Chicago News

  • An ordinance from downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly (42) to repeal an ordinance establishing an honorary street sign for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump is on the Transportation Committee agenda for this morning. It’s the only non-routine item on Tuesday’s agenda.  At the October monthly City Council meeting, citing Trump’s repeated racist comments and “mean-spirited remarks about Chicago,” Ald. Reilly introduced an ordinance that would repeal the designation and require that CDOT Commissioner Rebekah Scheinfeld remove the honorary "Trump Plaza” sign which is located at the east side of North Wabash Avenue.


  • In under 10 minutes, and without a quorum, the Committee on Public Safety approved the appointment of Steve Flores, a partner at Winston & Strawn LLP, to the Police Board, the agency in charge of recommending disciplinary action against police officers accused of misconduct.


  • Cook County Circuit Court Judge Diane J. Larsen delayed ruling Monday morning on an Open Meetings Act injunction on the May 18 and June 22 City Council meetings, directing plaintiffs to file a new brief that takes into account a new seating policy issued by the City Council Sergeant-at-Arms on October 4. Plaintiffs Andy Thayer and Rick Garcia charge they and other protesters were kept from attending the meetings because city employees packed the Council gallery and prevented members of the public from going to the gallery.

  • The city’s Commissioner for Animal Care and Control ran into a buzzsaw of questioning from Ald. Raymond Lopez (15) Friday afternoon, as Lopez ran down a lengthy list of prepared questions charging shoddy management of the agency and a failure to fulfill requirements for a donor’s two million dollar gift.

  • A little over a dozen aldermen showed up for budget hearings Friday morning, which included swan song testimony for City Clerk Susana Mendoza, who is widely expected to win her campaign for State Comptroller on November 8. Aldermen in the Budget Committee, helmed by Vice Chair Jason Ervin (28) for the fourth day in a row, also lightly questioned the Public Library commissioners, mostly asking for further details on how they can obtain additional library services.

  • The Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management (DSHEM) is looking to significantly increase community relations–aiming to increase the number of impressions the department makes from about 55,000 to 520,000, or “at least 10% Cook County residents contacted,” Executive Director Ernest Brown said. But those contacts don’t include moving any closer to the city center, he said.


  • “We’re almost at the halfway point,” County Treasurer Maria Pappas noted, looking around at the commissioners who attended her budget hearing Friday. “I want to congratulate you for sitting here.” She recalled with Comm. Deborah Sims, one of the board’s most senior members who was on the Board when Pappas was a Commissioner in the 1990’s, that “in the old days”, hearings would last until 3:00 a.m. and no commissioners would dare be absent. (Commissioners Larry Suffredin, Tim Schneider, Sean Morrison, Stanley Moore, and Chairman John Daley were also in attendance. Pappas’ hearing started a few hours ahead of schedule.)


  • Cook County officials charged with managing this year’s elections are more than miffed with accusations from Donald Trump that Chicago, in particular, is a bastion of voter fraud.


  • All this week, aldermen held hearings on Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s nearly $10 billion budget for 2017. Fourteen departments met this week, and with no major taxes or fees, aldermen stuck to familiar pet peeves. This week we bring you a selection from week one of two budget hearings, where aldermen grilled department heads about their budgets, past accomplishments, or, in some cases, failures.


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  • The Chicago Plan Commission moved quickly through its full docket over three hours, unanimously approving three new residential towers, the rehabilitation of two towers into rental apartments the approval of a new planned manufacturing district to build new L cars and the rehabilitation of the Theater On The Lake. The meeting was conducted in Room 201A’s crowded quarters, to make room for the Council budget hearings, which continued in chambers.

  • While City Council prepares to answer a suit charging it violated the Illinois Open Meetings Act, two weeks ago, the Chicago City Council’s Sergeant-at-Arms quietly issued a document to aldermen and city officials detailing a new seating policy for the Council Chambers. “The public is admitted to the Gallery’s non-reserved seats on a first-come, first-served basis. Fifteen seats on the second floor and fifteen seats on the third floor shall be set aside for general admission and may not be reserved. The Sergeant-at-Arms reserves the right to seat visitors in the second-floor or third-floor Gallery based on seat availability,” says the document.

  • A Republican candidate for State Senate in southwest suburban Plainfield, Illinois, Michelle Smith has begun running broadcast television ads in Chicago, riling up 43rd Ward residents, demanding to know why Ald. Michele Smith (43) (one “L”) is running for State Senate, according to Smith’s chief of staff, Adam Gypalo.


    Obviously, Michelle and Michele are not the same person. Michelle Smith (two “L”) is in a tight race near Joliet against Democratic State Sen. Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant with a ton of spending on both sides. One-L Smith is a North Side Chicago Alderman. Let’s not confuse the two anymore, OK?

  • A relatively quick day of county budget hearings featured talk almost exclusively on development issues, with officials from Capital Planning, Economic Development, Asset Management, and the Land Bank Authority taking center stage. The only major lines of questioning focused on tax incentive enforcement and addressing rumors Cook County’s Land Bank Authority (CCBLA) was making a “land grab” of lots in the First District.


  • A protester interrupted Thursday morning’s budget hearing on the Department of Buildings, loudly chanting, “16 shots and a cover up!”, marking the two-year anniversary of Laquan McDonald’s death. The meeting was otherwise routine, mostly focusing on the city’s large stock of vacant buildings. The issue was best summed up by Ald. Mike Zalewski (23): “The very, very, very frustrating issue of a house that has been sitting and sitting, vacant and abandoned, and dilapidated, and rat infested, and squirrel infested.”


  • A more than three hour budget hearing for the Department of Transportation was a near replica of last year’s hearing: many requests to amend the aldermanic menu program, and many questions on a long-delayed, but much touted, citywide lighting project.