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‘Craziest 45 seconds of my life.’ Tornado tears through western suburbs, over 100 homes damaged, several people injuredon June 21, 2021 at 9:20 pm

A tornado ripped through the western suburbs late Sunday night, damaging more than a hundred homes and injuring several people, including a woman in critical condition.

The tornado touchdown was confirmed about 11:10 p.m. near Route 53 and 75th Street in Woodridge, the National Weather Service said. The tornado — packing winds of more than 100 mph — also hit portions of Naperville, Downers Grove, Darien and Burr Ridge, smashing cars, ripping roofs off homes, downing power lines, shearing off garage doors, uprooting large trees and spewing debris thousands of feet into the air.

Naperville reported at least five people taken to Edward Hospital, one of them in critical condition. At least 125 homes were damaged, 16 of them considered uninhabitable. In Woodridge, three adults were taken to hospitals, according to Lisle-Woodridge Fire District Deputy Fire Chief Steve Demas.

Emergency crews continued going door to door checking on residents into the morning. As the sun rose, more and more people came out of their homes, some walking their pets as they surveyed the damage, many taking photos and videos in disbelief.

“Unbelievable,” a woman said while staring at a home missing its roof and a wall in Woodridge. Around her, generators hummed and a tractor began clearing streets and pushing away fallen trees.

Many people said they were already in bed when the sirens went off. Some recalled the moment of silence before the rain and wind picked up fiercely.

One neighbor called it the “craziest 45 seconds of my life.” Others said it sounded like a train passing over their homes and they could feel the vibrations. “As fast as it came, it was gone,” Joseph Palacios said.

“This doesn’t happen around here,” Palacios said. “This is something totally new and it’ll probably never happen again… It’s shocking to see the devastation, all the trees are just gone, people’s houses — you don’t see this here.”

Palacios comforted his wife as she wiped tears from her eyes. “It’s hard seeing it in the daylight,” she said.

“It definitely is because it’s home,” her husband added. “It’s quiet, it’s peaceful here… Just to see it torn up, it’s obviously never going to look the same ever again.”

Nate Casey, 16, strummed his guitar as he sat in a lawn chair with his mother, Bridget Casey, in their driveway around 4 a.m. The entire second floor of their house was gone, and their garage was partially destroyed.

The home is in the 7800 block of Woodridge Drive, believed to be one of the areas hit hardest by the storm.

Nate said he was watching TV when the storm rolled through. “I just heard a loud crash and I’m thinking, ‘Oh, what are my brothers up to?’ I go look and I see the sky, and then I hear my brothers screaming from the room.”

Nate, a student at Downers Grove South, helped his mother get his three younger siblings to the basement. He grabbed some of his camping equipment and scout gear just to be safe before going down himself.

“I just can’t believe it happened, you know? It’s not something that you see too often or at all, and it’s just scary that everything just comes crashing in,” Nate said. “Something that I was happy to see, that was not broken, was my dad’s ashes, but there’s really nothing else. It’s all material, I’m still worried about the bearded dragon that’s stuck up there but we’re going to get him in the morning.”

He said he was waiting for the streets to be cleared so his aunt could get them.

“It’s been long,” Bridget Casey said as she pulled a blanket tighter around her shoulders. “Just trying to make sure that we can get everything taken care of, we have all the important stuff and waiting for the roads to be cleared enough so my sisters can come.”

Bridget Casey said she plans to live with her sister while their house gets repaired, though she doesn’t know how long that will take.

“I was just happy that everybody was OK,” she said.

A person who lives behind Casey, brought her some personal items, including pictures and her children’s birth certificates, that he found in his backyard. “That means the world to me,” she said. “They didn’t have to do that.”

Down the street, Donna Suchecki joined a few of her neighbors in a driveway around 3:30 a.m. They sipped wine and moonshine out of blue plastic cups and talked about the damage.

“It’s overwhelming, I think we’re … all of us are like, ‘Oh my God, this really happened.’ It’s kind of a dream, you see it on TV, you see shows, you see stuff like that on tornados and … then you come out here and you see the cops, you see the fire trucks and stuff and you’re just like, ‘Wow.’ … We got lucky, it could’ve been something really seriously,” Suchecki said.

Heaps of trees covered Suchecki’s front lawn, but “luckily nothing hit” the house, she said. Her fence was smashed under a tree, though she said it needed to be replaced anyway.

“When I see this in the morning tomorrow, we’ll deal with it when we have to,” Suchecki, 45, said.

