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Lyric Opera’s ‘Blue’ Follows Family Grappling With Grief After Police Shooting

“Blue” follows a Black family after they lose their son to police violence, all while the father serves as a police officer. The production explores injustice and finding healing through faith and community.

Report Examines What Some South Side Residents Think About Reparations

A recent report from the Chicago Urban League and the South Side Community Reparations Coalition focuses on 10 neighborhoods: Douglas, Englewood, Fuller Park, Grand Boulevard, Greater Grand Crossing, Oakland, South Shore, Washington Park, West Englewood and Woodlawn.

Durbin, Duckworth Slam Trump Cabinet Choices as ‘Dangerously Unqualified’ and a ‘Disaster’

President-elect Donald Trump’s Cabinet choices are provoking backlash from the two Illinois Democrats whose positions give them power to take part in approving, or denying, Cabinet appointments.

There Could Be 200 Underground Railroad Sites in Illinois, Task Force Says

“Too many in Illinois believe we need to travel to the East Coast to visit locations on the Underground Railroad, unaware of the enormous activity that took place in their own backyards here,” task force member and Tazewell County Clerk John Ackerman said.

Unions Rally in Springfield, Urge Lawmakers to Change State’s Tiered Pension System

Illinois public workers who began their positions before 2011 are in Tier 1, which offers better benefits. Those hired after Jan. 1, 2011, are in Tier 2. They have to work longer and upon retirement receive a smaller payout.

Donald Trump Picks Matt Gaetz for Attorney General, Marco Rubio for Secretary of State

Trump also announced that he had tapped Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida as his nominee for secretary of state. And he selected Tulsi Gabbard, a former Democratic member of Congress and presidential candidate, to serve as his director of national intelligence.

University of Illinois Hospital Nurses Enter 2nd Strike Since August Amid Concerns Over Safety, Wages

The Illinois Nurses Association represents 1,700 nurses at UI Hospital who have been in contract negotiations since June. Nurses at the hospital system initially went on strike for one week when their contract ended in August. For the current strike, the nurses’ union did not give hospital leadership a strike end date.

CTA Board Approves Last Budget Boosted By Pandemic-Era Stimulus, Pushes Dorval Carter for More Transparency and Collaboration

Board members said improved communication will be key to the agency’s survival as it faces down a projected $539 million fiscal cliff in 2026, after the CTA runs out of pandemic-era relief funding that’s been keeping its operating budget afloat in the first quarter of that year.

Just Eat Takeaway Sells Chicago-Based Grubhub for $650 Million, Just 3 Years After Buying the App for $7.3 Billion

European food delivery giant Just Eat Takeaway.com is selling Grubhub for $650 million, a fraction of the billions it spent to buy the U.S. platform just three years ago.

Nov. 12, 2024 - Full Show

Pushback to Mayor Brandon Johnson’s plan to hike property taxes. And efforts in Illinois to “shore up” protections ahead of a second Trump presidency.

Illinois House Speaker on Protecting Reproductive Rights, Balancing the State Budget

Democratic leaders — who kept their veto-proof majorities in both the state House and state Senate — are discussing what, if any, actions Illinois may take to “shore up” protections ahead of a second Trump presidency.

State Republicans Call for Inclusion in Budget Talks as Illinois Faces $3B Deficit

State Sen. John Curran at a press conference Tuesday called on Gov. J.B. Pritzker to pledge not to raise taxes, either on individuals or businesses.

Johnson Acknowledges $300M Property Tax Hike Unlikely to Get Chicago City Council Approval

Mayor Brandon Johnson used a Tuesday afternoon news conference to cast the City Council’s apparent refusal to hike property taxes by $300 million as evidence of his collaborative approach to governing in Chicago, and not a rebuke of his leadership.

Chicago Employees Deliver Free Compost Bins to Northwest Side Residents as Part of Citywide Giveaway

The city aims to deliver 3,000 compost bins to residents throughout Chicago's 50 wards. The city initially allocated 20 compost bins to distribute in each ward but increased it to 60 bins per ward due to demand.

Chicago Will Remain a Sanctuary City, Despite Donald Trump’s Threats, Mayor Brandon Johnson Says

“We will not bend or break,” Mayor Brandon Johnson said. “Our values will remain strong and firm. We will face likely hurdles in our work over the next four years but we will not be stopped and we will not go back.”