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Duckworth, Salvi agree Bears should move to Arlington Heights in Sun-Times, WBEZ, WTTW forum

Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth and her Republican challenger Kathy Salvi couldn’t be further apart on gun control, abortion rights, inflation, or just about any other key issue facing residents in Illinois and beyond.

But they did find one rare patch of common ground during a televised forum Thursday night, as both Senate candidates agreed the Chicago Bears should ditch Soldier Field in favor of greener pastures in Arlington Heights.

“I do think they should go to Arlington Heights with a new stadium, because more people will get to it, and I think there’s a greater chance of having greater growth out there,” Duckworth said when tossed that political football during the forum sponsored by the Chicago Sun-Times, WBEZ and WTTW.

A move to the Democrat’s former congressional district is far from a done deal, but the incumbent from Hoffman Estates said if any public money is involved, it should come with “tremendous strings so that the taxpayers are compensated for any type of subsidies that they [the Bears] are provided with.”

Salvi, the Mundelein attorney vying to prevent a second Duckworth term, quickly took the handoff, saying: “I’d love to see the Chicago Bears in the Arlington Heights area, too, but don’t you love Soldier Field? It’s an iconic place, a lot of history. But if they want to move to Arlington Heights, let’s keep the Bears here in Illinois, that’s for sure.”

That was about the extent of the candidates’ time in sync during an hourlong question-and-answer session that saw Salvi consistently circling back to attack Duckworth as a “radical extremist” on abortion rights and a “rubber stamp” vote for President Joe Biden’s policies that the challenger claims are fueling inflation.

“I’m running because the economy’s in the tank, and you’re part of the cause of that. Crime is out of control, and you’re part of the cause of that,” said Salvi, 63.

Republican U.S. Sen. challenger Kathy Salvi prepares for her forum with Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth at WTTW Studios Thursday evening.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Duckworth, 54, stood by her record in Washington, pointing to legislation she helped pass to stiffen punishment for straw purchasers, or people who illegally buy guns for people who aren’t allowed to have them.

“The voters sent me to Washington to find those common-sense solutions,” Duckworth said.

With the nation’s ongoing gun violence epidemic, the sitting senator said “we need to pass an assault weapons ban and a high-capacity magazine ban that will get those guns off the streets.”

Duckworth went after Salvi for her “A” rating from the National Rifle Association.

“She’s never going to vote for an assault weapons ban,” Duckworth said of Salvi, who said the emphasis should be on treating mental illness rather than restricting firearms.

Asked if they own guns, both candidates said no. Salvi said some of her adult children own firearms with concealed carry licenses, for “target practice and for protection.”

Salvi tried to tie Duckworth the rising Chicago crime through her “reckless” support of Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, and she also went after the senator for supporting COVID-19 regulations that shut down schools early in the pandemic — a decision made by Gov. J.B. Pritzker.

Duckworth repeatedly suggested Salvi was confused about what was covered by federal, state or local laws.

“I think she’s running for mayor of Chicago in the municipal elections next year, not for Senate,” Duckworth cracked. “We’re here to talk about November.”

Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth prepares for a forum with Republican challenger Kathy Salvi at WTTW Studios Thursday evening.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Salvi also briefly tripped up in saying Duckworth supports “nine-month elective abortion, taxpayer funded,” which she labeled “radical and extreme.”

The senator said she’d vote to codify abortion rights into federal law “consistent with Illinois law, which is at the 24 weeks at the point of viability.

“My daughters, I’m not gonna let them grow up in a world where they have fewer rights than I do,” Duckworth said. “We’ve had Roe v Wade now for 50 years, [rights] which have now just been ripped away, and frankly Kathy Salvi and Republicans are pushing for a nationwide abortion ban.”

Salvi called herself “pro-life, pro-woman and pro-child.”

“I support exceptions and regulation of big-business abortion,” she said, noting she supports abortion rights in cases of rape, incest or those that risk the life of the mother.

Without any knockout moments in the forum, Salvi continues to face an uphill battle in her bid to unseat Duckworth, who was shortlisted as a potential running mate for Biden in 2020.

