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Feds Pump Brakes on General Iron Permit Pending Fair Housing Investigation

General Iron’s parent company has applied for its final permit to operate its metal-shredding operation on the Southeast Side, but federal officials have asked the city to hold off on making a decision.

Illinois Moves to ‘Tier 3’ Restrictions Starting Friday to Curb COVID-19 Surge

Facing “exponential growth” in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations, Illinois will soon begin operating under tighter restrictions designed to stop the spread of the virus — and avoid another stay-at-home order, the governor said.

Aldermen Resist Lightfoot’s Plan to Hike Property Taxes, Imperiling Spending Plan

Aldermen from across the political spectrum pressured Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s budget team on Tuesday to come up with a proposal to head off a $93.9 million property tax hike.

Campaign Launches to Flip Black Friday to ‘Black Shop Friday’ This Holiday Season

“Black Friday has been around for a long time, but what has been missing is the Blackness,” said the creators of the program, which encourages people to support Black-owned businesses in Chicago this holiday season.

‘You Should Not Be Traveling’: Officials Urge Residents to Stay Home on Thanksgiving

Chicagoans should not travel to celebrate Thanksgiving with friends and family, the city’s top doctor said Tuesday, warning that the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic is getting worse in Chicago.

November 17, 2020 - Full Show

Watch the Nov. 17, 2020 full episode of “Chicago Tonight.”

Theo Epstein Steps Down After 9 Seasons Leading Cubs

Theo Epstein, who transformed the long-suffering Chicago Cubs and helped bring home a drought-busting championship in 2016, is stepping down after nine seasons as the club’s president of baseball operations.

COVID-19 and the Courts: 5 Cook County Judges Test Positive This Month

Five Cook County Circuit Court judges and 37 more employees working under the office of Chief Judge Timothy Evans have tested positive for COVID-19 thus far this month.

For Some Restaurants, It’s Cheaper to Close Than to Remain Open

It’s been a solid eight months since government leaders in Chicago and Illinois began asking residents to limit their activities due to the coronavirus. A new round of that took effect in the city on Monday.

What Joe Biden’s Transportation Agenda Could Mean For Chicago

On the campaign trail, Joe Biden said he’d expand federal investment in America’s infrastructure and transportation systems, at a time when they desperately need it. But will Biden’s rhetoric turn into concrete action? 

Joe Walsh: ‘We Can’t Normalize’ President Trump’s Behavior

President Donald Trump has aggressively promoted misinformation and disinformation questioning the results of the election, which he lost. Former Illinois U.S. Rep. Joe Walsh, a fierce Trump critic, weighs in.

Why COVID-19 Is Prompting a Mass Exodus of Women in the Workforce

Since February, nearly 2.2 million women have left the workforce, according to the National Women’s Law Center. What’s behind what some have dubbed the “she-cession” — and what are the long-term implications of the exodus?

Anti-Racist Health Care: Correcting Structural Racism in Medicine

What health care institutions and practitioners can do to unwind the systemic racism that continues to affect health care outcomes in Black and Latino communities.

Ethics Board Finds Probable Cause Ald. Brookins Violated Ethics Ordinance

The board voted unanimously to find that there is probable cause to believe the 21st Ward alderman violated the city’s ethics ordinance by defending clients in criminal cases involving the Chicago Police Department.

2nd Virus Vaccine Shows Overwhelming Success in US Tests

A second experimental COVID-19 vaccine — this one from Moderna Inc. — yielded extraordinarily strong early results Monday, another badly needed dose of hope as the pandemic enters a terrible new phase.