Across the street, two cars sat untouched on a slab of cement where the garage once was. Suchecki said it was uprooted and tossed into the backyard, where it hit a power line, leaving the block without power.

Storm damage in Naperville's Ranchview neighborhood Monday, June 21, 2021.
Storm damage in Naperville’s Ranchview neighborhood Monday, June 21, 2021.
Rich Hein/Sun-Times

“It could be worse,” said Suchecki. “It’s crazy to go through this, that’s a traumatic event.”

The tornado lifted debris 10,000 feet into the atmosphere, “a clearcut sign to us that we have a tornado of some significance,” said weather service meteorologist Matt Friedlein.

Based on the damage, the tornado’s wind speeds were likely between 111 and 135 mph, Friedlein said. Surveyors were inspecting damage Monday to confirm if other potential tornados hit areas including Aurora and Hobart, Indiana.

In Naperville, officials said they were still assessing the damage and checking on residents.

“Our first priority was making sure that the families were OK, but now we are moving on to handling the damage,” said Linda LaCloche, Naperville communications director.

“We have power outages in the area and have electrical teams checking on that. We also had some gas leaks reported, so Nicor Gas is going door to door to shut off all the gas lines.”

Crystal Porter was on her way home from her mother’s home in Joliet when she got a tornado warning alert. She said it took her five attempts to find a way to her home in the 2700 block of Everglade Avenue.

Ultimately, the retired military veteran had to move a tree to do so. After checking her dogs, Porter walked around the streets to assess the damage.

“I couldn’t believe it. I’ve lived here for 27 years and I’ve never seen trees come down here like this. Ever,” Porter said.

Porter noticed firefighters doing a search and rescue at a partially destroyed home and removing a cage filled with doves. With the owners not home, Porter grabbed a dog crate from her garage and rescued the birds.

“At least they’re not left out in the street,” she said.

Last year, a tornado touched down on Chicago’s North Side and traveled three miles into Lake Michigan. Winds of 110 mph took down trees and cut power to thousands, but no serious injuries were reported.

In 2015, five people were injured in a a tornado that hit Coal City, about 50 miles southwest of Chicago.

In 1990, the strongest tornado ever recorded in the Chicago area tore through Plainfield, killing 29 people and injuring more than 300. The twister cut a 15-mile swath on its way to Crest Hill.

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‘Craziest 45 seconds of my life.’ Tornado tears through western suburbs, over 100 homes damaged, several people injuredon June 21, 2021 at 9:20 pm Read More »

Key player in ‘absolutely massive’ Chicago-area gambling ring avoids prison timeon June 21, 2021 at 9:15 pm

The feds say Todd Blanken played a key role in “an absolutely massive, long-term, very profitable” international Chicago-based gambling ring.

Their investigation led early last year to charges against Blanken, Mettawa Mayor Casey Urlacher, and eight others. On Monday, a prosecutor even hinted that a well-known sports figure “whose name we all know” participated.

But Blanken is now the latest defendant in the case to avoid prison time, as U.S. District Judge Virginia Kendall sentenced Blanken on Monday to six months of community confinement, as well as two years of probation.

Though Kendall said the “absolute breadth of this case was remarkable,” she noted that Blanken had moved to Arizona, “made some tough decisions” and has “broken from this community.”

“I think that is admirable,” Kendall said.

The judge told Blanken his sentence means he will be living in a community center, but he will be able to work.

“I fully understand what I did was wrong,” Blanken said before he was sentenced, apologizing to his family and the judge.

Blanken, 44, is the second of 10 people charged in a February 2020 gambling indictment to be sentenced. He’s the first since Donald Trump pardoned Urlacher in the final hours of his presidency last January, sparing the brother of Chicago Bears great Brian Urlacher.

Last fall, Kendall also gave three months of home detention to Eugene DelGiudice, an elderly defendant who Assistant U.S. Attorney Terry Kinney described Monday as “seriously, seriously ill.”

Blanken pleaded guilty on Feb. 12. Kinney later wrote in a court memo that Blanken “played a critical role in the operation and management” of the gambling ring led by Vincent “Uncle Mick” DelGiudice, which involved more than 1,000 gamblers around Illinois and in other states. On Monday, Kinney said the ring’s reach was international.

Vincent DelGiudice is the son of Eugene DelGiudice.

Kinney called it “one of the largest book making operations ever” in Chicago’s federal court district. He has previously tied it to the mob-connected gambling ring once run by bookie Gregory Paloian, of Elmwood Park.