Duckworth outpaces Salvi in terms of both name recognition and fundraising. The senator entered the home stretch of the election with more than $7.6 million in her campaign fund, compared to about $204,000 for Salvi, whose bid is largely self-financed.

Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth (left) and Republican challenger Kathy Salvi prepare to participate in a forum at WTTW Studios Thursday evening.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Duckworth served two terms in a suburban U.S. House seat before she beat GOP former Sen. Mark Kirk in 2016 to become Illinois’ second-ever woman senator and the first double amputee ever elected to the U.S. Senate. The Army National Guard veteran lost her legs during a tour of duty in Iraq in 2004.

Salvi’s only previous political foray ended in a second-place finish in a 2006 GOP primary for a suburban congressional seat.

A Chicago Sun-Times/WBEZ poll earlier this month had Duckworth leading Salvi about 50% to 36%, with 5% of respondents supporting Bill Redpath, a financial consultant from West Dundee who is the Libertarian candidate on the ballot. About 9% of likely voters in the survey were undecided.

That same poll suggests it’s unclear whether the candidates’ support for a new suburban Bears stadium will help or hurt them with voters. About 31% of those surveyed said they think the Bears should move to Arlington Heights, compared to 29% who said they think the team should stay put. About 39% weren’t sure.

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Duckworth, Salvi agree Bears should move to Arlington Heights in Sun-Times, WBEZ, WTTW forum Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon October 27, 2022 at 8:50 pm

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


MAGA flip-flops

Men from Blago to Bolduc are trying to sing a new song.


Just like we told you

The Bears finally make their play for public money to build their private stadium.


The choice is yours, voters

MAGA’s Illinois Supreme Court nominees are poised to outlaw abortion in Illinois—if, gulp, they win.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon October 27, 2022 at 8:50 pm Read More »

Bears GM Ryan Poles shows discipline yet again in trading DE Robert Quinn

The hallmark of general manager Ryan Poles’ rebuild of the Bears has been his discipline. It’ll take at least another year to see if his plan is prudent, but there’s no question that he has stuck to the course he plotted when he took the job in January.

That was to his detriment, it seemed, in free agency when he made only budget-friendly signings at offensive line and wide receiver rather than aggressively fortifying those positions to better facilitate quarterback Justin Fields’ progress.

But in the case of trading defensive end Robert Quinn to the Eagles for a fourth-round pick Wednesday, Poles reiterated that he’s looking far down the road with the rebuild. He did not fall into the trap of believing the Bears were better than their 3-4 record after the thrilling blowout of the Patriots.

It’s still a rebuild. And Poles is a realist.

That’s a key distinction between him and his predecessor, Ryan Pace.

Pace either couldn’t or wouldn’t see what mostly everyone knew about his recent Bears teams: They weren’t close. His inability or unwillingness to accept that led to the mess that Poles has had to clean up. Seeing clearly, rather than seeing what you want, is essential to the job. It comes down to facts, not feelings.

It’s another test Poles has passed. The longer he has been on the job, the more many of his moves have looked smart.

He staked his employment on hiring coach Matt Eberflus, who continually conveys competence. He played hardball with linebacker Roquan Smith and won. And now he has resisted the emotional rush of a big win and held steady in his plan for 2023 and beyond.

“In the moment it’s tough because you lose a guy who’s a captain who we all voted for, but you understand they’ve got business to do upstairs and they’ve got the best interest of the organization going forward,” tight end Cole Kmet said Thursday. “You understand that, but it sucks to lose a guy like Rob.”

Poles talks about running the Bears like he’ll be doing it for the next decade, and while this franchise isn’t known for giving general managers time, his actions have followed his words.

Here’s what Poles has lined up for the coming offseason: A full slate of draft picks for the first time since 2016, plus the fourth-rounder from the Quinn trade and an NFL-best-by-far $125.7 million in salary cap space.

That’s nearly double the next highest team, the Falcons, and while he’ll spend some of it on Smith, wide receiver Darnell Mooney, cornerback Jaylon Johnson and possibly Kmet and running back David Montgomery, Poles will still have plenty of resources to add talent.

