SORT Order Oldest FirstNewest First Has Video - Any -YesNo FILTER Date Range Start date End date Category - Any -Arts & EntertainmentBusinessCrime & LawEducationHealthPoliticsScience & NatureSports Keyword(s) Oct 30, 2023 McCormick Place Says It Will Do Better by Birds After 1,000 Killed in Mass Casualty Event. Conservationists Want Proof Monday’s meeting of the McPier board was dominated by discussion of the mass death of 1,000 birds in a single day, killed after colliding with McCormick Place. Bird conservationists want a solution in place by spring migration. Oct 30, 2023 With Few Granted, Time Is Fleeting for People in Illinois Prisons Hoping for Medical Release: ‘My Hope Is Waning’ For the last two years, Illinois has had a law that allows people who are in prison and are dying of a terminal illness or are physically disabled the opportunity to petition for compassionate release. However, few of the releases are granted. Oct 30, 2023 Part-Time Faculty Members at Columbia College Go On Strike Amid Concerns Over Class Cuts, Increased Class Sizes Nearly 600 part-time faculty members at Columbia College walked off the job Monday. The faculty union and administration have been contract bargaining since May. Oct 30, 2023 Vote Delayed on Plan to Expand Workers’ Paid Time Off Amid Fierce Push Back by Chicago Business Groups The proposal is at the core of the labor agenda for Mayor Brandon Johnson, a former organizer for the Chicago Teachers Union, who was elected with the unanimous support of Chicago’s progressive labor organizations. Oct 30, 2023 WTTW News Explains: From Mud City to Second City, Where Did Chicago’s Nicknames Come From? Maybe it’s because the city’s actual name comes from a smelly wild onion, or maybe it’s because other cities like to drag our city through the mud, but Chicago has had a whole lot of nicknames over the years. We break down where they came from. Oct 30, 2023 Illinois Man Pleads Not Guilty to Hate Crime and Murder Charges in Attack on Muslim Mother and Son Joseph Czuba is charged in the fatal stabbing of six-year-old Wadea Al-Fayoume and the wounding of Hanaan Shahin on Oct. 14. Authorities said the victims were targeted because of their Muslim faith and as a response to the war between Israel and Hamas. Oct 30, 2023 Alleged Highland Park Parade Gunman Won’t Testify at Father’s Reckless Conduct Trial Attorneys for Robert Crimo Jr., who is set to go to trial next week on seven counts of reckless conduct, had sought to call his son — alleged parade shooter Robert Crimo III — to testify in his defense. Oct 30, 2023 Plan to Transform Former Jewel, Parking Lot on Far South Side Into Migrant Shelter Advances Ald. Ronnie Mosley (21st Ward) said he was "highly disappointed" by the decision by the mayor's office to open a migrant shelter in his ward, but acknowledged he could not stop the proposal. Oct 30, 2023 General Motors Reaches Tentative Agreement With UAW, Potentially Ending 6-Week Strike General Motors and the United Auto Workers union have reached a tentative contract agreement that could end a six-week-old strike against Detroit automakers, two people briefed on the deal said Monday. Oct 30, 2023 15 People Wounded in Halloween Party Shooting Early Sunday: Police No one was killed, but two people were listed in critical condition and the other 13 victims were hospitalized in fair or good condition following the shooting that took place at around 1 a.m. Sunday in the 1200 block of South Pulaski Road. Oct 30, 2023 With Temperatures Set to Dip Below Freezing, Warming Buses Set to Shelter Migrants “With colder weather upon us, we are at an increasingly critical point in this humanitarian endeavor,” Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office said in a statement. Oct 30, 2023 Chicago’s Top Cop Vows to Rein in Police Overtime Spending as 2023 Bill Tops $200M Even though the Chicago Police Department has exceeded its overtime budget in each of the past five years, the City Council is once again poised to set aside just $100 million to cover the department’s overtime bill in the 2024 budget. Oct 29, 2023 EPA to Strengthen Lead Protections in Drinking Water After Multiple Crises, Including Flint Decades after officials banned lead in gasoline for new cars and stopped the sale of lead paint there are still an estimated 500,000 U.S. children with levels of lead in their blood that are considered high, and experts say lead in drinking water is an important source. Oct 29, 2023 Looking to Help Migrants and Unhoused Chicagoans This Winter? Here’s What the City Recommends With winter fast approaching, the city of Chicago is reminding people that asylum seekers and homeless residents are in need of clothing, toiletries and other items. Oct 28, 2023 Retail Chains May Be Using Theft to Mask Other Issues, Report Says Retailers say theft is exploding, and some data from retailers along with numerous videos of violent store robberies and looting seem to support the claim. But some retail analysts and researchers say stores may be over-stating the extent and impact of theft. Load More Thanks to our sponsors: