Stories by Dan Andries

Floating Museum Begins its 3-Month Journey Up the Chicago River

There’s a new floating attraction along Chicago’s Riverwalk. We go for a look.

Study: Cost, Severity of Opioid Overdose Admissions to ICU Rising

For years, critical care doctors have noticed an increase in patients suffering from opioid overdoses. A new study confirms their observations and details the staggering cost of treatment.

CPS Budget Hearings: Get Dates, Times for August Meetings

Chicago Public Schools has five hearings scheduled on various aspects of its latest spending plan this month, beginning Monday with meetings on its capital budget. Get complete details.

Gov. Rauner: ‘Let’s Compromise’ on School Funding

A day after the Illinois Senate killed his vision for a new method of funding Illinois schools, Gov. Bruce Rauner kept up hopes that legislators will come around to his way of thinking.

Emanuel: Neo-Nazis ‘Think They Have a Friend in the Oval Office’

The violent confrontation between white supremacists groups and protesters has sparked nationwide outrage and condemnation. How some local politicians are responding.

Aug. 14, 2017 - Full Show

Watch the Aug. 14, 2017 full episode of "Chicago Tonight."

Mayor Mum on City Money for CPS

The city of Chicago will need to come up with an additional $269 million to help Chicago Public Schools make it through the year, according to the schools’ new budget. Where will this additional city money come from?

Parent of Expelled 3-Year-Old: ‘One Day We Had Child Care, the Next We Didn’t’

New Illinois law helps protect pre-K students from expulsion

Illinois parents faced with the expulsion of a preschool-age child are often put in a difficult situation, but a new state law seeks to end that practice and get schools thinking about alternative solutions.

Circus Elephants to Take Final Bow in Illinois

Illinois will become the first state to ban the use of elephants in circuses and other traveling exhibitions, putting an official end to a practice that animal rights activists have been protesting for decades.

Media Depictions of Pregnancy, Post-Baby Bodies ‘Unrealistic,’ Studies Find

“A lot of women said it sets an unrealistic standard when they see Beyoncé in a magazine and she looks fantastic,” said researcher Toni Liechty. “If those are the images you’re seeing, you think that it’s common.”

Illinois Eliminates Statutes of Limitations on Child Sex Abuse Crimes

“This law sends a message to survivors of felony child sex crimes that it is not too late to come forward,” said Polly Poskin, executive director of the Illinois Coalition Against Sexual Assault, in a statement.

Rauner Loses School Funding Fight in Senate; Battle Moves to Illinois House

Governor Bruce Rauner’s attempt to put his stamp on school funding met its demise Sunday, when a single Republican senator joined with the chamber’s 37 Democrats to reject Rauner’s rewrite of a significant school funding measure.

Gov. Bruce Rauner to Appear Monday on ‘Chicago Tonight’

The governor’s sit-down with WTTW will come a day after the Illinois Senate is scheduled to vote on his amendatory veto of Senate Bill 1—a plan that rewrites how Illinois decides how to divvy up state funding for schools. 

The Week in Review: State Misses Payments to Public Schools

Illinois blows the deadline for payments to public schools. Mayor Rahm Emanuel sues the Trump administration. Lawsuits fly over Cook County’s soda tax. And Mitch Trubisky shines in the Bears first preseason game.

3 Critically Endangered ‘Diving Duck’ Chicks Hatch at Lincoln Park Zoo

The zoo’s newest residents are being hand-reared by keepers, and scientists will analyze their genetics as part of an international species survival plan.

Historical Happy Hour: A Toast to Anna Langford and Marilou von Ferstel

To honor the first women of Chicago’s City Council, we mix smoky mezcal and bright grapefruit juice. It’s sweet but not too sweet, sharp but never bitter, and tough enough to duke it out with the best (or worst) of ‘em. 

CPS Counting on City, State Funding in Fiscal Year 2018 Budget

Chicago Public Schools on Friday finally issued the framework of its operating budget for the 2017-18 school year, but the source of some of its revenue remains unclear.

J.B. Pritzker Selects State Rep. Juliana Stratton as Running Mate

At a rally Thursday, the Democratic candidate for governor introduced his pick for lieutenant governor. “We need real solutions, and that is what J.B. and I will provide,” state Rep. Juliana Stratton said.

Aug. 10, 2017 - Full Show

Watch the Aug. 10, 2017 full episode of "Chicago Tonight."

WTTW Garden Yields Bumper Harvest

It’s been a bountiful season for Chicago’s urban gardeners. Jeanne Nolan, The Organic Gardener, joins us with an update from our very own organic garden.

Former White House Chief of Staff: Leaks are ‘Dangerous’ and ‘Disloyal’

Can the new chief of staff temper President Trump’s explosive rhetoric? Former White House Chief of Staff Samuel Skinner weighs in.

Chicago Entrepreneurs Shine Light on Preventing Elderly Falls

Falls are the leading cause of injury in older adults. How one local company is trying to prevent them from occurring, while allowing older adults to maintain their independence.

How Cook County’s Soda Tax Could Swallow Food Stamp Funding

The rollout of Cook County’s sweetened beverage tax has been anything but sweet and easy. Now there’s concern it could put food stamps at risk.

CPS Students Call For Fair Funding With 606 Protest

Public school students set up dozens of desks and seats Thursday morning along the 606 trail in protest of Chicago Public Schools’ latest staffing cuts and Gov. Bruce Rauner’s amendatory veto of Senate Bill 1.

CPS, Chicago Focused on SB1 as Override Vote Looms

Mayor Rahm Emanuel says Chicago Public Schools is prepared for the long term, but he’s not willing to put the city in a “weakened position” by discussing education financing options outside of Senate Bill 1.

Advocates Blast Ameren for Bucking Illinois Energy Savings Target

Residents in central and southern Illinois will pay nearly 30 percent more on utility bills than projected if Ameren is allowed to lower its energy savings target, environmental and consumer advocates said Wednesday.
 

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