Videos

‘Craziest 45 seconds of my life’: Tornado tears through western suburbs, critically injuring 1 and damaging over 100 homesMitch Dudekon June 22, 2021 at 1:37 am

Debris from a home destroyed by severe weather is shown in Naperville, Monday, June 21, 2021. | Rich Hein/Sun-Times

The tornado also smashed cars, spewed debris and downed power lines throughout cities including Naperville, Woodridge, Darien and Burr Ridge.

After the tornado passed, Jean-Phillipe Ducreux emerged from his Naperville home to find his neighbor’s home had collapsed and its owner was sifting through the rubble to find his wife — amid the smell and hiss of a gas leak.

“The husband was injured but good enough and said ‘my wife should be around here,’” said Ducreux, 51, who moved to the United States from France three years ago for work.

The men followed the sound of her screams.

“We unburied her,” said Ducreux, who worried about a gas explosion as the pair, aided by a firefighter who arrived on the scene, worked to free her. “I think she was pretty lucky because there was two sides and a top around her, two walls and a door; she was pretty protected, but she was hurt.”

The woman, Savita Patel, was taken to Edward Hospital in critical condition. She was one of at least five people who received treatment there.

The Patels’ home, near 75th Street and Ranchview Drive, lay in the path of a EF3 tornado that packed winds reaching 140 mph.

The twister touched down in Naperville about 11:02 p.m. in the area of the Springbrook Prairie Forest Preserve and headed east nearly parallel to 75th Street and into the communities of Woodridge, Darien and Burr Ridge before petering out in Willow Springs, according to National Weather Service Meteorologist Brett Borchardt.

It was on the ground for about 20 minutes, moved at a speed of about 45 to 50 mph and traveled about 10 miles, smashing cars, ripping roofs off homes, downing power lines, shearing off garage doors, uprooting large trees and spewing debris as high 19,000 feet, or 3.59 miles into the sky, Borchardt said.

In Naperville, 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.

On Monday, the goodwill of neighbors who showed up in droves to help clean up the mess was in full display.

A platoon of community members, including dozens of high school athletes, descended on the site of the Patels’ home — the hardest hit in the area — to do whatever they could to help.

“I came over this morning after practice,” said Ayden Lutes, 17, a member of the Naperville Central High School wrestling team. “I felt terrible. It sucks when your fellow community members are in need. And then I saw the football guys come out so I texted a couple of wrestling guys to come out … we’ve decided to replace our weightlifting sessions with debris-moving sessions instead.”

A glass encased model of the Taj Mahal sat under the sun on the exposed floor of the Patels’ destroyed home near where the front door would have been.

Some volunteers removed heavy debris. Others sifted through the mess to recover family pictures and other precious items.

Anna Lindflott, 21, fished dozens of colorful bracelets from a neighbor’s above-ground pool that was reduced to a murky puddle when parts of the Patel home flew onto it.

“Anything we can do to help,” said Lindflott, who lives nearby.

The pool belongs to Katie Long Piper, who survived the tornado in her basement with her son and her 85-year-old mother as their home shifted on its foundation but remained standing.

“It didn’t sound like a freight train; it sounded like explosions,” said Long Piper, who runs Naperville Central High School’s in-school television network and coordinates school activities, like dances.

A piece of wood crashed through her basement window well as Long Piper laid on her belly with her mom and son.

“I’m so grateful I got everyone in the basement and that our house didn’t get sucked up,” she said while expressing love and concern for her less fortunate neighbors.

“They’re awesome, great people,” she said.

Photos on social media catalogued the damage across the affected suburbs.

“Unbelievable,” a homeowner said while staring at a home missing its roof and a wall in Woodridge. The “craziest 45 seconds of my life,” said another. “You could hear the metal literally ripping off of the buildings,” said a woman in Darien. Others said it sounded like a train went by — overhead.

And then, “as fast as it came, it was gone,” as Joseph Palacios, of Woodridge, recalled.

“It’s shocking to see the devastation — all the trees are just gone, [as well as] people’s houses,” Palacios said.

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. “Just to see it torn up, it’s obviously never going to look the same ever again.”

Earlier in Woodridge, 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. Monday. The entire second floor of their house was gone, and their garage was destroyed.

The home is in the 7800 block of Woodridge Drive, 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 High School, 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.”

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. 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,’” 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.

Across the street, two cars sat 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.
Rich Hein/Sun-Times
Storm damage in Naperville’s Ranchview neighborhood Monday, June 21, 2021.

“It’s crazy to go through this,” she said. “That’s a traumatic event.”

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.

Porter, 27, 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.

Southwest suburbs hit, too

In Darien, Maureen Malloy recalls the lights going off around 11:15 p.m. Sunday as the winds picked up.

“You could hear the metal literally ripping off of the buildings,” Malloy said. “The wind was so strong that it was coming through the bottom and side of my door and it was blowing my hair back.”

She said that only lasted for about two minutes, but she waited until close to 1 a.m. to assess the damage. The entire street was blocked with trees, and a five-story weeping willow fell inches from her home.

“We are all very fortunate,” Malloy said. “These trees seriously could have killed somebody.”

Nicole Poletti was in the basement of her house in Burr Ridge with her husband and two kids when she heard a loud bang.

“It sounded like an explosion, and it happened in a split second,” she said. It was not until a bit later into the night that her husband was able to walk upstairs and see that noise was a tree falling onto their house.

She left with her kids to stay with her parents for the night, but Monday morning she saw the full extent of the damage.

“We have broken windows, damage to our roof, and actual branches going through our ceiling to our attic. A couple of trees fell onto our house,” she said. Their front yard and driveway were littered with so many broken branches it was hard to see the ground, she said. Her car was also completely destroyed.

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.

Read More

‘Craziest 45 seconds of my life’: Tornado tears through western suburbs, critically injuring 1 and damaging over 100 homesMitch Dudekon June 22, 2021 at 1:37 am Read More »

Cubs’ lefty Justin Steele close to returningRussell Dorseyon June 22, 2021 at 12:27 am

Chicago Cubs v Milwaukee Brewers
Stacy Revere/Getty Images

Steele is 2-0 with a 2.03 ERA in 11 outings this season.

Left-hander Justin Steele had made his mark on the Cubs bullpen and was the first of the Cubs young relievers to arrive on the scene this season. A right hamstring strain while running the bases has sidelined Steele for a month, but the Cubs should be getting their young southpaw back in the near future.

Steele threw a bullpen on Sunday before the Cubs 2-0 win over the Marlins and all indications are that things went well.

“The data turned out really good,” Ross said. “He’ll throw another bullpen pretty soon. I need to talk to him first, but things are good. He’ll be off on a rehab assignment soon.”

The Cubs left-hander is 2-0 with a 2.03 ERA in 11 outings this season.

Alzolay officially activated

Right-hander Adbert Alzolay was officially activated from the injured list before his start on Monday against the Indians. Alzolay had been out since June 8 with a blister on his right middle finger.

To make room for Alzolay on the 26-man roster, left-hander Kyle Ryan was optioned to Triple-A Iowa. Ryan, who was recalled on Sunday, has a 3.38 ERA in three appearances this season.

Zobrist seeking $6 million in damages in new court case

Former Cub and 2016 World Series MVP Ben Zobrist has filed a lawsuit against a former minister and marital counselor, according to court documents. Zobrist is also seeking $6 million in damages from Byron Yawn, who is also accused in the lawsuit of defrauding Zobrist’s charity where he worked for a period of time.

Zobrist missed much of his final season with the Cubs in 2019 for personal reasons while handling what turned into very public marital issues. He returned to the team and played 47 games that season. It would be his final season in the big leagues before retiring in 2020.

According to the court filings, which were filed on May 6 in Nashville, Tenn., Zobrist claims to have lost $8 million in income due to missing four months with the Cubs.

He said it

“I find myself watching how these [managers] interact in the game. I get all worked up sometimes when the umpire might not be that great or whatever. And I watch [Terry Francona] in Cleveland. He’s just steady Eddie. There’s no yelling. He’s seen a lot of baseball games and he’s just a cool cucumber and knows what’s going on in the game and knows how to react. I’m still learning, experiencing and trying to try to navigate my way and how I do things, but I definitely have a lot of respect for him and what he’s been able to do in this game and the way the players like him and getting the most out of his teams, even shorthanded. I mean, he’s a Hall of Famer.” –Ross on Cleveland manager Terry Francona

Read More

Cubs’ lefty Justin Steele close to returningRussell Dorseyon June 22, 2021 at 12:27 am Read More »

Enhance Your Healthcare Plan This Summeron June 22, 2021 at 12:24 am

Spiritual and Physical Wellness

Enhance Your Healthcare Plan This Summer

Read More

Enhance Your Healthcare Plan This Summeron June 22, 2021 at 12:24 am Read More »

Watch Berkowitz & Martin discuss why Gov Pritzker’s energy bill ran out of gas, Juneteenth, a CPS elected school Board and how to fix IL’s legislature (Cable/Web)on June 22, 2021 at 12:36 am

Public Affairs with Jeff Berkowitz

Watch Berkowitz & Martin discuss why Gov Pritzker’s energy bill ran out of gas, Juneteenth, a CPS elected school Board and how to fix IL’s legislature (Cable/Web)

Read More

Watch Berkowitz & Martin discuss why Gov Pritzker’s energy bill ran out of gas, Juneteenth, a CPS elected school Board and how to fix IL’s legislature (Cable/Web)on June 22, 2021 at 12:36 am Read More »

‘Craziest 45 seconds of my life’: Tornado tears through western suburbs, critically injuring 1 and damaging over 100 homesJermaine Nolenon June 21, 2021 at 10:54 pm

Debris from a home destroyed by severe weather is shown in Naperville, Monday, June 21, 2021. | Rich Hein/Sun-Times

The tornado appeared to start in Naperville, then cut a destructive path through Woodridge, Darien and Downers Grove.

In the early morning hours Monday, neighbors in suburbs across the Chicago area emerged from their homes after a tornado ripped through the area late Sunday night, damaging more than a hundred homes and injuring several people, including a woman in critical condition.

“Unbelievable,” a homeowner said while staring at a home missing its roof and a wall in Woodridge. The “craziest 45 seconds of my life,” said another. “You could hear the metal literally ripping off of the buildings,” said a woman in Darien. Others said it sounded like a train went by — overhead.

And then, “as fast as it came, it was gone,” as Joseph Palacios, of Woodridge, recalled.

The neighbors came together hours after a tornado touchdown was confirmed about 11:10 p.m. near Route 53 and 75th Street in Woodridge, according to the National Weather Service said. The tornado — packing winds of up to 135 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.

“It’s shocking to see the devastation — all the trees are just gone, [as well as] people’s houses,” Palacios said.

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. “Just to see it torn up, it’s obviously never going to look the same ever again.”

Earlier in Woodridge, 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. Monday. The entire second floor of their house was gone, and their garage was destroyed.

The home is in the 7800 block of Woodridge Drive, 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 High School, 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.”

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. 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,’” 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.

Across the street, two cars sat 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.
Rich Hein/Sun-Times
Storm damage in Naperville’s Ranchview neighborhood Monday, June 21, 2021.

“It’s crazy to go through this,” she said. “That’s a traumatic event.”

Debris 10,000 feet in the atmosphere, winds up to 135 mph

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 there were power outages and gas leaks reported.

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.

Porter, 27, 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.

Southwest suburbs hit, too

In Darien, Maureen Malloy recalls the lights going off around 11:15 p.m. Sunday as the winds picked up.

“You could hear the metal literally ripping off of the buildings,” Malloy said. “The wind was so strong that it was coming through the bottom and side of my door and it was blowing my hair back.”

She said that only lasted for about two minutes, but she waited until close to 1 a.m. to assess the damage. The entire street was blocked with trees, and a five-story weeping willow fell inches from her home.

“We are all very fortunate,” Malloy said. “These trees seriously could have killed somebody.”

Nicole Poletti was in the basement of her house in Burr Ridge with her husband and two kids when she heard a loud bang.

“It sounded like an explosion, and it happened in a split second,” she said. It was not until a bit later into the night that her husband was able to walk upstairs and see that noise was a tree falling onto their house.

She left with her kids to stay with her parents for the night, but Monday morning she saw the full extent of the damage.

“We have broken windows, damage to our roof, and actual branches going through our ceiling to our attic. A couple of trees fell onto our house,” she said. Their front yard and driveway were littered with so many broken branches it was hard to see the ground, she said. Her car was also completely destroyed.

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.

Read More

‘Craziest 45 seconds of my life’: Tornado tears through western suburbs, critically injuring 1 and damaging over 100 homesJermaine Nolenon June 21, 2021 at 10:54 pm Read More »

Raiders’ Carl Nassib comes out as first openly gay active NFL playerUSA TODAY Sportson June 21, 2021 at 10:59 pm

Nassib could become the first openly gay player to play in an NFL regular-season game. | Mark J. Rebilas/USA TODAY Sports

Nassib made the announcement in an Instagram post.

Las Vegas Raiders defensive end Carl Nassib made history Monday by coming out as the first active openly gay NFL player.

Nassib made the announcement in an Instagram post.

“I just wanted to take a quick moment to say that I’m gay,” Nassib said in a video recording. ”I’ve been meaning to do this for a while now but finally feel comfortable getting it off my chest. I really have the best life, the best family, friends and job a guy can ask for.

