Chicago Sports

Ryan Poles compares Chicago Bears to ‘Fixer Upper’, hints at aquiring more draft pics

Stressing the Chicago Bears are not in rebuild mode, new general manager Ryan Poles hinted at moving back in the 2022 NFL Draft in his press conference Tuesday.

Poles compared the process of reforming the Bears to rebuilding housing fixtures like countertops in a recently bought home; likening it to the HGTV show “Fixer Upper.” Chip and Joanna Gaines might be tidying up homes in the Baylor Bears hometown of Waco, TX, but Poles is tasked with fixing up the Chicago Bears at Halas hall this upcoming weekend.

“We’re constructing a very good football team, regardless of how you use whatever term that is,” he said. “We just continue to add talent, and young talent, older talent, whatever is takes to make the best team possible.”

Poles has been busy these past few months evaluating the current talent on the roster and making moves to plug in the many gaps in talent the team has going into the 2022 season. In order to fill as many gaps as possible with sparse draft picks, Poles suggested the Bears might have to trade back in the draft in order to acquire more draft capital. 

“We will be in the business, depending on where it is and what [the draft board] looks like in moving back and trying to create more. That’s just what we’ve been handed and were going to maximize that.”

Poles said he will make the determination based on if he could trade into a position on the draft board that would still have quality players at needed positions. Poles and his team have been watching film and reading reports to find the best players the Bears can draft at each spot on their draft board.

“It’s definitely a challenge but that’s why I was hired,” Poles said, referencing the unique situation former Bears general manager, Ryan Pace, left him and the team in.

Poles has had a pedestrian free agency so far, signing players who add more depth that elite talent, much to the annoyance to many Bears fans on social media. Bears fans might be wanting more sexy names in the draft to have hope for the 2022 team and beyond, but Poles seems to be biding his time and scoping out the long term solutions to the roster.

Make sure to check out our Bears forum for the latest on the team.

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Zach LaVine out? Bulls-Bucks was hopeless enough already

You know what’s fun? Watching sports teams that aren’t cracked, splintered, hollowed-out shells of what they might have been or were supposed to be.

Then again, how would we know?

Welcome to Chicago, where the baseball is inferior, the hockey is revolting and the basketball is 48 minutes from merciful oblivion.

In the time you’ve taken to read this far, the White Sox have committed three more errors and lost another key player to a ruptured something-or-other. The Cubs — hey, how about that 21-0 romp against the Pirates! — still haven’t won a series since the first one of the season. The Blackhawks are rumored to be not quite finished with their lost season, but it would take a deeply deranged, twisted individual to tune in and find out.

And then there are the Bulls, who have found more ways to suffer than any pretty good team should. Unofficial season motto: “There’s no business like woe business.” For one more night — a Game 5 in Milwaukee on Wednesday that they almost certainly can’t win — the no-show must go on.

We’ll never know how the Bulls would have fared against the mighty Bucks had they been at full strength, Lonzo Ball and all. We do know they didn’t come close to measuring up with all other hands on deck, as losses by 30 and 24 points in Games 3 and 4 at the United Center made abundantly clear. As it was, a team that played sub-.500 basketball since the All-Star break, got manhandled by all the true contenders and withstood more injuries than most was already staggering to the finish line.

But then came Tuesday’s news that All-Star Zach LaVine had been placed in the NBA’s coronavirus health and safety protocols, unable to travel to Milwaukee with the team and in doubt for Game 5. With fellow starting guard Alex Caruso in concussion protocol and unlikely to be available, a series the Bulls weren’t going to win anyway has devolved into kind of a meaningless exercise.

Even setting aside the possibility that free-agent-to-be LaVine’s Bulls career is over — what’s a couple hundred mil between friends, anyway? — the postseason has been one big bummer. LaVine not getting to go down with a fight in his first time in the playoffs is the rotten cherry atop the whole mess.

“It sucks,” Nikola Vucevic said.

And not only that.

“It’s frustrating and it sucks,” DeMar DeRozan said.

