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Chicago Bears announce 2022 Team Captains

Justin Fields leads the list of team captains for the 2022 Chicago Bears

Today, the Chicago Bears announced their team captains for the 2022 season.  In a not-so-surprising move, Justin Fields was named as one of the 2022 captains.  Other Bears joining him are Left Guard Cody Whitehair, Defensive End Robert Quinn, and Linebacker Roquan Smith.

Justin Fields leads a list that shouldn’t surprise anyone here. The Bears traded up in the First round of the 2021 NFL Draft to get Fields. Now, they’ll have him lead the Chicago Bears into the future from the front.  The Bears will be looking for fields to take a big leap from his rookie season, where he passed for 1870 yards, 7 touchdowns, and 10 interceptions.

Cody Whitehair was a day one starter for the Bears, who drafted him in the 2nd round of the 2016 NFL Draft.  He has been a day 1 starter for the Bears, playing Guard and Center, for the Bears since joining the franchise. Whitehair has also shown impressive durability, playing 95 of 97 games available. He will lead a unit tasked with protecting the Bears franchise quarterback, Justin Fields, in 2022.

Robert Quinn is in his 3rd season with Chicago.  Last year he set a Bears franchise record with 18.5 sacks, surpassing Richard Dent’s mark of 17.5. Going into his 12th year in the NFL, Quinn leads a defensive line with a lot of question marks.  He is currently the only Bears defensive lineman with proven superstar ability, with players like Trevis Gipson and Dominique Robinson looking to make a name for themselves behind him.

Roquan Smith was the Chicago Bears 8th overall pick in the 2018 NFL Draft.  He is a two-time NFL Second Team All-Pro and the franchise player on this defense. In 2021, Smith lead the defense with 163 tackles, 3 sacks, and 1 interception. This off-season was murky with Roquan Smith being a training camp “hold-in” while trying to negotiate a new contract with the Bears.  This eventually lead to him requesting a trade from the franchise outright. He will now focus on the 2022 season, and along with Robert Quinn, lead this Chicago Bears defense with a lot of question marks.

In addition to the 4 Season-long captains, the bears announced the week 1 honorary captain in David Montgomery. Mongomery is in a contract year, being drafted by the Bears in the 3rd round of the 2019 NFL Draft.  The Iowa State product has looked the part of a franchise running back in Chicago. Montgomery will have a chance this year to set career marks in just about all statistical categories, as Matt Eberflus and Luke Getsy will run the ball early and often in 2022.

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The Melanin Martha gets rational at the next Monday Night Foodball

Since we left her last June, Jordan Wimby has taken a rational approach to pop-ups.

“The amount of food enslaved people were given by owners was referred to as rations,” says Wimby, aka The Melanin Martha. “Corn or fatback or any of the things that the people in the house didn’t wanna eat. These small portions sustained the lives of Black folks on the plantation. But I’ve kind of reclaimed this term. I’m giving you something that sustains our culture. I’m giving you rations.”

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

The rations will be rich and abundant this September 12 when the Melanin Martha returns to Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s ongoing guest chef pop-up at the Kedzie Inn in Irving Park. For the sequel, Wimby wants to put a big prix fixe plate of classic and reimagined soul food in front of you, featuring a beet salad with whipped lemon feta, candied pecans, crispy fatback and microgreens; a sweet fried buffalo chicken thigh; a vegan turnip-mustard-collard green medley; whipped orange sweet potatoes; and a hunk of salted maple poppyseed cornbread to sop up every last dribble.

It’s a Melanin Martha meat-and-four—meat-and-five, really, counting the banana pudding pop that’s going to cool your metabolic engines when it all winds down.

Wimby, who’s lately been working behind the stick at Rogers Park Social, tells me she’s in beet mode, and she’s hinted that the night’s cocktail, executed by Kedzie owner Jon Pokorny, could very well be, ahem, rooted in Beta vulgaris. Show up at 5 PM at 4100 N. Kedzie and find out. Limited walk-in orders will be available, but preorder right now to lock in all that love.

Meanwhile, prepare yourself for a night of global Asian barbecue with Umamicue and friends on September 19, and a brand-new Monday Night Foodball fall schedule. It’s coming. I swear it.

Kedzie Inn4100 N. Kedzie(773) 293-6368kedzieinn.com

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The Melanin Martha gets rational at the next Monday Night Foodball Read More »

Printers Row Lit Fest embraces Chicago’s writers

Printers Row Lit Fest has been bringing all things literary to the streets of the Printers Row neighborhood for 37 years. The festivities return for the second weekend of September with a packed schedule of events

The festival is many things to many people: a homage to the publishing industry, a shopping spree for book lovers, a postable feast for Bookstagrammers, and perhaps, above all, a place for publishers, journalists, writers, poets, and agents to hobnob. Specifically, it is the place for any writer in the midwest to see and be seen, or, better yet, hear and be heard. 

Two days of live events, spoken word, readings, workshops, and panel discussions will wash over the brawny former industrial zone, and over 100 booksellers will line the streets with their tents full of actual paper books as the last cicada chirps of summer fade. Best of all, the programming is free! What could be more inviting than that? Perhaps a mere dash of sweater weather and a nicely positioned coffee truck on Polk Street could tip it into a rom-com paradise? 

