Chicago News

  • With no major taxes or fees proposed, and lacking a threat of one of the city’s pension funds becoming insolvent, the first hearing on Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s FY 2017 budget was fairly uneventful compared to past years. At Monday’s day long hearing, aldermen asked a grab bag of questions of City Budget Director Alex Holt, Comptroller Erin Keane, and Chief Financial Officer Carole Brown. Frequent topics included the new Community Catalyst Fund, two new pilot programs to ease car congestion downtown and at Wrigley Field, and the Chicago Police Department’s hiring plans.


  • Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s ambitious plan to add 970 new positions within the Chicago Police Department by 2018 is a complicated numbers game, making it difficult to quantify exactly the net number of new police officers who will join the force over the next two years.

  • Chicago public school kids (and many parents) went to bed Monday not knowing whether their teachers would strike. It took some down to the wire negotiating and a helping hand from the city’s tax-increment-financing (TIF) districts to reach a deal. But as we discuss in this week’s show, we still don’t know the full cost of the agreement, or how this contract impacts other looming issues at CPS–namely, a pension shortfall and statewide funding fix that hasn’t come through from the Illinois General Assembly.


  • Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle rolled out her $4.4 billion FY2017 budget in a brief 27 minute Thursday morning address. The budget includes a one-cent per ounce tax on sugar-sweetened beverages, a net decrease in 211 positions across county government, and a pledge to not raise taxes again for at least the next two fiscal years.


  • While public school students are firmly planted in their classroom seats and teachers are drawing up lesson plans, Chicago Public Schools public affairs staff have yet to return calls requesting information on how much the CPS-Chicago Teachers Union Tentative Agreement will cost. Already behind the budgetary eight ball, CPS’ 2017 budget relied on the idea that the teachers union would consent to an agreement similar to the one CPS offered last January, which included the phase out of the 7% pension pickup. The teachers did not.

  • A one-cent per ounce tax on sugar sweetened beverages, estimated to bring in $220 million a year once fully implemented, will be included in President Toni Preckwinkle’s budget proposal today, staffers and stakeholders briefed on the matter confirmed to The Daily Line Wednesday. The president is scheduled to formally present her budget at a special board meeting at 11:00 a.m. today.


  • The 2017 proposed City budget totals $9.81 billion, including $3.72 billion in the corporate fund and $1.59 billion in grant funding. Police, Fire, and OEMC make up 58% of proposed corporate fund spending. As The Daily Line team continues to review Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s budget proposal, we’ll report our observations. Below is a breakdown of some of the revenues and expenditures expected this year.


  • Aldermen are scheduled for more briefings this morning on the police department’s plan to hire 250 new officers next year as part of a two year hiring plan. It’s one of several initiatives in Mayor Emanuel’s $9.81 billion budget that aldermen say they’ll be taking a closer look ahead of the budget vote in November.


  • Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s 2017 budget includes a $1 million appropriation for a new Municipal ID program that is still largely in the planning stage.


    Mayor Emanuel and City Clerk Susana Mendoza, whose department would oversee the program, issued identical press releases Wednesday announcing the initiative as part of the city’s overall budget for 2017. But, according those involved in the implementation of the program, a lot of the finer points have yet to be worked out.


  • Following Monday night’s marathon contract negotiations between Chicago Public Schools and the Chicago Teachers Union, CPS released additional information on the contract agreements, but did not respond to requests for details on the costs of the agreed contract changes.

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    Mayor Rahm Emanuel Unveils 2017 Budget. Credit: Claudia Morell Mayor Rahm Emanuel unveils 2017 budget. Credit: Claudia Morell

    Mayor Rahm Emanuel unveiled his $9.81 billion spending plan for 2017 Tuesday, providing details on his blueprint to boost hiring at the Chicago Police Department, modernize the city’s 311 system, and continue investments in blighted neighborhoods.


    The $9.8 billion FY2017 budget includes about $3.72 billion is corporate fund expenditures, a 3.6% increase over FY2016, and $1.59 billion in grant funding.


  • Marking their third press release about the new downtown early voting Super Site at 15 W. Washington (where the Walgreen’s used to be), the charming tabulation officials at the Chicago Board of Elections want to remind you that there’s a place at 15 W. Washington that opened today with 150 voting machines ready to handle an onslaught of 4,000 earnest voters a day. (Ed. note: While we have not visited yet, the Board of Elections has flacked it enough that we’re thinking of it as a political junkie tourist site. When I get there, I’m planning to go all Ken Bone on it when I exercise my electoral rights.)

  • After more than 500 days of negotiations, members of the Chicago Teachers Union and the Chicago Board of Education came to a “tentative agreement” minutes before midnight, averting a strike scheduled to begin just six hours later. Negotiations continued down to the wire, with rumors swirling that Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s administration would meet CTU demands to sweep extra money from the city’s Tax Increment Financing (TIF) districts to give more to CPS.


  • Mayor Rahm Emanuel will unveil his FY 2017 budget this morning in the City Council Chambers, which will likely include provisions of a tentative agreement reached with the Chicago Teachers Union late last night. Few other details of the mayor’s budget plan have been revealed, other than the idea of adding a 7-cent tax on plastic bags, according to the Chicago Sun-Times and Chicago Tribune. This added tax would, in theory, add teeth to the existing plastic bag ban by providing an incentive for customers to bring a reusable bag.


  • On Saturday morning, Cook County Democratic committeemen unanimously selected Ed Moody to succeed the late 6th District Commissioner Joan Murphy, who passed away on September 18. Moody is the current Worth Township Highway Commissioner and a more than 25 year "active member" of House Speaker Mike Madigan's 13th Ward Democratic Organization, according to his resume. Moody was the presumed top pick by county stakeholders ahead of Saturday's selection meeting.