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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.

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  • Bars and restaurants could face fines of up to $1,000 for playing music for their outdoor patrons under a measure proposed by Ald. Brian Hopkins (2).
  • Friends of Marianne Lalonde / YouTube


    An Uptown consultant and activist who last year came within 25 votes of unseating Ald. James Cappleman (46) chartered an independent political group this week, the latest in a series of progressive neighborhood-level organizing ventures to materialize in the wake of last year’s earth-shaking city elections. 
  • A young boy participates in an online lesson for his kindergarten class while schools remain closed to help slow the spread of COVID-19, Chicago, Illinois, April 3, 2020. Interim Archives/Getty Images


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  • Hilco Redevelopment Partners violated Illinois law and state pollution control regulations when its April 9 demolition of a smokestack at the former Crawford power station sent a cloud of dust over neighboring homes, according to a lawsuit filed Tuesday by state Attorney General Kwame Raoul.
  • Mass unemployment sparked by the coronavirus pandemic is likely accelerating the forces that were already squeezing vulnerable renters out of gentrifying neighborhoods, according to findings released Tuesday by the DePaul University Institute for Housing Studies.
  • Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said she was disappointed by the presence of groups of people gathering throughout the city last weekend despite her administration’s aggressive campaign to promote social distancing in the wake of COVID-19. She suggested that arrests and fines are potential measures the city could take in the coming weeks against people who continue to throw parties and promote large gatherings. 
  • Developers and city officials previewed Monday their first official plan for Bronzeville Lakefront, an 81-acre campus to be built on the sprawling site of the former Michael Reese Hospital over the next two decades. 
  • S&P Global Rating downgraded the credit outlook on Cook County’s debt from “stable” to “negative” as the county braces for an unknown budget gap this year in the face of the coronavirus pandemic and ensuing economic recession. 

    Analysts affirmed an A+ rating for the county’s general obligation bonds and an AA- rating for its sales tax revenue bonds, but the change in their outlook represents at least a one-in-three chance of a ratings downgrade during the coming months due to “unprecedented pressure facing the county from the rapid deterioration in the U.S. economy,” according to a report published by S&P on Friday. 
  • A judge ruled against a suburban emergency dispatch service in the group’s lawsuit against Cook County health officials. Meanwhile, Cook County Chief Judge Timothy Evans extended a suspension of most in-person court activity, as well as eviction and foreclosures. And city and state health officials announced they will stop accepting new patients at the makeshift hospital created inside McCormick Place. 


  • Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Chicago police leaders on Thursday announced a new citywide staffing structure they said would bolster coordination between patrol officers and detectives. Meanwhile, city leaders celebrated a legal victory against President Donald Trump in a case that has been litigated since 2017. The mayor dug in on her non-binding “housing solidarity pledge” as activists have demanded stronger tenant protections ahead of the May 1 rent deadline. And looking ahead to budget season, Lightfoot vowed to consider laying off city employees only as a “last, last, last resort.” 
  •  Mayor Lori Lightfoot speaks in October at an announcement of the INVEST South/West Initiative. (Provided)

    Among the hundreds of items passed by the Chicago City Council at its April 24 meeting was funding for Mayor Lori Lightfoot's nascent INVEST South/West project.

    Announced last October, the mayor's project aims to reinvigorate the West and South Sides, in part by jumpstarting local businesses.

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    Members of the Chicago City Council have been more willing to oppose Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s agenda than they were to stand in the way of her predecessors, but the heightened opposition has so far done nothing to stymie her agenda.

    That was the conclusion of the latest “rubber stamp report” report released this week by University of Illinois at Chicago professor Dick Simpson, a former alderman and chronicler of Chicago history who has spent more than a decade keeping tabs on aldermen’s voting records. The report was co-authored by PhD candidate Marco Rosaire Rossi and author Thomas J. Gradel.
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    In the face of progressive forces calling for mass rent cancellation, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Wednesday announced her administration has coaxed a broad coalition of commercial lenders and landlord groups to sign onto a non-binding “solidarity pledge” promising all-around leniency in an effort to prevent people from being forced out of their homes amid the fallout of the coronavirus pandemic.

    The Chicago Housing Solidarity Pledge calls on apartment owners to work out individualized payment plans for struggling tenants, and it asks housing lenders to defer mortgage payments and suspend foreclosures until at least May 31. While the city has no power to enforce the pledge, Lightfoot touted commitments from more than a dozen banking firms and three influential local landlord groups agreeing to its terms.
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    Certain industrial businesses would be required to consult their local alderman, hold public meetings and face a City Council committee before opening facilities that emit air pollution under an ordinance introduced this month by Ald. George Cardenas (12).

    The ordinance (O2020-2217) would crank up requirements for any business that is seeking both a special-use permit from the city’s Zoning Board of Appeals and an air pollution control permit, which is issued by the Chicago Department of Public Health in consultation with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. The new rule would only apply to proposals located inside designated Planned Manufacturing Districts.
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    Mayor Lori Lightfoot unveiled a new grant program Tuesday targeted at keeping “micro-businesses” afloat during the stay-at-home order. Meanwhile, Cook County leaders announced they will extend their grace period for tax and fee collection by another month. And Chicago planning officials delayed scheduled meetings of the Chicago Plan Commission and Zoning Board of Appeals for the fourth time since March.