“I’m a pretty private person, so I hope you guys know that I’m not doing this for attention. I just think that representation and visibility are so important. I actually hope that one day, videos like this and the whole coming out process are not necessary, but until then I will do my best and my part to cultivate a culture that’s accepting and compassionate.”

Nassib added that he is donating $100,000 to the Trevor Project, which he called “the No. 1 suicide prevention service for LGBTQ youth in America.”

Nassib, 28, is a five-year NFL veteran who was selected in the third round of the 2016 draft by the Cleveland Browns. He played college football at Penn State. Nassib is entering his second season as a backup defensive end for the Raiders and spent 2018-19 with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

He appeared in 14 games last season, including five as a starter. He has 20 1/2 career sacks.

Nassib could become the first openly gay player to play in an NFL regular-season game. Former Missouri defensive end Michael Sam came out in 2014 before being selected in the seventh round by the St. Louis Rams, but he did not make the cut for the final 53-man roster. Several NFL players have come out after they retired.

Read More

Raiders’ Carl Nassib comes out as first openly gay active NFL playerUSA TODAY Sportson June 21, 2021 at 10:59 pm Read More »

Man shot dead in Goose IslandSun-Times Wireon June 21, 2021 at 11:03 pm

A person was wounded in a shooting June 20, 2021, in the Loop.
A man was fatally shot June 19, 2021, in Goose Island. | Sun-Times file photo

He was in a parking lot about 6:45 p.m. Saturday in the 700 block of West Evergreen Avenue when someone got out of a gray sedan and opened fire, striking him in the arm, groin and leg, Chicago police said.

A man was killed in a shooting Saturday in Goose Island on the North Side.

He was in a parking lot about 6:45 p.m. in the 700 block of West Evergreen Avenue when someone got out of a gray sedan and opened fire, striking him in the arm, groin and leg, Chicago police said.

The 27-year-old was was taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 2:42 a.m. Sunday, police and the Cook County medical examiner’s office said.

He was identified as Kenneth Hammond, the medical examiner’s office said. An autopsy released Monday ruled his death a homicide.

No arrests have been made. Area Three detectives are investigating.

Read More

Man shot dead in Goose IslandSun-Times Wireon June 21, 2021 at 11:03 pm Read More »

Could downtown become a ‘pot paradise’ after all?Tom Schubaon June 21, 2021 at 11:17 pm

An ordinance introduced Monday would give so-called social equity applicants the ability to set up pot shop in the restricted area that includes some of Chicago’s most sought after real estate. | AP file

An ordinance filed Monday would allow new cannabis dispensaries to move into the downtown “exclusion zone” Mayor Lightfoot fought for and has continued to defend.

An ordinance filed Monday could allow a flood of new cannabis dispensaries to move into a downtown “exclusion zone” where Mayor Lori Lightfoot has blocked pot sales.

In addition to giving so-called social equity applicants the ability to set up shop in the restricted area that includes some of Chicago’s most sought after real estate, the proposal sponsored by Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36th) would allow those groups to bypass some of the onerous zoning requirements for cannabis businesses.

Villegas told the Sun-Times that his plan would help “level the playing field” for the social equity applicants, a designation created to diversify the state’s lily white weed industry.

Those social equity applicants await Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s signature on a recently passed bill that will unleash a flood of new licenses allowing some of those applicants to open 120 new dispensaries. Another 75 licenses created earlier are in limbo until the state holds a lottery to determine the winners.

Villegas’ proposal has already drawn the ire of some social equity applicants and it could set the stage for a battle with Lightfoot, who rebuffed another plan earlier this year to allow pot sales downtown. “We’re not turning Michigan Avenue into pot paradise,” Lightfoot told the Sun-Times in January.

Villegas, who previously served as Lightfoot’s City Council floor leader, argued that some cannabis businesses wouldn’t be out of place in the Loop.

“Some of the stores that are currently in place look like Apple stores,” he said. “Everything’s open for discussion. If the mayor doesn’t want to have Michigan Avenue, there are other locations that are near Michigan Avenue.”

Lightfoot’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment.

The initial proposal has already come under heavy fire from members of the influential Cannabis Equity Illinois Coalition, which is pushing the city to first address other zoning issues and to offer waivers allowing “true social equity applicants” to open downtown.

Former state Sen. Rickey Hendon, a dispensary applicant and coalition spokesman, claimed Villegas’ plan offers an undue edge to firms like Green Renaissance Illinois, or GRI Holdings, a clouted applicant group that he doesn’t believe should have qualified for social equity status.