If you plan to stroll the outdoor festival and take advantage of the book stalls and writers events, take a moment to cast your eyes skyward to see some of the historic architecture as well. Nestled in the South Loop, most of the old printer buildings have been converted into fancy lofts and shops. But you can still see some remnants of Chicago’s printing hub glory days (which peaked in the 1880s) in the architecture. The Franklin building (720 S. Dearborn) features a mural of the Gutenberg Bible being printed and tiles of bookbinders and printers along the building’s facade. 

The entire area is so unique that it has landed on the National Register of Historic Places and the “Printing House Row Historic District” is listed as a National Historic Landmark. Stroll over to the Printers Row Park fountain and community garden (0.38 acres of greenery hidden in the Loop at 632 S. Dearborn) and find a moment of rest in this discreet nod to the area’s printing history, featuring concrete benches resembling printers’s blocks and a kaleidoscopic fountain that would make Frank Lloyd Wright blush postmortem. If you need to escape the elements all together, you might wander into Sandmeyer’s Bookstore (714 S. Dearborn) for an authentic vibe and browse the many titles on display (since 1982).

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Printers Row Lit Fest juggles over 100 author appearances and coordinates entertainment for all echelons of the publishing industry—from the romance writer to the political activist—while also providing programming for children (including a Latin American-style puppet show in Spanish and English presented by Carlos Theatre Productions). As of this writing, a full schedule of the weekend’s events had not yet been released, but a steady stream of updates is available at the festival’s Instagram (@printersrowfest). 

Printers Row Lit FestSat 9/10-Sun 9/11, 10 AM-6 PM, S. Dearborn from Ida B. Wells Dr. to Polk and Polk from State to Clark, free, full schedule at printersrowlitfest.org

Even without the full timeline to pour over, the established highlights of this year’s Printers Row Lit Fest are enough to entice a crowd. The emphasis on recognizing Chicago writers is strong and also includes diverse voices who focus on social justice and activism. Danyel Smith,the first Black editor of Billboard magazine, will talk about her recent book Shine Bright: A Very Personal History of Black Women in Pop. Jamie Ford will discuss his current New York Times bestseller The Many Daughters of Afong Moy, and the Emcee Skool organization will leada spoken word workshop and open mike

The festival does not give short shrift to Chicago’s journalists or satirists; perhaps the best known amplifiers of social justice personages and causes in Chicago. The Sun-Times and WBEZ will host a series of panels reflecting on two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, including a conversation between Dr. David Ansell (author of The Death Gap: How Inequality Kills) and Dr. Thomas Fisher (author of The Emergency: A Year of Healing and Heartbreak in a Chicago ER).

The Chicago Public Librarywill host “Voices for Justice: Natalie Moore’s The Billboard,” including a staged reading of excerpts from Moore’s play. The Sun-Times also hosts an in-person episode of their series The Environmental Justice Exchange dedicated to Hazel M. Johnson. Johnson started a movement when she noticed that her neighbors on the south side were suffering from physical ailments associated with pollution, toxins, and poor living conditions, and founded People for Community Recovery in 1979 to advocate for environmental justice. The Sun-Times and Chicago Public Media also host a discussion titled “Social Justice in Chicago: The Mexican Community’s Fight to Stay in the City” hosted by Elvia Malagón (a Sun-Times reporter focusing on social justice topics) with guestMike Amezcua, author of Making Mexican Chicago: From Postwar Settlement to the Age of Gentrification.

Other featured journalists at Lit Fest include Neil Steinberg on his book Every Goddamn Day: a Highly Selective, Definitely Opinionated, and Alternatingly Humorous and Heartbreaking Historical Tour of ChicagoandRay Long on The House that Madigan Built: The Record Run of Illinois’ Velvet Hammer.

Our city’s library pulls its weight at the festival, bestowing their prestigiousHarold Washington Literary Award to Evanston-based Natasha Trethewey (Pulitzer Prize winner and two-term United States Poet Laureate).

The Poetry Foundation is setting up a dedicated poetry tent (on North Dearborn, just south of Ida B. Wells) that will be hosting a stream of emerging and award-winning poets. On Saturday at 2 PM, a panel titled“Our City: Chicago’s Poetic Landscape” will be moderated by scholar Carlo Rotella. Panelists include Daniel Bortzutzky, Ugochi Nwaogwugwu, Elise Paschen, and Sara Salgado. 

Of course, works of fiction set in Chicago will be highlighted at Lit Fest, such as Toya Wolfe’s Last Summer on State Street, Joe Meno’sBook of Extraordinary Tragedies, andthe Chicago Public Library’s “One Book, One Chicago”honoree Eric Charles May (Bedrock Faith). Multiple authors whose books have recently been reviewed by the Reader recently will be present, notably Adam Levin (Mount Chicago) and Adam Langer (Cyclorama).

Fitting examples of Chicago’s outspoken heritage of audience participation and spoken word are rampant at Lit Fest. Some excellent samplings include a Literary Death Match,where four local authors will verbally duel each other in front of a panel of judges. Winners from the Moth live storytelling competition will read their work. An exciting skillshare with the public will occur as staff from The Onion will workshop writing satirical news stories (scheduled for the festival’s main stage on Saturday at 3 PM). 

Printers Row Lit Fest is one of Chicago’s core city triumphs. It’s as Chicago as the Bud Billiken parade and as eternal as a zine-filled Quimby’s Bookstore. If you attend, you’ll be part of the Chicago literary scene! Welcome to the glitterati.

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A century of guaranteed income 

This story was originally published by City Bureau.

Chicago just launched one of the largest guaranteed-income programs in the country. But how long have Americans been pushing for government-backed income as a solution to entrenched poverty and inequality?

The push to solve economic inequality and widespread poverty through a government-backed minimum level of income is nearly a century old, starting after the Great Depression. In the 1930s, populist Louisiana senator Huey Long, who blamed capitalism for the country’s poverty at the time, proposed giving every American a minimum income of $2,000. However, Long was assassinated in 1935 and his plan never came to fruition. 

That same year, a physician and political advocate in Long Beach, California, named Francis Everett Townsend wanted the federal government to establish a guaranteed income program of $200 a month for retired citizens aged 60 or older. The program garnered popular support, and 8,000 “Townsend clubs” across the country lobbied for his program. While President Franklin D. Roosevelt ultimately dismissed Townsend’s pension plan and Congress rejected it in 1939, Townsend’s ideas influenced the Social Security Act adopted as part of Roosevelt’s New Deal.

The idea of guaranteed income surfaced again during the rise of the civil rights movement and the Black Power era that emerged in the 1960s. Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. saw guaranteed income as a path to national justice and equality. In 1966, the Black Panther Party, one of the most active Black political organizations of the era, stated that in an unjust economic system, the federal government owes guaranteed income or guaranteed jobs to its citizens. 

Calls for guaranteed income also came from libertarians and conservatives. In 1962, free market capitalist Milton Friedman proposed giving free money to everyone in the form of negative income tax to reduce the bureaucracy of state welfare programs and further enable free markets. In 1969, President Richard Nixon advocated for the elimination of welfare programs and the creation of a “basic federal minimum,” or a negative income tax. The amount of assistance would decline as incomes rose. However, his idea never came to fruition due to political opposition in Congress. 

President Gerald Ford later brought about the earned income tax credit as part of the Tax Reduction Act of 1975, which was further expanded under President Ronald Reagan. The tax credit, which is still in existence today, is similar to a negative income tax but requires that participants work, because the credit is a fixed percentage of their income. The figure fluctuates based on the number of children listed as dependents and whether people file taxes with a partner. 

Where have we seen guaranteed income in the U.S.? 

The federal government tested negative income tax programs between 1968 and 1980 in areas including Seattle, Denver, New Jersey, and Gary, Indiana. The results showed the cash grants were beneficial overall—some children attended more school, parents pursued continuing education opportunities, and families purchased more nutritious food. Some people, however, worked less and earned less money, a point that opponents of guaranteed income use as evidence that it doesn’t work. Proponents argue that these negative income tax experiments may have underreported earnings and didn’t fully account for the people who forwent short-term income in order to pursue educational opportunities. 

Alaska established the nation’s only large-scale permanent universal basic income (UBI) for nearly all residents, regardless of age, in 1976. Today, Alaskans typically receive about $1,000 to $2,000 annually as a dividend of oil revenues through the Alaska Permanent Fund. Since 1997, the Eastern Band of Cherokees’ casino dividend program has provided around $4,000 per person per year in North Carolina from casino profits. 

Outside of Alaska, there have been no guaranteed income programs implemented at the state level, and there’s no federal program on the horizon, so counties and municipalities are experimenting with pilot programs.

Stockton, California, offered one of the first city-led cash assistance programs to its residents. In 2020, Michael D. Tubbs, who was Stockton’s then-mayor, helped found Mayors for a Guaranteed Income, a coalition of dozens of current and former mayors from across the country advocating for guaranteed income policy. Starting in 2018, the Magnolia Mother’s Trust provided 20 Black mothers experiencing extreme poverty $1,000 a month in Jackson, Mississippi. Since then, the program has expanded to 110 moms. Last year, Equity and Transformation, a west-side nonprofit in Chicago, launched an 18-month cash assistance program for 30 people who have been incarcerated. 

As of this summer, at least 30 cities have launched guaranteed-income pilots, including Chicago. Separately, Cook County joined the list of counties with programs. The county’s application will launch in September, and the first payment will go out in December. 

What’s the history of guaranteed income in Chicago?

The modern-day push for guaranteed income in Chicago can be traced back to former alderperson Ameya Pawar, who in June 2018 introduced a resolution to create a task force to study how Chicago could implement a universal basic income pilot. He wanted to expand and modernize the Earned Income Tax Credit, create a task force to study a guaranteed income pilot program, and eventually give 1,000 families $500 a month as part of a pilot program. 

Most alderpeople supported Pawar’s resolution, and in September of that year Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced the creation of the task force, rendering a vote on the legislation moot. Pawar said that years of advocacy built the political will necessary for it to happen. 

