Chicago News
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Mayor Lori Lightfoot made donations to some aldermanic campaign funds in the first three months of 2021.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s political action committee brought in more than $245,000 in campaign donations during the first three months of 2021 and contributed donations of at least $250 each to five aldermen.
State board of election filings show Light PAC made $250 donations to Ald. Pat Dowell (3) on March 4, Ald. Michele Smith (43) on Feb. 10, Ald. Samantha Nugent (39) on Feb. 18, Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza (10) on Feb. 18. The committee also made two donations of $250 each to Ald. David Moore (17) on Jan. 19 and Feb. 8. The donations all marked tickets that Lightfoot's organization had purchased to aldermen's fundraising events, Dave Mellet, political spokesperson for Lightfoot told The Daily Line Monday.
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Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35) speaking during an April 21 rally for the Empowering Communities for Public Safety Ordinance
Passing the Empowering Communities for Public Safety ordinance through City Council without support of the mayor would mark an “extremely rare” event, but advocates for civilian oversight of the police department say the city “can’t wait any longer,” they said on The Daily Line’s Cloutcast.
Coalitions previously behind the competing proposals for Civilian Police Accountability Council (CPAC) and Grassroots Alliance for Police Accountability (GAPA) earlier this year introduced their compromise Empowering Communities for Public Safety ordinance, which sponsors said will be filed as a substitute of the GAPA ordinance (SO2019-4132), and are urging Mayor Lori Lightfoot and aldermen to pass the measure.
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Cook County Board of Review Comm. Tammy Wendt is opposed a bill backed by her fellow commissioners Larry Rogers and Michael Cabonargi.
Members of the Cook County Board of Review are divided over a proposed state House bill that would bar candidates from running for the elected tax office unless they’re licensed to practice law in Illinois.
The two senior members of the three-member board are promoting the bill as a way to ensure its leaders are held to a higher professional standard in their work reviewing thousands of tax assessment appeals each year. But the newest member of the group has joined the ranks of critics who call the bill a ploy to thin the political field before all three commissioners run for reelection next year.
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A rendering of the first phase of the Lincoln Yards plan that was presented to the Chicago Plan Commission on April 15. [Department of Planning and Development]
A developer’s about-face in its first stage of building the Lincoln Yards megadevelopment illustrates how much latitude the firm has been given to reshape its massive plans — shutting out public input in the process, some neighbors argue.
Sterling Bay presented the first construction planned in its sprawling Lincoln Yards campus to the Chicago Plan Commission during a public hearing on April 15.
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Erin Hegarty spoke with Alderman Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35) and Desmon Yancy, director of community organizing for Inner-City Muslim Action Network, about their ordinance and challenges in getting it approved without the mayor’s support.
Advocates behind the Empowering Communities for Public Safety ordinance are urging aldermen and Mayor Lori Lightfoot to approve the newly proposed measure that would establish civilian oversight of the Chicago Police Department. The measure, which comes as a result of coalitions behind the Civilian Police Accountability Council and Grassroots Alliance for Police Accountability agreed on a unity ordinance, has stalled as Lightfoot says her own proposal on police oversight is on the way.
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Mayor Lori Lightfoot answers questions after Wednesday’s City Council meeting
A group of aldermen are calling on Mayor Lori Lightfoot to target the expected $1.9 billion in anticipated federal stimulus money toward the “immediate needs of communities hardest hit by COVID-19 pandemic” instead of using it to pad the Chicago Police Department’s budget, according to a resolution they introduced during Wednesday’s City Council meeting.
Another alderman introduced an ordinance Wednesday that would permanently cap third-party delivery fees, and another introduced a resolution calling for a hearing to discuss Navy Pier’s “lack of transparency” in minority contracting.
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City leaders expect to pick a winning casino proposal early next year.
The word “neighborhood” is mentioned 12 times in the Request for Proposals issued to would-be Chicago casino operators, but the document issued by Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s office on Thursday provided the strongest evidence yet that city leaders are eyeing a site in or around downtown.
The 86-page open-call invites developers to pitch their ideas for a “world-class entertainment destination” with an “iconic outdoor public space,” a five-star hotel and a meeting space of up to 60,000 square feet. The new “live-work-play district” should embed gambling within a larger constellation of shops, restaurants and performance venues, and it should integrate with a “multi-modal” transportation fabric that emphasizes walkability, according to the plan.
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Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36) during a City Council meeting on Wednesday. Villegas’ proposal to use federal stimulus money to fund a basic income program was sabotaged by Ald. Jason Ervin (28). [Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times/Pool]
Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s long-promised overhaul of the city’s highest-profile affordable housing policy cleared the City Council in a 42-8 vote on Wednesday, setting it up to guide most new residential construction proposed after Oct. 1.
The ordinance was the most controversial of dozens of measures approved during the City Council’s first in-person meeting since February 2020.
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Cook County Health CEO Israel Rocha explains the rollout of open access vaccine clinics in Cook County.
Two Cook County mass vaccination sites will be open for walk-in appointments through Saturday, County officials announced Wednesday.
“Open access means open access — come on down,” Cook County Health CEO Israel Rocha said during a news conference.
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Aldermen have the option to attend Wednesday’s City Council meeting in person.
When Mayor Lori Lightfoot gavels in the City Council at 10 a.m. Wednesday, things will look different than they have for the past year, but they still won’t be completely back to normal.
For the first time since last March, aldermen have the option to attend Wednesday’s City Council in person, though it is still classified as a virtual meeting under the Open Meetings Act, according to a news release from the mayor’s office.
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A years-in-the-making push to rewrite Chicago’s highest-profile affordable housing policy cleared a key hurdle on Tuesday, setting up Mayor Lori Lightfoot for a significant victory as she faces mounting headwinds across a range of other issues.
Aldermen on the City Council’s Committee on Housing and Real Estate voted 14-3 to advance Lightfoot’s proposed overhaul (SO2021-1226) of the Affordable Requirements Ordinance. If approved by the full council on Wednesday, the update will go into effect on Oct. 1, ushering in the third iteration of the policy created in 2007 and updated in 2015.
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Chicago Department of Buildings Comm. Matthew Beaudet and Infortmation Technology Director Eric Tenfelde during a zoning committee on Tuesday
Aldermen unanimously advanced a proposal on Tuesday to crack down on “problem” building owners but grilled city officials over the long-promised technology upgrades needed to bring the measure to life.
The council’s Committee on Zoning, Landmarks and Building Standards voted to endorse an ordinance (O2021-1193) sponsored by Mayor Lori Lightfoot that would widen the criteria used by the city’s Department of Buildings to add properties to the city’s “Building Code Scofflaw List.” Properties on the list are rendered ineligible for zoning changes, tax-increment financing assistance or land deals with the city.
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Ald. David Moore’s (17) proposal to rename Lake Shore Drive after Jean Baptiste Point DuSable is set for a hearing on April 29.
The proposal to rename Outer Lake Shore Drive after Jean Baptiste Point DuSable, Chicago’s first permanent resident, won’t be on this month’s City Council agenda. The ordinance is due for a hearing later this month, but sponsor Ald. David Moore (17) on Monday warned against “any games” to further keep it from a vote.























