Chicago News
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City Treasurer Kurt Summers, first appointed in 2014 and elected in 2015, is weighing a run for mayor of Chicago, going so far to set up a new website — ourchicago.net — to measure interest.
But he hasn’t ruled out running for a second full term as treasurer — and that has prompted some political watchers to pass around a portion of a state statute that suggests if Summers opts out of a mayoral bid, he could be blocked by state law from running for re-election as treasurer in 2019.
According to the little-known section of state law “the clerk and treasurer each shall hold office for a term of 4 years beginning at noon on the third Monday in May following the election and until a successor is elected and qualified. No person, however, shall be elected to the office of city treasurer for 2 terms in succession.”
Summers won one elected term in 2015 after being appointed in 2014.
FormerMayor Richard J. Daley changed the city code in 1975 to allow Treasurer Joseph Bertrand to run for a second term in a row, according to the Tribune archives. As part of Daley’s 1971 ticket, Bertrand, a former shoeshine boy, janitor and basketball star, was the first black man elected to a major citywide office.
The city ordinance now on the books reads: “There shall be no ineligibility of, nor disqualification or limitation upon, any person being elected to successive terms as city treasurer. Any prior law, statute or ordinance to the contrary notwithstanding, no restriction on succession in the office of city treasurer shall be applicable.”
Summers’ team argues home-rule authority is on their side.
But Daley’s ordinance change was improper under the Illinois Constitution, three election attorneys told The Daily Line. Article VII, section (f) stipulates that a home rule unit of government like Chicago “shall have the power to provide for its officers, their manner of selection and terms of office only as approved by referendum or as otherwise authorized by law.”
Despite apparent conflict, several treasurers besides Bertrand have run and won multiple re-elections. Treasurer Cecil Partee was elected in 1983 and 1987. Before she went to jail, Miriam Santos won elections in 1991, 1995 and 1999. Stephanie Neely won two elections in 2007 and 2011 before stepping down in 2014. Mayor Rahm Emanuel appointed Summers to succeed her.
“I’m not sure any of those folks were entitled to that under the statute,” one experienced local election attorney said, but “apparently nobody in the past for all these various city treasurers filed an objection… My reading would be that the state law applies and whatever ordinance the city passed was not effective, because the only way that could have been done is via referendum,” the attorney said.
“In theory, somebody would have to file an objection,” Chicago Board of Elections spokesman Jim Allen said, but confirmed the state’s provision of “no consecutive terms for city treasurer” has “actually been on the books for decades.”
”It sounds like a hypothetical and we’re going to avoid commenting on it,” Allen said. “We’ll see what happens with both the filings and any objections. We just advise every candidate — it’s always wise to get together with a seasoned election attorney.”
The Board of Elections is not tasked with investigating whether candidates meet criteria for holding office — that is up to challengers.
“If Kurt Summers files nomination papers and nobody objects, he would probably end up on the ballot, there’s no self-enforcing mechanism,” the election attorney said.
“The bottom line, as I see it, is the ‘it's legal until we get caught’ approach,” said election attorney Andrew Finko in an email to The Daily Line. “Until someone brings it in front of a Democratic Party-elected judge in the Circuit Court of Cook County to decide, and then take it up to the even-more Democratic Party selected First District Appellate Court. The final stop would be the super-Democrats on the Supreme Court. (Sorry, don't mean to offend, just being realistic about our court system, and its influences).”
“Although the city can adopt ordinances to change how it handles elections, or other procedures, I'm not certain that the city can disregard the Illinois Municipal Code,” Finko said.
Another legal alternative is the quo warranto writ, a civil procedure. Translated to “by what warrant (or authority)?”, the move challenges an individual's right to hold an office or governmental privilege. A citizen can send a letter to the state’s attorney or the Illinois attorney general making a case about why he or she believes a person is wrongfully holding office, which could result in a hearing.
Finko has had one of his candidates tossed out because of quo warranto action — a popular school board member in Thornton who was convicted of a felony during his teen years.
Illinois State Board of Elections spokesman Matt Dietrich said its general counsel was examining the issue but said “it looked like something that could end up in the courts.”
Ald. Ameya Pawar (47) is the only prominent Chicago politician openly considering a run for treasurer. But Pawar said he’s awaiting Summers’ final word. Pawar is not running for re-election in his North Side ward.
“Kurt is a friend and I don’t know what decisions he’s making, I know he’s got a lot of options,” Pawar said. “I’m not interested in nudging or elbowing someone out. I just think that there is a tremendous opportunity to use this office to drive meaningful social change, and that’s where I’m at.”
Pawar said he is interested in issues including creating a public bank, refinancing student loans locally, creating a universal basic income program and other measures to reduce income inequality.
