SORT Order Oldest FirstNewest First Has Video - Any -YesNo FILTER Date Range Start date End date Category - Any -Arts & EntertainmentBusinessCrime & LawEducationHealthPoliticsScience & NatureSports Keyword(s) Sep 3, 2023 Venezuelan Asylum Seeker Designs Logo to Help Raise Funds for Group Aiding Migrants For the many volunteers helping migrants living at Chicago police stations, raising funds is essential. One group teamed up with a Venezuelan migrant to design the logo on merchandise being sold to raise money for food, clothes and medicine for asylum seekers. Sep 3, 2023 From Strikes to New Union Contracts, Labor Day’s Organizing Roots Are Especially Strong Across the Country This Year The early-September tribute to workers has been an official holiday for almost 130 years — but an emboldened labor movement has created an environment closer to the era from which Labor Day was born. Sep 2, 2023 Children Hit Hardest by the Pandemic Are Now the Big Kids at School. Many Still Need Reading Help Nationally, students suffered deep learning setbacks in reading and math during the pandemic. Last year’s third-graders, the kids who were in kindergarten when the pandemic started, lost more ground in reading than kids in older grades and were slower to catch up. Sep 2, 2023 As Migrants Continue to Arrive in Chicago, Officials Call for Collaboration Across Levels of Government This week marks one year since the first bus of asylum seekers was sent to Chicago from the southern border. More than 13,500 migrants have arrived in the city to date. Sep 2, 2023 Long-Lost Shipwreck From 1880s Discovered in Lake Michigan, Historical Society Says According to the Wisconsin Historical Society, the Trinidad was built for the Great Lakes grain trade between Milwaukee, Chicago, Buffalo and Oswego. The ship’s owners did not invest much money into its upkeep, leaving its career relatively short. Sep 2, 2023 79th Street Renaissance Festival Celebrates Auburn Gresham Community, Sept. 9 The 18th annual 79th Street Renaissance Festival returns to Auburn Gresham on Saturday, Sept. 9, with entertainment, food, community resources and a carnival including a 50-foot-tall Ferris wheel. Sep 2, 2023 One ‘Whirlwind’ Year In, Community Groups Assisting Migrants Say There’s Much More Work Ahead From the moment the first bus of migrants arrived in Chicago a year ago, much of the ongoing work of supporting migrants has been done by volunteers, mutual aid groups and community organizers who swung into action. Sep 2, 2023 With Forbearance Period Over and Forgiveness Gone, What’s Next for Student Loan Debt The picture for student loan debt has been pretty tumultuous over the last couple of years. Borrowers will soon begin repaying their federal student loans after a forbearance period ends this month. Sep 2, 2023 Chicago Tonight: Black Voices, Sept. 1, 2023 - Full Show Student loan payments are resuming — what’s being done to provide relief. What’s behind the soaring number of opioid overdose deaths. And a sit-down with the new leader of Rainbow PUSH. Sep 2, 2023 Chicago Tonight: Latino Voices, Sept. 1, 2023 - Full Show “Seeking Sanctuary: One Year Later.” How community members are supporting migrants. Officials plea for federal help. And rebranding the Chicago flag with special meaning. Sep 2, 2023 ‘Margaritaville’ Singer Jimmy Buffett, Who Turned Beach-Bum Life Into an Empire, Dies at 76 Singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett, who popularized beach bum soft rock with the escapist Caribbean-flavored song “Margaritaville” and turned that celebration of loafing into a billion-dollar empire of restaurants, resorts and frozen concoctions, has died. Sep 1, 2023 Week in Review: Anniversary of Migrant Arrivals; Questions Still Swirl Over White Sox Shooting Local officials call for federal aid one year after asylum seekers first arrived in Chicago. Renewed calls for ethics reform. And still no answers on the shooting at Sox Park. Sep 1, 2023 Captain Bill Pinkney, Pioneering Sailor, Dies at 87 In 1992, native South Sider Captain Bill Pinkney became the first African American to sail around the world solo via the Southern Capes. It was a feat that took 22 months, which he chronicled in a video diary and in a documentary. Sep 1, 2023 A Year Later, Asylum Seekers Work to Build New Lives With Help From Chicagoans This week marks one year since the first bus of asylum seekers arrived in Chicago from the southern border. Since then, WTTW News has covered the city’s and volunteers’ response to aid the thousands of migrants seeking shelter. Sep 1, 2023 As Over-the-Counter Narcan Hits Store Shelves, Access Problems to the Life-Saving Overdose Reversal Drug Persist Narcan, which comes as nasal spray and was initially approved for over-the-counter sale by the Food and Drug Administration in March, is expected to hit shelves at stores like Walgreens, CVS Pharmacy and Walmart as soon as next week. The life-saving medication is expected to retail at stores for $45. Load More Thanks to our sponsors: