Stories by Heather Cherone
Deadline Extended to Oct. 30 for Cook County Residents Applying for Federal Help After Severe Storms
| Heather Cherone
Cook County residents have until Oct. 30 to apply for assistance, including grants for temporary housing and home repairs and low-cost loans to cover uninsured property losses, officials said.
Chicago Police Officer Who Threatened to Kill Romantic Partner and Their Family Won’t Be Fired: Watchdog
| Heather Cherone
The inspector general’s probe found that while the officer’s former partner was moving out, the officer “told them to call everyone they loved and tell them goodbye” and told them they were going to kill them and their family if they appeared at the apartment later that same day.
Johnson Sets Aside $150M to Care for Migrants in 2024, Less Than Half of 2023 Costs
| Heather Cherone
“Chicago is a place strong enough to welcome and embrace newcomers while honoring our commitments to those who are already here, especially those who have long suffered disinvestment,” Mayor Brandon Johnson said.
Mayor Brandon Johnson Proposes $16.6B Spending Plan That Closes Budget Gap, Expands Mental Health Services
| Heather Cherone
Mayor Brandon Johnson’s first spending plan does not include a property tax hike to keep up with the rising rate of inflation, or new taxes or fee hikes to cover the city’s budget deficit.
City Panel Endorses Plan to Sell Vacant Little Village Fire Station to National Museum of Mexican Art
| Heather Cherone
The fire station at 2358 S. Whipple St. was in use for more than a century but has been vacant since 2011 when a new fire station was built two blocks away. The Chicago Historic Resources Survey determined the two-story structure is significant in the context of the surrounding community.
Mayor Brandon Johnson Set to Unveil Spending Plan Designed to ‘Undo Trauma,’ Close $538M Gap
| Heather Cherone
The spending plan crafted by Mayor Brandon Johnson and his team will provide the most comprehensive response to the myriad of intractable problems facing the mayor, including how to handle the more than 1,700 vacant positions in the Chicago Police Department, since he took office nearly 150 days ago.
Columbus Statues Remain in Storage on Another Columbus Day, More Than 3 Years After Removal
| Heather Cherone
Mayor Brandon Johnson has been noncommittal about the fate of the statues, saying in June that he would follow the “direction” of the people of Chicago about their ultimate fate.
Chicago City Council Votes 36-10 to End Tipped Minimum Wage
| Heather Cherone
Chicago joins Alaska, California, Guam, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Washington and Washington, D.C., in ending the tipped minimum wage.
Migrant Crisis Escalates as Johnson Administration Struggles to Identify Locations for Tents
| Heather Cherone
Officials are still scouting locations for the massive tents, which could shelter, feed and care for as many as 1,000 migrants in a single location.
Proposal to Hike Taxes on Sales of Million-Dollar Homes to Fight Homelessness Clears Key Hurdle
| Heather Cherone
Supporters say the plan would generate approximately $100 million annually to address the root causes of homelessness by building new permanent housing that offers wraparound services.
NASCAR to Return to Chicago for 2024 Race, Mayor Announces
| Heather Cherone
Mayor Brandon Johnson waved the green flag after race officials agreed to “shorten the event’s set up and tear down windows, reducing travel disruption for impacted communities and other residents,” the mayor’s office said in a statement.
NASCAR Added $109M to Chicago’s Economy, City Tourism Officials Say
| Heather Cherone
By comparison, Lollapalooza generated $422 million, according to a separate report.
Vote to End Tipped Minimum Wage in Chicago Delayed by City Clerk’s Error
| Heather Cherone
City Clerk Anna Valencia acknowledged her office had erred, delaying a triumphant moment for Mayor Brandon Johnson and the progressive political movement that elected him to office earlier this year.
Stops by Chicago Police Create Fear and Sow Distrust, Finds Survey Conducted by Federal Court Monitor
| Heather Cherone
The 39-page report from the independent monitoring team, led by attorney Maggie Hickey, compiled the results of the feedback gathered from more than 400 Chicagoans at 17 community engagement sessions in February, March and April.
