Erin Hegarty has covered City Hall for The Daily Line since September 2020. She previously covered the City of Naperville for the Naperville Sun/Chicago Tribune for four years, and prior to that covered the northwest suburbs for the Daily Herald. Erin enjoys biking around the city and eating her way through different neighborhoods.
Contact Erin at [email protected]
Bio
Covering Chicago City Hall for @thedailylinechi. Send tips to [email protected]. More coffee, always.Gov. JB Pritzker discusses migrant issues with reporters at a news conference in Chicago on Thursday. [Ben Szalinski/The Daily Line]
Bus after bus continues to arrive in Chicago carrying asylum seekers who recently arrived in the United States, continuing to increase pressure on the city and state to provide for thousands of people with few resources of their own.
Chicago officials plan to ask state for more migrant funding
The City Council Committee on Environmental Protection and Energy approved the reappointment of the city’s chief sustainability officer. The Committee on Committees and Rules acted on a proposal to eliminate the city’s tipped minimum wage, and the Committee on License and Consumer Protection approved a measure creating a restricted cannabis zone and a ban on short-term rentals in the 23rd Ward. The City Council’s transportation committee will meet at 12:30 p.m. Thursday. The workforce development committee will vote on an ordinance authorizing collective bargaining agreements with various trade unions.
News in brief: Tovar reappointment nets committee approval; Tipped wage proposal referred out of rules committee; Restricted cannabis zone approved by license committee
Members of various Illinois business associations speak at a news conference in Springfield on May 19. [Ben Szalinski/The Daily Line]
A pair of bills to reform Illinois’ controversial biometric privacy law and make new changes to the state’s cannabis laws didn’t advance by the end of session despite late pushes from lawmakers.
BIPA and cannabis reform bills on hold despite late push in session
Ald. Michele Smith (43) speaks at a March 2022 City Council meeting. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Lincoln Park Ald. Michele Smith (43) will retire from the City Council next month, capping her City Council career at 11 years and giving Mayor Lori Lightfoot her third opportunity this year to appoint a new alderman, she announced on Thursday.
The sudden announcement, citing a desire to spend more time with family and friends, comes one day after Smith scored a major legislative victory with the City Council’s passage of an ethics reform ordinance she championed.
Smith announces abrupt retirement from City Council, setting up another Lightfoot appointment
Cook County leaders laid the groundwork Monday for annual spending talks and late tax collections in an unusual budget year. And Chicago transportation officials unveiled plans to give away 5,000 bikes through 2026.
News in brief: Cook County looks ahead to budget season; CDOT details plans to give away 5,000 bikes
Ald. James Cappleman (46) at a City Council meeting in February 2020. [Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago]
Ald. James Cappleman (46) will not run for a fourth term in the City Council next year after more than a decade at the helm of Uptown’s radical transformation, he announced in a note to constituents on Tuesday.
The news comes as three contenders have already lined up to succeed him — including one challenger who came within a hair’s breadth of unseating him in 2019.
Cappleman to call it a career after 12 years as Uptown’s alderman as crowded field emerges to replace him
Ald. Walter Burnett (27) voices an endorsement for Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s campaign alongside fellow West Side elected officials Ald. Emma Mitts (37), Ald. Jason Ervin (28) and retiring Metropolitan Water Reclamation District Comm. Barbara McGowan.
A trio of West Side aldermen showcased an early mark of political force for Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s fresh-off-the-ground reelection campaign, highlighting her efforts to jump-start economic activity in historically overlooked neighborhoods while she faced unprecedented headwinds.
Lightfoot’s tightest City Council allies rally around her nascent reelection campaign
Aldermen quizzed Chicago Chief Financial Officer Jennie Huang Bennett (top right) and Deputy Mayor for Economic Development Samir Mayekar (top left) during a committee hearing on Friday.
A key City Council committee hit the pause button Friday on the $1.7 billion Chicago casino plan championed by Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration amid a flurry of questions over how much oversight aldermen will have over the deal. Lightfoot’s deputies and committee chair Ald. Tom Tunney (44) are holding on — for now — to a schedule that would keep the plan on track to move to a final City Council vote this week.
But as a range of aldermen beg for more details and language tweaks to a nearly 150-page agreement between casino developer Bally’s and the city, Tunney made it clear that the mayor’s target of a floor vote on Wednesday is no sure bet.
Casino plan stumbles but remains on course for approval this week as aldermen demand more oversight
A coach house on Chicago’s Northwest Side. [Lichter Realty]
Chicago property owners have applied to build 361 new basement or attic apartment buildings and 166 new backyard coach houses in the approximately one year since their construction has been legal, city officials said Monday as they weigh whether they should accelerate the legalization push. But while some aldermen point to the numbers as a sign that the new homes — known as Accessory Dwelling Units or Additional Dwelling Units (ADUs) — have been a success, others remain skeptical.
City Council remains divided on coach houses, basement additions as ADU pilot readies for 1-year check-in
Photo by Manuel Martinez, WBEZ / Treatment by Jason McGregor, Crain’s Chicago Business/iStock photo
Virtual public meetings and better systems of accountability have sharply boosted aldermanic attendance rates at City Council meetings since 2019, according to a joint analysis by The Daily Line, WBEZ and Crain’s Chicago Business. The average Chicago alderman showed up to do the work of the City Council about four out of every five times they were required to since the start of the term in May 2019.
