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  • article-image
    The City Council Committees on Budget and Government Operations and Finance will hold meetings Thursday. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line] 

    The City Council Committee on Finance is set to meet at 9 a.m. Thursday for a subject matter hearing on municipal depositories. Aldermen will also hear an update on the city’s Workers’ Compensation program. 

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    Aldermen during the Zoning Committee meeting Tuesday. [City of Chicago livestream] 

    Aldermen gave an initial OK to a proposal to build a 63-unit affordable housing development in Lincoln Square near the CTA’s Western Brown Line train station. 

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    Several questions about the Chicago Police Department’s overhaul of its controversial gang database remained unanswered after a three-hour meeting Monday where representatives from the police department, Office of Inspector General and the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability (CCPSA) discussed the proposed changes.

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    Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Monday filed her petitions to run for reelection. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line] 

    Monday marked the close of the window for candidates to file petitions to get on the 2023 municipal ballot, and by the end of the day 11 people filed petition signatures to run for mayor. 

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    Public Health Comm. Allison Arwady, left, sat for a hearing before the City Council Committee on Health and Human Relations Monday [Michael McDevitt/The Daily Line] 

    Chicago Public Health Comm. Allison Arwady said more money is needed to fulfill the goals of a proposed resolution that calls for the establishment of a citywide African American HIV/AIDS Response Fund. 

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    Members of the Zoning Committee on Tuesday will consider a proposal for a 63-unit affordable development in Lincoln Square. [City of Chicago] 

    A proposal to build a 63-unit affordable housing development in Lincoln Square could come one step closer to reality Tuesday if it nets approval from a key City Council committee.  

    The City Council Committee on Zoning, Landmarks and Building Standards will consider the proposal during its 10 a.m. meeting in City Council chambers, marking the first time the committee is set to meet in person since the COVID-19 pandemic began. 

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    Chicago City Clerk Anna Valencia and City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin both filed their petitions Monday to run for reelection. And five incumbent aldermen won’t face challengers next year. 

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    Ald. Ed Burke (14) during a City Council meeting. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]

    After more than 50 years on the Chicago City Council, Ald. Ed Burke (14) will not run for reelection next year.  

    Burke did not file petition signatures by Monday’s 5 p.m. deadline for candidates seeking to run for election next year, Chicago Board of Elections spokesperson Max Bever told reporters Monday evening.  

    Burke, who is the longest serving alderman on the Chicago City Council, was indicted in 2019 on 14 counts including bribery, attempted extortion and racketeering. 

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    Chicago Public Health Comm. Allison Arwady speaks during a press conference [File] 

    The City Council Committee on Health and Human Relations will hear an update on the city’s COVID-19 response from Public Health Comm. Allison Arwady and discuss funding citywide programs to fight HIV and AIDS among the city’s Black population during a Monday meeting. 

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    The Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability along with representatives from the police department and the city’s inspector general will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday to discuss the police department’s proposed overhaul of its controversial gang database.

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    Candidates wait to file petition signatures on Monday. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]

    More than 120 people have filed petitions to run for alderman in the city’s 50 wards ahead of the Feb. 28 election.

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    The Office of the Clerk for the county’s circuit court was released from federal oversight Monday, and Cook County has begun to enroll participants selected for the country’s largest guaranteed basic income program. 

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    Ald. Raymond Lopez (15) announced on Monday that he was pulling out of the race for mayor and instead running for another term on the City Council. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line] 

    Ald. Raymond Lopez (15) in April was the first candidate to launch a challenge against Mayor Lori Lightfoot in the 2023 election. Upon entering the race, he tweeted “I'm in!” 

    But on the morning of the first filing day for nominating petitions, he announced he was out. 

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    Monday marked the first day candidates could file their petitions to get on the Feb. 28 ballot. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line] 

    Six people on Monday filed petitions to challenge Mayor Lori Lightfoot next year for her seat at the helm of the city.  

    Monday marked the first day candidates vying to get on the Feb. 28 municipal ballot could file petition signatures. Candidates or their representatives who were in line with their petitions at 191 N. Clark St. by 9 a.m. will be entered into a lottery to determine who will be listed first on next year’s ballot.  

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    Petition filing for the 2023 municipal election begins Monday morning. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line] 

    Petition filing for next year’s municipal election begins Monday morning as candidates vie to position themselves first on the Feb. 28 ballot.  

    With the mayor, clerk, treasurer, all 50 aldermen and new district councils for civilian oversight of the police department all on the ballot this year, this will likely be a “high candidate year,” according to election officials.