IRMA's Featured Retailer
We Are Retail: Love’s Sweet Arrow
A shared love of romance novel reading led Roseann Backlin and her daughter Marissa to open one of the nation’s first romance-only bookstores. Love’s Sweet Arrow in Tinley Park is one-of-a-kind and dedicated entirely to happily-ever-afters.
Offering every trope and style, from sweet to steamy, it’s a must-visit bookstore for romance fans everywhere.
Sponsored Content
-
Mayor Brandon Johnson is pictured during a City Council meeting on Dec. 16, 2024. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Chicago is forecasting at least a $1.15 billion budget gap heading into the next fiscal year, the mayor and finance officials told reporters Friday.
At the same time, the lack of certainty surrounding a pension payment reimbursement from Chicago Public Schools is a driving factor in the city anticipating to end 2025 with a $146 million deficit in its corporate fund.
-
Public Safety Committee Chair Brian Hopkins (2) is pictured during a City Council meeting on April 17, 2024. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The City Council Committee on Public Safety on Wednesday will consider measures allocating funds for public safety infrastructure around the Bally’s Chicago casino project and raising fines for trespassers that use fake identities. The committee will also hold a hearing on giving the responsibilities of parking enforcement and other non-urgent matters to civilian personnel rather than police.
The committee will meet at 10:30 a.m. in council chambers.
-
The Chicago Board of Education meets Aug. 28, 2025. [Livestream]
The Chicago Board of Education approved the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) superintendent’s proposed 2026 budget on Thursday, bucking Mayor Brandon Johnson and his allies and leaving the city potentially on the hook once more for covering pensions for non-teacher staff.
-
Cook County Comm. Kevin Morrison's chief of staff, Ted Mason, is running to replace him as 15th District commissioner. [Provided]
Ted Mason, a Democrat that’s declared his candidacy for the 15th District seat on the Cook County Board of Commissioners, said his experience working in government at the local, state and federal levels has prepared him to succeed if elected to the county board.
-
Inspector General Deborah Witzburg speaks to City Club of Chicago on Aug. 26, 2025. [Livestream]
Chicago Inspector General Deborah Witzburg addressed an audience at the City Club of Chicago on Tuesday, and she discussed her office’s recent investigations; the changing relationship between the mayor and City Council; the upcoming city budget fight and what guided her recent decision to step aside after a single term.
-
A rendering of the proposed hotel development at 6402-6420 S. Stony Island Ave. [Stantec Architecture]
The Chicago Plan Commission met Thursday and approved an application to build a new hotel near the President Barack Obama presidential library campus on the South Side and nearby Metra rail renovations.
-
Nate Hutcheson and Holly Burd speak to Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36) and constituents at a ward event on Aug. 19, 2025 in Ukrainian Village. [Michael McDevitt/The Daily Line]
A new organization has popped up to educate Chicago’s residents about the push to institute a city charter, which some lawmakers and good government advocates argue could help alleviate many of the city’s most entrenched structural flaws.
-
Chicago City Hall is pictured. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The City Council Office of Financial Analysis (COFA), the body tasked with independent analysis of the mayor’s proposed budget, proposed legislation and other fiscal matters, put out its own analysis of the city’s inaugural mid-year budget figures. It looked at potential ways for the city to save money and raise new funds while also evaluating recent city vacancies and overtime spending.
-
Mayor Brandon Johnson embraces a resident as he surveys flood damage on the Southwest Side on Aug 19, 2025. [Vashon Jordan Jr./Mayor's Office]
Mayor Brandon Johnson visited the Southwest Side on Tuesday, just days after flash floods hit the area and a day after six alderpeople representing some of the affected wards sent a letter to the mayor imploring him to deploy financial assistance to residents.
Speaking at the Gage Park fieldhouse alongside city leaders and City Council members, Johnson pledged to do just that but also called on the state and federal government to do their part.
“We will continue to direct city resources to the affected areas to ensure that Chicagoans are not facing this crisis alone,” the mayor said. “Multiple city departments are engaged in this effort — the effort to clean up debris, clear away sewer backups, and then, of course, address safety hazards.”
-
Renderings of Concourses D and E are pictured. [Provided by Chicago Department of Aviation]
Mayor Brandon Johnson joined officials across jurisdictions and leaders of airlines to celebrate the groundbreaking of the new Concourse D project at O’Hare International Airport, which will add 19 new gates to the airport.
-
The Greater Lawn Health Center is pictured [OIG Audit Report photo]
The city’s public health department has been supporting people with mental illnesses in an equitable and considerate way across the city’s communities but could implement several changes to improve access to care, according to a report released last week by the Chicago Office of the Inspector General (OIG).

















