IRMA's Featured Retailer

For more than 60 years, American Sale has helped Chicagoland families “bring the fun home” with pools, hot tubs, patio furniture, game rooms, and more. Led by President Bob Jones Jr., the family-owned business has grown to eight locations across the region while staying committed to customer service, quality products, and creating memorable experiences at home.

From backyard entertainment to wellness and relaxation, American Sale continues to be a trusted retail destination for generations of Illinois families.

Learn more

Sponsored Content
  • Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot addresses reporters about protections for downtown businesses amid looting concerns.


    Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced a new, beefed up plan to prevent future looting both in the city’s downtown business district and in its neighborhoods.
  • Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot [City of Chicago]
    Cities should beef up officer training, take a harder line against police unions and consider shrinking the role of police in everyday life without cutting their funding, according to a nationwide blueprint for police reform developed by a league of U.S. mayors and police chiefs including Mayor Lori Lightfoot.


  • Republican former Judge Pat O’Brien is challenging State’s Attorney Kim Foxx for reelection in November.


    Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx has found herself increasingly on the defensive this summer as Chicago reels from a historic spasm of violence and racial unrest, culminating in the widespread looting of downtown businesses early Monday morning.

    Now, former Judge Pat O’Brien is hoping the backlash against is fierce enough push Cook County voters to a once-unthinkable feat: electing a Republican to countywide office for the first time in nearly three decades.

  • The City Council Committee on Public Safety voted Tuesday to approve a framework for assessing progress on the federally mandated reforms of the Chicago Police Department.


  • Property owners who grow “native gardens” would be exempt from Chicago’s rules against overgrown weeds under new rules being developed by the Cook County Environmental Commission. [photo by Alex Cheek on Flickr]
  • Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx speaks to reporters Monday.


    Hours of widespread looting in downtown Chicago early morning Monday is increasing tensions among public officials across the city and state, and also activist groups who are demanding for accountability in a police shooting Sunday that sparked the maelstrom.
  • Former Cook County Board of Ethics member Juliet Sorensen during a virtual town hall; Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle


    Cook County leaders are vowing to press forward with a series of revisions to beef up the county’s ethics ordinance in the wake of a controversial shake-up in the appointed board that crafted the changes.
  • Tax-increment financing (TIF) districts in Chicago are on track to pull in about $926 million from taxpayers this year, a record haul representing more than one-third of total taxes collected by the city.

    Revenues from the special taxing districts jumped inside the city by more than 10 percent since last year, according to a report published Thursday by Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough. When including money from districts scattered across the Cook County suburbs, TIF revenue topped $1.3 billion. Those numbers represent values assessed for the 2019 tax year, which property owners are paying this year.


  • article-image

    Teachers and parents pushed back against the district's plan to have most kids in school for two days per week.

    CHICAGO — The city’s public schools will start the year Sept. 8 with all kids taking online, remote classes, officials announced Wednesday, reversing a previous decision to begin with some in-class instruction.

    The move comes after weeks of pushback from teachers, parents and community members, who worried the district’s plan — to have a hybrid model where most kids would spend at least a few days in school — would expose children, families and faculty to coronavirus.

  • Chicago health officials provided aldermen with new details on the city’s contact tracing program on Wednesday, as daily cases of COVID-19 slowly increase in the city.
  • Gov. JB Pritzker gives an update on unemployment benefits and statewide Covid-19 cases during a press conference on Wednesday


    Gov. J.B. Pritzker blamed federal regulators for allowing widespread unemployment fraud to flourish in Illinois, saying the Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES) has flagged more than 100,000 cases of fraud this year.