A sensible timeline for the Bears is to use this season to free themselves from bad contracts, compete for the playoffs next season and ramp up to real contention in 2024 — all contingent, of course, on Fields being their franchise quarterback rather than having to reset that pursuit in the draft.

But make no mistake, this was the season to tear it down and start the rebuild.

Pace had that chance after the 2019 season but convinced himself the Bears were on their way up when it was quite the opposite.

Poles’ Bears actually are on their way up, but the important aspect for him to gauge is how quickly they’re moving. It’s still a multi-year rebuild, regardless of the win Monday, and veering from that approach would’ve been a mistake. As good and beloved as Quinn was, it always made sense to trade him. If there’s any criticism, it’s that Poles didn’t do it earlier.

As a first-time general manager, Poles still has to prove to everyone that his plan is a good one, but he’s already shown without a doubt that he’s committed to do it.

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Bears GM Ryan Poles shows discipline yet again in trading DE Robert Quinn Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


MAGA flip-flops

Men from Blago to Bolduc are trying to sing a new song.


Just like we told you

The Bears finally make their play for public money to build their private stadium.


The choice is yours, voters

MAGA’s Illinois Supreme Court nominees are poised to outlaw abortion in Illinois—if, gulp, they win.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show Read More »

Chicago Cubs Rumors: Trea Turner identified as a targetJordan Campbellon October 27, 2022 at 10:30 pm

Before the Chicago Cubs offseason can begin in earnest, the Major League Baseball World Series between the Houston Astros and Philadelphia Phillies will need to be concluded first.

Once concluded, teams will prep for the start of free agency and the Cubs are expected to be among the more active teams this winter.

Reading between the lines and taking into account what Cubs’ President of Baseball Operations Jed Hoyers told reporters earlier this month during his annual end-of-the-season press conference, the goal for the 2023 season is clearly for the team to return to contention.

“Spending Intelligently” has been the buzzword for the Cubs this offseason and that likely means that the team will be swimming in the deep end of free agency.

NBC Sports Chicago insider David Kaplan did a radio hit on KNVO in Iowa earlier this week and shared some insights regarding the Cubs’ offseason:

Los Angeles Dodgers free agent shortstop Trea Truner is a target.The Chicago Cubs have an interest in free agent first baseman Jose Abreu on a short-term deal if he does not return to the Chicago White Sox.The Cubs will be in play for Japanese starting pitcher Kodai Senga.The Cubs likely will not be in the market for outfielder Aaron Judger nor starting pitcher Jacob deGrom but Kaplan offered that a short-term, high AAV deal would make sense.

This week is not the first time that Kaplan has mentioned Turner specifically in regard to the Cubs’ offseason plan. In September, Kaplan reported that there is mutual interest between the Cubs and Turner.

Trea Turner would be a great addition to the Chicago Cubs roster in 2023.

With the reporting that has surfaced over the last month, it seems as if it would be an upset if the Cubs were not a landing spot for one of the top free agent shortstops this offseason. Turner and Carlos Correa have been the two most rumored names with an emphasis being made on Correa.

Correa does make more sense for the Cubs over Turner considering that he will not have a qualifying offer attached to him this offseason and is a year younger. That doesn’t mean that the Cubs would necessarily be wrong in identifying Turner as their priority.

He has a unique combination of speed and power which was on display during the 2022 season with the Los Angeles Dodgers as he had a slash line of .298/.343/.466/.809 with 21 home runs and 39 doubles. FanGraphs had Turner as a 6+ WAR player last season.

The more reports that surface linking the Cubs to players in the top-tier of the free agent class this winter, the more clear it becomes that the words from Hoyer after the season are not just lip service. The Cubs want to contend in 2023 and that plan involves spending money this winter.

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Chicago Cubs Rumors: Trea Turner identified as a targetJordan Campbellon October 27, 2022 at 10:30 pm Read More »

ESPN’s Breen named Vin Scully award recipienton October 27, 2022 at 11:50 pm

NEW YORK — Hall of Fame broadcaster Mike Breen will receive the Vin Scully Award for Excellence in Sports Broadcasting, becoming just the second Fordham alumnus to receive the honor given by the university’s media station.

