Chicago News

  • Billionaire Ken Griffin’s $10 million donation to expand the University of Chicago Crime Lab’s backup of the Chicago Police Department’s “strategic support centers,” increased training and support for officers, and development of an early intervention system passed through the city’s Budget Committee Tuesday.

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  • Spring has sprung and shake-ups are in the air. Speculation continues about Ald. Michael Zalewski’s (23) replacement as chair of City Council’s Aviation Committee, while 80 committeemen meet to appoint the next head of the Cook County Democratic Party.

    Zalewski formally endorsed long-rumored favorite, state Rep. Silvana Tabares, to replace him as alderman on Tuesday. Mayoral spokesperson Adam Collins said news was forthcoming on the process to select Zalewski’s replacement. City Council’s last retirement, Ald. Will Burns (4) led to the mayor appointing a selection committee and open applications to ward residents. That committee recommended Sophia King.

    Just after City Council is expected to wrap, Cook County Democrats meet up the street at 203 North LaSalle to select the new head of the party. Several committeemen suggested Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle is favored to win – what remains a mystery is how much she will depart from the style and operations of retiring Chairman Joe Berrios – including who will serve on the party’s executive committee. Our story with weighted votes and new party faces is here.

    The Finance Committee will meet at 9:30 a.m. to consider its recessed agenda – Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s pay gap measure, a resolution asking the General Assembly to support "Good Samaritan" civilian liability laws to protect animals in distress (R2018-300), and an ordinance on the impounding of stray animals with microchips.

    Progressive aldermen are expected to introduce an ordinance creating a new Office of Labor Standards to enforce the city’s minimum wage and sick leave regulations. It aligns with the caucus’s backing of its “Fair Workweek” ordinance to “give workers more control over their schedules, require employers to first offer existing employees additional hours prior to hiring additional workers, and require employers to provide clear expectations about hours and schedule on an ongoing basis.”

    Other items aldermen are expected to approve at the full City Council meeting:

    • Sydney R. Roberts’ appointment as Chief Administrator of the Civilian Office of Police Accountability (A2018-35) – Our coverage.

    • Four settlements – three police related – totaling $6.2 million. The largest settlement, is owed to 16-year-old Jaquise Evans, who was shot and wounded by Officer Richard Salvador in the summer of 2015. City lawyers on this case were accused of failing to turn over crucial evidence in the case. – Our coverage.

    • Ald. Brian Hopkins’ (2) crackdown on landmark property owners who “willingly neglect” their buildings in the hopes of knocking them down and profiting off the land O2017-4871. The ordinance imposes daily fines of $1,000 to $2,000 on owners with compromised exterior, structural or defective elements. – Our coverage.

    • Ald. Marge Laurino’s (39) latest effort to tighten the city’s sexual harassment provisions, O2018-2401. It alters the declaration of city policy to affirm that sexual harassment “threaten[s] the rights and proper privileges of the city’s inhabitants and menace the institutions and foundation of a free and democratic society.” – Our coverage.

    • Acceptance of roughly $28 million in grants, including the $10 million gift from billionaire Ken Griffin for Chicago Police Department and University of Chicago Crime Lab initiatives (O2018-2337).

    • A fuel lease agreement (O2018-3039) with ORD Fuel Co. LLC (whose members are from American, Delta, and United Airlines) and an expanded agreement with Chicago Airlines Terminal Consortium (CATCo) (O2018-3040) to manage equipment and operations in and around Terminals 1, 2, 3 and 5 at O’Hare Airport.

    • A four-year collective bargaining agreement covering the 24 sergeants who patrol O’Hare and Midway airports (O2018-2579).

    • Ald. Brendan Reilly’s (42) O2018-921, which triples fines “for parking or standing of vehicles alongside properly parked vehicles within Central Business District.” Double parkers downtown would see fines triple from $100 to $300.

    • Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s latest crackdown on tobacco to deter teen smoking. The ordinance bans tobacco samplers from operating in the city and mandates that the Department of Public Health create warning signs about the dangers of other tobacco products like e-cigarettes, cigars, and cigarillos to be displayed at retailers (O2018-2340). – Our coverage.

    • The extension of three existing leases with Catholic Charities. Ald. Raymond Lopez (15) voted against in committee, arguing the city wasn’t getting its money’s worth. (O2018-2449, O2018-2428, O2018-2400) – Our coverage.

    • The new 16-story residential building planned in Ald. Proco Joe Moreno’s (1) ward. The building would have 168 units (seven affordable), and developers promise an $875,000 cash payment to the Affordable Housing Opportunity Fund (O2016-6342). – Our coverage.

