Videos

Waukegan, Romeoville coal-fired power plants to shut down in 2022on June 17, 2021 at 3:53 pm

Two coal-fired power plants in the Chicago area, both major sources of air pollution, will be closed by their owner in June of next year, according to a company presentation to its investors.

In a presentation Thursday, NRG announced the planned retirements of the coal plant in Waukegan and another in Romeoville in 2022. NRG representatives didn’t immediately respond to questions about the planned closures.

“This is sooner than anyone anticipated,” said Celeste Flores of the group Clean Power Lake County, which since 2013 has called for closure of the Waukegan plant and advocated for redeveloping the lakefront property. “Now we want a just transition plan from the company. We are the ones living day to day breathing in this pollution.”

The announcement follows months of debate among state lawmakers about when to order the closure of all the remaining coal plants in Illinois to reduce air pollution and fight climate change. That debate came to a grinding halt this week even as Gov. J.B. Pritzker, legislators and various interest groups seemed to be in agreement on a 2035 date for closing all coal plants in the state. Though their numbers are declining nationally, coal plants are a major source of greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change.

NRG, like other fossil fuel power companies, has been exploring a new business model as coal is less economical due to competition from cheaper natural gas power and often-subsidized clean energy sources such as wind and solar. Even subsidized nuclear power is squeezing out coal. A big piece of the energy bill being debated in Springfield is an almost $700 million bailout for three Exelon nuclear power plants so that the state can phase out fossil fuel energy sources.

The announcement was made in a portion of the company’s presentation called “path to decarbonization,” a reference to NRG’s goal of reducing harmful carbon emissions.

The Waukegan plant has been the target of local protests for years because of its proximity to tens of thousands of residents along the lakefront. Waukegan plant officials could not be reached.

Advocates, who have warned of the health impacts of coal plants, welcomed the news.

“The closing of these last big Chicago-area coal-power plants is a testament to the tireless work of local community leaders living in the shadow of smokestacks,” said Brian Urbaszewski, director of environmental health programs for Respiratory Health Association.

Urbaszewski cited a 2012 study that found almost a third of Waukegan High School students had been diagnosed with asthma or experienced asthma symptoms.

NRG previously decided to shut one of two coal plant units in Romeoville in 2014. About 150 people now work at the Romeoville plant. A plant worker who answered the phone said he couldn’t comment.

Brett Chase’s reporting on the environment and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

Read More

Waukegan, Romeoville coal-fired power plants to shut down in 2022on June 17, 2021 at 3:53 pm Read More »

Biden abroad: Pitching America to welcoming if wary allieson June 17, 2021 at 4:08 pm

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden spent his first trip overseas highlighting a sharp break from his disruptive predecessor, selling that the United States was once more a reliable ally with a steady hand at the wheel. European allies welcomed the pitch — and even a longtime foe acknowledged it.

But while Biden returned Wednesday night to Washington after a week across the Atlantic that was a mix of messaging and deliverables, questions remained as to whether those allies would trust that Biden truly represents a long-lasting reset or whether Russian President Vladimir Putin would curb his nation’s misbehaviors.

Biden’s mantra, which he uttered in Geneva and Brussels and on the craggy coast of Cornwall, England, was that “America was back.” It was Putin, of all people, on the trip’s final moments, who may have best defined Biden’s initial voyage overseas.

“President Biden is an experienced statesman,” Putin told reporters. “He is very different from President Trump.”

But the summit with Putin in Geneva, which shadowed the entire trip and brought it to its close, also underscored the fragility of Biden’s declarations that the global order had returned.

Though both men declared the talks constructive, Putin’s rhetoric did not change, as he refused to accept any responsibility for his nation’s election interference, cyberhacking or crackdown on domestic political opponents. At the summit’s conclusion Biden acknowledged that he could not be confident that Putin would change his behavior even with newly threatened consequences.

Biden’s multilateral summits with fellow democracies — the Group of Seven wealthy nations and NATO — were largely punctuated by sighs of relief from European leaders who had been rattled by President Donald Trump over four years. Yet there were still closed-door disagreement on just how the Western powers should deal with Russia or Biden’s declaration that an economic competition with China would define the 21st century.

“Everyone at the table understood and understands both the seriousness and the challenges that we’re up against, and the responsibility of our proud democracies to step up and deliver for the rest of the world,” Biden said Sunday in England.

As vice president and chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Biden had trotted the globe for more than four decades before he stepped off Air Force One and onto foreign soil for the first time as commander in chief. His initial stop, after a speech to thank U.S. troops stationed in England, was for a gathering with the other G-7 leaders.

The leaders staked their claim to bringing the world out of the coronavirus pandemic and crisis, pledging more than 1 billion coronavirus vaccine doses to poorer nations, vowing to help developing countries grow while fighting climate change and backing a minimum tax on multinational firms.

At the group’s first face-to-face meeting in two years because of the pandemic, the leaders dangled promises of support for global health, green energy, infrastructure and education — all to demonstrate that international cooperation is back after the upheavals caused by the pandemic and Trump’s unpredictability. There were concerns, though, that not enough was done to combat climate change and that 1 billion doses were not nearly sufficient to meet the stated goal of ending the COVID-19 pandemic globally by the end of 2022.

The seven nations met in Cornwall and largely adhered to Biden’s hope that they rally together to declare they would be a better friend to poorer nations than authoritarian rivals such as China. A massive infrastructure plan for the developing world, meant to compete with Beijing’s efforts, was commissioned, and China was called out for human rights abuses, prompting an angry response from the Asian power.

But even then, there were strains, with Germany, Italy and the representatives for the European Union reluctant to call out China, a valuable trading partner, too harshly. And there a wariness in some European capitals that it was Biden, rather than Trump, who was the aberration to American foreign policy and that the United States could soon fall back into a transactional, largely inward-looking approach.

After Cornwall, the scene shifted to Brussels where many of the same faces met for a gathering at NATO. Biden used the moment to highlight the renewed U.S. commitment to the 30-country alliance that was formed as a bulwark to Moscow’s aggression but frequently maligned by his predecessor.

He also underscored the U.S. commitment to Article 5 of the alliance charter, which spells out that an attack — including, as of this summit, some cyberattacks — on any member is an assault on all and is to be met with a collective response. Trump had refused to commit to the pact and had threatened to pull the U.S. out of the alliance.

“Article 5 we take as a sacred obligation,” said Biden. “I want NATO to know America is there.”

When Air Force One touched back down in Washington, Biden again faced an uncertain future for his legislative agenda, the clock ticking on a deadline to land a bipartisan infrastructure deal as the president was confronted with growing intransigence from Republicans and mounting impatience from fellow Democrats. But Biden and his aides believe he accomplished what he set out to do in Europe.

The most tactile of politicians, Biden reveled in the face-to-face diplomacy, having grown frustrated with trying to negotiate with world leaders over Zoom. Even amid some disagreements, he was greeted warmly by most of his peers, other presidents and prime ministers eager to exchange awkward elbow bumps and adopt his “build back better” catchphrase.

At the end of each day, Biden would huddle with aides, including Secretary of State Tony Blinken and national security adviser Jake Sullivan, eagerly going over a play-by-play of the day’s meetings and preparing for the next. Aides padded his schedule with some down time to pace the 78-year-old president, though there were still a few missteps, including some verbal flubs and when he simply neglected to announce a Boeing-Airbus deal in front of the European Council.

His summit with Putin, coming three years after Trump sided with the Russian leader over U.S. intelligence agencies when those two men met in Helsinki, loomed over the trip, with the cable networks giving it Super Bowl levels of hype. Aides wanted to confront Putin early in the presidency, with some hope of reining in Moscow and reaching some stability so the administration could more squarely focus on China.

There were no fireworks in their summit near the Swiss Alps, and the nations agreed to return ambassadors to each other’s capitals and took some small steps toward strategic stability.

But while Biden was able to deliver stern warnings to Putin behind closed doors, he also extracted few promises. In the Russian president’s post-summit remarks, he engaged in classic Putin misdirection and what-about-ism to undermine any of the United States’ moral high ground.

In his own Geneva news conference, Biden stood against a postcard-perfect backdrop of a tree-lined lake, taking off his suit jacket as the sun beat down from behind, so bright that reporters had trouble looking directly at the president.

Once more, Biden declared that America was back, but he also soberly made clear that it was impossible to immediately know if any progress with Russia had, in fact, been made.

“What will change their behavior is if the rest of world reacts to them and it diminishes their standing in the world,” Biden said. “I’m not confident of anything; I’m just stating a fact.”

___

Madhani reported from Geneva.

Read More

Biden abroad: Pitching America to welcoming if wary allieson June 17, 2021 at 4:08 pm Read More »

Diamondbacks tie MLB record for consecutive road lossesJanie McCauley | Associated Presson June 17, 2021 at 2:56 pm

The Diamondbacks’ Asdrubal Cabrera reacts after being called out on strikes by home plate umpire Adam Beck Wednesday night.
The Diamondbacks’ Asdrubal Cabrera reacts after being called out on strikes by home plate umpire Adam Beck Wednesday night. | Tony Avelar/AP

Arizona dropped its 22nd straight road game Wednesday night, matching the 1963 Mets and ‘43 Philadelphia Athletics for the major league record with a 13-7 loss to the San Francisco Giants.

SAN FRANCISCO — Hours before first pitch, many of the Arizona Diamondbacks were busy working in an outdoor weight room at Oracle Park as others prepared for their pregame fielding drills.

The little things aren’t leading to winning results right now, which makes the constant losing all the more painful. Manager Torey Lovullo is searching for answers from his own staff as well as baseball friends everywhere who might offer something that works.

Arizona dropped its 22nd straight road game Wednesday night, matching the 1963 Mets and ‘43 Philadelphia Athletics for the major league record with a 13-7 loss to the San Francisco Giants.

“This is obviously nothing that we ever expected, nothing that we’re proud of, and we can’t reverse anything that’s happened over the past 40-plus days,” Lovullo said. “We’ve got to find a way to win a baseball game tomorrow.”

Buster Posey hit a three-run homer in a first inning that lasted 43 minutes, while Steven Duggar and LaMonte Wade Jr. connected in the fourth as San Francisco sent its NL West rival to a 13th consecutive loss overall. Pinch-hitter Wilmer Flores added a two-run drive in the fifth and Brandon Belt hit his ninth homer that inning.

Giants starter Anthony DeSclafani (7-2) pitched a two-hit shutout against the Nationals on June 11 and followed that with another impressive performance to win his third straight start. The right-hander allowed two runs on five hits, struck out five and walked one over five innings.

Cabrera homered and Ketel Marte hit a two-run double in the D-backs’ five-run sixth.

“It’s really hard because we’ve been working hard every day,” third baseman Asdrúbal Cabrera said. “I feel bad for me and my teammates because I know we’re working hard.”

Arizona jumped ahead 2-0 in the first against DeSclafani — but that could hardly feel comfortable for the D-backs a day after they squandered a 7-0 advantage when Mike Yastrzemski hit a grand slam with two outs in the eighth inning for a 9-8 Giants’ victory.

“I think last night helped us remember, or a better way to put that is reminded us, that we have big innings in us and we have the ability to grind out at-bats and wear pitchers down,” Giants manager Gabe Kapler said.

On Wednesday, Josh Rojas hit the third pitch of the game for a double and scored moments later on Wade’s error in left field when he over ran a liner by Marte. Eduardo Escobar doubled to left one out later.

After Brandon Crawford’s one-out walk in the first, D-backs catcher Stephen Vogt tried six pickoff attempts at first before Donovan Solano’s swinging strikeout. Jason Vosler followed with an RBI double against Arizona righty Merrill Kelly (2-7) .

Kelly, who entered the game holding opponents to a .235 average over his previous four road starts, was knocked out after three innings. He had three of his team’s nine walks.

“We’re all searching for those types of answers,” Kelly said of what’s not working. “… At the end of the day this is our job. Whether we like it or not, whether things are going the way that we want them to go, there’s nowhere to hide. We’ve got to come in tomorrow and try our best to forget about today and do the things that we need to do or do the things that we think we need to do in order to try to win tomorrow.”

Read More

Diamondbacks tie MLB record for consecutive road lossesJanie McCauley | Associated Presson June 17, 2021 at 2:56 pm Read More »

This week in history: Ella Fitzgerald makes her Chicago debutAlison Martinon June 17, 2021 at 3:00 pm

Ella Fitzgerald, by Chester Sheard.
Ella Fitzgerald, shown here performing on an unknown date, died this week in history on June 15, 1996. | Chester Sheard

The jazz singer, who died this week on June 15, 1996, appeared for the first time on Chicago stages on Sept. 23, 1939.