Breen, in his 30th year calling New York Knicks games and the voice of the NBA Finals on ABC, will receive the award from WFUV next Tuesday night. He was a 1983 graduate of Fordham.

Scully began his Hall of Fame broadcasting career at Fordham, where he graduated in 1949. Scully, who died earlier this year, spent 67 years as the voice of the Dodgers, first in Brooklyn and then Los Angeles.

Breen said Thursday in a statement that as a Fordham graduate and broadcaster, “receiving an award named after Mr. Scully is the highest honor I could ever receive.”

Michael Kay, who broadcasts Yankees games on YES Network, is the only Fordham alum to receive the Scully award.

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ESPN’s Breen named Vin Scully award recipienton October 27, 2022 at 11:50 pm Read More »

NBA 2K League bans 7 for gambling violationson October 27, 2022 at 11:50 pm

The NBA 2K League has indefinitely disqualified six players and a coach from any league activity for violating gambling and fantasy rules, it was announced Thursday.

An investigation found that Christopher Lafanette, Dorian Earl Miller and Robert Nastasi of Blazer5 Gaming, Kimanni Ingram of Jazz Gaming, and Zekirri Dennis of Mavs Gaming all wagered or attempted to wager on NBA 2K League games, either on their own or through other individuals, the league said in a statement.

The five players also broke league rules by failing to report any violations or cooperate with the investigation.

Blazer5 Gaming coach Andrew Maxie and player Marquis Gill were also disqualified indefinitely from all league activity for failing to report violations or cooperating with the league’s investigation.

“The integrity of our game is, and always will be, the NBA 2K League’s top priority,” league president Brendan Donohue said in a statement. “We take our obligation to the competition and to our fans incredibly seriously, and we will always act forcefully regarding violations of the rules governing game integrity and the related reporting and cooperation requirements.”

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NBA 2K League bans 7 for gambling violationson October 27, 2022 at 11:50 pm Read More »

Is community oversight of police finally a reality?

On an evening in late September, dozens of people gathered at Malcolm X College on the near west side for the first official citywide meeting to talk about police oversight. The room was packed with community activists, office seekers, journalists, and grieving family members. For many of them, the satisfaction of seeing this long-awaited moment was tempered by the years of neglect preceding it.  

On a dais at the front of the room sat the newly appointed interim commissioners of the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability—the result of decades of community organizing efforts to hold police officers accountable. Each of the seven members—a queer pastor, a political strategist, two lawyers, a nonprofit leader, and two activists—were drawn from different corners of the city. 

As with many of the city’s committees, commissions, and task forces (the holy trinity of symbolic gestures), the interim members were handpicked by the mayor, who did so more than a year after the ordinance that created the commission passed through the City Council. Until permanent members are selected, they are responsible for making recommendations to the bloated police budget, hiring and firing leadership, and setting goals for the department. 

It’s a far cry from the original demands for community oversight of the police pioneered by the Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression (CAARPR), which also demanded the commission be given the power to investigate police misconduct, govern the rules of the department, and approve the city’s contract with the Fraternal Order of Police. Nonetheless, for the people of Chicago, establishing some semblance of civilian oversight was a historic win and a chance to do things differently—or at least they hope.

“We take public comment very seriously,” said Reverend Dr. Beth Brown, one of the seven interim commissioners, as she invited audience members to comment. Like other political circuses in the city, that means two minutes (and nothing more!) for members of the public to express their grievances. 

A litany of pleas and words of skeptical encouragement poured into the mike. Some people begged for the return of loved ones wrongfully convicted. Others interrogated the commissioners. Many denounced the terror incited by members of the Chicago Police Department. Sustained applause followed each speaker. 

After several people spoke, Frank Chapman made his way to the front of the room with the help of a walker, his signature fedora perched on his head. The decades of leading a movement to stop police crimes has weighed on the 80-year-old activist, as evidenced by his laborious pace. When he spoke, the audience fell silent. 

