SORT Order Oldest FirstNewest First Has Video - Any -YesNo FILTER Date Range Start date End date Category - Any -Arts & EntertainmentBusinessCrime & LawEducationHealthPoliticsScience & NatureSports Keyword(s) Jun 28, 2021 Legislation to Address Period Poverty Heads to Governor’s Desk Community organizations and state lawmakers are working to make menstrual products more accessible to Illinoisans who need them. We take a look at the issue in our Firsthand: Living in Poverty series. Jun 28, 2021 Crain’s Headlines: Ventas Reaches $2.3B Deal for Additional Senior Housing Investment groups wager on future demand for senior housing. Crain’s Chicago Business reporter Danny Ecker has details on that story and more. Jun 28, 2021 Explainer: Infrastructure Deal Targets Lead Pipes Included in the bipartisan infrastructure deal reached with President Joe Biden last week is a plan to eliminate the country’s remaining lead pipes and service lines, which for decades have posed a risk for contaminated water in millions of homes and schools. Jun 28, 2021 Chicago Police Believe Mass Shootings Sunday Night Were Likely Gang-Related Police Superintendent David Brown on Monday said investigations remain ongoing into a shooting in the South Shore that left one dead and five injured, and another at Marquette Park that left one dead and 10 injured. Jun 28, 2021 Blackhawks Hire Outside Firm to Investigate Allegations The Chicago Blackhawks have hired a former federal prosecutor to conduct an independent review of allegations that a former player was sexually assaulted by a then-assistant coach in 2010. Jun 28, 2021 June 28, 2021 - Full Show Details about Illinois’ new criminal justice law. Catching up with alderpeople after two City Council meetings. What you need to know about the delta variant. How poverty affects women differently. Jun 28, 2021 License Expired? As Lines Swell, Deadline Extended to January 2022 Illinois residents scrambling to renew their driver’s licenses and identification cards got a five-month reprieve Monday as lines swelled at secretary of state offices across the state. Jun 28, 2021 Officer Who Shot Anthony Alvarez Stripped of Police Powers: CPD The Civilian Office of Police Accountability recommended two months ago that Officer Evan Solano have his gun and badge taken from him after the March fatal shooting of a 22-year-old in Portage Park, even as a probe of the killing continues. Jun 28, 2021 Families of the Missing Visit Site of Florida Condo Collapse Families of the missing visited the scene of the Florida condo building collapse Sunday as rescuers kept digging through the mound of rubble and clinging to hope that someone could yet be alive somewhere under the broken concrete and twisted metal. Jun 27, 2021 Some Fully Vaccinated People May Still Get Sick if Exposed to Variants, CDC Warns The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the agency is tracking the Delta coronavirus variant, among others — and warned that there is a small chance a fully vaccinated person could still get infected if they’re exposed. Jun 27, 2021 Fully Free Campaign Seeks to End System of ‘Permanent Punishments’ In the U.S., many people view incarceration as the punishment one receives for breaking the law. But a recently released study indicates that for the more than 3.3 million people with criminal records in Illinois, punishment continues well beyond time served. Jun 27, 2021 Chicago Tonight: Black Voices, June 27, 2021 - Full Show Helping people who’ve been involved with the criminal legal system get a fresh start. A new book from the late novelist Richard Wright. And The Last Word on mental health in the Black community. Jun 27, 2021 60 Years Later, Influential Author’s Take on Race, Police Still Relevant A novel by Richard Wright, published more than 61 years after his death, is this month’s Black Voices Book Club selection. We discuss “The Man Who Lived Underground” with the grandson of this influential author. Jun 27, 2021 Transgender Rights, Religion Among Cases Justices Could Add The Supreme Court has already issued big decisions on health care and religious freedom this month. And next term, the high court has agreed to take on cases about abortion and guns. The court could say as soon as Monday what it will do about these issues awaiting action. Jun 26, 2021 La Ultima Palabra: Lolita’s Bodega The forces of gentrification can make people being priced out of their neighborhoods feel powerless. But the founders of Lolita’s Bodega in Humboldt Park say residents have more power than they think. Load More Thanks to our sponsors: