Chicago News
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From left: Ald. Roberto Maldonado (26), Chicago Department of Housing policy director Daniel Hertz and Ald. James Cappleman (46) speak during a City Council Housing Committee meeting on Tuesday.
The city’s fledgling effort to bless the construction of backyard coach houses and basement dwelling units is working just as housing officials hoped it would, a department leader told aldermen on Tuesday — but plenty of barriers remain that hold the program back from its potential to expand affordable housing options across the city.
City officials and multiple aldermen signaled during a committee hearing on Tuesday that they’re ready to expand the program, but some aldermen remain skeptical of the policy.
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A graph shows a potential timeline for CTA’s electrification of its buses.
The process of switching the city’s fleet from diesel to electric-powered vehicles is slow moving as the city makes plans to phase out old vehicles and waits for federal funding to be unlocked to move the process along, according to information presented Tuesday during a City Council committee hearing. Still, the CTA has charted out an aggressive plan to electrify its bus fleet during the course of the next two decades, agency officials said.
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A rendering of the outdoor event space planned for the Salt Shed at 1357 N. Elston Ave., which is lined up to be the first recipient of a new Outdoor Entertainment Venue liquor license from the city. [Lamar Johnson Collaborative]
Large event venues would be able to regularly play music and serve alcohol outdoors — with restrictions — under a new ordinance set for consideration by a City Council committee on Wednesday.
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Supporters of the ward map approved by City Council on Monday held a news conference after a special meeting. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]
Just one week after they reached a compromise over new ward boundaries, 43 aldermen voted on Monday to support a new city ward map just in time to avoid sending the decision to voters in the June 28 primary.
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Ald. Daniel La Spata (1) showing an example of public bathrooms some cities have installed.
It would be “doable” and worthwhile for Chicago to build a network of freestanding public toilets around the city, a cluster of progressive aldermen argued in a City Council hearing on Monday. And while the effort has yet to gain the backing of Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration or of most aldermen, it may have gained a powerful ally in the chair of a key council committee.
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A coach house on Chicago’s Northwest Side. [Lichter Realty]
Chicago property owners have applied to build 361 new basement or attic apartment buildings and 166 new backyard coach houses in the approximately one year since their construction has been legal, city officials said Monday as they weigh whether they should accelerate the legalization push. But while some aldermen point to the numbers as a sign that the new homes — known as Accessory Dwelling Units or Additional Dwelling Units (ADUs) — have been a success, others remain skeptical.
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The Chicago Police Department has ordered hundreds of hybrid squad cars, but city leaders have no current plan to electrify all city vehicles. [Jason Lawrence on Flickr; Chicago Climate Action Plan]
City officials are due to update aldermen Tuesday on their efforts to streamline city data-sharing practices — an overhaul that is well underway — as well as efforts to electrify city vehicles, which have barely gotten off the ground.
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Ald. Michelle Harris (8), who chairs the City Council’s rules committee, speaks during a Friday hearing on the compromise ward map.
In an anticlimactic end to the city’s monthslong ward remapping process, at least 41 aldermen are expected on Monday to vote in favor of a compromise map, avoiding sending the decision to voters in the June 28 primary.
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A rendering of the Butcher & the Burger restaurant set to open in O’Hare’s Terminal 5 as part of a concession agreement that advanced on Friday. [Chicago Department of Aviation]
A $28 million, four-part agreement to bring new shops and restaurants to O’Hare Airport cruised through a City Council committee on Friday as aldermen praised city aviation officials’ efforts to make sure entrepreneurs of color get a substantial piece of the business.
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Ald. Daniel La Spata (1) is a lead sponsor on a resolution calling for the city to increase its stock of public bathrooms. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Aldermen are set on Monday to discuss the possibility of a pilot program that would help bring more public bathrooms to Chicago.
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Cook County Chief Financial Officer Ammar Rizki is set to move to the Obama Foundation next month. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Three of Cook County’s most senior officials were showered with praise on Thursday for steering the county’s finances and public health efforts through the tumult of the COVID-19 pandemic as all three head for the exits, opening up a new chapter as county leaders look to the 2023 budget and the 2022-26 elected term.
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A pending concession agreement will allow new food options to open in O’Hare Terminal 3 and Terminal 5.
Travelers at O’Hare Airport can expect to start seeing names like Butcher and the Burger, Bar Siena and Sparrow Coffee under a sweeping new concession agreement set for a vote before a City Council committee on Friday.
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Rep. Kam Buckner [D-Chicago] speaks at a campaign announcement event in the South Loop Thursday. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Illinois state Rep. Kam Buckner (D-Chicago) on Thursday became the third person to officially announce a challenge against Mayor Lori Lightfoot in next year’s Chicago mayoral race.
Buckner, whose name has been swirling for months as a likely candidate for Chicago mayor, made the announcement Thursday outside of TeaPotBrew Bakery in the South Loop to a crowd of about four-dozen people. The bakery is included in his state house district which stretches from South Chicago north to the Gold Coast.
“A mayor’s job is not just to fight for the sake of fighting. It’s time to bring the people together,” Buckner said during his announcement event as the sun beat down and the temperature pushed past 90 degrees. “We want our mayor to be fearless and compassionate to get things done.”






