Billy Donovan, as steady as they come and rarely one to complain, sounded after Tuesday’s practice like a coach who has had just about enough.

“This has been going on for us all year long,” he said. “I mean, this is not anything that’s new to us. Whether it’s been Patrick Williams breaking his wrist, whether it’s been Coby [White] being out with a shoulder, then out with Covid, Zach being out with Covid, ‘Vooch’ being out with Covid, DeMar being out with Covid, Alex having a hamstring issue, a foot issue, I mean, it’s gone on the whole, entire year.”

There’s plenty he left out, too. And now he has to break out the JV squad in a win-or-go-home game against the NBA’s defending champions? It can’t be much fun. No offense, of course, to White, Ayo Dosunmu or anyone else.

Where are Adam Mokoka, Shaquille Harrison and Walt Lemon Jr. when you really need them, right?

Hey, here’s a fun fact: Bulls end-of-the-bencher Matt Thomas scored a career-high 25 points on his Senior Day at Iowa State. He also hit the final 28 free throws of his college career. So what if it was way back in 2017? This guy clearly has the clutch gene. Could it be that the answer to all the Bulls’ problems is right under Donovan’s nose?

No, it wasn’t a serious question. Get ready, though, for a heavy dose of Javonte Green. Did you know Green is the first Radford alum to make it to the NBA? You probably did considering it gets mentioned whenever the Bulls are on national television and Green is in the game. Come to think of it, does anyone know a single other thing about the man?

It doesn’t matter. This will all be over soon enough.

For this Bulls team — tired, gasping, its best work far behind it — there are no solutions. It’s not the end of the world, but it is too bad it’s ending like this.

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Bears, Byron Pringle ‘in a good place’ after arrest in Florida

Bears general manager Ryan Poles said he was disappointed in wide receiver Byron Pringle’s arrest on charges of reckless driving and driving with a suspended license Saturday in Florida, but maintained his faith in the Pringle’s character and said the Bears and Pringle “are in a good place.”

“I know him very well. And it’s not a reflection of who he is at all,” said Poles, who was with the Chiefs personnel department for Pringle’s four seasons with the Chiefs in 2018-21. “You don’t want your guys in the news at all … [so] it’s a disappointment. But we had a good conversation about it. We’re in a good place. We’ll keep [the details] internal.”

Pringle was stopped by a Florida Highway Patrol officer near Pringle’s home in Wesley Chapel, Fla. on Saturday after he was observed squealing his tires, burning rubber and “doing a donut” in his 2016 Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat sports car. He was arrested after a check on his driver’s license revealed it had been suspended in February.

Pringle, 28, signed a one-year, $4 million contract with the Bears in free agency that includes $2 million in incentives. He had 42 receptions for 568 yards (13.5 avg.) and five touchdowns with the Chiefs, and is expected to play a bigger role with the Bears in 2022.

Piccolo Award winners

Defensive end Robert Quinn and running back Khalil Herbert were honored as the veteran and rookie winners of the prestigious Brian Piccolo Award for 2021 at a ceremony at Halas Hall on Tuesday.

The award, which is voted on by teammates, honors players who best exemplify the courage, loyalty, teamwork, dedication and sense of humor of Brian Piccolo, a Bears running back who died from embryonal cell carcinoma at 26 in 1970.

Quinn set a Bears record with 18.5 sacks with 17 tackles-for-loss as an outside linebacker in 2021. Herbert, a sixth-round draft pick from Virginia Tech, rushed for 433 yards on 103 carries (4.2 avg.) and two touchdowns last season.

Like Piccolo, Herbert was a star running back from Broward County, Fla. “I had a little knowledge [about the Piccolo story], being from South Florida,” Herbert said. “He went to St. Thomas Aquinas [in Fort Lauderdale], which is not too far down the street from me. I gotta go watch this move [Brian’s Song]. I haven’t seen it yet, so I’m excited to go watch it.”

Off the bus running

Though quarterback Justin Fields will be the obvious focus as coordinator Luke Getsy installs the new offense, a more efficient running game is getting some underlying buzz.

“I’m excited,” Herbert said. “I definitely think we’re going to use our run game this year, and it’s gonna allow us to open up the rest of the offense.”

Getsy came from the Packers, who — with Aaron Rodgers at quarterback — effectively used two running backs. David Montgomery and Herbert look like a good fit in that model.

“Definitely,” Herbert said. “Up there they use both those backs really well and balance them out. lot. It’s definitely exciting that they know how to do it and in this offense, I think we’ll be able to do that.”

Unsung hero

Poles gave a shout-out to Bears director of football systems Mike Santarelli for diligent behind-the-scenes work in preparing the personnel department for the draft.

“He does our system, our database,” Poles said. “I’ve been really demanding on him just in terms of making last-minute changes with our technology so our tools and visuals we’re using to make decisions and make them fast are up-and-running. He’s one an unbelievable job.”

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DE Robert Quinn all in with Bears amid potentially rocky transition season

Bears defensive end Robert Quinn wasn’t dialed into the team’s busy offseason, but he caught the bullet points.

He knew that hiring general manager Ryan Poles and coach Matt Eberflus would bring change. He knew they offloaded his pass rush partner, Khalil Mack, in a trade to the Chargers.

And he knew he could be next.

“Hopefully my resume or my production from last year gives me a little weight to keep my foot in the building,” Quinn said. “[But] it’s a business. You see Khalil Mack getting traded.

“I didn’t expect to go anywhere, or want to go anywhere, but this is a crazy business.”

Quinn’s had enough craziness throughout his 11-year career and prefers the continuity even if it means riding out a transitional season amid the Bears’ rebuild.

He went through his own transition in 2020, when he struggled to acclimate to the Bears’ defense, battled injuries and became so miserable he didn’t want to go to Halas Hall. But that all cleared up for him last season, and he set the franchise record with 18.5 sacks.

That version of Quinn is worth every penny of his five-year, $70 million contract, and he’s in an advantageous position to keep it up.

While Quinn turns 32 next month, that’s not necessarily a problem at his position. Over the past decade, there were 18 double-digit sack seasons by players 32 and up. Former Bear Julius Peppers put up 11 as a 37-year-old for the Panthers in 2017.

Additionally, Eberflus is implementing a 4-3 defense that will shift Quinn back to his natural position. Quinn was so detached from the Bears’ coaching search that he wasn’t aware Eberflus was a 4-3 guy until someone mentioned it to him several days after his hiring. He made it work at outside linebacker last season, but he has been adamant that he belongs at defensive end.

The Bears are high on Quinn beyond his production, and he could be a vital influence as they lay the groundwork for their future. He bristled at a reporter using the word “rebuild,” presumably because it implies tanking or the team not having any real standards for the upcoming season. He wants to be a pillar of professionalism, and there’s value in that, too.

That attitude was a big reason why his teammates voted for him for the Brian Piccolo Award, which goes to a rookie and veteran who reflect Piccolo’s determination, courage and other qualities. Running back Khalil Herbert won the rookie honor.

The award was particularly meaningful to Quinn, who has long been familiar with Piccolo’s story. Piccolo was diagnosed with cancer in 1969 and died at age 26. Quinn, meanwhile, believed he was facing the end when doctors diagnosed him with a brain tumor at 17.

“When I truly found out who he was… and to hear what he had to overcome and how he approached things — I just try to make the most out of today because tomorrow ain’t promised,” Quinn said. “The way I kind of approach life after hearing from a doctor you’ve got a week to live: There ain’t too much that can bring you down after that.”

Quinn’s tumor eventually was determined to be benign, and he did not have it removed. He survived, but the effect of seeing how quickly he could lose his life shaped him permanently.

“I remember looking at my mom for I don’t know how long, kind of [in] disbelief,” he said. “But after a couple of days, I came to grips with it: I’m about to leave this world.