    • A 12-year class 6B tax for break construct an approximately 174,536 square foot last mile urban logistics facility at 2445 S. Rockwell, R2018-186.

    • Leslie D. Davis and Shirley J. Newsome’s reappointments to the city’s Community Development Commission (A2018-23).

    • TIF Assistance for accessibility improvements at the Seward Park Fieldhouse on the Near North Side (O2018-2342) and improvements at the Big Marsh Environmental Center on the far South Side (O2018-2343) – Our coverage.

    • 12-year landmark tax breaks for the old Cook County Criminal Building, or Court House Place (O2018-2347) in River North and the former Avondale Butter & Egg Co. building (O2018-2348) in the red-hot Fulton Market District. Our coverage.

    • Another precinct ban on shared housing in Ald. Marty Quinn’s (13) ward (O2018-2361). It is is the 29th ban out of 48 precincts. – Our coverage.


     
  • A packed (and lengthy) Finance Committee saw passage of changes to the recent ban on body armor in the city and $6.2 million in legal settlements. But aldermen held off on an ordinance requiring banks who do business with the city not have relationships with arms companies, Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s executive order to close the pay gap, and filing suit against Facebook and Cambridge Analytica over the election data breach.

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    Ald. Carlos Ramirez Rosa (35) says he and Public Safety Chair Ariel Reboyras (30) reached an agreement to cancel today’s Public Safety Committee hearing, while longtime Ald. Ed Burke (14) appeared confident of his reelection chances in 2019 – without committing to the race.
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  • Millions were lost at the county’s hospital system and the Assessor “has established a custom and practice of non-compliance” with freedom of information act requests, the county’s inspector general found. Plus, aldermen on the Committee on Economic, Capital and Technology Development meet at 1:30 p.m. today for a brief agenda.
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  • Aldermen in the Finance Committee will vote on four settlements today, totaling $6.2 million. Three are police-related.
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  • Ald. Brian Hopkins’ (2) crackdown on landmark property owners who “willingly neglect” their buildings passed the Zoning Committee unanimously Thursday.

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  • CPAC backers are headed to city council next week, while other organizers are looking to slow the momentum of the Obama Presidential Library. On the Preckwinkle front, a new effort has launched to protect vulnerable immigrant groups. Here are the highlights.

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  • Aldermen on City Council’s Zoning Committee have a relatively routine agenda Thursday.

    O2017-4871 – Ald. Brian Hopkins’ (2) ordinance aimed squarely at landmark building owners who “willfully [neglect] their property” in the hopes of redeveloping it instead is on today’s agenda (it will be substituted). Hopkins says there are some landmark property owners who have intentionally let their buildings deteriorate in the hopes they can demolish and rebuild on the site.

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  • Aldermen on the city’s License Committee approved the latest in a series of crackdowns on tobacco and other tobacco products – this time banning samplers from operating in the city, and mandating retailers post warnings about products like e-cigarettes, cigars and cigarillos.

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  • At a press conference lauding a $10 million donation from billionaire Ken Griffin for Chicago Police Department technology, Mayor Rahm Emanuel took his turn criticizing a Chicago Magazine article about CPD Commander Paul Bauer and his killer, Shomari Legghette.

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  • Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s latest ban on tobacco products is up in License Committee this morning. The ordinance prohibits tobacco product sampling and mandates the Department of Public Health design a sign to be hung up warning about the harmful effects of other tobacco products like e-cigarettes. The effort counters “decades of misleading and manipulative marketing techniques,” the mayor’s office says.

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  • Eddie Johnson, just shy of his two year anniversary as the Superintendent of the Chicago Police Department, gave a broad look at the department’s strides and upcoming challenges at a City Club appearance Tuesday afternoon. On his list: changes to allow citizens to be removed from the city’s gang database, an internal review of each use of force incident, and an early intervention pilot before the end of 2018.

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  • The latest of a dozen sexual harassment ordinances and resolutions introduced to City Council in the past year is up in committee, while the mayor issues an executive order on pay equity.

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  • 23rd Ward Ald. Mike Zalewski made a surprise announcement Monday – after 42 years working with the city, he would be stepping down at the end of May, opting not to finish his term. He has been serving as alderman in the Southwest Side ward since 1995, as committeeman since 2005, and as chair of the Aviation Committee since 2011. He got his start as a city garbage man and rose to deputy commissioner for the Department of Streets and Sanitation under Mayor Richard M. Daley, later becoming Daley’s president pro tempore.

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