The prosecutor wrote that Blanken served “as a trusted runner” for Vincent DelGiudice and two of his most significant agents — Matthew Knight and Justin Hines — and also recruited gamblers for Vincent DelGiudice.

Vincent DelGiudice also pleaded guilty in February. Knight pleaded guilty in March, but charges are still pending against Hines.

Kinney said Blanken managed a number of gamblers and shared with Vincent DelGiudice “a generous portion of their losses.” He collected from two of the most significant gamblers who bet with Vincent DelGiudice, collecting regular payments of $1,500 from one gambler who owed about $600,000 to Vincent DelGiudice.

Vincent DelGiudice gave Blanken Christmas bonuses of $7,000 in 2017 and $12,000 in 2018, according to the prosecutor.

Meanwhile, Kinney said Blanken worked in the mandatory arbitration office of the Cook County courts, calling it “blatant hypocrisy” that “an employee of the court system was a key player in this illicit gambling enterprise.”

Blanken’s defense attorneys insisted in their own memo that “there is no evidence that any threats were made by him to collect any gambling losses.” They said Blanken has been working at Costco to support his family.

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Key player in ‘absolutely massive’ Chicago-area gambling ring avoids prison timeon June 21, 2021 at 9:15 pm Read More »

Woman killed in West Side shootingon June 21, 2021 at 9:40 pm

A woman was fatally shot Saturday on the West Side.

She was walking outside about 6:10 p.m. in the 3300 block of West North Avenue when someone opened fire, striking her in the back, Chicago police said.

The 37-year-old was taken to Stroger Hospital, where she was pronounced dead, police said.

Autopsy results released Monday ruled her death a homicide, the Cook County medical examiner’s office said. Her name hasn’t been released.

Area Five detectives are investigating.

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Woman killed in West Side shootingon June 21, 2021 at 9:40 pm Read More »

Afternoon Edition: June 21, 2021Satchel Priceon June 21, 2021 at 8:00 pm

A memorial is seen on Sunday for Gyovanny Arzuaga, who was shot and killed in the 3200 block of West Division Street on Saturday. Gyovanny was in a car with Yasmin Perez, who also was shot and critically wounded. | Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Today’s update is a 5-minute read that will brief you on the day’s biggest stories.

Good afternoon. Here’s the latest news you need to know in Chicago. It’s about a 5-minute read that will brief you on today’s biggest stories.

This afternoon will be partly sunny with a high near 72 degrees. Tonight will be mostly clear with a low around 53. Tomorrow will be sunny with a high near 76.

Top story

Man killed, girlfriend critically wounded in attack during Puerto Rican Day Parade in Humboldt Park: ‘Such an amazing friend’

“Happy Father’s Day,” read one message on the black poster board. “RIP Gyo,” read another.

The sign was taped to a pole just feet from where Gyovanny Arzuaga was shot to death and his girlfriend — the mother of their two children — was critically wounded during the Puerto Rican Day Parade in Humboldt Park Saturday night.

Arzuaga, who had just turned 24, and the woman, 25, were ambushed by up to three people around 9:15 p.m. in the 3200 block of West Division Street, according to Chicago police.

Arzuaga was taken to Saints Mary and Elizabeth Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead, police said. The woman was hit in the neck and taken to Stroger Hospital in critical condition.

A police spokeswoman said there was a crash before the shooting and a crowd had surrounded the couple’s car. Video circulated on social media appears to show the couple being dragged from the car and shot as they lay in the street.

Police would not comment on the video Monday morning. No one was reported in custody, and no descriptions or images of the attackers were released.

A memorial was erected Sunday near the site of the shooting. Loved ones lit candles and left balloons and bouquets of flowers for Arzuaga.

“He was just there to have a good time and go back home,” said his friend, Jae Pacheco, who had planned to meet up with him later in the evening.

Read our reporters’ full story here.

More news you need

  1. Mayor Lori Lightfoot vowed to hunt down everyone involved in the “horrific” Humboldt Park shooting that killed Arzuaga. Lightfoot said the police have “promising leads” after tips from the community and again called for Chief Judge Tim Evans to order the full resumption of criminal trials.
  2. Chicago police know who fatally stabbed a Maryland graduate student on a weekend afternoon in the South Loop and are “scouring the various homeless encampments downtown,” Lightfoot said. Anat Kimchi, 31, had been working on her doctoral degree in criminology and criminal justice.
  3. The mayor also said today that the Chicago Police Department needs to do a better job of recruiting to counter the recent wave of retirements. City Hall reporter Fran Spielman says Lightfoot “responded to the mass exodus by stating the obvious” — that it was “a challenging time” for police recruitment and that CPD needs to be “creative” in its recruitment approach.
  4. Emergency crews continued checking on residents this morning after a tornado tore through the western suburbs last night. Read our full story on the aftermath of the devastating storm, which one neighbor called the “craziest 45 seconds of my life.”
  5. The cleanup effort in Woodridge, where the tornado first touched down, has already begun. As chainsaws growled and bulldozers crunched over splintered tree limbs, a resident eyed the meager pile of possessions she’d managed to save — a stack of family photographs, her wedding ring, a ceramic figurine of the Virgin Mary.
  6. The University of Illinois joins a host of private schools in requiring all students to be vaccinated against COVID-19 before returning to campus next fall. The flagship U. of I. system in Urbana-Champaign, Chicago and Springfield appears to be the first public university in the state to require the shots.
  7. If the owner of Parkway Gardens wants a casino license, it might need to show some love to the 1950s-era, low-income housing complex. David Roeder provides an update after owner Related Midwest put the South Side complex on the market, then pulled it off amid code violations.

A bright one

7-year-old honored for making 911 call that helped save his mother

Daniel Armani sat inside a fire truck Friday, with his hands on the large steering wheel and feet unable to reach the floor while wearing a plastic fire helmet and an ear-to-ear smile.

It was all part of the 7-year-old’s reward for helping to save his mom’s life.

Daniel, who goes by D.J., called 911 on May 30 at 6 p.m. because his mother was having an epileptic seizure. He then calmly and cooly relayed critical information while comforting his mother.

“I’ve been here for 18 years and handled thousands and thousands of calls, but this guy was a step ahead, especially for being so young,” said Dianne Statts-Mareci, the Chicago Fire Department communications officer who handled the call.


Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times
Daniel “D.J.” Armani was honored Friday for saving his mother’s life by calling 911 after she had an epileptic seizure.

Statts-Mareci said the call was transferred to her from police communication officer Andrea Jones when it was determined to be a medical issue. Jones stayed on the line, and both of them took information from D.J. that helped save his mother, Tarissa Clark.

“We get a lot of calls from kids but you could hear in his voice that something wasn’t right,” Jones said, explaining why she transferred the call to Statts-Mareci. Both said D.J. remained cool and provided them with important information.

“It’s key because all the information we ask is necessary to get the right kind of help,” Statts-Mareci said.

Read Bob Chiarito’s full story here.

From the press box

Your daily question ☕

How has the pandemic changed how you plan for your future?

Email us (please include your first name and where you live) and we might include your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.

Reply to this email (please include your first name and where you live) and we might feature your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.

On Friday, we asked you: What advice do you have for this year’s graduates? Here’s what some of you said…

“Don’t worry too much about what others think of you. Be worthy, be honest, and love yourself. All else will follow.” — Carolyn Jackson

“Advance your education. Whether it’s trade school, college or the military, anywhere you can learn to support yourself and contribute.” — Kate Tallent

“Our society is not too far gone. Follow your dream and add something good for the next generation along the way.” — Pauly Dee

“Find a trade — electrician, plumber, etc. That’s the way to go. [Those jobs] will always be needed and make great money.” — Guy Battista

“Nothing in this world is free or handed to you, do the work.” — Brian Berg

“Live your life with your mind focused on 10 years down the road. What are you doing and what did you do to get where you are now?” — Genevieve Williams

“Keep moving forward and believe in yourself, regardless of what others may say!” — Mary Stapleton

Thanks for reading the Chicago Afternoon Edition. Got a story you think we missed? Email us here.

Sign up here to get the Afternoon Edition in your inbox every day.

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Afternoon Edition: June 21, 2021Satchel Priceon June 21, 2021 at 8:00 pm Read More »

Rita Moreno says she almost said no to Steven Spielberg on ‘West Side Story’ rolePatrick Ryan | USA TODAYon June 21, 2021 at 8:37 pm

Rita Moreno plays Valentina, a new role, in the “West Side Story” remake due in theaters in December. | 20th Century Studios

A cameo would have been ‘a distraction,’ says the actress from the 1961 original, but ultimately she agreed to a heftier part.

Rita Moreno almost said no to Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” remake.

The EGOT winner starred in the original 1961 movie musical, which tells the story of star-crossed lovers caught between rival street gangs the Sharks, who are Puerto Rican, and the Jets, who are white. The film took home 10 Academy Awards including best picture.