In February 2019, the Chicago Resilient Families Task Force released a report recommending the city create a pilot for 1,000 Chicagoans to receive $1,000 a month to reduce poverty and increase well-being among the city’s lowest income residents. It was a positive sign since then-candidate Lori Lightfoot, who would start her term as mayor in May that year, supported the idea.

But in early 2020 at the mayor’s Solutions Toward Ending Poverty Summit, Lightfoot appeared to reverse her position, raising concerns about whether universal basic income was sustainable. 

“I’m teaching people to fish so that they can feed themselves for a lifetime,” Lightfoot said at the summit.  

Proponents of guaranteed income in Chicago say that the economic impact of the pandemic and the influx of cash assistance programs, such as the city’s Emergency Rental Assistance Program, shifted public opinion and paved the way for the pilot. 

In 2021, alderpeople Gilbert Villegas, Maria Hadden, and Sophia King called for the creation of a guaranteed income pilot program to aid 5,000 families with $500 per month. Villegas wanted the city to use some of its $1.9 billion in federal COVID relief funds to fund the project, estimating that the program would cost the city some $30 million per year. In the end, Lightfoot championed the one-time pilot during the 2022 budget cycle using $31.5 million in temporary federal grants to fund it. 

Asked why the mayor changed her mind, again, her office didn’t directly answer. A spokesperson said the mayor understands that flexible cash assistance is a powerful tool to alleviate financial hardship and combat poverty. And he added that the federal dollars offered an opportunity to create the pilot program and “put hard-hit residents at the center of our economic recovery from the pandemic.”

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Sky Patterson is a City Bureau 2022 Summer Civic Reporting Fellow, along with Francisco Saúl Ramírez Pinedo, who contributed to this report. Sarah Conway, City Bureau’s senior reporter covering jobs and the economy of survival in Chicago, also contributed. You can reach her with tips at [email protected].


This story was originally published by City Bureau. Five hundred dollars, no strings attached. That’s what the Chicago Resilient Communities Pilot—one of the largest guaranteed income programs in the United States—plans to deliver to 5,000 low-income Chicagoans every month for a whole year. More than half of participants are already receiving the cash infusion. Despite unemployment…


One housing complex can’t reverse decades of historical trends—but city officials hope 43 Green can be a model for equitable development.


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

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A century of guaranteed income  Read More »

The Melanin Martha gets rational at the next Monday Night FoodballMike Sulaon September 7, 2022 at 6:59 pm

Since we left her last June, Jordan Wimby has taken a rational approach to pop-ups.

“The amount of food enslaved people were given by owners was referred to as rations,” says Wimby, aka The Melanin Martha. “Corn or fatback or any of the things that the people in the house didn’t wanna eat. These small portions sustained the lives of Black folks on the plantation. But I’ve kind of reclaimed this term. I’m giving you something that sustains our culture. I’m giving you rations.”

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

The rations will be rich and abundant this September 12 when the Melanin Martha returns to Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s ongoing guest chef pop-up at the Kedzie Inn in Irving Park. For the sequel, Wimby wants to put a big prix fixe plate of classic and reimagined soul food in front of you, featuring a beet salad with whipped lemon feta, candied pecans, crispy fatback and microgreens; a sweet fried buffalo chicken thigh; a vegan turnip-mustard-collard green medley; whipped orange sweet potatoes; and a hunk of salted maple poppyseed cornbread to sop up every last dribble.

It’s a Melanin Martha meat-and-four—meat-and-five, really, counting the banana pudding pop that’s going to cool your metabolic engines when it all winds down.

Wimby, who’s lately been working behind the stick at Rogers Park Social, tells me she’s in beet mode, and she’s hinted that the night’s cocktail, executed by Kedzie owner Jon Pokorny, could very well be, ahem, rooted in Beta vulgaris. Show up at 5 PM at 4100 N. Kedzie and find out. Limited walk-in orders will be available, but preorder right now to lock in all that love.

Meanwhile, prepare yourself for a night of global Asian barbecue with Umamicue and friends on September 19, and a brand-new Monday Night Foodball fall schedule. It’s coming. I swear it.

Kedzie Inn4100 N. Kedzie(773) 293-6368kedzieinn.com

Read More

The Melanin Martha gets rational at the next Monday Night FoodballMike Sulaon September 7, 2022 at 6:59 pm Read More »

Printers Row Lit Fest embraces Chicago’s writersKimzyn Campbellon September 7, 2022 at 7:33 pm

Printers Row Lit Fest has been bringing all things literary to the streets of the Printers Row neighborhood for 37 years. The festivities return for the second weekend of September with a packed schedule of events

The festival is many things to many people: a homage to the publishing industry, a shopping spree for book lovers, a postable feast for Bookstagrammers, and perhaps, above all, a place for publishers, journalists, writers, poets, and agents to hobnob. Specifically, it is the place for any writer in the midwest to see and be seen, or, better yet, hear and be heard. 

Two days of live events, spoken word, readings, workshops, and panel discussions will wash over the brawny former industrial zone, and over 100 booksellers will line the streets with their tents full of actual paper books as the last cicada chirps of summer fade. Best of all, the programming is free! What could be more inviting than that? Perhaps a mere dash of sweater weather and a nicely positioned coffee truck on Polk Street could tip it into a rom-com paradise? 

