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CTU President Calls Out Chicago Public Schools CEO Amid Tensions Over New 5-Year School Plan

Nearly a week after the Chicago School Board approved a new five-year plan for Chicago Public Schools, tensions among CPS CEO Pedro Martinez, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and the Chicago Teachers Union are mounting.

Chicago Fed President Predicts Interest Rate Cuts, Says US Economy is on a ‘Golden Path’

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President and CEO Austan Goolsbee said the U.S. is currently on what he calls a “golden path.” Inflation has cooled from historic highs without the country going into a recession, and the unemployment rate is at what economists generally consider a sweet spot. Now the key is staying there.

As Chicago Scraps ShotSpotter, Officials Look for New Technology to Fight Gun Violence

Deputy Mayor of Community Safety Garien Gatewood told WTTW News’ “Chicago Tonight” program on Monday that city officials are excited to see what kind of technology is available.

Once Known as the Chairman, Ex-Ald. Ed Burke is Now Federal Inmate No. 53698-424

Former Ald. Ed Burke is in the custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons at Federal Correctional Institution Thomson in Thomson, Illinois, nearly 150 miles west of his beloved hometown. He will begin his two-year prison sentence.

Hundreds Sue Over Alleged Sexual Abuse in Illinois Youth Detention Centers

Three lawsuits filed Monday detail abuse from 1996 to 2021, including rape, forced oral sex and beatings by corrections officers, nurses, kitchen staff, chaplains and others. Overall, 667 people have alleged they were sexually abused as children at youth facilities run by the state and Cook County in lawsuits filed since May.

Chicago International Film Festival 2024 Lineup Announced. Here Are the Local Stories Being Showcased This Year

The 60th annual Chicago International Film Festival runs Oct. 16-27. Screenings and programs are set to take place at the festival’s hub theater in AMC NEWCITY 14 in addition to the Music Box Theatre, the Gene Siskel Film Center and more.

Illinois Celebrates Dispensary Openings While Manufacturers Face Significant Challenges

An independent diversity study found that while Illinois has awarded more licenses to women and people of color than any other regulated market in the United States, white men are still the demographic most likely to have a cannabis license in Illinois.

Americans Can Order Free COVID-19 Tests Beginning This Month

U.S. households will be able to order as many as four nasal swab tests when the federal program reopens.

Man Killed in Mass Shooting at Little Village Prayer Vigil Is Among 6 Fatally Shot in Chicago Over the Weekend: Police

The Little Village shooting victims were among the 33 people shot in Chicago — six of them fatally — in 21 separate incidents over the weekend, according to police.

Police Misconduct Agency Rejects Watchdog’s Demand to Reopen 5 Probes Closed During Push to Clear Backlog

In each of the five cases, Inspector General Deborah Witzburg informed Civilian Office of Police Accountability Chief Administrator Andrea Kersten that the agency known as COPA had erred when it closed those cases because they involved serious allegations of police misconduct.

Research Project Tries to Reimagine Chicago’s Approach to Public Safety

A new report from NYU offers alternative solutions to policing that researchers said would better serve the public and free up police to investigate more serious crimes.

Week in Review: City Council Votes on ShotSpotter; Tension Between Mayor and CPS CEO

ShotSpotter meets its demise in Chicago — despite the wishes of City Council. And CPS sets a vision for its future, but is that a future without the current CEO?

High Insulin Prices Spur a Federal Lawsuit Against 3 Pharmacy Benefit Managers

Three companies that process about 80% of prescriptions in the United States — Caremark, Express Scripts and OptumRx — have engaged in anticompetitive practices that spur price increases, the FTC is alleging in a new lawsuit.

US Will Let More People Take Methadone at Home

The first big update to U.S. methadone regulations in 20 years is poised to expand access to the life-saving drug starting next month, but experts say the addiction treatment changes could fall flat if state governments and methadone clinics fail to act.

It’s Good to Be King: New Actor in Town Wears the Crown of ‘Henry V’ at Chicago Shakespeare Theater

Elijah Jones must have impressed Chicago Shakespeare Theater with the same charisma he projects onstage as the titular king in “Henry V,” a lively production of Shakespeare’s history play about war between France and England. WTTW News spoke with the Juilliard-trained actor about his past, present and future.