Stories by Heather Cherone

Mix of CTU-Endorsed, Charter School-Backed and Independent Candidates Win CPS Board Races, With 3 Contests Undecided: AP

The results of the hard-fought and expensive races will usher in a new era for the 325,000 students who attend Chicago Public Schools — and serve as a referendum on the leadership of Mayor Brandon Johnson, a former teacher, and the Chicago Teachers Union.

Push to Use Cameras to Bust Chicago Drivers Who Park in Bus, Bicycle Lanes Finally Starts

Designed to stop drivers from endangering pedestrians, cyclists and transit riders by parking and stopping in lanes designated for bicyclists and buses, the new initiative is set to last two years, and would target scofflaws downtown between the lake, Ashland Avenue, Roosevelt Road and North Avenue.

Mayor Brandon Johnson Calls for $300M Property Tax Hike To Close Budget Gap, Avoid Draconian Cuts

Mayor Brandon Johnson said proposing the tax hike, the second largest in modern Chicago history after the $588 million property tax hike pushed through by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel in 2016, was a “difficult decision” that was the result of an "excruciating process.”

City Council OKs 4 of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s 5 Picks to Serve on RTA Board, Rejects Humboldt Park Pastor

The Chicago City Council confirmed four of the five Chicagoans picked by Mayor Brandon Johnson to serve on the board of the Regional Transportation Authority, which is facing a $730 million deficit in 2026.

Chicago to Pay $4.5M to Settle 3 Police Misconduct Cases

The Chicago City Council voted to pay $4 million to the family of a man who spent 33 years in prison after he was wrongfully convicted of murdering a woman in 1989 in Chicago’s Gold Coast neighborhood.

Chicago Housing Authority CEO Tracey Scott Steps Down Amid Growing Criticism

Angela Hurlock, the chair of the CHA Board of Commissioners, will serve as the agency’s interim CEO, while a search for a permanent leader takes place, according to a statement from the agency.

Man Charged With West Ridge Attempted Murder and Firing at Police Should Face Hate Crime Charges, Ald. Silverstein Says

Sidi Mohamed Abdallahi, 22, has been charged with six counts of attempted first-degree murder, seven counts of aggravated discharge of a firearm toward a police officer or firefighter and one count of aggravated battery.

Key City Panel Advances Johnson’s 5 Picks to Serve on RTA Board

The endorsement of the city’s Transportation and Public Way Committee sends the nominations of Natasha Jenkins, Thomas Kotarac, Jarixon Medina, Dennis J. Mondero and Nora Cay Ryan to the full Chicago City Council for confirmation.

As Officials Scramble to Fill Chicago’s Budget Gap, City Has Less Than $300M Left in Federal COVID-19 Relief Funds

Between March 2021 and June 2024, Chicago spent more than $238.8 million on a host of programs including affordable housing, mental health, violence prevention, youth job programs and help for unhoused Chicagoans, according to the most recent reports filed with the U.S. Department of the Treasury as required by federal law.

Family of Man Killed by Police in 2016 in Mount Greenwood Should Get $225K, City Lawyers Recommend

The City Council will also weigh paying $325,000 to resolve a separate lawsuit filed by a man who was shot and wounded by a Chicago Police officer in March 2018 while suffering a mental health crisis.

Pay $4M to Family of Man Who Spent 33 Years in Prison After Being Wrongfully Convicted, City Lawyers Recommend

In all, Chicago taxpayers spent $201.8 million to resolve 43 lawsuits brought by more than three dozen people wrongfully convicted based on evidence gathered by the Chicago Police Department since 2019, according to an analysis of city data by WTTW News.

Police Misconduct Agency Identified Troubling Pattern of Stops in 11th District Months Before Fatal Dexter Reed Shooting, Letter Shows

A letter sent to police officials from COPA on March 27, six days after Reed’s death, shows that the agency had evidence that officers were routinely engaging in misconduct that violated Chicago Police Department rules and put Chicagoans at risk of a violent encounter with officers for at least a year. 

