IRMA's Featured Retailer
We Are Retail: It’s All About Wine
With its extensive selection of fine wines, beer, and spirits, It’s All About Wine has become a beloved gathering place in Springfield. Co-owned by Zach Sweet and his wife Nancy, the shop is known for its welcoming atmosphere, special events, and loyal customer base that feels more like family than patrons.
Stop in and see why It’s All About Wine continues to bring people together in the heart of the community.
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The Committee on Pedestrian and Traffic Safety holds a hearing on the Better Streets for Buses Plan on July 29, 2024. [Livestream]
Alderpeople asked about the implementation of congestion pricing for vehicles in parts of downtown Chicago and the addition of dedicated bus lanes on DuSable Lake Shore Drive during a Committee on Pedestrian and Traffic Safety hearing Monday.
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Cook County Comm. Stanley Moore (D-4) presides over a Criminal Justice Committee meeting last week. [Livestream]
The Cook County Board of Commissioners on Thursday approved a contract to purchase a helicopter for the county sheriff’s office that has long been on Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart’s wish list. The county currently doesn’t have any helicopters for law enforcement.
The $11.3 million contract (24-3697) with the Fort Worth-based Bell Textron Inc. will provide a helicopter airframe and associated equipment. The contract was approved by the County Criminal Justice Committee on Wednesday. The contract will run from Aug. 1 through the end of July 2028.
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The flag of Cook County is pictured. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The Cook County Board of Commissioners last week approved an updated five-year Solid Waste Management Plan (24-3201), a policy framework that aims to help divert 45 percent of the county’s waste from landfills over the next half-decade.
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Committee on Pedestrian and Traffic Safety Chair Daniel La Spata is pictured in 2023. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The Committee on Pedestrian and Traffic Safety will meet Monday for a subject matter hearing on the benefits of bus infrastructure improvements on mobility and traffic safety. The committee will meet in council chambers at 10 a.m.
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Ald. Brian Hopkins (2), public safety chair, is pictured at a City Council meeting in April 2024. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The City Council Committee on Public Safety will meet Thursday for a subject matter hearing on transportation logistics surrounding the Democratic National Convention (DNC) next month as well as a recent Office of Inspector General (OIG) report that criticized the Chicago Police Department’s (CPD) preparedness to deal with mass protests planned for the convention, which is taking place at both the United Center and McCormick Place from Aug. 19-22.
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Ald. Jessie Fuentes (26), top right, asks questions at a Committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights meeting on Tuesday. [Livestream]
City officials have reduced by more than half the amount of money being spent on the migrant crisis in Chicago but don’t plan to end the city’s 60-day shelter stay policy any time soon as the city is preparing for a possible surge in buses ahead of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) next month, the Committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights was told this week.
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Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi speaks to the County Legislation and Intergovernmental Relations Committee Monday. [Livestream]
Cook County commissioners during a committee meeting Monday asked the county assessor for his rationale behind the process for closing a loophole in the county property tax ordinance that allowed mostly commercial buildings to be assessed like mixed-use buildings and receive a significant tax reduction.
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Ald. Andre Vasquez (40), chair of the immigration committee, is pictured at a City Council meeting in June 2024. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The City Council Committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights will hold a subject matter hearing on Tuesday on an ordinance that would eliminate the city’s 60-day shelter stay limit for migrants that have arrived in the city after crossing the southern border.
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Ald. Maria Hadden (49) speaks about the Clean and Affordable Buildings Ordinance during a news conference in January. [Michael McDevitt/The Daily Line]
Advocates of the mayor-backed plan to effectively ban natural gas in most cases in new construction are pushing back at the notion the legislation is dead after it has lingered in the City Council’s rules committee this year.
The Sun-Times reported last week that overwhelming City Council opposition to the legislation has effectively killed it, but proponents said they don’t believe the fight is over.
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The Committee on Ethics and Government Oversight meets on July 16, 2024. [Livestream]
The Department of Buildings (DOB) has done little to correct lackluster and unsafe permit inspection practices since the inspector general issued recommendations in an audit report two years ago, City Council Committee on Ethics and Government Oversight heard on Tuesday.
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Renderings for the proposed 37-story development to replace the vacant bank building at 1555-1569 N. Clybourn Ave. [Department of Planning and Development]
The Chicago Plan Commission on Thursday gave approval to a new residential development planned for the edge of Lincoln Park and Old Town and new residential developments in Fulton Market.
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Mayor Brandon Johnson presides over a City Council meeting June 2024. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
The City Council on Wednesday approved a measure to penalize groups that distribute hateful literature and similar materials, appointments to fill the vacancies on the Zoning Board of Appeals and an ordinance that could make it more difficult for the proposed Chicago River swim to be permitted.
Additionally, Ald. Michelle Harris (8), chair of the Committee on Committees and Rules, declined to call for a vote on installing Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25) as the new zoning committee chair. There hasn’t been a permanent chair since Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35) resigned last fall.


















