big job in front of him, amidst oversight by a federal judge and as negotiations for new police and fire contracts start in earnest.
“I don’t want to be one to bury proposed legislation,” Taliaferro said. “I don’t think that’s fair to our city and I don’t think that’s fair to the democratic process. I want to make sure we look at everything with open eyes and with reason.”
Though Taliaferro backed Preckwinkle, he said would support Lightfoot as mayor.
“We all should respect her… now she’s tasked with growing this city beyond what Mayor Emanuel has done, so she’s taking up the helm and we’ve got to start off with respecting her in that position,” Tailaferro said. “Overwhelmingly, the city has put her in that position by a large margin, and I respect my constituents’ decision to support Lori and I want to do so as well.”
Taliaferro called for his colleagues to fall in line and support Lightfoot’s picks.
“We have to let her take the helm,” Taliaferro said. “When you’re a captain of a ship, your crew doesn’t necessarily put together the agenda of the ship. The captain has always done that. So I think I want to be respectful enough of Mayor Lightfoot to say: lead the ship.”
Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza (10) — a member of the Chicago Teachers Union and the daughter of a labor icon — will chair the Committee on Workforce Development, which was led by defeated Ald. Pat O’Connor (40).
Ald. Harry Osterman (48) will chair of the Committee on Housing and Real Estate, replacing his former neighbor to the north, defeated Ald. Joe Moore (49).
Ald. Nicholas Sposato (38), will chair the Committee on Special Events, Cultural Affairs and Recreation, which was led by Tunney during the last term.
Ald. Michael Scott, Jr. (24) will chair the Committee on Education and Child Development, taking over from Ald. Howard Brookins (21).
Instead, Brookins will replace Ald. Anthony Beale (9) as chair of the Committee on Transportation and Public Way. Beale had campaigned to be Finance Committee chair, and warned Lightfoot she needed to pick him to avoid battling with aldermen.
Five aldermen who chaired committees during the Emanuel administration are set to remain as chairs under Lightfoot, including Ald. George Cárdenas (12), who will lead the Committee on Environmental Protection and Energy, which was the Committee on Health and Environmental Protection under Emanuel.
Ald. Michelle Harris (8) will remain chair of the Committee on Committees and Rules, giving her the power to block legislation at the direction of the mayor. Pedestrian and Traffic Safety Committee Chair Ald. Walter Burnett Jr. (27); Aviation Committee Chair Ald. Matthew O’Shea (19) and License and Consumer Protection Committee Chair Ald. Emma Mitts (37) will also keep their spots.
Ald. Michele Smith (43) will chair the newly created Committee on Ethics and Good Governance, which will be charged with reforming the city’s rules and procedures.
Ald. Brendan Reilly (42) will serve as president pro tem, and will preside over the City Council meetings in Lightfoot’s absence. He will also be in charge of the Legislative Reference Bureau, which is designed to help aldermen craft ordinances.
Reilly said he would make the bureau “a real resource for my colleagues.” -
The city’s $89-million-a-year workers’ compensation program needs “substantial improvement to operate more effectively” and has “significant control deficiencies and weaknesses” that could allow fraud, waste and abuse to flourish unchecked, according to an audit prompted by the federal charge levied against 14th Ward Ald. Ed Burke.
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Ald. Walter Burnett’s (27) stepson, Jawaharial “Omar” Williams, will fill the 10th District seat in the Illinois House to finish the term of Treasurer-elect Melissa Conyears-Ervin, who will be sworn in Monday morning.
Jawaharial “Omar” Williams is sworn into office by Circuit Judge Robert F. Harris as his stepfather, Ald. Walter Burnett (27) looks on. [A.D. Quig/The Daily Line]
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After more than two years of furious and racially-charged debate, state officials are set to approve tax credits for a 75-unit affordable housing complex in Jefferson Park on Friday.
A rendering of the proposed development at 5150 N. Northwest Highway. [45th Ward Office]







The nine-story Fulton Market office tower at 1230 W. Washington Blvd. [City of Chicago]