“If Kurt wants to be the one to do that, I’ll stand behind him,” Pawar said. “But if he’s not running again, then I’ll take a hard look at it and start putting the pieces together.”
Alex Sims, an advisor to Summers who helped run his 2015 campaign and now has her own firm, APS & Associates, said the conflict between the state law, Constitution and city ordinance was a “moot point,” noting that several treasurers have served multiple terms.
“This ordinance was enacted to allow a black treasurer to serve, the first one to serve in citywide office,” Sims said. “It seems like stirring from a certain group of people.”
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Budget season will start with a bang, as Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle chose the same day to unveil their spending plans for next year. Cook County Democrats are putting some financial muscle toward their effort to sweep Republicans from their seats on the Cook County Board. Meanwhile, Assessor Joseph Berrios lost another round in court over ethics rules.

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An influx of federal cash will help the modernization of the will help move the modernization of the Red and Purple CTA train lines forward, while a judge will face re-election without the support of the Cook County Democratic Party for the first time in recent memory. New candidates have filed in the 7th, 14th and 20th wards — while 42nd Ward Ald. Brendan Reilly has no opponent, but a boatload of cash,
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A 28 percent increase in the number of claims filed of damage with the City Council during the first eight months of 2018 as compared with the same period in 2017 will force city leaders to dig deep to pay for the damage.
Finance officials filed more than 240 claims of damage to vehicles at the City Council meeting on Thursday. That’s the most in a single month since March, the traditional start of Chicago’s unofficial pothole season.
Caused by Chicago’s frequent freeze-and-thaw-cycles, potholes are the bain of many Chicago drivers — as well as officials hoping to be re-elected.
Tori Joseph, a spokesman for Mayor Rahm Emanuel, said city officials have “a strong commitment towards improving road conditions.
City crews have resurfaced 175 miles of streets and filled 222,958 potholes, bringing the total filled this year to 386,672, Joseph said.
City Clerk Anna Valencia’s office processes damage claims of as much as $2,000 to repair flat tires, bent wheels and out-of-whack alignments. The claims head to the City Council’s Finance Committee, which approves payment as part of its routine monthly agenda.
Drivers can file claim forms online at chicityclerk.com along with a copy of the police report as well as a paid repair bill or two estimates.
About six months later, drivers will get a check in the mail for about half — under the theory that any damage is at least partly the fault of the person behind the wheel.
According to the National Weather Service, the average temperature from December 2017 through February 2018 was 1.1 degrees above the normal temperature between 1981 to 2010. More than 30.2 inches of snow fell at O’Hare International Airport, 2.1 inches more than normal.
In 2016-17, however, the average temperature was 4.2 degrees higher than normal. Only 18.3 inches of snow fell, 9.8 inches less than normal. -
For several months, The Daily Line has tracked where the top fundraisers in the mayoral race are receiving their funds. Thanks to some help from Thomas Ogorzalek, an assistant professor of Political Science and Urban Studies at Northwestern University, we now have those donations mapped.
Map – Mayoral Contributions 2019: Selected Candidates
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For context and comparison, we’ve included Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s donations beginning in April 2018. That’s when businessman Willie Wilson gave himself $100,000, lifting the contribution caps. Emanuel almost immediately began bringing in millions weekly. For scale, the size of the red circles corresponds to the size of the donation.
We have included Dorothy Brown, Paul Vallas, Garry McCarthy and Lori Lightfoot. Wilson is still largely self-funded, so his inclusion does not tell much of a story. You may toggle which candidates you'd like to see by clicking "content" on the sidebar. Feel free to zoom out to see donations nationwide.
Lightfoot’s fundraising is concentrated on the city’s Loop and North Side, with several donors clustered near the lakefront and in the northern suburbs. She likewise has a small group of donors in Oakland, Kenwood and Hyde Park.
Vallas similarly counts a higher concentration of donors on the North Side, but fewer in number than Lightfoot. He also has pockets of donors in the Western Suburbs.
McCarthy and Brown have far fewer individual donors in the city, and roughly the same number of donors in the suburbs as in the city.
Past coverage:
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Civilian control of the Chicago Police Department is the missing piece of efforts to reform the Chicago Police Department, members of the Grassroots Alliance for Police Accountability said Thursday at City Hall, renewing their push for new rules to hold officers accountable.
“It’s true that this ordinance is a dramatic departure for the city and the police department, but dramatic change is needed to restore public trust…Chicagoans deserve better,” Ald. Roderick Sawyer (6) said to applause. [A.D. Quig/The Daily Line] -
State and local elected officials blasted Peoples Gas Thursday at a City Hall news conference, saying the utility was misspending ratepayers’ money on new gas mains.