Anger, Frustration Boil Over at Hearing on Migrant Crisis as Breach Deepens Between City, State
| Heather Cherone
Ald. Pat Dowell called on Mayor Brandon Johnson to center the need of Black Chicagoans and warned that every bus that arrives “is eating away at the goodwill of the people of the city of Chicago.”
Probe into Allegations of Sexual Misconduct by Chicago Police Officers at Police Stations Home to Migrants Closed
| Heather Cherone
There is no evidence that any Chicago police officer had sexual contact with any of the migrants forced to sleep on the floor of the stations after arriving in Chicago from the southern border, the head of the agency charged with investigating police misconduct announced Friday.
2 Chicago Police Officers Not Guilty in Pilsen Shooting That Seriously Injured Unarmed Man
| Heather Cherone
Cook County Judge Lawrence Flood acquitted Sgt. Christopher Liakopoulos, 44, and Officer Reuben Reynoso, 43, after a bench trial, finding they acted reasonably when they opened fire on two men in July 2022.
Johnson Administration Defends Plan to House Migrants in Tents As Pace of Arrivals Quickens, Costs Mount
| Heather Cherone
The cost of caring for the migrants through the end of the year is now estimated to reach $345 million, according to updated financial projections shared by Cristina Pacione Zayas, the mayor’s first deputy chief of staff. Three weeks ago, those costs were pegged at $302 million, according to city data.
Chicago Taxpayers Pay $100K to Man Who Claimed Ald. Jim Gardiner Had Him Wrongfully Arrested
| Heather Cherone
Benjamin George, a construction worker, said his life was upended on Aug. 19, 2019, when he stopped at a 7-Eleven store in Jefferson Park and mistakenly picked up a cell phone left on the checkout counter that did not belong to him.
Larry Snelling Confirmed by Chicago City Council as New Top Cop
| Heather Cherone
Mayor Brandon Johnson picked Larry Snelling to implement Johnson’s pledge to fight crime in Chicago with a holistic approach that focuses on the root causes of violence.
Health Committee Agrees to Form Working Group to Reopen Chicago’s Public Mental Health Clinics, Expand 911 Alternate Response
| Heather Cherone
The measure, introduced by Mayor Brandon Johnson and Health Committee Chair Ald. Rossana Rodriguez Sanchez, is set for a final vote by the full City Council on Oct. 4.
Federal Judge: Ald. Jim Gardiner Violated First Amendment by Blocking Critics from Official Facebook Page
| Heather Cherone
“The record is clear that Gardiner engaged in both content-based and speaker-based restrictions on his Facebook page, according to the ruling from U.S. District Court Judge Sharon Johnson Coleman. The Court thus finds Gardiner in violation of the First Amendment.”
Committee Advances Brandon Johnson’s Selection of Larry Snelling to Lead Chicago Police Department
| Heather Cherone
Snelling is one vote away from becoming the 64th superintendent of the Chicago Police Department, with final approval expected Wednesday.
Pritzker, Johnson Praise Biden for Allowing Migrants to Work While Seeking Asylum
| Heather Cherone
With approximately 7,400 people taking up every available spot in 20 city shelters, more than 2,100 men, women and children are being forced to sleep on the floors of police stations across the city and at Chicago O’Hare International Airport, according to city data.
Chicago Sues Monsanto for Polluting City’s Air, Water, Soil with Toxic Chemicals
| Heather Cherone
Representatives of Bayer, which now owns Monsanto, said Chicago's lawsuit was “meritless” because the company never manufactured or disposed PCBs in or near the Chicago area.
Deal to Phase Out Tipped Minimum Wage in Chicago Passed by Key City Panel
| Heather Cherone
Chicago could join Alaska, California, Guam, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Washington and Washington D.C. in ending the tipped minimum wage.
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