Stories by Heather Cherone

COVID-19 Vaccination Rates for Latino and Black Chicagoans Continue to Lag: City Data

Since the COVID-19 vaccination effort began on Dec. 15 in Chicago, 18% of Chicagoans who got at least the first shot are Latino, while 19% are Black, according to data released Friday by the Chicago Department of Public Health.

Massive Breach Fuels Calls for US Action on Cybersecurity

Jolted by a sweeping hack that may have revealed government and corporate secrets to Russia, U.S. officials are scrambling to reinforce the nation’s cyber defenses.

‘Chicago Tonight’ in Your Neighborhood: South Deering

The industrial community once marked by steel mills is now lined with other plants, and the proposed opening of a metal scrapping company has become a point of controversy on the Southeast Side and across the city.

Journalists Fearful as Hedge Fund Strikes Deal to Buy Tribune Publishing

Alden Global Capital seeks to buy Tribune Publishing in a $630 million deal, but the deal has newsroom journalists worried because of Alden’s history of deep cuts at other newsrooms. 

NASA’s Mars Rover Tweets Its First Image from Red Planet

NASA’s Perseverance rover greeted its global audience on Twitter, beaming back to Earth the first image captured after touching down Thursday afternoon on Mars. 

Ask Geoffrey: Snow, Snow, Snow

A collective groan may or may not have been heard around Chicago when the city awoke to find it was snowing — again. Geoffrey Baer explains how this recent blast of snowy weather stacks up against Chicago’s most infamous winter storms.

Cases of More Transmissible COVID-19 Variant Nearly Double In Illinois: Officials

Twenty-two more cases of a COVID-19 variant first discovered in the United Kingdom that is believed to be more transmissible have been discovered in Illinois in the past seven days, according to data released Thursday by the Illinois Department of Public Health.

Chicago Volunteer Expo Aims To Draw Thousands To Its Weekend Event — Virtually, Of Course

Volunteering looks different during the pandemic, but organizations still need support. The Chicago Volunteer Expo is moving forward with its annual event, where people can learn about opportunities at scores of nonprofits, but has shifted to a virtual platform.

UN: Huge Changes in Society Needed to Keep Nature, Earth OK

Humans are making Earth a broken and increasingly unlivable planet through climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution. So the world must make dramatic changes to society, economics and daily life, a new United Nations report says.

Progressive Groups, Aldermen Slam Lightfoot For Using Federal Relief Funds to Cover Police Costs

Progressive aldermen and community groups slammed Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Thursday for using $281.5 million in COVID-19 federal relief funds to cover the cost of salaries and benefits for Chicago Police Department officers.

February 18, 2021 - Full Show

Watch the Feb. 18, 2021 full episode of “Chicago Tonight.”

City Shuts Down Lan’s In Old Town For Hosting Maskless Party

Inspectors found 27 people in the Chinese restaurant on the day before Valentine’s Day not wearing masks or following social distancing rules, according to a statement from the city’s Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection.

Experts Warn Against COVID-19 Variants as States Reopen

Scientists widely agree that the U.S. simply doesn’t have enough of a handle on the variants to roll back public health measures and is at risk of fumbling yet another phase of the pandemic after letting the virus rage through the country over the last year.

Michael Madigan to Resign From Illinois House

Michael Madigan, who has represented the 22nd District on Chicago’s South Side since 1971 and steadily amassed political capital, is exiting the Illinois House at the end of February. The announcement comes a month after Madigan lost the reigns as speaker.

Chicago Police Botched Response to Protests, Unrest After George Floyd’s Death: Watchdog

The Chicago Police Department was “under-prepared and ill-equipped, and thus critically disserved both its own front-line members and members of the public,” according to the inspector general’s report, the first in-depth examination of the police department’s response to the unrest. 

US Jobless Claims Jump to 861,000 as Layoffs Stay High

Before the virus erupted in the United States last March, weekly applications for unemployment benefits had never topped 700,000, even during the Great Recession of 2008-2009.

Pritzker’s Budget Doesn’t Hike Income Tax, Rely on Federal Aid

The pandemic-era budget proposed Wednesday by Gov. J.B. Pritzker relies heavily on businesses to bring an additional $932 million into state coffers through what the Democrat describes as closing corporate tax loopholes. We get reaction from state lawmakers.

Spotlight Politics: Pritzker Takes Aim at Republicans in Budget Address

Gov. J.B. Pritzker takes aim at Republicans during his budget address. Our politics team breaks that down and more.

NASA’s Perseverance Hunting for Ancient Life on Mars

NASA prepares to land a rover on Mars designed specifically to detect signs of ancient life. Local astronomer and space exploration enthusiast Mark Hammergren tells us more about the mission.

Jennifer Pritzker: Biden’s Repeal of Transgender Military Ban Good for Everybody

As of last month, the transgender military ban was repealed. We talk with retired Col. Jennifer Pritzker about the importance of this move.

Considered Food Desert, North Chicago Gets Its 1st Grocery Store in 20 Years

The lack of affordable and nutritious food in North Chicago has made the city a food desert, but soon it'll get its first full-service grocery store in 20 years.

Biden Reframes His Goal on Reopening of Elementary Schools

President Joe Biden is promising a majority of elementary schools will be open five days a week by the end of his first 100 days in office.

Chicago Man Charged in Carjacking After Massive Snowfall

A Chicago man allegedly pushed a woman out of her vehicle as he was attempting to escape during a carjacking before getting stuck in the heavy snowfall that blanketed the city Tuesday morning.

Shedd Introduces Harmony, the Aquarium’s Newest Addition to Its Dolphin Family

Students from across Chicago voted on the name for the Shedd’s 5-month old Pacific white-sided dolphin calf.

February 17, 2021 - Full Show

Watch the Feb. 17, 2021 full episode of “Chicago Tonight.”

Rush Limbaugh, ‘Voice of American Conservatism,’ Has Died

Rush Limbaugh, the talk radio host who ripped into liberals and laid waste to political correctness with a merry brand of malice that made him one of the most powerful voices on the American right, influencing the rightward push of conservatism and the rise of Donald Trump, died Wednesday. He was 70.
 

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