An affordability crisis is looming, Illinois PIRG’s Abe Scarr said, adding that he worries that those that can’t afford their bills will heat their homes with their ovens or other unsafe methods, or keep the heat at a dangerously low temperature. [A.D. Quig/The Daily Line] -
Police reform advocates will gather at City Hall before Thursday’s meeting of the full City Council to renew their call for civilian oversight of the police department. In addition, Mayor Rahm Emanuel has named a replacement for the executive director of Chicago Animal Care and Control that he fired in July.
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Correction: A previous version of this story misstated Lanetta Haynes Turner's salary as interim chief of staff as $186,000 annually. It is $154,000.
Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle announced late Wednesday that she’d “demanded and received” resignation from her Chief of Staff, John Keller, after she learned of a corroborated allegation that Keller “had engaged in inappropriate behavior on his personal time.”
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Aldermen will gather Thursday for the first time since Mayor Rahm Emanuel set off a political earthquake by announcing he will not run for a third term.
Part of the newly altered landscape includes the possibility of a much different City Council in the spring, with Emanuel ally Mayor Pro Tem Ald. Margaret Laurino (39) set to retire — bringing an end to another political dynasty at City Hall. Ald. Pat O’Connor (40) — the mayor’s floor leader — is also considering ending his time on the City Council after 36 years. Ald. Ricardo Munoz (22) will step down as well, and is weighing a run for mayor.
Emanuel’s vow to squeeze two years of work into his last eight months as mayor will face its first test Thursday, as he asks aldermen to pass a massive tax hike on e-cigarettes and liquid nicotine through committee and council within a single day.
Other tests are on the docket as well. Emanuel will introduce a measure Thursday that would lease part of Jackson Park to the Obama Presidential Center for 99 years in return for $10 as well as a measure to change the city’s sign ordinance to allow big companiesto adorn downtown buildings with their names.
As the aldermen meet, the race to replace Emanuel will take shape. Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle whether she will run for mayor from the same Hyde Park hotel where former President Barack Obama launched his campaign for the U.S. Senate. Meanwhile, Cook County Comm. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia inched closer to launching his own campaign for the fifth floor of City Hall Wednesday, as his team filed the paperwork required in order for him to start raising money.
At the top of the City Council’s agenda Thursday will be four police misconduct settlements totalling $18 million, including one of the largest settlements (Or2018-414) in the city’s history for the family of Bettie Jones.
City lawyers recommended settling the wrongful death suit filed by Jones’ family because “any jury would likely develop a profound sympathy” for Jones. Jones was “an innocent bystander” who was trying to aid the police and a neighbor, Quintonio Legrier, who was also killed by police. Our coverage.
Aldermen are also expected to give final approval (O2018-3178) to a 75-unit complex in Jefferson Park at the heart of a furious debate over affordable housing on the Northwest Side. However, the project at 5150 N. Northwest Highway still needs to win state tax credits to break ground.
Aldermen will also retroactively grant the Chicago Cubs permission to hold a Friday night game on Sept. 13 instead of an afternoon game to boost their chances to win a playoff berth. [The Cubs beat the Washington Nationals 4-3.]
Other developments slated for approval:
- Hilco deal fires up environmentalists, businesses (O2018-6028) — A proposal to transform a former coal-fired power plant in Little Village into a hulking distribution center as part of a $100 million project was opposed by some locals for adding pollution to neighborhood streets. Our coverage.
- Southbridge neighborhood to rise from Ickes Homes (O2017-3198) — A proposal to build 972 units on the now-vacant 20 acres that were once home to 11 high-rises run by the Chicago Housing Authority to create the new neighborhood of Southbridge. Our coverage.
- New Fulton Market tower (O2018-4929) — A proposal to build a 13-story building at 1375 W. Fulton St. that would feature 315,300 square feet of office space, shops on the ground floor and 116 parking spaces on what is now a vacant lot and surface parking lot along the western edge of the Fulton Market District.
- Bucktown/Wicker Park luxury building near 606 (O2018-1835) — A six-story building at 1750 N. Western Ave. would have 109 luxury apartments, a 42-spot parking garage on the first floor and retail on the second floor, where a plaza will connect to the trail and include public bathrooms. Our coverage.
- Soup kitchen to become apartments (O2018-3178) — A Wicker Park community center and soup kitchen will be transformed into 16 apartments. Our coverage.
- Two new breweries set (O2018-4976) (O2018-4941) — Blind Pig plans to open a new brewery, distillery and restaurant in Fulton Market and Naperville-based brewery Solemn Oath won permission to open a brewery and tap room in Logan Square.
Other items slated for approval:
- $9 million loan forgiven (O2018-6573) — Aldermen begrudgingly approved this ordinance, which requires the city to forgive $9 million of the $11 million it is owed. In exchange, Neighborhood Housing Services would sell eight multifamily buildings in the 27th, 28th, 29th and 37th ward to Villa Capital for $7.7 million and prevent the buildings from going into foreclosure.