If you plan to stroll the outdoor festival and take advantage of the book stalls and writers events, take a moment to cast your eyes skyward to see some of the historic architecture as well. Nestled in the South Loop, most of the old printer buildings have been converted into fancy lofts and shops. But you can still see some remnants of Chicago’s printing hub glory days (which peaked in the 1880s) in the architecture. The Franklin building (720 S. Dearborn) features a mural of the Gutenberg Bible being printed and tiles of bookbinders and printers along the building’s facade. 

The entire area is so unique that it has landed on the National Register of Historic Places and the “Printing House Row Historic District” is listed as a National Historic Landmark. Stroll over to the Printers Row Park fountain and community garden (0.38 acres of greenery hidden in the Loop at 632 S. Dearborn) and find a moment of rest in this discreet nod to the area’s printing history, featuring concrete benches resembling printers’s blocks and a kaleidoscopic fountain that would make Frank Lloyd Wright blush postmortem. If you need to escape the elements all together, you might wander into Sandmeyer’s Bookstore (714 S. Dearborn) for an authentic vibe and browse the many titles on display (since 1982).

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Printers Row Lit Fest juggles over 100 author appearances and coordinates entertainment for all echelons of the publishing industry—from the romance writer to the political activist—while also providing programming for children (including a Latin American-style puppet show in Spanish and English presented by Carlos Theatre Productions). As of this writing, a full schedule of the weekend’s events had not yet been released, but a steady stream of updates is available at the festival’s Instagram (@printersrowfest). 

Printers Row Lit FestSat 9/10-Sun 9/11, 10 AM-6 PM, S. Dearborn from Ida B. Wells Dr. to Polk and Polk from State to Clark, free, full schedule at printersrowlitfest.org

Even without the full timeline to pour over, the established highlights of this year’s Printers Row Lit Fest are enough to entice a crowd. The emphasis on recognizing Chicago writers is strong and also includes diverse voices who focus on social justice and activism. Danyel Smith,the first Black editor of Billboard magazine, will talk about her recent book Shine Bright: A Very Personal History of Black Women in Pop. Jamie Ford will discuss his current New York Times bestseller The Many Daughters of Afong Moy, and the Emcee Skool organization will leada spoken word workshop and open mike

The festival does not give short shrift to Chicago’s journalists or satirists; perhaps the best known amplifiers of social justice personages and causes in Chicago. The Sun-Times and WBEZ will host a series of panels reflecting on two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, including a conversation between Dr. David Ansell (author of The Death Gap: How Inequality Kills) and Dr. Thomas Fisher (author of The Emergency: A Year of Healing and Heartbreak in a Chicago ER).

The Chicago Public Librarywill host “Voices for Justice: Natalie Moore’s The Billboard,” including a staged reading of excerpts from Moore’s play. The Sun-Times also hosts an in-person episode of their series The Environmental Justice Exchange dedicated to Hazel M. Johnson. Johnson started a movement when she noticed that her neighbors on the south side were suffering from physical ailments associated with pollution, toxins, and poor living conditions, and founded People for Community Recovery in 1979 to advocate for environmental justice. The Sun-Times and Chicago Public Media also host a discussion titled “Social Justice in Chicago: The Mexican Community’s Fight to Stay in the City” hosted by Elvia Malagón (a Sun-Times reporter focusing on social justice topics) with guestMike Amezcua, author of Making Mexican Chicago: From Postwar Settlement to the Age of Gentrification.

Other featured journalists at Lit Fest include Neil Steinberg on his book Every Goddamn Day: a Highly Selective, Definitely Opinionated, and Alternatingly Humorous and Heartbreaking Historical Tour of ChicagoandRay Long on The House that Madigan Built: The Record Run of Illinois’ Velvet Hammer.

Our city’s library pulls its weight at the festival, bestowing their prestigiousHarold Washington Literary Award to Evanston-based Natasha Trethewey (Pulitzer Prize winner and two-term United States Poet Laureate).

The Poetry Foundation is setting up a dedicated poetry tent (on North Dearborn, just south of Ida B. Wells) that will be hosting a stream of emerging and award-winning poets. On Saturday at 2 PM, a panel titled“Our City: Chicago’s Poetic Landscape” will be moderated by scholar Carlo Rotella. Panelists include Daniel Bortzutzky, Ugochi Nwaogwugwu, Elise Paschen, and Sara Salgado. 

Of course, works of fiction set in Chicago will be highlighted at Lit Fest, such as Toya Wolfe’s Last Summer on State Street, Joe Meno’sBook of Extraordinary Tragedies, andthe Chicago Public Library’s “One Book, One Chicago”honoree Eric Charles May (Bedrock Faith). Multiple authors whose books have recently been reviewed by the Reader recently will be present, notably Adam Levin (Mount Chicago) and Adam Langer (Cyclorama).

Fitting examples of Chicago’s outspoken heritage of audience participation and spoken word are rampant at Lit Fest. Some excellent samplings include a Literary Death Match,where four local authors will verbally duel each other in front of a panel of judges. Winners from the Moth live storytelling competition will read their work. An exciting skillshare with the public will occur as staff from The Onion will workshop writing satirical news stories (scheduled for the festival’s main stage on Saturday at 3 PM). 

Printers Row Lit Fest is one of Chicago’s core city triumphs. It’s as Chicago as the Bud Billiken parade and as eternal as a zine-filled Quimby’s Bookstore. If you attend, you’ll be part of the Chicago literary scene! Welcome to the glitterati.

Read More

Printers Row Lit Fest embraces Chicago’s writersKimzyn Campbellon September 7, 2022 at 7:33 pm Read More »

A century of guaranteed income Sky Patterson and City Bureauon September 7, 2022 at 7:40 pm

This story was originally published by City Bureau.

Chicago just launched one of the largest guaranteed-income programs in the country. But how long have Americans been pushing for government-backed income as a solution to entrenched poverty and inequality?

The push to solve economic inequality and widespread poverty through a government-backed minimum level of income is nearly a century old, starting after the Great Depression. In the 1930s, populist Louisiana senator Huey Long, who blamed capitalism for the country’s poverty at the time, proposed giving every American a minimum income of $2,000. However, Long was assassinated in 1935 and his plan never came to fruition. 

That same year, a physician and political advocate in Long Beach, California, named Francis Everett Townsend wanted the federal government to establish a guaranteed income program of $200 a month for retired citizens aged 60 or older. The program garnered popular support, and 8,000 “Townsend clubs” across the country lobbied for his program. While President Franklin D. Roosevelt ultimately dismissed Townsend’s pension plan and Congress rejected it in 1939, Townsend’s ideas influenced the Social Security Act adopted as part of Roosevelt’s New Deal.

The idea of guaranteed income surfaced again during the rise of the civil rights movement and the Black Power era that emerged in the 1960s. Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. saw guaranteed income as a path to national justice and equality. In 1966, the Black Panther Party, one of the most active Black political organizations of the era, stated that in an unjust economic system, the federal government owes guaranteed income or guaranteed jobs to its citizens. 

Calls for guaranteed income also came from libertarians and conservatives. In 1962, free market capitalist Milton Friedman proposed giving free money to everyone in the form of negative income tax to reduce the bureaucracy of state welfare programs and further enable free markets. In 1969, President Richard Nixon advocated for the elimination of welfare programs and the creation of a “basic federal minimum,” or a negative income tax. The amount of assistance would decline as incomes rose. However, his idea never came to fruition due to political opposition in Congress. 

President Gerald Ford later brought about the earned income tax credit as part of the Tax Reduction Act of 1975, which was further expanded under President Ronald Reagan. The tax credit, which is still in existence today, is similar to a negative income tax but requires that participants work, because the credit is a fixed percentage of their income. The figure fluctuates based on the number of children listed as dependents and whether people file taxes with a partner. 

Where have we seen guaranteed income in the U.S.? 

The federal government tested negative income tax programs between 1968 and 1980 in areas including Seattle, Denver, New Jersey, and Gary, Indiana. The results showed the cash grants were beneficial overall—some children attended more school, parents pursued continuing education opportunities, and families purchased more nutritious food. Some people, however, worked less and earned less money, a point that opponents of guaranteed income use as evidence that it doesn’t work. Proponents argue that these negative income tax experiments may have underreported earnings and didn’t fully account for the people who forwent short-term income in order to pursue educational opportunities. 

Alaska established the nation’s only large-scale permanent universal basic income (UBI) for nearly all residents, regardless of age, in 1976. Today, Alaskans typically receive about $1,000 to $2,000 annually as a dividend of oil revenues through the Alaska Permanent Fund. Since 1997, the Eastern Band of Cherokees’ casino dividend program has provided around $4,000 per person per year in North Carolina from casino profits. 

Outside of Alaska, there have been no guaranteed income programs implemented at the state level, and there’s no federal program on the horizon, so counties and municipalities are experimenting with pilot programs.

Stockton, California, offered one of the first city-led cash assistance programs to its residents. In 2020, Michael D. Tubbs, who was Stockton’s then-mayor, helped found Mayors for a Guaranteed Income, a coalition of dozens of current and former mayors from across the country advocating for guaranteed income policy. Starting in 2018, the Magnolia Mother’s Trust provided 20 Black mothers experiencing extreme poverty $1,000 a month in Jackson, Mississippi. Since then, the program has expanded to 110 moms. Last year, Equity and Transformation, a west-side nonprofit in Chicago, launched an 18-month cash assistance program for 30 people who have been incarcerated. 

As of this summer, at least 30 cities have launched guaranteed-income pilots, including Chicago. Separately, Cook County joined the list of counties with programs. The county’s application will launch in September, and the first payment will go out in December. 

What’s the history of guaranteed income in Chicago?

The modern-day push for guaranteed income in Chicago can be traced back to former alderperson Ameya Pawar, who in June 2018 introduced a resolution to create a task force to study how Chicago could implement a universal basic income pilot. He wanted to expand and modernize the Earned Income Tax Credit, create a task force to study a guaranteed income pilot program, and eventually give 1,000 families $500 a month as part of a pilot program. 

Most alderpeople supported Pawar’s resolution, and in September of that year Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced the creation of the task force, rendering a vote on the legislation moot. Pawar said that years of advocacy built the political will necessary for it to happen. 

In February 2019, the Chicago Resilient Families Task Force released a report recommending the city create a pilot for 1,000 Chicagoans to receive $1,000 a month to reduce poverty and increase well-being among the city’s lowest income residents. It was a positive sign since then-candidate Lori Lightfoot, who would start her term as mayor in May that year, supported the idea.

But in early 2020 at the mayor’s Solutions Toward Ending Poverty Summit, Lightfoot appeared to reverse her position, raising concerns about whether universal basic income was sustainable. 

“I’m teaching people to fish so that they can feed themselves for a lifetime,” Lightfoot said at the summit.  

Proponents of guaranteed income in Chicago say that the economic impact of the pandemic and the influx of cash assistance programs, such as the city’s Emergency Rental Assistance Program, shifted public opinion and paved the way for the pilot. 

In 2021, alderpeople Gilbert Villegas, Maria Hadden, and Sophia King called for the creation of a guaranteed income pilot program to aid 5,000 families with $500 per month. Villegas wanted the city to use some of its $1.9 billion in federal COVID relief funds to fund the project, estimating that the program would cost the city some $30 million per year. In the end, Lightfoot championed the one-time pilot during the 2022 budget cycle using $31.5 million in temporary federal grants to fund it. 

Asked why the mayor changed her mind, again, her office didn’t directly answer. A spokesperson said the mayor understands that flexible cash assistance is a powerful tool to alleviate financial hardship and combat poverty. And he added that the federal dollars offered an opportunity to create the pilot program and “put hard-hit residents at the center of our economic recovery from the pandemic.”

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Sky Patterson is a City Bureau 2022 Summer Civic Reporting Fellow, along with Francisco Saúl Ramírez Pinedo, who contributed to this report. Sarah Conway, City Bureau’s senior reporter covering jobs and the economy of survival in Chicago, also contributed. You can reach her with tips at [email protected].


This story was originally published by City Bureau. Five hundred dollars, no strings attached. That’s what the Chicago Resilient Communities Pilot—one of the largest guaranteed income programs in the United States—plans to deliver to 5,000 low-income Chicagoans every month for a whole year. More than half of participants are already receiving the cash infusion. Despite unemployment…


One housing complex can’t reverse decades of historical trends—but city officials hope 43 Green can be a model for equitable development.


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

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A century of guaranteed income Sky Patterson and City Bureauon September 7, 2022 at 7:40 pm Read More »

R. Kelly trial update: Ex-Sun-Times music critic Jim DeRogatis won’t have to testify about viral video tape

R. Kelly’s former business manager — and co-defendant in his latest trial — is expected to take the stand Wednesday as the proceedings resume for a fourth week following a one-day delay caused by a “operational issue” at the Dirksen Federal Building.

Derrel McDavid, who faces charges alongside Kelly for allegedly helping coordinate payoffs to witnesses and allegedly rounding up incriminating sex tapes ahead of the singer’s 2008 trial on child pornography charges, will offer up “substantial” testimony, his lawyers have said.

McDavid can be expected to spend considerable time on the witness stand, facing cross-examination from federal prosecutors, as well as from lawyers for Kelly and fellow co-defendant Milton “June” Brown, a former assistant in Kelly’s entourage.

First, U.S. DistrictJudge Harry Leinenweber is expected to hear arguments to quash a subpoena for former Sun-Times journalist and music critic Jim DeRogatis, who McDavid’s attorneys want to call as a witness.

In 2002, DeRogatis received a VHS cassette of Kelly performing sex acts with an alleged 14-year-old girl from an anonymous sender, which he turned over to authorities and became key evidence in Kelly’s 2008 trial. DeRogatis, whose reporting alongside fellow Sun-Times reporter Abdon Pallasch, documented numerous lawsuits against Kelly that seemed to substantiate rumors swirling around the singer in the early 2000s.

Witnesses have testified that McDavid handled payments for recovering Kelly’s stolen videotapes that allegedly showed the singer sexually abusing an underage girl.

McDavid’s lawyers have said that he was merely doing his job as Kelly’s business manager.

Kelly’s trial was expected to resume Tuesday, but was delayed when U.S. District Clerk of Court Thomas Bruton announced that an “operational issue” at the Dirksen Federal Building would cause the courthouse to remain closed for an additional day after the holiday weekend. Officials later said the courthouse would reopen on Wednesday.

The trial was expected to end this week, but due to the delay could now enter a fifth week.

Kelly, 55, already has been convicted of child trafficking and racketeering in federal court in New York and been sentenced to 30 years in prison.

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The 1 “expert” prediction that should have Bears fans HYPED

Bears get no love from the experts in their 2022 NFL predictions.

The Bears are consensus picks to finish dead last in the NFC North (and possibly the league) in 2022. If it weren’t for the Lions, that sentiment might be unanimous everywhere outside of Chicago. Hell, it’s the prevailing sentiment in Chicago that the Bears will win only a handful of games this season.