Moreno, 89, won the best supporting actress Oscar playing Anita, the dynamic and fiercely loyal girlfriend of Sharks leader Bernardo (George Chakiris) and a confidante to his younger sister, Maria (Natalie Wood). But the actress was hesitant when Spielberg called her up and asked her to appear in his new adaptation (in theaters Dec. 10), written by “Angels in America” playwright Tony Kushner.

“I almost wet my knickers. I couldn’t believe this was Steven Spielberg on the phone, whom I so admired,” Moreno said, speaking in support of her new documentary “Rita Moreno: Just a Girl Who Decided to Go for It” (in theaters now).

“But then I had the courage to say, ‘I don’t think I could do a cameo. I think it would be a severe disservice to this movie — it’d be a distraction,’ “ she adds. “And he said, ‘No, no, no. This is a real part. Tony Kushner wrote this part for you.’ ”

Moreno portrays a new character, Valentina, who is Doc’s widow. (In the 1961 movie, Doc, played by Ned Glass, owns a candy store where the Sharks and the Jets hang out.) Valentina is a reworked and expanded version of the Doc character, and sings a rendition of the classic song “Somewhere” in the movie’s first trailer.

In addition to the role, Spielberg also made Moreno an executive producer on the film.

“I felt I had things to tell him about the other production and about Latinos,” Moreno says. “He really went to such lengths to make sure he got that right,” even hosting a town hall at the University of Puerto Rico in San Juan in late 2018, where he invited feedback from students, faculty and others before making the movie.

“He said, ‘Tell us what you think about “West Side Story,” tell us what you think about us doing it again, tell us what you think about the original movie,’ “ Moreno says. “And there were some people who said they were offended by some of the things they saw in the film. First of all, the makeup was kind of one color for the Hispanics, whereas Puerto Ricans are a mélange of French, Spanish Spain, Dutch and Taíno Indian, which is a copper color.”

Moreno, who was born in Humacao, Puerto Rico, and moved to New York when she was 5, resented producers’ decision to darken her skin for the original “West Side.” The issue resurfaced last when Moreno defended Lin-Manuel Miranda, whose new film “In the Heights” has come under fire for its lack of Afro-Latino actors in lead and supporting roles. (Moreno has since apologized, saying, “I was clearly dismissive of Black lives that matter in our Latin community.”)


United Artists
Rita Moreno says her skin was darkened for her starmaking role as Anita in 1961’s “West Side Story.”

“I remember saying to my makeup man once on the original ‘West Side Story,’ ‘Why do I have to wear such dark makeup? I’m not that color,’ ” Moreno says. “And he literally said to me, ‘What, are you a racist?’ He really said that and I was so astonished that I shut up, because I didn’t know what to say to that. If I said, ‘No, I’m not a racist,’ I feel he would not believe me, so I let it drop. But it was shocking.”

As well as the use of brownface, the first “West Side” has been criticized for casting white actors in Hispanic roles and perpetuating stereotypes about Puerto Ricans. But Spielberg and Kushner “corrected all that stuff,” Moreno says. In the update, “every Hispanic [character] is actually Hispanic.”

Read more at usatoday.com

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Rita Moreno says she almost said no to Steven Spielberg on ‘West Side Story’ rolePatrick Ryan | USA TODAYon June 21, 2021 at 8:37 pm Read More »

Baseball Hall of Fame will set induction ceremony for full capacityAssociated Presson June 21, 2021 at 8:28 pm

The Baseball Hall of Fame will plan for full capacity for lawn seating area at this year’s induction ceremony.
The Baseball Hall of Fame will plan for full capacity for lawn seating area at this year’s induction ceremony. | Tim Roske/AP

Hall of Fame officials said Monday that tickets will not be required for the event’s free lawn seating area. The ceremony is scheduled for Sept. 8 on the grounds of Clark Sports Center.

COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — The Baseball Hall of Fame’s induction ceremony is returning to its standard seating format, opening the door for another big crowd.

Hall of Fame officials said Monday that tickets will not be required for the event’s free lawn seating area. The ceremony is scheduled for Sept. 8 on the grounds of Clark Sports Center and will honor class of 2020 members Derek Jeter, Marvin Miller, Ted Simmons and Larry Walker. No one was selected this year.

Inductions have been held outside the center since 1992 and the largest crowd was estimated at 70,000 for Cal Ripken Jr. and Tony Gwynn in 2007. The second-largest crowd on record — an estimated 55,000 people — attended the last induction ceremony, in July 2019. Crowds have surpassed 50,000 at five of the past six ceremonies, from 2014-2019. Last year’s was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The Hall of Fame’s annual awards presentation will remain an indoor, television-only event, on July 24. Al Michaels (2021) and former White Sox broadcaster Ken “Hawk” Harrelson (2020) will receive the Ford C. Frick Award for broadcasting excellence, Dick Kaegel (2021) and Nick Cafardo (2020) will receive the Baseball Writers’ Association of America Career Excellence Award, and David Montgomery will receive the Buck O’Neil Lifetime Achievement Award from last year.

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Baseball Hall of Fame will set induction ceremony for full capacityAssociated Presson June 21, 2021 at 8:28 pm Read More »

CPD must do better job of recruiting, hold more frequent exams to counter tidal wave of retirements, mayor saysFran Spielmanon June 21, 2021 at 7:02 pm

Chicago Police Supt. David Brown welcomes recruits back as training resumes with social distancing precautions in place in July 2020.
Chicago Police Supt. David Brown welcomes recruits back as training resumes with social distancing precautions in place in July 2020. | Sun-Times file

Law enforcement is “not viewed in the most positive light,” the mayor said. “It won’t change and it won’t get better if we don’t have diverse people in our neighborhoods who look like the people in the neighborhoods they are sworn to serve and protect.”

The Chicago Police Department needs to do a better and more aggressive job of recruiting minorities and hold more frequent entrance and promotional exams to counter a tidal wave of retirements, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Monday.

The Chicago Sun-Times reported this week that more Chicago police officers have retired this year than in all of 2018.

That’s according to the latest figures from the police pension board, which show that, from January through June, 363 officers have left the Chicago Police Department, with another 56 expected to retire in July.

Lightfoot responded to the mass exodus by stating the obvious. It is a “challenging time, no question about it” for police retention and recruitment in Chicago and across the country and CPD needs to be “creative” to counter that trend.

“We’re gonna be reaching out to veterans in the military. The superintendent has plans to have a designated recruiting team, not unlike what the armed services do, as well,” Lightfoot said.

“But we’ve got to do a better job of making sure that we’re bringing new talent, diverse talent into the pipeline to be Chicago Police.”

The mayor argued there are “three ways the city directly creates middle class”: with jobs as teachers, firefighters and police officers.

“We’ve got to do a better job, even in these challenging times when law enforcement is not viewed in the most positive light. It won’t change and it won’t get better if we don’t have diverse people in our neighborhoods who look like the people in the neighborhoods they are sworn to serve and protect,” Lightfoot said.

“We’ve got to get on a better schedule of giving tests. That was slowed, obviously, as a result of COVID. We have limited capacity at our training academy. But we’ve got to get more people into the pipeline soon.”

Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara has blamed “absolutely miserable” working conditions for the mass exodus, meaning 12-hour shifts, canceled days off, the constant threat of punitive action and the four-year wait for a new police contract.

“This department just doesn’t give a damn. You are literally treated like a rented mule and ridden until you can’t go any more. And then, on to the next. Today’s hero, tomorrow’s zero,” said Catanzara, who has been at loggerheads with Lightfoot.

“They are not supported. They are in fear that this department has become so retaliatory for every little, even honest mistake. It’s just not worth risking their job, their employment history or, even worse, their freedom.”

What will it take to turn that around?

“A new mayor, a new superintendent and cleaning house over at 35th and Michigan to get rid of a lot of the upper echelon who just are going along with this policy, including the ones who are sitting silent, letting this go on and not speaking up because they’re trying to protect their gold, bright pension and they don’t want to get dumped because they know how bitter and vindictive this mayor can be,” Catanzara said.

The FOP president says the exodus from the Chicago Police Department would be “hundreds” of officers higher if you factored in the number of officers waiting for the police contract to be hammered out and the number of younger cops requesting “leaves of absence” so they can transfer to “other departments” in the suburbs and elsewhere.

“Just hearing phone call after phone call of how many surrounding police departments now have CPD members in the last year as lateral transfers. They’re all officers under ten years. They’re the ones who [normally] want to stick around forever and they’re not sticking around,” Catanzara said.

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CPD must do better job of recruiting, hold more frequent exams to counter tidal wave of retirements, mayor saysFran Spielmanon June 21, 2021 at 7:02 pm Read More »

MLS planning a lower-tier player development league in 2022Anne M. Peterson | APon June 21, 2021 at 7:29 pm

Major League Soccer is launching a lower-tier professional league aimed at developing young players from its academy system. 
Major League Soccer is launching a lower-tier professional league aimed at developing young players from its academy system.  | Jewel Samad/AFP via Getty Images

The new league, which will rank below the second-division USL Championship, will include teams affiliated with current MLS clubs as well as independent teams.

Major League Soccer is launching a lower-tier professional league aimed at developing young players from its academy system.

The new league, which will rank below the second-division USL Championship, will begin play next year and will include teams affiliated with current MLS clubs as well as independent teams.

The name of the league has not been announced. Some 20 clubs are expected to participate in the first season, which will start in March and run through the fall, concluding with a championship game in December.

MLS Deputy Commissioner Mark Abbott said the new league is an outgrowth of the MLS Next platform and team academies, providing elite players who may not be quite ready for the top division with an accelerated pathway to a professional career.

“The key missing piece for us was this place where our young players could get meaningful minutes in high-level competition,” he said.

MLS Next, launched last year, is designed to fill the gap after U.S. Soccer disbanded its development academy.

Beyond player development, MLS also sees business opportunities for clubs participating in the new league, especially in markets that don’t currently have an MLS teams. Likewise, it will provide career opportunities for coaches and support staff.

Abbott said the new league is not meant to supplant the USL Championship or League One, but he expects the MLS clubs currently participating in those leagues to migrate. The new league has applied for Division III sanctioning from U.S. Soccer.

“Our anticipation, is that the USL, who we have a great relationship with, will remain a very strong and vibrant league, and continue to do as much for player development as they have and continue to help grow the sport in this country,” Abbott said. “I think we’re going to see that league continue to thrive. But over time I would anticipate that most (MLS) clubs will all ultimately be in this league.”

In a statement, the USL said: “The more pathways there are for young players across the country, the better. We wish MLS success in their efforts and look forward to continuing our work together to grow the sport of soccer in the United States.”

The new league will be run out of MLS headquarters in New York. A commissioner has not yet been named.

The league is considered by MLS to be crucial to player development in the United States as a record 20% of roster spots on MLS clubs are filled this season with players from the academy system.

As a pro league, players will earn salaries unless they aim to retain college eligibility.

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MLS planning a lower-tier player development league in 2022Anne M. Peterson | APon June 21, 2021 at 7:29 pm Read More »

Third-party food delivery services held responsible for collecting city restaurant taxFran Spielmanon June 21, 2021 at 7:25 pm

A restaurant advertises Uber Eats in the Coconut Grove neighborhood in Miami in November 2019. | Lynne Sladky/AP
Uber Eats, Grubhub, DoorDash and other third-party online order and delivery services would have to collect Chicago’s restaurant tax and send the money along to the city, under a proposed ordinance advanced out of committee on Monday. | Associated Press file photo

At the behest of City Comptroller Reshma Soni, the City Council’s Finance Committee agreed to clear up “confusion” about who is responsible for collecting the city’s 0.5% restaurant tax.

Third-party food delivery services that thrived during the pandemic would be required to collect and remit Chicago’s percent restaurant tax, under a mayoral plan advanced Monday to eliminate tax collecting “confusion.”

The City Council’s Finance Committee shifted responsibility for tax collection from restaurants to third-party delivery companies like GrubHub and Uber Eats, DoorDash and Postmates, setting the stage for final approval at Wednesday’s City Council meeting.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s pandemic relief package also calls for: extending the 15% cap on restaurant delivery fees until 180 days after all pandemic-related restrictions on restaurants are repealed; authorizing both delivery and carryout of cocktails-to-go and shaving up to three weeks from the time it takes for new restaurants to get licenses to open in spaces occupied by previously shuttered establishments.

City Comptroller Reshma Soni said the decision to hold delivery companies responsible for collecting and remitting the 0.5% city restaurant tax that generated $39 million in annual revenues before the pandemic will eliminate “confusion” caused by a recent change in the state’s process for collecting state sales taxes on restaurant meals.

“Some of the delivery companies were keeping the city’s share of the tax, but they weren’t remitting those taxes to us. Some weren’t keeping the city’s share. They were actually giving it to the restaurant. But, they didn’t clearly tell the restaurant that the city’s share of taxes was going back to the restaurant. So the restaurant was confused if they should be paying or not. And then some, weren’t collecting at all,” Soni told aldermen.

“There were so many different things being done and there were no set guidelines by us similar to what the state had done. This will help delivery companies to know they should follow the same process as the state.”