- New dog parks on the South Side (O2018-6106, O2018-6117, O2018-6122) — The new parks are at 3906 S. Lake Park Ave. in the 4th Ward, 4149-53 S. Vincennes Ave. in the 4th Ward, and 3938-40 S. Indiana Ave. in the 3rd Ward.
- Tax break for Morgan Park medical office (O2018-6317) – A new medical office space that will replace the mid-century Chesterfield Bank in the 19th Ward with the help of a Class 7c tax break over the next five years. Our coverage.
- Park grants and reimbursements (O2018-6300, O2018-6260, O2018-6175) –Aldermen will chip in close to $225,000 to parks projects in the 12th and 9th ward, including efforts to bring a water source to a popular community garden. Our coverage.
- Old Main Post Office plaza updates (O2018-6582) – An earmark of at most $18 million from the Canal/Congress TIF to renovate a city-owned plaza ahead of Walgreens relocating its headquarters at the Old Main Post Office. Our coverage.
- Pop up stores get green light (O2018-6162) – Aldermen approved a proposal from Mayor Rahm Emanuel that will allow for the operation of short-term “pop-up” stores, including restaurants, as well as six measures governing the sale of packaged liquor.
- Closed Chatham school set to become union offices (O2018-6076) – The Amalgamated Transit Union Local 241 plans to buy a city-owned site adjacent to the former Garrett A. Morgan Elementary School, which shut down as part of the 2013 school closings. Our coverage.
- Donations to Puerto Rico, Mexico approved (O2018-6021, O2018-6022, and O2018-6033) – Aldermen will donate an ambulance and pumper to Manati, Puerto Rico, and an ambulance, fire truck, gear and other fire equipment to Chilpancingo, Guerrero and Tuxtla Gutierrez in Mexico.
Several appointments are also up for approval:
- Ethics reappointments (A2018-86) — Neither Daisy Lezama nor Zaid Abdul-Aleem were in committee for their reappointments earlier this week, leading Council fixture George Blakemore to ask. “Where are they? I want to hear from the person.” Our coverage.
- Housing appointments (A2018-83 and A2018-84) — The appointments of City Hall veteran Jacqueline Edens (the current CEO of social service nonprofit Inner Voice) and Richard Rowe (the senior program manager at the Corporation for Supportive Housing) to the 15-member Low Income Housing Trust Fund Board. Our coverage.
- Commission on Human Relations reappointments (A2018-85) — Naderh H. Elrabadi, Stephanie A. Kanter, David J. Mussatt and Nabeela Rasheed would serve until 2021 if confirmed.
In a break with recent business as usual, a number of the most controversial measures considered by aldermen during committee meetings failed to advance. They are:
- A proposal from Ald. Brian Hopkins (2) to create a registry of Chicago murals after several were removed by city graffiti-removal crews in error. Opponents said it could complicate the city’s decades-long war against graffiti-removal.
- O2017-8598 — A measure to ban horse-drawn carriages stalled Wednesday in the City Council’s License Committee in the face of opposition from chairwoman Ald. Emma Mitts (37), who wondered why aldermen cared more about horses than those injured and killed by guns in her ward. Our coverage.
- O2018-4049 — Two of City Council’s biggest ride-hailing antagonists put off a vote requiring taxi companies and ride-hailing services to report violent incidents involving their drivers to city officials every three months. Our coverage.
- O2017-5612 —A measure requiring City Council approval for Corporation Counsel settlements, claims, judgements or verdicts of $100,000 or more failed to move in Finance Committee this week. Our coverage.
- R2018-833- This resolution from Ald. Anthony Napolitano (41) and Ald. Nick Sposato (38) calls for city and county officials to investigate the claims of a former Independent Police Review Authority investigator, Kelvin Lett, who alleged he was fired after refusing to reverse his finding that a police shooting was justified. Our coverage.
- Or2018-80 — Scrap metal facility General Iron will be allowed to continue to operate at night near the North Branch of the Chicago River after an effort by Ald. Brian Hopkins (2) to revoke the firm’s permit failed earlier this week. Our coverage.
- O2018-5201 — The zoning committee deferred Ald. Brendan Reilly’s (42) request to downzone 1045 N. Rush St., the former home of Proof Nightclub. He says his ward is saturated with nightclubs.
- O2018-4980 — A proposal to convert a convenience store at 3579W. Dickens Ave. in Logan Square into a shelter by dog-rescue group One Tail At A Time.







Cook County Board President jumps into the race for mayor surrounded by several dozen of her closest friends. [A.D. Quig/The Daily Line]
