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Stories by WTTW News

April 28, 2023 - Full Show

A humanitarian crisis in Chicago after a new surge of migrants. How the CTA is trying fill its ranks with bus and rail operators. And James “Big Cat” Williams gives his take on the Chicago Bears’ draft moves.

Bears Pass on Carter, Take Tennessee Offensive Tackle Wright in NFL Draft First Round

James “Big Cat” Williams, who played offensive tackle for the Bears from 1991 to 2002 and is co-host of the No Name Football podcast, gives “Chicago Tonight” his assessment of the Bears’ draft moves.

CTA Adding Bus and Rail Workers, Touting Service Improvements; Mayor-Elect Mum on Keeping Transit Agency Leader

The CTA is still short more than 600 full-time bus and rail operators. As the transit agency tries to reverse service and staffing losses, it’s been putting a big focus on hiring.

Chicago Facing ‘Humanitarian Crisis’ Amid Renewed Surge of Migrants from the Border, Officials Say

More than 8,100 people, most of them from Central and South America, have arrived in Chicago since Aug. 31. Mayor Lori Lightfoot sent to the City Council Friday, acknowledging that once again the city’s shelter system is bursting at the seams.  

Week in Review: Johnson Unveils Transition Team; ‘ComEd Four’ Jury Hears Closing Arguments

Criminal justice change as Kim Foxx prepares to step away. Who’s helping the mayor-elect transition to City Hall. Awaiting a verdict in the “ComEd Four” case.

This Week in Nature: Mystery Vandal Strikes Again at LaBagh Woods Forest Preserve, Setting Back Eco-Restoration Efforts

A mystery vandal is once again undoing ecological restoration work at LaBagh Woods.

Time To Go Wild, Chicago. Anyone With a Camera Can Participate in the Weekend’s City Nature Challenge

It's time for the annual City Nature Challenge, a friendly global competition among hundreds of cities, running from Friday through Monday. Here's how to submit nature observations and boost Chicago in the standings.

April 27, 2023 - Full Show

Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson’s transition team. A dangerous crossing for kids in Hammond to get to school. And we’re live in Woodlawn for our “In Your Neighborhood” series.

‘Home Away From Home’: Woodlawn Community Steps in to Help Migrants Bused From Texas Following Some Tension

It's been three months since a group of migrants was moved into the shuttered Wadsworth Elementary School in the Woodlawn community following objections from some nearby residents. Now, some locals have joined forces to help integrate their new neighbors into the community.

Former Chicago Police Chief of Detectives, Fired Reform Boss Join Johnson’s Transition Team

The team, led by University of Illinois at Chicago Professor Barbara Ransby and Charles Smith, an insurance executive, will have to work fast — Johnson is set to take office in 18 days.

Hammond Kids Have to Crawl Under Freight Trains to Get to School: ProPublica

It’s the stuff of nightmares for parents: children crawling under and over idling trains in order to get to school on the other side. Two ProPublica journalists spent months reporting on railroad safety and the kids who are risking life and limb to go to school.

Carolyn Bryant Donham, at Center of Emmett Till Death, Dies at 88

The white woman who accused Black teenager Emmett Till of making improper advances before he was lynched in Mississippi in 1955 has died in hospice care in Louisiana, a coroner's report shows.

Suspected Chicago Gang Members Facing Federal Drug, Firearms and Fraud Charges

Federal prosecutors allege eight of the nine defendants are members or associates of the Black P Stone Nation street gang. Charges include firearms trafficking, distribution of a controlled substance and possession of a weapon as a convicted felon.

These Chicago Women Ran an Underground Abortion Network in the 1960s. Here’s How They View Today’s Debate

A band of young women — most in their 20s, some in college, some married with children — banded together in Chicago to create an underground abortion network. The group was officially created in 1969 as the “Abortion Counseling Service of Women’s Liberation.”

Jerry Springer, Whose Chicago-Based Show Was Ratings Hit and Cultural Pariah, Dies at 79

At its peak, ”The Jerry Springer Show” was a ratings powerhouse and a U.S. cultural pariah, synonymous with lurid drama. Springer died peacefully at home in suburban Chicago after a brief illness. 

Plover Watch: Female Plover Joins Imani and Mystery Bachelor at Montrose, Let the Dating Games Begin

There’s a love triangle brewing at Montrose Beach, where Imani the piping plover has been joined by a mystery bachelor and … a female.

April 26, 2023 - Full Show

Our Spotlight Politics team on jury deliberations in the ComEd bribery trial and the opening at the state’s attorney office. Former presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke joins us. And a plover sighting!

Spotlight Politics: Kim Foxx’s Legacy; ‘ComEd Four’ Trial Closing Arguments

Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx is not seeking reelection. Closing arguments wrap up in the so-called “ComEd Four” trial. And some familiar Illinois faces are working on President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign.

Beto O’Rourke on Voting Rights, His Time as a University of Chicago Fellow

For the last three months, Beto O’Rourke has been spending time in Chicago as a University of Chicago Institute of Politics fellow.

Imani the Plover Is Back at Montrose. Will Monty and Rose’s Chick Stick Around and Find a Mate?

Chicago’s birders are celebrating the arrival of Imani at Montrose Beach. The piping plover is a 2021 chick of Monty and Rose.

5 Things to Do This Weekend: Block Party, Indie Bookstore Crawl

A block party, poetry festival and spring art shows usher in the weekend. Here are five things to do in and around Chicago.

Mississippi River Flooding Prompts Evacuations, Sandbagging in Wisconsin and Iowa

A small number of people had to leave their homes in Wisconsin as the river kept rising. Others stacked sandbags in the small community of Buffalo, Iowa, in anticipation of flooding this weekend and early next week.

Immigrants Waiting 10 Years in US Just to Get a Court Date

The backlog stems from a change made two months after President Joe Biden took office, when Border Patrol agents began now-defunct practice of quickly releasing immigrants on parole. 

Quentin Fulks, Now a Top Biden Presidential Campaign Aide, Was Pritzker Operative

Anne Caprara, Pritzker’s chief of staff and former campaign manager, who hired Quentin Fulks as her 2018 deputy, described him as a “soft-spoken” but skilled operative who understands Democrats’ uneasy coalitions

April 25, 2023 - Full Show

Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx says she’s not running for reelection. The search for the next police chief. Some Medicaid patients could be losing their coverage. And bringing the formerly incarcerated home.

Hundreds of Thousands of Medicaid Recipients in Illinois at Risk of Losing Coverage

Emergency measures designed to ensure people didn’t lose their health care during the COVID-19 pandemic are now being phased out. People must once again prove their eligibility for the government=-backed insurance program.
 

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