Some of the most powerful Chicago aldermen show up to work the least
Cole Stallard speaks during a budget hearing Friday. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]
The Department of Streets and Sanitation’s 2024 budget is proposed to grow by 10.6 percent, up to $344.7 million, and alderpeople on Friday largely heaped praise on Comm. Cole Stallard and the department’s work to haul trash, eradicate rats, build up the city’s tree canopy while keeping up with tree maintenance and starting a new composting program.
Alderpeople applaud streets and sanitation department’s improvements on tree trimming, composting
Aileen Velazquez answers questions during a budget hearing Friday. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]
Echoing comments similar to those offered up during budget hearings past, alderpeople pushed the city’s chief procurement officer Friday to do better in awarding contracts to minority-owned and women-owned firms.
City Council pushes procurement officer to ‘be a bull in a China shop’ to award minority contracts
Alderpeople on Monday are set to hold a hearing on the Office of Public Safety Administration’s budget, which is proposed to drop compared to 2023. On the other hand, both the Office of Emergency Management and Communication and the Chicago Fire Department’s budget are set to grow by 4 percent and about 1 percent respectively in 2024.
Office of Public Safety Administration to discuss declining budget; OEMC’s budget proposed to grow by 4%
Mayor Lori Lightfoot gave her farewell address Monday. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Mayor Lori Lightfoot gave her farewell address Monday touting her four years as mayor as one marked not only by challenges like the pandemic, civil unrest and an inherited budget deficit but one filled with hope and equity.
Lightfoot gives farewell address with notes of optimism and hope
DNAinfo/Casey Cora
During Thursday’s Committee on Pedestrian and Traffic Safety meeting, a brief squabble emerged over a proposed ordinance (O2023-1325) from Ald. Raymond Lopez (15) that would tweak the Comiskey Park permit parking area during events.
Expanded parking program around Guaranteed Rate Field faces opposition
The Illinois Gaming Board on Thursday gave unanimous initial approval to Bally’s temporary casino it plans to open this summer at Medinah Temple at 600 N. Wabash Ave. in Chicago’s downtown, the Tribune reported on Thursday.
Brief: Temporary Casino to open
Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin, who is running unopposed in the Feb. 28 election, touted work her office has done in the past year ranging from divesting from fossil fuels and ending 2022 in a “strong” position during her annual State of the City Treasurer’s Office address Thursday.
Brief: Conyears-Ervin touts office’s work on fossil fuel divestment
Mayor Lori Lightfoot picked Anabel Abarca as the next 12th Ward alderman. [Friends of Anabel Abarca/anabelfor12.com]
Mayor Lori Lightfoot picked Anabel Abarca to serve as the next 12th Ward alderman, marking the fourth appointment to the City Council Lightfoot has made this term.
Lightfoot picks Cardenas’ former chief of staff Anabel Abarca as next 12th Ward alderman
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.
Ald. Ed Burke won’t run for reelection after more than 50 years on the City Council
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.
Civilian police oversight commission will hold meeting Monday to discuss CPD’s proposed gang database revamp
CTU President Stacy Davis Gates, who chairs United Working Families, speaks during a news conference announcing endorsements on Thursday. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]
The progressive organization United Working Families on Thursday endorsed 18 people hoping to win aldermanic elections in wards across the city during next year’s municipal election.
United Working Families makes endorsements in 18 aldermanic races
Former governor of Illinois Pat Quinn announced he won’t run for mayor. The mayor’s office on Thursday made public the names and resumes of four people hoping to be the next 12th Ward alderman. And the Plan Commission approved an affordable housing development in Lincoln Square.
News in brief: Pat Quinn won’t run for mayor; 4 file applications to be next 12th Ward alderman; Plan Commission approves Lincoln Square affordable development
The City Council met for its regular meeting on Wednesday. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]
The City Council on Wednesday approved $13.5 million in tax-increment financing (TIF) dollars for a Black-owned company that plans to spruce up six Save-A-Lot grocery stores on the South and West sides.
City Council grants $13.5M in TIF to rehab Save-A-Lot grocery stores as same company looks to take over closed Whole Foods in Englewood
Members of the Chicago Plan Commission on Thursday will consider a proposal for a 63-unit affordable development in Lincoln Square. [City of Chicago}
Members of the Chicago Plan Commission are scheduled to meet on Thursday to consider a 63-unit, 100 percent affordable residential development proposed for Lincoln Square and the renovation of a building on the Near South Side to bring a mixed-use development with 38 residential units to the community.
Plan Commission to consider 63-unit affordable development in Lincoln Square
The City Council is scheduled to meet at 10 a.m. Wednesday. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]
Aldermen during Wednesday’s City Council meeting could finally vote on a controversial proposal to legalize private booting of cars citywide, according to a notice filed with the City Clerk’s office on Monday.
City Council could finally vote on proposal to legalize private booting of cars citywide
Supporters of the Bring Chicago Home proposal attend a news conference outside City Hall Monday. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]
A public hearing on whether to ask voters this February if they support raising the real estate transfer tax to help fund affordable housing and homelessness services did not occur after not enough aldermen showed up to council chambers to meet the required quorum.
Lack of quorum grinds to a halt hearing on proposal to hike real estate transfer tax to fund homelessness services
Members of the City Council’s finance committee during Monday’s meeting. [Erin Hegarty/The Daily Line]
Aldermen on Monday gave an initial OK to a measure that would give $13.5 million in tax-increment finance (TIF) dollars to a company planning to lease and rehab six Save-A-Lot grocery stores in the city.
Aldermen give initial OK to $13.5M in TIF funding to rehab six Save-A-Lot grocery stores
Bio
Covering Chicago City Hall for @thedailylinechi. Send tips to [email protected]. More coffee, always.