Johnson Names 7th Member of New CPS Board, Now Set to Meet Nov. 1

Rafael Yáñez, who ran unsuccessfully to represent the 15th Ward on the Chicago City Council in 2015 and 2019, is set to join the board.

Chicago Will No Longer Guarantee Migrants a Bed in City Shelters Under New Unified Approach: Mayor

The designated “landing zone” for buses from Texas at Polk and Desplaines streets in the West Loop will only operate from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. starting Tuesday and close by the end of the year, officials announced.

Share of Chicago Property Taxes Claimed by TIF Funds Set Another Record in 2023: Report

Demolishing the record set in each of the past three years, $1.3 billion poured into the city’s 127 TIF funds in 2022, according to a report from Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough.

Effort by City Council to Put CPS Board Members, CEO on the Hot Seat Fizzles

No current or former members of the Chicago Board of Education attended Wednesday's marathon session of the City Council’s Education Committee, even after some City Council members threatened to hit them with subpoenas to require them to appear.

No Quick Fix for Chicago’s Budget Woes That Are Rooted in Decades of Mismanagement, Civic Federation Says

“A generation-long persistence in structurally imbalanced budgets, coupled with high pension and debt burdens, mean the city will face enormous budget shortfalls in the coming years,” wrote Joseph Ferguson, the head of the nonpartisan budget watchdog group and the city’s former inspector general.

Federal Court Monitor: Expand Consent Decree to Include Traffic Stops, But Give Chicago Police Oversight Board Some Control

A federal court order requiring the Chicago Police Department to change the way it trains, supervises and disciplines officers should be expanded to include traffic stops, but the city’s new police oversight board should be given some power over the hot-button issue, according to a new recommendation. 

Little Village Migrant Shelter Will Close Nov. 3, State Officials Announce

The shelter at 27th Street and Pulaski Road, which opened in January at the height of the crisis that strained state and city resources, now houses 146 people, state officials said.

Amid CPS Budget Battle, Focus Shifts to Property Taxes Earmarked to Fight Blight

CPS CEO Pedro Martinez said during an appearance on WTTW News’ “Chicago Tonight” he has repeatedly urged the mayor to use funds from the city’s TIF districts instead of borrowing money or making cuts to classrooms.

Johnson Won’t Veto City Council’s Rebuke of His Decision to Scrap ShotSpotter

Mayor Brandon Johnson acknowledged Wednesday he decided not to veto the ordinance because of concerns it would set a “dangerous precedent.”

‘We’re Going to Transform This School District Once and for All,’ Mayor Brandon Johnson Says

“I’m not going to cut, and take away, layoff, fire, privatize so that other people can benefit, and the people of Chicago can lose,” Mayor Brandon Johnson said. “Not under my watch.”

As Ald. Walter Burnett Takes Control of City Council’s Zoning Committee, Aldermanic Prerogative Takes Center Stage

“I truly believe in community input,” Ald. Walter Burnett (27th Ward) said. “I want the people to have a voice. I don’t know every nook and cranny of every neighborhood. And when I say the people, I mean the alderman.”

1st Development Designed to Transform Chicago’s Financial District Advances

The City Council’s Finance Committee unanimously endorsed the plan from R2 Co. and the Campari Group to transform the 14-story office building at 79 W. Monroe St. into an apartment building with 117 units, including 41 units set aside for low- and moderate-income Chicagoans.

Mayor Brandon Johnson Acknowledges He Has Been Unable to Rein in CPD Overtime Spending as Spending Blows Past Budget

“This is still very much a frustration I have,” Mayor Brandon Johnson said. “I’ve been in conversations with the superintendent, with our budget director to come up with better systems.”

Did You Get an Unsigned Mailer Praising or Slamming Your Alderperson? Here’s Who Sent It

Although the mailers did not identify who paid for them, the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150 helped bankroll the campaign, Local 150 officials told WTTW News.
 

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