“We’ve come here not just to challenge you . . . but to support you,” Chapman told the commissioners.  

As the lead architect of the proposal for community oversight of the police, Chapman reminded the commissioners that he knows very well what they require to function properly: funding and robust staffing. Last week, the Sun-Times reported that out of the 14 staff positions in the commission, only one has been filled. At a City Council budget hearing, the commission’s executive director Adam Gross reassured dubious alderpeople that more candidates were in the hiring process, but that there would still be vacancies going into the new year. One alderperson questioned Gross about his near 14 percent salary raise included in the mayor’s budget for next year, to which he denied having any involvement. 

“We didn’t do all this organizing to have a lame-duck council,” Chapman went on. His baritone voice sucked the air out of the room. All eyes and ears were on him. He directed his orders not just to the commissioners, but to the rapt audience before him that had made this meeting possible. Whenever Chapman said “all power to the people,” many in the packed room responded in kind.

Perhaps no one emanated Chapman’s urgency more than Chicago’s “concerned citizen” George Blakemore, a regular at public meetings. Sporting his signature hand-painted attire while waving a pointed finger, Blakemore said that the city has been here before, noting the failures of the Office of Professional Standards, the Independent Police Review Authority that replaced it, and the Civilian Office of Police Accountability that followed. Addressing the audience of nodding heads, Blakemore put his assessment of the interim commission bluntly: “I bet you won’t hold them to it.” 

Following the public comments, the commissioners formally fleshed out the commission’s business as the audience patiently looked on. The commissioners elected Anthony Driver as president, adopted rules, and set the next meeting date. They also established committees faster than I could keep count. Oswaldo Gomez, the commission’s interim vice president, noted the lack of a translator and promised to translate materials into Spanish for the next meeting. 

Before the meeting came to a close, the commissioners reminded people to run for a seat in the new district councils. In addition to the commission, the ECPS ordinance established these councils, which will be composed of three elected positions hin each of the city’s 22 police districts. The councils are charged with fostering a better relationship between police and community members. 

With a little over a month before campaign petitions for district council hopefuls are due, interested candidates will have to collect anywhere between 300 to 700 signatures, depending on how many registered voters are in their police district. Candidates for district councils will be on the ballot in next February’s municipal elections. 

Once elected, those members will then nominate 14 candidates for the permanent commission. The mayor will choose seven of the nominees for the city council to approve. 

After two contentious hours, the meeting finally came to a halt. There was a collective gasp for air. Though skeptical, the crowd was also visibly hopeful and quickly dispersed into chatter. As Chapman headed to the doors, he was accompanied by a flurry of handshakes and thank-yous.

Maybe this time would be different. 


CPD officer Frederick Collins has more than 40 misconduct complaints. Now, he’s running for mayor.


But despite delays, progressive alderpersons and activists remain hopeful on ECPS


Lori Lightfoot has hampered the process of installing a police oversight council, activists say, despite making it a major part of her public safety platform during her mayoral run.

Read More

Is community oversight of police finally a reality? Read More »

Police district council races gear up

In the 2023 municipal elections, three candidates will be elected to councils in each of the city’s 22 police districts. Along with the citywide Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability (CCPSA), the councils are the result of decades of work by organizers for community oversight of the police.

District Councils are tasked with improving policing and public safety, getting community input on policing, expanding restorative justice programs, holding monthly public meetings, and nominating members of the CCPSA.

Read “Community oversight of police: finally a reality?” by Kelly Garcia

To be eligible, you must be a registered voter who will have lived in the police district you’re running in for at least one year on February 28, 2023. People convicted of felonies cannot run unless the conviction has been expunged; neither can people who owe the city money. 

Candidates have until November 28, 2022 to collect and submit petitions signed by a required number of eligible voters. The minimum number of signatures is based on how many registered voters are in each district (see list below). To defend their petitions against Chicago’s time-honored tradition of challenging the eligibility of opponent’s signatures, candidates typically try to collect several times the required number of signatures.

