Stories by Matt Masterson
Grandfather Charged in Stabbing Death of Man in Englewood Home
| Matt Masterson
Anthony Moody, 55, has been charged with one count of first-degree murder stemming from the Sunday death of Robert Webster, and was ordered held on $200,000 bail during a hearing Tuesday afternoon.
AP Source: Biden to Tap Rahm Emanuel for Ambassador to Japan
| Associated Press
President Joe Biden is expected to nominate former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel to serve as the U.S. ambassador to Japan, according to a person familiar with the president’s decision.
US Schools Fight to Keep Students Amid Fear of Dropout Surge
| Associated Press
Educators are doing everything they can to track down high school students who stopped showing up to classes and to help them get the credits needed to graduate, amid an anticipated surge in the country’s dropout rate during the coronavirus pandemic.
Chicago Opening City-Run Vaccine Sites to Ages 12-15 Starting Thursday
| Patty Wetli
Chicago will open all city-operated COVID-19 vaccination sites to youth ages 12-15 on Thursday, officials announced Tuesday. “Current data show that the vaccine is safe and effective in children, and it not only protects our kids, but also their families and our communities,” said Dr. Alison Arwady.
Poll: Most in US Who Remain Unvaccinated Need Convincing
| Associated Press
Fewer Americans are reluctant to get a COVID-19 vaccine than just a few months ago, but questions about side effects and how the shots were tested still hold some back, according to a new poll that highlights the challenges at a pivotal moment in the U.S. vaccination campaign.
Crain’s Headlines: Rush, BMO Launch $10M Health Equity Institute
| WTTW News
Rush University System for Health and BMO Financial Group team up to help improve health disparities in the region. Crain’s Chicago Business reporter Danny Ecker has details on that story and more.
Agencies Calculating Cost of 2019 Steel Mill Cyanide Spill
Can you put a price tag on damaged natural resources?
| Patty Wetli
State and federal agencies are still assessing how much damage was done to natural resources in Northwest Indiana as a result of the 2019 discharge of hazardous chemicals into a Lake Michigan tributary.
Lawmaker Moves to Block State Financing for Massive One Central Development
| Nick Blumberg
The proposed mega-development would create residential and retail space, parkland and a transit hub on top of the Metra tracks just west of Soldier Field. Why some lawmakers want to block state financing for the splashy, $20 billion plan.
Pfizer COVID-19 Shot Expanded to US Children as Young as 12
| Associated Press
U.S. regulators on Monday expanded the use of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine to children as young as 12, offering a way to protect the nation’s adolescents before they head back to school in the fall and paving the way for them to return to more normal activities.
Still a ‘Vast Wasteland’? Newton Minow Reflects on the State of Television
| Marissa Nelson
Newton Minow, a former chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, played a key role in public media. Here’s what he thinks about television today — six decades after his famous “vast wasteland” speech.
Logan Square Farmers Market Gives Businesses a Boost Amid COVID-19
| Evan Garcia
One of Chicago’s only weekly, nearly year-long farmers markets opened on Sunday, just in time to provide some extra help to the farmers, restaurateurs and other food producers selling their goods in the city’s Northwest Side neighborhood. We meet some of this year’s vendors.
Economy Roars Back, But Dismal Jobs Report Points to Jobs-Skills Mismatch
| Paul Caine
The U.S. economy has come roaring back from pandemic lows, but a disappointing jobs report that fell far short of analysts’ predictions highlighted some potentially worrying trends.
Vaccine Hesitancy Driven for Some by Fear of Allergic Reactions
| Paris Schutz
Demand for the COVID-19 vaccine is dropping, but there is still a large population that’s hesitant to get the shot. Some of that hesitancy is steeped in politics or misinformation, but others fear an allergic reaction. We meet one Chicagoan who says she has good reason to hold out.
In India’s Northeast There’s Fear of a Virus Surge to Come
| Associated Press
With experts saying the coronavirus is likely spreading in India’s northeastern state of Assam faster than anywhere else in the country, authorities were preparing Monday for a surge in infections by converting a massive stadium and a university into hospitals.
Judge to Decide if Smollett Attorney Can Stay on Case After Summer Hearing
| Matt Masterson
A Cook County judge has scheduled a hearing this summer to determine if an attorney that actor Jussie Smollett has hired will be allowed to represent him following allegations of a possible conflict of interest involving that attorney and the two brothers Smollett allegedly hired to carry out a hoax attack.
Reversing Trump, US Restores Transgender Health Protections
| Associated Press
The federal government will protect gay and transgender people against sex discrimination in health care, the Biden administration declared Monday, reversing a Trump-era policy that narrowed rights at the intersection of changing social mores and sensitive medical decisions.
Jim Mabie, Longtime WTTW-WFMT Trustee and Board Chair, Dies at 85
| WTTW News
Jim Mabie, a noted Chicago businessman, philanthropist and civic leader who served as a WTTW and WFMT trustee for more than 20 years, died Saturday surrounded by his family.
Americans Set Another Pandemic-Era Record for Air Travel
| Associated Press
The Transportation Security Administration said that slightly more than 1.7 million people were screened at airport checkpoints on Sunday, the highest number since March 2020, when travel was collapsing because of the coronavirus outbreak.
May 10, 2021 - Full Show
| WTTW News
COVID-19 vaccines are on their way to downtown office buildings. What to do about vaccine allergies. The debate over a mega-development near Soldier Field. Newton Minow on TV as a “vast wasteland.”
Results Are in From City Nature Challenge, and Chicagoans Went Wild
| Patty Wetli
Chicagoans notched a whopping 12,000 observations of plants, animals and fungi in the 2021 City Nature Challenge, coming in well ahead of Moscow, Prague, London and Tokyo.
As Supply of COVID-19 Vaccine Swells, Clinics Open in Office Buildings
| Heather Cherone
Vaccination clinics will open in office buildings in downtown Chicago and across the state as officials continue to get as many people vaccinated against COVID-19 as quickly as possible. The vaccines will allow the city to put “the pandemic in the rearview mirror,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Monday.
City, State Officials Cut Ribbon on Long-Awaited Navy Pier Flyover
| Nick Blumberg
The project’s many delays – some due to unexpected maintenance, some to funding availability – became a source of both frustration and humor for trail users and observers, who joked about the flyover taking longer than engineering marvels like the Golden Gate Bridge and the Sears Tower.
New White House Panel Aims to Separate Science, Politics
| Associated Press
Eager to the turn the page on the Trump years, the Biden White House is launching an effort to unearth past problems with the politicization of science within government and to tighten scientific integrity rules for the future.
Chicago Tonight: Black Voices, May 9, 2021 - Full Show
| WTTW News
Critics of the Chicago Police Department’s use of ShotSpotter technology question its value. The head of Chicago Public Schools announces her departure. A trip to the Hampton House. And fabulous fabrics.
Study Questions Accuracy, Utility of ShotSpotter Technology
| Erica Gunderson
A new study by Northwestern University’s MacArthur Justice Center found that 86% of ShotSpotter alerts resulted in no report of any crime, leading to questions of the gunfire detection system’s value in violence reduction.
Fred Hampton Jr., Akua Njeri on ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’
| Erica Gunderson
It’s a story many Chicagoans know, but since the Oscar-nominated film “Judas and the Black Messiah” was released, more people are learning about the life and death of Fred Hampton. We talk with his widow and his son.
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