SORT Order Oldest FirstNewest First Has Video - Any -YesNo FILTER Date Range Start date End date Category - Any -Arts & EntertainmentBusinessCrime & LawEducationHealthPoliticsScience & NatureSports Keyword(s) Mar 25, 2021 Illinois Attorney General: Contact Utility Companies Before Shut Off Moratorium Lifts Starting April 1, state-regulated electric, natural gas and utilities may begin to disconnect customers who haven’t paid their bills, according to Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, who urged customers to contact their providers if they’re facing financial hardship. Mar 25, 2021 Spend Federal Relief Funds on Direct Aid to Chicagoans, Progressive Groups Tell City Officials Progressive groups launched a campaign Thursday to ratchet up the pressure on Mayor Lori Lightfoot and the Chicago City Council to spend the city’s $1.9 billion share of the latest federal COVID-19 relief package on direct aid to Chicagoans struggling amid the coronavirus pandemic. Mar 25, 2021 Vaccination Race Enlists Grassroots Aides to Fight Mistrust Top U.S. health officials say they’re in a race to vaccinate as many people as quickly as possible as COVID-19 variants spread, mask and distancing rules are relaxed, and Americans crave a return to normalcy. Mar 24, 2021 March 24, 2021 - Full Show Pritzker gets his COVID-19 vaccine shot. New information on the fallout at Loretto Hospital. Will Chicago workers go back to the office? Parking meters on the lakefront. The dangers of lead water lines. Mar 24, 2021 Chicago Has More Lead Service Pipes Than Any Other US City, Illinois the Most of Any State Illinois may have as much as a quarter of all lead service pipes in the country, according to U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, who is leading the push for a bipartisan infrastructure bill to rebuild the nation’s water systems. We discuss what else is being done to address the issue. Mar 24, 2021 Will Chicago Workers Go Back to the Office in a Post-Pandemic World? While some people may have gotten used to the comforts of working from home, others may be itching to get out. The stakes for the city couldn’t be higher, especially for the owners and managers of the massive pieces of real estate in the city’s central business district that are still sitting mostly vacant. Mar 24, 2021 CPS Considers Alternatives to School Resource Officers While several Chicago Public Schools have removed police officers from their buildings, 55 schools still have what are called “school resource officers.” On Wednesday, the school district and five community organizations laid out recommendations for those schools to pursue a more holistic approach to safety. Mar 24, 2021 Gov. J.B. Pritzker Gets COVID-19 Vaccine “We really do have a fighting chance now to bring this pandemic to an end,” Gov. J.B. Pritzker said Wednesday before receiving the Johnson & Johnson vaccine in Springfield. Mar 24, 2021 Embattled Loretto Hospital Executive Resigns Amid Vaccine Scandal Dr. Anosh Ahmed, COO and CFO of Loretto Hospital, was at the center of multiple controversies over alleged improper vaccination events, after Block Club Chicago first reported on vaccines administered at Trump Tower Chicago to the building’s employees. Mar 24, 2021 Alderman Calls for Equity in Metered Parking Along Lakefront Metered parking is already in place at lakefront destinations like Rainbow Beach, North Avenue Beach, 31st Street Beach, 63rd Street Beach and Foster Avenue Beach. Now it’s coming to Montrose Harbor — and some residents aren’t happy about it. Mar 24, 2021 US Report: Bald Eagle Populations Soar in Lower 48 States The number of American bald eagles has quadrupled since 2009, with more than 300,000 birds soaring over the lower 48 states, government scientists said in a report Wednesday. Mar 24, 2021 CPS Chief Education Officer LaTanya McDade Named Superintendent of Virginia School District LaTanya McDade, the second highest-ranking official within Chicago Public Schools, will leave the district at the end of the current school year after being named superintendent of Prince William County Public Schools in Virginia. Mar 24, 2021 Futuristic ‘Miracle House,’ Once a Raffle Prize, Set to Be Named Chicago Landmark With a pair of giant steel arms jutting from its frame and a nearly all-glass exterior, Galewood’s “Miracle House” looks as futuristic in 2021 as it did when it was built in 1954. And it has an origin story as quirky as its appearance. Mar 24, 2021 Call to Use COVID-19 Relief Package to Send Chicagoans Cash Triggers Reparations Debate “These conversations are a slap in the face to people that have suffered great atrocities over time in this country," said Ald. Jason Ervin, the chairman of the City Council Black Caucus. Mar 24, 2021 City Council Approves New Rules for Industrial Developments in Effort to Reduce Air Pollution Mayor Lori Lightfoot said the revised ordinance was “better” than her administration originally proposed and will “put our city on the right track to full ensuring that our residents have clean air, no matter what ZIP code in which they reside.” Load More Thanks to our sponsors: