SORT Order Oldest FirstNewest First Has Video - Any -YesNo FILTER Date Range Start date End date Category - Any -Arts & EntertainmentBusinessCrime & LawEducationHealthPoliticsScience & NatureSports Keyword(s) Mar 4, 2024 5 Years After Chicago’s Consent Decree Took Effect, Little Urgency Surrounds Reform Push The Chicago Police Department has fully met just 6% of the consent decree’s requirements, according to the most recent report by the team monitoring CPD’s progress. Mar 3, 2024 Early Voting Expands Across Chicago for March 19 Illinois Primary Starting Monday, voters in Chicago will have more places to cast their ballots ahead of the Illinois primary election on March 19. Mar 2, 2024 His Conviction Was Overturned After 35 Years Wrongfully Served. State Law Caps His Compensation at 14 Years A new bill in the General Assembly would seek to remove the roughly $200,000 cap on payments to exonerees that maxes out at the 14-year mark, replacing it with a payout of $50,000 per year, capped at just over $2 million. Mar 2, 2024 Native Tribe Seeks Return of Ancestral Land in DeKalb County A bill pending in the General Assembly would give back roughly 1,500 acres of park land in DeKalb County to the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation. That tribe once occupied much of the Great Lakes region but was forcibly removed in the 19th century. Mar 2, 2024 Chicago Jazz Vocalist Takes Listeners on Musical Journey in ‘75 Years of Mahalia Jackson’: Review Tammy McCann recently previewed a one-woman show dedicated to the life and work of gospel legend Mahalia Jackson. McCann will soon head to New York to once again pay homage to the queen of gospel. Mar 2, 2024 The Chilling Power and Uncanny Timeliness of ‘Message in a Bottle’: Review “Message in a Bottle,” which runs through Sunday at the Cadillac Palace Theatre, is simply a phenomenal production that should not be missed, writes WTTW News theater critic Hedy Weiss. Mar 1, 2024 Homecoming for Chicago Band Brigitte Calls Me Baby — Lead Singer Talks Elvis, Pen Pals and a Promising Future The spotlight shines brightly these days on Chicago band Brigitte Calls Me Baby. The group just had its national TV debut on “CBS Saturday Morning,” and the influential public radio station WXPN called the band “future rock royalty.” Mar 1, 2024 Invasive Dupes, Part 5: The Common Reed’s Identity Crisis is a Doozy For the last in our series on invasive species that can be mistaken for natives, here’s one of the trickiest: phragmites, also known as common reed. Mar 1, 2024 Week in Review: Trump Ruled Ineligible for Illinois Primary Ballot; Multiple Warnings Over Migrant Shelter Conditions Trump is ruled ineligible in Illinois but will stay on the ballot. And all signs point to the Bears drafting a superstar prospect with the first overall pick. Mar 1, 2024 Older Adults Should Get Another COVID-19 Shot, Health Officials Recommend There are still more than 20,000 hospitalizations and more than 2,000 deaths each week due to the coronavirus, according to the CDC. And people 65 and older have the highest hospitalization and death rates. Mar 1, 2024 What the Heck Happened to February in Chicago? It Was the Warmest on Record, But It Could Have Been Weirder It’s official, Chicago: February 2024 was the warmest in 153 years of recording keeping. Mar 1, 2024 US Health Officials Drop 5-Day Isolation Time for COVID-19 Most people have some degree of immunity to the coronavirus from past vaccinations or from infections. And many people are not following the five-day isolation guidance anyway, some experts say. Mar 1, 2024 CVS and Walgreens Plan to Start Dispensing Abortion Pill Mifepristone Soon Walgreens will begin dispensing the medication within a week at some locations in several states, including Illinois. Mar 1, 2024 Students Seek Feedback From Transit Riders on How CTA Can Bring ‘Joy’ to Its Stations: ‘It’s a Pipe Dream, But It Gives Us Hope’ Students at the University of Illinois Chicago are conducting the survey as part of a capstone project, which focuses on getting rider feedback on the UIC Halsted Blue Line station, Roosevelt Red Line station and the Clark/Division Red Line station. Mar 1, 2024 Illinois Signed $640K Contract to Review Controversial ‘Invest In Kids’ Tax Credit Program, But Results Are Deemed ‘Inconclusive’ Illinois signed a contract for $640,000 for a report that could help legislators determine the value of the state’s recently defunct private school scholarship program, but a lack of data makes its findings “inconclusive.” Load More Thanks to our sponsors: