• Aldermen on the city’s Special Events and Cultural Affairs Committee swiftly approved Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s Parks District Board appointee, millionaire real estate manager David A. Helfand. Helfand replaces Juan Salgado, the recently-appointed Chancellor of City Colleges.

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    Projected FY2018 Expenditures, via the Cook County Preliminary Forecast FY2018.

    Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle and her finance team released the county’s Fiscal Year 2018 preliminary forecast Thursday. The mid-year projection of year-end revenues and expenses for the rest of FY17 is a look ahead to the budget that will be introduced in October. While President Preckwinkle promised no new taxes, it’s likely union employees in the county will face tougher negotiations as collective bargaining agreements are hashed out.

  • A coalition of neighborhood community groups that had been tasked by the Emanuel Administration with designing a community oversight board for the Chicago Police Department announced Thursday their support for a consent decree, but then also admitted they haven’t come up with a blueprint for public oversight.
  • The Mendoza Family gathers to testify for their two-flat upzone in Zoning Committee Thursday.


    Zoning Committee forged through four hours of testimony Thursday to approve dozens of zoning changes and the first precinct bans on room sharing through online platforms like Airbnb. While much of the meeting’s pace was kept to a slow walk because of repeated testimony by Leading Citizen George Blakemore, almost an hour of testimony came from more than a dozen Jefferson Park residents. They turned out to oppose a planned 13-story mixed use building on Lawrence and Lipps Avenues, near the Jefferson Park Transit Center.
  • The Cook County Democratic Party will meet Thursday and Friday for their “pre-slating” meeting, an opportunity for candidates of countywide and statewide offices to make their pitches to the 80 Ward and Township Committeemen, as they seek the County Party’s endorsement. The speeches, open to the media at 134 N. LaSalle, in the 7th floor conference room, promise to deliver drama and a couple of political shifts. The County Party will hear candidate’s pitches this week, then meet again on August 10 and 11 to vote on slating.

  • Ever since he defeated Esther Saperstein for 49th Ward alderman in 1979, David Orr has held elected office. But Wednesday afternoon, the 74 year-old Cook County Clerk called a press conference to announce that when January 2019 rolls around, he’ll be retiring, since he won’t run for reelection in 2018.
  • Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s appointment to the Chicago Park District to replace Juan Salgado–the new head of Chicago City Colleges–is up for Special Events Committee consideration Thursday. The mayor tapped millionaire real estate manager David A. Helfand to finish Salgado’s term on the Parks Board, which expires June 30, 2022.
  • In addition to the 50 pages of regular agenda items slated Thursday, Transportation Committee Chairman Anthony Beale (9) is urging the city’s Department of Transportation to follow federal guidelines and use post-consumer recyclable materials in roadway projects.
  • Ald. Michael Scott (24) will chair the selection committee tasked with appointing a replacement for his mentor, Cook County Comm. Robert Steele, who passed away Monday morning. The district that he and his mother, former Cook County Board President and Commissioner Bobbie Steele, represented for decades spans both the city’s South and West Sides and covers 19 wards. Only two committeemen hold more than 10% of the weighted vote, which sources speculate could lead to a fraught nomination process.
  • Homeowners in much of the 13th Ward would be barred from listing their property on Airbnb as mandated in several ordinances that’ll be reviewed by the Zoning Committee Thursday.  

    Though the City Council approved regulations for the online room sharing company nearly a year ago, this package of ordinances submitted by local Ald. Marty Quinn (13) marks the first effort by an alderman to impose a blanket ban.

  • Council installed a digital countdown clock Wednesday for public testimony.


    Lacking a quorum, the Council’s Rules Committee delayed a vote Wednesday on a court-mandated measure that would allow 30 minutes of public comment at monthly City Council meetings. Only 16 of the committee’s 50 members were present for the morning meeting, nine shy of a quorum.

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    The Council’s License Committee advanced the appointment of a new commissioner for the Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection (BACP), a crackdown on prostitution rings that front as massage parlors, and updated staffing rules for self-serve laundromats.

  • The Council’s License Committee will consider the nomination of a new commissioner for the Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection (BACP) Wednesday, the city agency that administers and drafts rules and regulations for city licenses. Mayor Emanuel has recommended his Deputy Chief Operating Officer Rosa Escareño to the post.  

    Proposed regulations for massage parlors (dubbed “Operation Hot Towel.” ), staffing requirements for coin-operated laundries, and nine liquor license amendments are also slated for review today.

  • Members of the public would be given the opportunity to testify at the monthly City Council meetings under a rule change the Council’s Rules Committee is scheduled to consider Wednesday. But with testimony capped just at three minutes a speaker, the rules would likely give only 10 members of the public the opportunity to address the full City Council and the mayor. Rules for implementation would be up to the Sergeant-at-Arms and his deputies.

  • When the city announced the first awardees of a new grant program aimed at spurring economic activity in depressed commercial corridors, neighborhoods with some of the highest unemployment and poverty rates in the city–West Englewood, Fuller Park, and Oakland, among others–were noticeably absent. While more than 700 applied to get a piece of the pie, 25 businesses located in wards represented by some of the mayor’s allies fared noticeably well.