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CPS Leaders Working on ‘Contingency Plans’ Ahead of Possible Winter COVID Spike

CPS CEO Pedro Martinez on Wednesday said his team is beginning to set up plans and solidify a specific health metric that can be used to decide when to shut down in-person learning within a school or across the district itself.

Illinois Students Rally to Defend LGBTQ Book as School Board Hears Objections Over Its Content

The increasingly heated debate over the presence of certain books in school libraries was aired at a Downers Grove school board meeting this week.

Parents of Murdered Children Demand Steeper Penalties for Killing Kids

Illinois has intentionally reduced its prison population, and made changes to sentencing laws to reduce offenders’ time behind bars. Now some victims’ family members are calling for the state to reverse directions when it comes to those who murder children.

‘We’re Behind the Eight Ball’: Debate Rages Over New Chicago Ward Map With 15 Days Until Deadline

The leaders of the Chicago City Council’s Black and Latino caucuses said Tuesday that they could endorse a new Chicago ward map with 18 wards with a majority of Black voters and 15 wards with a majority of Latino voters.

No Verdict After Daylong Deliberations by Rittenhouse Jury

The jury at Kyle Rittenhouse’s murder trial deliberated a full day on Tuesday without reaching a verdict over whether he was the instigator in a night of bloodshed in Kenosha or a concerned citizen who came under attack while trying to protect property.

A ‘Sister Act’ Production Bound to Raise the Spirits of Musical Theater Believers

Reneisha Jenkins’ direction, along with the wonderfully playful, hip-swiveling choreography of Christopher Chase Carter and the impeccable music direction of keyboardist Diana Lawrence, has infused the show with genuine emotional heat as well as laugh-generating irreverence and comic sparkle.

Where Does the City Plant Trees? A Ward-by-Ward Analysis

Chicago has a long history of segregation and racial inequity. Now, a new data analysis by the DePaul University Center for Journalism Integrity & Excellence shows inequity is rooted even in the planting of city trees.

Chicago’s 2008 Climate Action Plan Came Up Short, New Analysis Shows

Three mayors in the past 15 years have all promised to combat the effects of global climate change. But some critics and scientists, along with a new data analysis by the DePaul University Center for Journalism Integrity & Excellence, reveal their efforts have fallen short. 

Illinois’ Copy of the Gettysburg Address Is Coming Out of the Vaults, and It Has a Weird Back Story

Illinois’ handwritten copy of the historic document once belonged to the guy who was the main speaker at Gettysburg and whose own two-hour oration was followed by Abraham Lincoln’s 272-word masterpiece.  

Chicago’s First Physical NFT Gallery Drops Digital Art

A special kind of art gallery in Chicago is emerging as a brick-and-mortar trailblazer in the digital art world. The art space imnotArt in Chicago’s Wicker Park neighborhood bills itself as the city’s first physical NFT gallery and one of the first of its kind in the world.

Good COP, Bad COP? Takeaways from the New UN Climate Deal

The annual Conference of the Parties, just held for the 26th time, is all about getting countries to gradually ratchet up their measures to defuse global warming.

Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee Removed from Chicago’s COVID-19 Travel Advisory

One week after it was removed from the advisory, officials returned Arkansas to the list of states with high rates of transmission. The advisory includes 38 states as well as Guam, announced Dr. Allison Arwady, the commissioner of the Chicago Department of Public Health.

Pfizer Asks US Officials to OK Promising COVID-19 Pill

The company’s filing comes as new infections are rising once again, driven mainly by hot spots in states where colder weather is driving more Americans indoors.

Ethics Board Asks Watchdog to Probe Ald. Gardiner After His Attorney Denies He Violated Ethics Ordinance

Chicago’s inspector general should conduct “a full factual investigation” of Ald. Jim Gardiner's conduct, the Chicago Board of Ethics determined.

20-Year-Old ‘Oops’ Leads to Invasive Carp Pulled From Chicago Lagoon. How Many More Are Out There?

When a fish the size of a 10-year-old child was pulled from the Humboldt Park lagoon earlier this month, the reaction quickly went from “Oooh” to “Uh-oh.” The angler had reeled a whopper of an invasive bighead carp accidentally stocked 20 years ago. Are there more?