Personally? I take all that as a good sign.

That’s because the so-called experts really suck at making predictions. Or, to be more charitable, the NFL is a very unpredictable animal. Look at last year. Sure, heading into the 2021 season the Rams were a very popular pick to win the Super Bowl, but lets take a look at the predictions about their eventual big-game opponent, the Bengals:

This was the entire CBS Sports online expert panel. They couldn’t agree on the Steelers. They couldn’t agree on the Browns. They couldn’t agree on the Ravens. The consensus, though, was that the Browns would make the playoffs, the Ravens might make the playoffs, and the Steelers were probably the third-best team in the division. But there was complete, unanimous, unequivocal agreement on one thing: the Bengals were the worst team in the AFC North.

So of course the Steelers and the Bengals made the playoffs. And of course the Bengals came one play away from winning the Super Bowl.

Were the CBS Sports experts roundly criticized for naysaying the Bengals’ hopes in 2021? Of course not. There was near-universal agreement that the Bengals would suck. But someone forgot to tell the Bengals. They went 10-7 in the regular season before steamrolling through the playoffs and nearly snatching the Lombardi Trophy away from the LA Rams.

So what does this mean for the Bears?

It means there’s hope for the Bears, and not just before the season starts. In case you’ve forgotten, the outlook for the Bengals didn’t look much better than the experts had forecast after their Week 2 loss to the Bears. Joe Burrow threw 3 straight interceptions in that game, and Ja’Marr Chase had yet to emerge as God incarnate as a wide receiver. (In fact, of the seven losses on the Bengals’ schedule, five of them came at the hands of teams that failed to make the playoffs. Yet the Bengals lost only three games to playoff teams all year, one of which was the Super Bowl. The NFL doesn’t always make sense.)

The only prediction Bears fans should really care about is the one all the experts made about the Bengals last year, because predictions mean absolutely nothing, especially in the NFL. And if the Bears don’t come storming out of the gates against the 49ers, or if they have missteps along the way against teams we know they can beat, that still doesn’t mean they can’t improve every week of the 2022-2023 NFL season. (Even if Justin Fields throws three straight interceptions in a game.)

So should Bears fans expect this team to go to the Super Bowl? No, expect is the wrong word entirely. Our expectations should remain low. We don’t even really know who this team is other than the fact that it’s a roster made up entirely of guys with a whole lot to prove.

The right word is hope. Bears fans have every right and every reason to hope that this team goes to the playoffs and then some this season and postseason. You’re not an idiot for hoping. It is, quite realistically, more ridiculous to believe the predictions than it is to hope they’re absolutely wrong.

This Bears team has a coaching staff that appears to know what they’re doing, but they’re unproven. They have a GM who appears to see things in players no one else has the courage to act on . . . but his methods are unproven. This Bears franchise has a potential franchise quarterback with a golden arm, but a decision-making arsenal that is unproven. Defense, offense, special teams . . . everybody is unproven. But they are unproven in either direction, good or bad.

Before you give up hope on this Bears season, let them prove who they are.

And just one more thing. Here’s the only Bears hype video I’m watching heading into Week 1 against the Niners.

Bear down.

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FiveThirtyEight model has QB Justin Fields ranked below Bears backup

Justin Fields looks to redeem himself this season

Chicago Bears quarterback Justin Fields struggled as a rookie. He wasn’t the only quarterback to struggle in Matt Nagy’s offense with the Bears. Fields is expected to improve this season in a new scheme with offensive coordinator Luke Getsy.

Fields will have challenges with a weak wide receivers corps and a suspect offensive line. Fields must use his athleticism to keep the ball alive and make plays in the passing game or on the run. He did that well in the preseason.

One prediction model isn’t sold on Fields getting much better this season. FiveThirtyEight recently released its predictions for the 2022 NFL season at the quarterback position. The model uses “Elo” points to rank quarterbacks:

The top quarterbacks for each team and their value in Elo points, which are used in our quarterback-adjusted model. Our ratings are a rolling average of recent performances and incorporate both passing and running. Initial rookie ratings are based on draft position; undrafted rookies begin their careers with an Elo value of zero, while a first overall draft pick starts with an Elo value of 113.

If that reads like gibberish to you, where it ranks Fields will make sense.

Fields ranks low on the model

Bears backup quarterback Trevor Siemian is ranked higher than Fields by seven Elo points. Justin Fields is also well behind former Bears quarterback and Pittsburgh Steelers captain Mitch Trubisky. Here’s a list of the rankings.

Here are this year’s official 538 QB ratings.

Thoughts?https://t.co/tGA40G6IWn https://t.co/DqKR1uNbxg pic.twitter.com/FGRfOgUu9s

— Computer Cowboy (@benbbaldwin) September 7, 2022

FiveThirtyEight has a flawed model

Justin Fields is not the 43rd-best quarterback in the NFL. It’s a ridiculous list that sees Colt McCoy over Carson Wentz. It’s not too surprising, coming from a property of Nate Silver that failed so poorly in the 2016 presidential election. Fields doesn’t even have to have a good season to beat this prediction.

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