Candidate filings checklist

Statement of organization (State Board of Elections)  Nominating petitions signed by eligible voters and submitted November 21-28. Minimum required signatures are below. (Chicago Board of Election Commisioners) Statement of economic interest (Cook County Clerk) Statement of financial interest; file within five days of qualifying as a candidate (Chicago Board of Ethics) To accept donations or spend more than $5,000, file disclosures with the State Board of Elections.
District 1st (Central) 2nd (Wentworth) 3rd (Grand Crossing) 4th (South Chicago) 5th (Calumet) 6th (Gresham) 7th (Englewood) 8th (Chicago Lawn) 9th (Deering) 10th (Ogden) 11th (Harrison) 12th (Near West) 14th (Shakespeare) 15th (Austin) 16th (Jefferson Park) 17th (Albany Park) 18th (Near North) 19th (Town Hall) 20th (Lincoln) 22nd (Morgan Park) 24th (Rogers Park) 25th (Grand Central)
Signatures required277329244400256318198662364236229463420193657403493758314396396519

Below, check out some of the candidates for police district councils who are already gathering petition signatures to get on the February 2023 ballot. Some are running as individuals; others have joined up as slates of three candidates with shared political values and goals. We will update this map periodically as more candidates enter the race.

Eighth District (Archer Heights, Chicago Lawn, Garfield Ridge, Ashburn)

Jason Huff, a city worker who supervises car booting for the Department of Finance, runs a neighborhood watch in the Eighth  District on the far southwest side. Huff’s social media pages regularly tout his volunteer work with Chicago Police Department programs such as youth soccer events and catalytic converter anti-theft efforts. Huff established a campaign committee, Friends of Jason Huff, at the beginning of October, and has filed candidate disclosures. His campaign for District Council was endorsed by mayoral candidate and 15th Ward alderperson Ray Lopez. On October 22, Huff posted a photo of himself gathering petition signatures with 23rd Ward alderperson Silvana Tabares. 

Tenth District (Lawndale, Little Village)

Tanya Lozano has been involved in local and national social justice campaigns for immigrants’ rights, workers’ rights, and against police brutality for her entire life. Her uncle was Rudy Lozano, the assassinated labor and political activist who was an aide to Harold Washington; her activist parents carried on his legacy. At Healthy Hood Chicago, a nonprofit fitness center Tanya founded on the first floor of her family’s Pilsen church, the walls are emblazoned with murals of Malcolm X and Angela Davis, and classes are designed to counter the life expectancy gap faced by Black and Brown people in Chicago. Lozano has indicated an intention to run, but has not yet filed any candidate disclosures. 

15th District (Austin)

Arewa Karen Winters is a community activist who founded the 411 Movement and has worked with Justice For Families and the Chicago Justice Torture Center. Chicago police shot and killed Winters’s 16-year-old great-nephew in 2016. She cochaired Mayor Lightfoot’s Use of Force Working Group, which released its report earlier this month. In August, Block Club reported that Winters said CPD needs to “confront its overwhelming tendency to police Black and Brown communities,” and that district councils “will afford us the chance to not only speak truth to power, but power to power.” Winters has not yet filed any campaign disclosures. 

16th District (Jefferson Park, Norwood Park, O’Hare)

Dan Butterworth, a vice president of member experience at First Financial Credit Union, is currently enrolled in the Citizen Police Academy, a 12-week program run by the police department in suburban North Chicago. Butterworth’s social media posts variously express support for police officers—and also for the Innocence Project, a nonprofit organization that seeks to exonerate people who have been wrongfully convicted. In one such post, he wrote, “citizens must keep a watchful eye to ensure the fine line between safety and liberty is walked.” Butterworth has not filed any candidate disclosures.

19th District (Lakeview, Uptown, North Center)

A slate of candidates—data analyst Maurilio Garcia, parent Jenny Schaffer, and attorney Sam Schoenburg—are running for the 19th District Council. Schoenburg says policing is the government institution that is “least accountable and most shielded from genuine community input.” Garcia says he wants to ensure all residents’ experiences with the police are “positive [and] productive.” Schaffer says she wants to expand the umbrella of emergency services to include people like mental health care professionals, drug rehabilitation specialists, and homelessness response providers. Garcia and Schaffer have each founded antiracist community groups. All three candidates have filed candidate disclosures. The ONE People’s Campaign and 47th Ward alderperson Matt Martin have endorsed the slate.