“They gamed the system, so we don’t accept them even to this moment as a social equity applicant,” Hendon said of the company.

GRI Holdings has been lobbying for the changes in Villegas’ proposal and others on the state level. Partner Thomas Wheeler, a former high-ranking Chicago cop, said he’s been working with advocates and policymakers for months “to ensure that we have the opportunity to succeed and compete in an industry that is currently dominated by corporate multi-state operators.”

Under Villegas’ proposal, social equity players notably wouldn’t be bound to a specific area or hindered by the dispensary caps placed on the city’s cannabis regions. The businesses would simply have to hold a community meeting and receive a special-use permit from the Zoning Board of Appeals. The plan would also allow social equity shops to open within 1,500 feet of existing dispensaries, a provision that mirrors a rule change included in the trailer bill.

Villegas said the changes could help maximize the city’s returns from the booming cannabis industry, which he noted is “ripe for generating revenue.” Chicago currently boasts just 19 of the state’s 110 licensed weed stores.

Read More

Could downtown become a ‘pot paradise’ after all?Tom Schubaon June 21, 2021 at 11:17 pm Read More »

Ride Share explores the dark side of the gig economyDmitry Samarovon June 21, 2021 at 8:30 pm


A former cabbie talks to writer Reginald Edmund about Ride Share at Writers Theatre—and the real-life experiences that inspired it.

Being a public driver has never been an easy way to make a living. But with the demise of the traditional taxi industry, the job has gotten even harder.…Read More

Ride Share explores the dark side of the gig economyDmitry Samarovon June 21, 2021 at 8:30 pm Read More »

‘Craziest 45 seconds of my life’: Tornado tears through western suburbs, damaging over 100 homes and injuring severalJermaine Nolenon June 21, 2021 at 10:13 pm

Debris from a home destroyed by severe weather is shown in Naperville, Monday, June 21, 2021. | Rich Hein/Sun-Times

The tornado appeared to start in Naperville, then cut a destructive path through Woodridge, Darien and Downers Grove.

In the early morning hours Monday, neighbors in suburbs across the Chicago area emerged from their homes after a tornado ripped through the area late Sunday night, damaging more than a hundred homes and injuring several people, including a woman in critical condition.

“Unbelievable,” a woman said while staring at a home missing its roof and a wall in Woodridge. The “craziest 45 seconds of my life,” said another. “You could hear the metal literally ripping off of the buildings,” said a woman in Darien. Others said it sounded like a train went by — overhead.

And then, “as fast as it came, it was gone,” Naperville homeowner Joseph Palacios said.

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.

In Naperville, while emergency crews continued going door to door check on residents, residents came in and out of their homes to survey the damage.

“It’s shocking to see the devastation — all the trees are just gone, [as well as] people’s houses,” Palacios said.

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. “Just to see it torn up, it’s obviously never going to look the same ever again.”

In Woodridge, 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. Monday. 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, 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 High School, 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.”

HIs mother 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. 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,’” 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.

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

“It’s crazy to go through this,” she said. “That’s a traumatic event.”

Debris 10,000 feet in the atmosphere, winds up to 135 mph

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 there were power outages and gas leaks reported.

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.

Porter, 27, 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.

Southwest suburbs hit, too

In Darien, Maureen Malloy recalls the lights going off around 11:15 p.m. Sunday as the winds picked up.

“You could hear the metal literally ripping off of the buildings,” Malloy said. “The wind was so strong that it was coming through the bottom and side of my door and it was blowing my hair back.”

She said that only lasted for about two minutes, but she waited until close to 1 a.m. to assess the damage. The entire street was blocked with trees, and a five-story weeping willow fell inches from her home.

“We are all very fortunate,” Malloy said. “These trees seriously could have killed somebody.”

Nicole Poletti was in the basement of her house in Burr Ridge with her husband and two kids when she heard a loud bang.

“It sounded like an explosion, and it happened in a split second,” she said. It was not until a bit later into the night that her husband was able to walk upstairs and see that noise was a tree falling onto their house.

She left with her kids to stay with her parents for the night, but Monday morning she saw the full extent of the damage.

“We have broken windows, damage to our roof, and actual branches going through our ceiling to our attic. A couple of trees fell onto our house,” she said. Their front yard and driveway were littered with so many broken branches it was hard to see the ground, she said. Her car was also completely destroyed.

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.

Read More

‘Craziest 45 seconds of my life’: Tornado tears through western suburbs, damaging over 100 homes and injuring severalJermaine Nolenon June 21, 2021 at 10:13 pm Read More »