Ald. Ray Lopez (15th) was equally concerned about Chicago taxpayers being shortchanged by third-party parking apps like SpotHero, which may or may not be collecting and remitting the city’s parking tax.

“I don’t think this is a situation that is unique just to the restaurant or carry-out industry. We see the same situation happening with parking and the third-party apps. They’re supposed to be charging taxes — are getting taxes paid to them for parking and the question of remittance goes unanswered,” Lopez said.

“I hope that, as the committee approves this today and votes on it on Wednesday that you and the budget team take a look at all third-party apps who are dominating this economy now as we come out of COVID. … We need to make sure that, as they are thriving, that they are also paying the taxes that consumers are paying and ensuring that money makes its way the various coffers where they belong.”

Soni agreed there are “others we should be looking at as well. … I’m glad you mentioned parking in particular.”

In other action:

• The Finance Committee OK’d eight park improvements bankrolled by $14.8 million in tax increment financing funds. The largest of those projects — for $8.9 million — would renovate a field house, baseball field, water, court, stable area and Conservatory Children’s Garden at Garfield Park on the West Side.

• Aldermen also agreed to pay $1.825 million to compensate five female paramedics who accused their bosses of sexual harassment and alleged the Chicago Fire Department “directly encouraged” the illegally behavior by “failing to discipline, supervise and control its officers.”

Some aldermen questioned why Chicago taxpayers are on the hook for the bad behavior of a few “knuckleheads and stalkers.”

Finance Committee Chairman Scott Waguespack (32nd) and First Deputy Corporation Counsel Renai Rodney told them that’s what the law requires.

“This is why it’s so important that City Council insist that departments have proper training and discipline for engaging in acts they shouldn’t be doing — like sexual harassment, like workplace injuries, like police shootings,” said Ald. Michele Smith (43rd).

“By providing proper training and holding employees to that standard of conduct, the city doesn’t get stuck holding the bag for the bad [behavior] of individuals.”

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Third-party food delivery services held responsible for collecting city restaurant taxFran Spielmanon June 21, 2021 at 7:25 pm Read More »

Chosen Few Picnic & House Music Festival postponed; virtual event scheduledEvan F. Mooreon June 21, 2021 at 7:29 pm

The 2020 Chosen Few Picnic & House Music Festival has been postponed.
The 2020 Chosen Few Picnic & House Music Festival has been postponed. | Kathy Chaney/ Sun-Times

Chicago’s house heads will have to get their fix online.

UPDATE: The lineup for the virtual event was announced June 21.

The COVID-19 pandemic has put yet another popular Chicago music festival on hold as the city’s house heads are feeling the brunt of the new normal.

The Chosen Few Picnic & House Music Festival, which generally brings in 40,000 attendees annually, was scheduled for July 4 in the South Side’s Jackson Park neighborhood, has been postponed, according to an official announcement Friday.

In its place, a virtual event scheduled for the same date, will feature a free, live-streamed performances and DJ sets from the Chosen Few DJs, and more.

“The decision to transition our beloved ‘Woodstock of House Music’ from a mass in-person gathering to a virtual one this year was not an easy one,” said picnic officials in a statement. “Like many of you, we want nothing more than to get together with our fellow house music lovers in person, just as we have done for the past 29 Julys. However, given the extraordinary time we are in, and the critical health dangers associated with large gatherings, we know this is the safest course of action for our picnic attendees, guest performers, vendors, and neighbors.”

Tickets purchased for the 2020 festival will be honored at the 2021 event. Ticket holders also have the option to submit a request for a refund at https://explore.seetickets.us/refund-form-chosen-few-2020/. Refund requests must be made by 11:59 p.m. on May 22, 2020.

Details about this year’s virtual event on July 4 will be announced in the coming weeks.

In addition, for the first time in the festival’s history, organizers are asking the public for online contributions to help support COVID-19 charitable efforts. Details about making the donations will also be announced in the coming weeks.

Chosen Few DJ Alan King says a lot of thought will go into the virtual event.

“We’re going to encourage people to go out in their backyards and set up a tent like they would have if they went to the Chosen Few [picnic], but in their backyard or on their rooftop,” said King.

Earlier this week, the city canceled some of Chicago’s biggest summer music events, including the Blues and Gospel festivals.

South Side summer event cancellations/postponements due to the COVID-19 pandemic include the Silver Room Block Party, South Shore Summer Festival and the Taste of WVON, among others.

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Chosen Few Picnic & House Music Festival postponed; virtual event scheduledEvan F. Mooreon June 21, 2021 at 7:29 pm Read More »