20th District (Edgewater, Andersonville)

Violence-prevention outreach worker Darrell Dacres, former precinct captain and 40th Ward Office volunteer Deidre O’Conner, and Jewish Council on Urban Affairs organizer Anna Rubin make up a slate of candidates running for the 20th District Council. The slate’s campaign website emphasizes building a community where “every resident is safe, feels safe, and is able to access the services and professionals they need to thrive.” Only Rubin has filed candidate disclosures so far. The ONE People’s Campaign and 40th Ward alderperson Andre Vasquez have endorsed the slate.

24th District (Rogers Park, West Ridge)

Three longtime community organizers—EdVetté W. Jones, Reverend Dr. Marilyn Pagán-Banks, and Veronica I. Arreola—have formed a slate running for the 24th District Council. Jones is a trustee of the United Church of Rogers Park and works with the Circles and Ciphers Youth Organization. Pagán-Banks is the director of the nonprofit A Just Harvest and is a founding member of the Coalition to End Money Bond. Arreola founded the 50th Ward Action Network and worked with The People’s Lobby during the 2019 municipal elections. The slate’s campaign website calls district councils “the most progressive community-led police accountability device in the country” and says “it is important to elect the most progressive voices possible.”   


But despite delays, progressive alderpersons and activists remain hopeful on ECPS


Lori Lightfoot has hampered the process of installing a police oversight council, activists say, despite making it a major part of her public safety platform during her mayoral run.


Alderman Ariel Reboyras’s two proposals were decried as toothless at the last of five community meetings on proposed police reform ordinances.

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Police district council races gear up Read More »

Katie Got Bandz at UniverSoul Circus, a Stevie Nicks night, and more

The UniverSoul Circus returned to Washington Park this year after a break during the initial COVID-19 pandemic lockdown in 2020, to the delight of families looking for a fun excursion. The organization features many BIPOC performers and offers clowns, motorcyclists, dance troupes, contortionists, aerial ballerinas, and plenty of interactive moments with the audience members so the kids can get up and play along. Throughout their run (which goes through Mon 10/31), UniverSoul features guest ringmasters sometimes culled from the community, and tonight rapper and south sider Katie Got Bandz, who recently got featured in Nicki Minaj’s “Super Freaky Girl Queen Remix”) takes the reins. Tonight’s show starts at 7 PM, with more shows scheduled for Sat 10/29 (11:30 AM, 3:30 PM, and 7:30 PM), Sun 10/30 (11 AM, 3 PM, and & PM) and Mon 10/31 at 7 PM. Entry is near S. Cottage Grove at Payne Dr., and tickets are available at Ticketmaster. (SCJ)

Tack Room (1807 S. Allport) is hosting a free night of Stevie Nicks-inspired drag. From 9-11 PM, sip witchy drinks by candlelight while being haunted by a chance to win spooky good prizes. Performer Wanda Screw will be joined by musician Kevan Eftekhari to get all the white-winged doves singing “ooh baby, ooh.” Better break out the platforms and jumpsuits for this one. (MC)

Here are some more music options for tonight with links to past coverage by our music writers:

Reader contributor Jack Riedy teams up with Metro’s Jill Hopkins to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the release of Prince’s album 1999 with a dance party featuring hours of Prince and Prince-related music at Gman Tavern (3740 N. Clark, 8 PM, free, 21+). Trumpeter Marquis Hill visits SPACE in Evanston for “New Gospel Revisited,” a WDCB-sponsored concert (1245 Chicago Ave., Evanston, 8 PM, $20-$25 tickets at Eventbrite, all-ages).R&B artist and Chicago musician Marcus Atom performs tonight at Golden Dagger along with DJ and producer Timmy V (2447 N. Halsted, 8:30 PM, $15 tickets at Ticketweb, 21+). (SCJ)Read More

Katie Got Bandz at UniverSoul Circus, a Stevie Nicks night, and more Read More »