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IDOC to Resume In-Person Visits for First Time Since Last Spring

The Illinois Department of Corrections will resume in-person visits at its facilities statewide over the next month, giving prisoners a chance to see their loved ones for the first time in more than a year.

Crain’s Headlines: Possible Status Switch for Chicago Tribune

The Chicago Tribune newspaper could become a nonprofit. Crain’s Chicago Business editor Ann Dwyer takes us behind the headline of that story and more.

Tweaked COVID-19 Vaccines in Testing Aim to Fend Off Variants

The vaccines currently being rolled out across the U.S. offer strong protection against variants. But new studies of experimental updates to the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines mark a critical first step toward an alternative if the virus eventually outsmarts today’s shots.

All Illinois Residents Now Eligible for COVID-19 Vaccine

The expansion of vaccine eligibility to any Illinois adult regardless of their age, health or employment does not include the city of Chicago. However, Chicagoans can travel outside of the city to be vaccinated, officials said, though supplies are still limited.

Some GOP-Led States Target Abortions Done Through Medication

About 40% of all abortions in the U.S. are now done through medication — rather than surgery — and that option has become all the more pivotal during the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Diversity in Development: How Black and Latino Developers Can Change the Map

When city leaders and developers discuss new plans for major real estate projects, some groups are often left out of the discussion. What’s being done to bring more Black and Latino developers into the industry. 

The Last Word: Shermann Thomas

Urban historian Shermann “Dilla” Thomas gives us the last word on how knowing the city’s past can change the energy of its future.

Chicago Tonight: Black Voices, April 11, 2021 - Full Show

What’s being done to bring more Black and Latino developers into the real estate industry. Cook County’s new public defender. A call for more big brothers and sisters. Bringing energy to history. 

For Chauvin’s Trial Attorney, It’s All About Raising Doubt

Derek Chauvin’s defense attorney appears to be making a series of moves aimed at undermining a dominant narrative of George Floyd’s death — established through bystander video — of a reckless, arrogant cop ignoring a man’s “I can’t breathe” cries as his life is snuffed out.

Chicago Tonight: Latino Voices, April 10, 2021 - Full Show

Calls to reform the police department’s foot pursuit policy. Community organizers lead the charge in getting Latinos vaccinated. A Pilsen mural highlights neighborhood residents. And La Última Palabra.

Community Organizers Lead the Charge to Get Residents Vaccinated

In neighborhoods like La Villita and Back of the Yards, outreach workers are taking a ground-up approach to registering residents for vaccinations by meeting them in grocery stores and taquerias, and through texts and social media.

Little Village Community Leaders Say They Want More Than a Foot Pursuit Policy

The Little Village Community Council wants to meet with Mayor Lori Lightfoot about policing policy changes. They also want to meet with the police department about the shooting of 13-year-old Adam Toledo.

La Ultima Palabra: Ana Hernandez

Why women should take their ideas and aspirations off the back burner.

More Black Americans Open to Vaccines After Outreach Efforts

Campaigns aimed at Black communities across the U.S. are making headway in the effort to persuade people that the COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective. 

After Amazon: Labor Tries to Regroup in Wake of Alabama Loss

Despite the strongest public support and the most sympathetic president in years, the American labor movement just suffered a stinging defeat -- again.