“So I was trying to go out as happy as possible, and I guess from there on out, I just tried to live that same way because we all go through bad things — it’s just how you approach it and make the most out of your situation. So I’ve been blessed to still be here.”

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White Sox’ Eloy Jimenez has surgery to repair torn tendon; timeline for return still 6-8 weeks

White Sox outfielder Eloy Jimenez underwent surgery Tuesday morning to repair a torn hamstring tendon behind his right knee. Jimenez, who suffered the injury running out a ground ball in Minnesota Saturday, is expected to miss six to eight weeks.

The hamstring strain involved a tendon that connected the hamstring to the back of his right knee, general manager Rick Hahn said Tuesday. It’s the same procedure catcher Yasmani Grandal had last season and Lance Lynn had this year.

“On the positive side of things we have some track record here and are still pretty confident in that six to eight week” return, Hahn said.

But “that can adjust as we go through his recovery and rehabilitation,” Hahn said.

The surgery was performed at Rush Oak Brook Surgery Center.

Hahn also said third baseman Yoan Moncada (oblique) could begin a minor league rehab stint at Triple A Charlotte this weekend and that Luis Robert (groin) will probably return to the lineup Wednesday.

Closer Liam Hendriks felt a back spasm during the Sox’ 6-4 loss to the Twins Sunday, and would seem to be doubtful Tuesday when the Sox open a three-game series against the Royals at Guaranteed Rate Field, although manager Tony La Russa wasn’t ruling out the possibility of Hendriks being available.

The Sox returned home from an 0-6 road trip through Cleveland and Minneapolis Sunday night, and Jimenez was further examined and evaluated Monday.

Jimenez joined eight players on the injured list: Right-handers Lynn (right knee), Ryan Burr (shoulder strain), Joe Kelly (biceps nerve) and Jonathan Stiever (right lat surgery), left-hander Garrett Crochet (Tommy John surgery), Moncada (oblique) and outfielder Yermin Mercedes (broken hamate bone).

Right-hander Lucas Giolito (abdominal strain) and outfielder AJ Pollock (hamstring) returned from the IL Sunday and Friday, respectively. Robert (groin) and Josh Harrison (shoulder) did not play in the weekend series against the Twins.

NOTE: Right-hander Matt Foster was reinstated from family medical leave list, and outfielder Adam Haseley was optioned to Triple-A Charlotte before the game Tuesday.

*Johnny Cueto is expected to make his second start for Charlotte Thursday.

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White Sox TV’s Jason Benetti will be lead voice for Peacock’s Sunday MLB package

White Sox TV voice Jason Benetti will be the play-by-play voice for Peacock’s MLB package of Sunday games, according to sources. An official announcement is expected Wednesday.

Peacock, NBC’s streaming service, will debut its 18-game “MLB Sunday Leadoff” on May 8 with the White Sox-Red Sox game, which is scheduled to start at 10:30 a.m. Central. Peacock has exclusivity until 12:30 p.m. Central, when the rest of the Sunday slate can begin.

Benetti’s national profile has increased in the last few years. He has become a popular announcer on ESPN’s college football and basketball broadcasts, and he called baseball on his first Olympic broadcasts at the 2021 Tokyo Summer Games, which aired on NBC. He also has filled in on Bulls games for NBC Sports Chicago.

Benetti will continue to work in the fall and winter for ESPN, but the network’s MLB Statcast, which Benetti has hosted opposite “Sunday Night Baseball,” is being shelved in favor of the new KayRod cast with Michael Kay and Alex Rodriguez.

Earlier on Tuesday, Peacock announced that Ahmed Fareedwill host “MLB Sunday Leadoff.” Fareed was a host and reporter for NBC Sports Bay Area and NBC Sports California from 2013-18, covering the Giants and A’s. Since 2019, Fareed has served as a host and reporter on a variety of NBC Sports properties.

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Rebuilding? Remodeling? Either way, Bears GM Ryan Poles has heavy lifting

Bears general manager Ryan Poles didn’t exactly recoil when asked Tuesday whether he was rebuilding. But he pursed his lips and glanced to the sky for a second.

“The ‘rebuild’ thing is, like, super-sensitive,” he said.

The Bears know fans don’t want to hear the word. The team won’t use it, either. But it’s clear that, in his first few months on the job, Poles has taken the long view in trying to reshape a roster that was in tatters when he took over for Ryan Pace.

Poles traded Khalil Mack, the face of the franchise, to the Chargers for a second-round pick and let receiver Allen Robinson leave via free agency. Akiem Hicks, James Daniels, Jakeem Grant, Eddie Goldman and Danny Trevathan are gone. In their place, Poles signed only four players to free-agent contracts of more than one season.

The Bears are paying $45.1 million in dead cap charges in 2022, third-most in the league. And that number — what the Bears contribute to the salary cap for players not on their team — could still go up.

Poles prefers to describe the Bears’ roster renovation like the home improvement shows he watches with his wife late at night. Think Chip and Joanna, not a wrecking ball.

“You might have to redo some countertops over here, some fresh paint over there,” he said. “Some rooms are good. You don’t need to touch them. So that’s kind of the thought process there. That’s not a rebuild.”

So if Poles doesn’t like the word “rebuilding,” how would he describe what the Bears are doing?

“We’re constructing a very good football team,” he said. “Regardless [of] how you use whatever term that is, we just continue to add talent. And young talent, older talent, whatever it takes to make the best team possible.”

Now that Poles has taken a sledgehammer to the Bears’ problem areas, he gets his first major chance to add young talent during this week’s NFL draft. The Bears don’t have a pick in the first round Thursday, but they have they have three Friday — two in Round 2 and one in Round 3.

Poles is unlikely to trade up during the draft, but remains open to moving back in the second and third rounds to acquire more picks–if an offer met the Bears’ needs.

“Where is that pick located in the draft?” he said. “And can I still get a quality player at that level as well? Also, you can accumulate on the back end and package things up and move them again. So really it’s just the volume and where the draft is deep at certain positions.”

It’s certainly deep at receiver and offensive line, the positions where the Bears need the most help. There are veteran receivers available, too — the 49ers’ Deebo Samuel has requested a trade, and the team that acquires him would be expected to pay him like one of the league’s top pass-catchers before he plays a down.

Poles admitted that dealing for any veteran receiver is “always intriguing,” but said he’d rather stay disciplined, both in terms of protecting his future draft picks and the Bears’ salary cap space. As of now, the Bears’ are projected to have the most cap space in the NFL in 2023.

Don’t expect him to make a splash trade for a pass-catcher, then.

“It will benefit us to make sure we draft well and develop our own guys,” Poles said.

The Bears will pour all they can into developing quarterback Justin Fields, for whom Pace traded the Bears’ 2021 and 2022 first-round picks. At the NFL Scouting Combine, Poles said the Bears conducted a historical look at quarterbacks who made second-year leaps and found they had one receiver they trusted when times got tough. The Bears then signed Byron Pringle and Equanimeous St. Brown to one-year deals — neither figures to be the security blanket that Fields needs.

Tuesday, Poles tried to walk back what was interpreted as a mandate to find Fields help– or at least tried expand the notion of what that means.

“You could say he needs receivers, receivers, receivers,” he said. “But he needs blocking, too, and he also needs balance in terms of running the ball efficiently and getting that done up front and then you can do some play action pass stuff, then you can do different things. Turnovers. Maybe a returner to flip the field to score more points. So it’s all connected.

“That’s really why the mindset is to get the best players on this team as possible. If I get too lopsided and be like, ‘I’ve got to do this specific thing,’ I think that’s where you lead into big mistakes.”

The Bears figure to draft a receiver to help Fields, whether Poles will say it out loud or not. But they need major draft-day help at offensive lineand cornerback, too –and some at safety and defensive line, too.

Hammer in hand, they still have a lot of work to do.

“Every draft is important,” Poles said. “Any time you can bring in new, young talent that can create competition and help get better … And obviously with the way free agency is, you get a rookie contract, you get a little bit of time to keep tweaking things and improve.”

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Blackhawks’ Patrick Kane proud of his performance this season in light of still-nagging injury

Patrick Kane has looked so much like his normal self this season –and produced so much like it, too — that his still-undisclosed nagging injury, once a topic of major concern, has been practically forgotten.

That is, it has been practically forgotten by everyone else. Kane himself, while racking up 92 points through 76 games in the third-highest scoring season of his career, has been reminded of it by pain and discomfort every night.

“I’m proud of myself in some ways, for sure, [about] the way this season went and the way I was able to perform,” Kane said Tuesday. “But I still think I need to be at another level coming into next year. That starts with just having a good summer and getting 100% healthy. … I really want to make sure my body’s feeling good and that I’m able to do the stuff that I want to [do].”

Indeed, he has been quietly inhibited health-wise all year.

“I was able to get myself ready pretty much for every game, and I definitely give the training staff a lot of credit for that, but it probably wasn’t where I needed it to be,” he added. “There are certain things on the ice that maybe you feel limited with.”

Kane has been alluding to his injury for more than a year now –it seemed to be more visibly affecting him last spring, during the latter half of the 2021 season — without disclosing many details. He admitted Tuesday there are some procedures available for his issue but he’s not considering any at the moment.

While rehabbing that injury this summer, Kane also expects to meet “more than one” time with general manager Kyle Davidson to “talk about certain things.” He’ll certainly want to get a clearer sense of Davidson’s rebuilding plans and how he may or may not fit in.

For now, though, Kane is still talking — as he has all season –as if he expects to stay in Chicago. He said he “really, truly believes” that there are “parts of our team that can come back next year, surprise some people and win a lot of hockey games.”

Davidson might inject in him a dose of reality this summer about what the Hawks’ rebuild will entail, but Kane is looking toward the Kings and Rangers’ examples to stay optimistic.

“You can win and still be in a rebuild,” he said. “There are teams that have accelerated that. You look at LA — they had some young guys that came in and maybe exceeded some of maybe their front-office expectations, and all of a sudden, they’re in a spot where they can sign guys like [Phillip] Danault and trade for [Viktor] Arvidsson and they’re a better team.

“[It’s the] same thing with the Rangers, right? They put out that memo a couple of years ago that they’re rebuilding, and all of a sudden, they’re one of the best teams in the league a couple of years later. Obviously [when] you bring a guy in like [Artemi] Panarin, that helps. Or [when] a guy like [Igor] Shesterkin…comes to the forefront. Youneed those young guys obviously to take next steps, but it could be done quicker than maybe some people think.”

Kane, always a believer in himself, thinks he personally could boost that youth development process.

Alex DeBrincat’s continued presence could, too. Kane went out of his way Tuesday to make it clear DeBrincat’s fate will significantly affect his fate.

“If [Alex is] here and if he’s a big piece, then that makes it easier for me, too,” he said. “Because I’m playing with him every day and he’s such a good player and it makes it fun to be out there with him. We’ll see how it all shakes out.”

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Bulls’ Zach LaVine enters NBA coronavirus health and safety protocols

The Bulls have spent much of the regular season dealing with adversity.

Whether it was injuries, players entering the health and safety protocols like it was a turnstile, or even a very memorable flagrant-2 that derailed the year more than the Bulls were willing to admit, it’s seemingly been one thing after another.

The gut punches didn’t stop coming on Tuesday.

Just before the afternoon practice ended and the Bulls headed up to Milwaukee, the team announced that All-Star Zach LaVine had entered the health and safety protocols for the coronavirus, putting his availability for Game 5 highly in doubt.

It was the second time this season LaVine was in the protocol, and the third time in the last year.

This comes after Alex Carusogoing in the concussion protocol on Monday. He remains day-to-day for Game 5.

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Chicago Fire Department makes progress, but not enough, toward ending racial, sexual discrimination

A Chicago Fire Department that remains 91% male and 64% white has made some, but not all, of the changes needed to stop sexual and racial discrimination and protect employees who complain about it from retaliation, a new report concluded Tuesday.

Last year, Chicago’s now-former Inspector General Joe Ferguson shined a glaring spotlight on the white male bastion of city government and demanded immediate changes in policy, training and employee protection.

The audit was accompanied by a survey in which 73 of all 285 respondents, both male and female — that’s 26% — reported experiencing sexual harassment “at least once” at CFD.

Even more troubling was the rate of sexual harassment of women. Out of 45 female survey respondents, 28 — 62% — reported being sexually harassed at CFD. The harassment included sexually suggestive remarks, open displays of sexually suggestive material, aggressive leering or staring.

On Tuesday, Acting Inspector General William Marback released a follow-up report analyzing the corrective actions taken by CFD over the last year under the leadership of Annette Holt, the first woman to serve as Chicago fire commissioner.

Of the five corrective actions recommended in Ferguson’s original audit, only one has been fully implemented: the suggestion that CFD create and implement “written guidelines instructing” Internal Affairs Division staff on “how to receive, process and refer complaints involving discrimination or sexual harassment” to the department’s Equal Employment Opportunity Division.

Appointment of a Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Officer to focus on “issues of diversity, discrimination and sexual harassment” has been stymied. No funding for the position was included Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s 2022 budget.

The companion suggestion to “recruit a diverse applicant pool that reflects the racial make-up of Chicago” has been slowed by the fact that “CFD does not select new candidates every year.”

The recommendation to train Internal Affairs staff to handle complaints about discrimination and sexual harassment “in a trauma-informed manner” was characterized as “partially implemented.”

CFD has worked with the Chicago Police Department to “develop training on trauma-informed concepts for its IAD investigators.” But that training so far has focused on “applying those techniques to sexual harassment complaints.”

Two other recommendations were characterized as “substantially implemented.”

A “Core Values Statement” and a so-called “Honor Our House Initiative” was developed to “further protect members from acts of discrimination, sexual harassment and retaliation” in a way that acknowledges the unique challenges posed by the fact that “many members live together while at work,” the report states.

Also, during the initial audit, the Fire Department “changed their complaint procedures to provide more anonymity for members making complaints,” the report states.

“We urge the department to fully implement a CFD-specific training on discrimination and sexual harassment to supplement the EEO training its members already receive,” Marback wrote in a letter that accompanied the follow-up report.

“Once fully-implemented, OIG believes the corrective actions reported by CFD may reasonably be expected to resolve he core finding noted in the audit.”

The Chicago Fire Department’s long, documented history of discrimination and racist incidents has triggered a parade of lawsuits, multi-million-dollar settlements, policy changes and back pay.

In 2013, Chicago spent nearly $2 million — plus $1.7 million in legal fees — to compensate dozens of women denied firefighter jobs because of a discriminatory test of upper body strength that City Hall has now scrapped.

Three years later, a dozen women accused the Chicago Fire Department of devising two new physical agility tests that were equally biased against women.

In 2014, a payroll auditor for CFD filed a federal lawsuit against the city — armed with a finding of discrimination by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission that upheld her sexual harassment charge against former Fire Commissioner John Brooks.

Four years later, five female paramedics filed a federal lawsuit accusing their superiors of sexual harassment and alleging the fire department “directly encourages” the illegal behavior by failing to “discipline, supervise and control” its officers.”

Allegations of sexual discrimination also forced CFD change its policy impacting pregnant employees and nursing mothers.

Even with that history, quotes attributed to survey respondents were troubling.

One female employee complained: “Women are treated like garbage.” Yet another respondent reported being forced to endure “racist photos and language at predominately white” firehouses.

Also in the report: instances of men relieving themselves with the door open; sleeping arrangements where women were sent to undesirable areas of the firehouse; and a refusal to assist with equipment and moving victims.

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