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Movement to Rename Douglas(s) Park Gets a Second Wind, Campaign Relaunches Saturday

The movement to rename Douglas Park after Frederick Douglass had hit a bureaucratic brick wall. Recent shifts in the political and social landscape encouraged activists to keep forging ahead with their campaign, which relaunches Saturday.

CPS Pitches Hybrid Learning for Fall, But Parents Can Opt Out of Sending Kids Back Into Schools

CPS released its long-awaited reopening framework on Friday. But these plans are just preliminary recommendations, and a final decision on in-person instruction will not be made until late August.

Pritzker Considering Whether to Extend Ban on Evictions Past July 31

With Illinois’ ban on evictions set to expire in two weeks, Gov. J.B. Pritzker is considering extending the coronavirus-spurred prohibition as state officials work to set up a program to distribute more than $300 million in help to landlords and tenants.

Pay $500K to Settle Case That Sought 48 Years’ Worth of Misconduct Files: City Lawyers

The city of Chicago should pay $500,000 to settle a lawsuit that sought to force the Chicago Police Department to turn over nearly five decades’ worth of secret files detailing allegations of misconduct by officers, city lawyers recommended.

‘Chicago Tonight’ in Your Neighborhood: Hermosa

Much of the neighborhood sits in the 60639 ZIP code, which has seen the most COVID-19 cases in the entire state. How businesses are faring and reopening.

Preckwinkle, Cook County Officials Sound the Alarm on Rising Opioid Overdose Deaths

COVID-19 is disproportionately impacting Black and Brown communities, but the opioid crisis is also taking a “devastating toll” on Chicago-area residents this year, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle said.

The Holdup Delaying People of Color from Profiting from Legal Pot

A new set of 75 dispensary licenses, judged in part on social equity factors, was to have been awarded by May 1, but has been indefinitely delayed due to the coronavirus.

Summer Amusements: Coronavirus-Related Changes to Water Parks, Carnivals

As theme parks across the country begin reopening, how are Chicago attractions faring?

Ask Geoffrey: Chicago’s Vanishing Water Tanks

They’re rare now, but rooftop water tanks once stood sentinel atop every large building in the city, keeping them safe from threat of fire.

Rising Coronavirus Infections Threaten US Economic Recovery

The government reported Thursday that retail sales rose a sharp 7.5% in June, but the positive trend was undercut by more recent data showing that credit card spending has stalled. 

Aldermen Give Cubs OK for Weekend Night Home Games at Wrigley Field

The Chicago Cubs got the green light Thursday to play home games on weekend nights, the “extraordinary circumstances” imposed by the coronavirus pandemic breaking a decadeslong ban on games under lights on Fridays and Saturdays.

Chicago Parents, Teachers Concerned About Return to School Ahead of CPS Reopening Plan

Chicago Teachers Union President Jesse Sharkey said Thursday the school district must begin the 2020-21 academic year with remote learning until there are firm guidelines and protocols in place to ensure kids and staff alike are protected from COVID-19.

Station Closures Ahead: CTA Red Line Modernization Moves Forward

The CTA’s ambitious Red and Purple Line modernization program will impact service for riders on the North Side for a four-week period starting Friday. And the agency’s plan to relocate a historic building takes a step forward.

EPA Soil Test Reveals Manganese at Hegewisch Baseball Diamond

After finding arsenic and lead in the soil at the Hegewisch Little League Field, the EPA tested a second a ball diamond in the neighborhood and found manganese. “We fight for every breath we take here,” said one resident.

July 16, 2020 - Full Show

Watch the July 16, 2020 full episode of “Chicago Tonight.”