As published in the Chicago Daily News, sister publication of the Chicago Sun-Times:

For six decades, Ella Fitzgerald wowed audiences with her beautiful, jazzy voice and her hit songs from “It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)” to “Summertime.” She also broke barriers when she became the first Black woman to win a Grammy award in 1958.

But on Sept. 23, 1939, no one in Chicago quite recognized the talent, who died this week on June 15, 1996, that was about to perform on the city’s stages for the first time at the Grand Terrace (35th Street and South Park, now King Drive).

“On Thursday night, the dusky song star, now only 21 years old, made her first Chicago night-club appearance with her own band behind her and an intensely interesting Grand Terrace audience in front of her,” Chicago Daily News reporter Joseph Lawler wrote after seeing Fitzgerald perform.

Fitzgerald exploded onto the entertainment scene in 1934 when she won an amateur singing contest at the Apollo Theater in New York City, according to Biography. At the time, she’d been living on the streets. After she won the contest, she met bandleader Chick Webb and began performing with him as a singer at the Savory in Harlem. Just a year before her Chicago debut, she recorded two hits: “A-Tisket, A-Tasket” and “I Found My Yellow Basket.”

Though best known for her singing, Fitzgerald once hoped to become a dancer, and Lawler noted that some of her dancing skills appeared in her singing through the way her voice moved (she had a three-octave range).

“She is, instead, a dance instructor’s dream of a vocalist — a singer who treats her voice like an integral instrument of the band,” Lawler wrote.

The Daily News reporter didn’t include Fitzgerald’s setlist, but she did sing “A-Tisket, A-Tasket” for her fans.

In her dressing room after the show, Fitzgerald told her reporters she’d been writing music since she was 17 and studied it for “a half term in public schools,” the paper reported. She admitted that she knew very little about writing, but the “boys fix it up” when needed.

Read More

This week in history: Ella Fitzgerald makes her Chicago debutAlison Martinon June 17, 2021 at 3:00 pm Read More »

Rafael Nadal won’t play at Wimbledon and Tokyo OlympicsAssociated Presson June 17, 2021 at 3:38 pm

Rafael Nadal said he will not play at Wimbledon and the Tokyo Olympics.
Rafael Nadal said he will not play at Wimbledon and the Tokyo Olympics. | Thibault Camus/AP

Nadal has won the title at Wimbledon twice, in 2008 and 2010. He also won the Olympic gold medal in singles at the 2008 Beijing Games and in doubles at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games.

MADRID — Rafael Nadal will not play at Wimbledon or at the Tokyo Olympics, saying Thursday he has decided to skip the two tournaments after “listening” to his body.

Nadal, who reached the French Open semifinals last week but lost to Novak Djokovic, has won the title at Wimbledon twice, in 2008 and 2010. He also won the Olympic gold medal in singles at the 2008 Beijing Games and in doubles at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games.

“The goal is to prolong my career and continue to do what makes me happy, that is to compete at the highest level and keep fighting for those professional and personal goals at the maximum level of competition,” Nadal said.

The 35-year-old Spaniard said the fact that there are only two weeks between Roland Garros and Wimbledon “didn’t make it easier” on his body to recover from “the always demanding” clay-court season.

“Sport prevention of any kind of excess in my body is a very important factor at this stage of my career in order to try to keep fighting for the highest level of competition and titles,” Nadal wrote on Twitter.

Nadal is a 20-time Grand Slam champion with a record 13 titles at the French Open.

His loss at Roland Garros last Friday was only his third in 108 matches at a tournament he won each of the last four years, including by beating Djokovic in the 2020 final.

Nadal sent a “special message” to fans in Britain and Japan in particular.

“The Olympic Games always meant a lot and they were always a priority as a Sports person, I found the spirit that every sports person in the world wants to live,” he wrote. “I personally had the chance to live 3 of them and had the honor to be the flag bearer for my country.”

Nadal hadn’t played much amid the coronavirus pandemic and had a slow start to his season. He won two titles, in Barcelona and in Rome, and had a 23-4 record so far this year.

Read More

Rafael Nadal won’t play at Wimbledon and Tokyo OlympicsAssociated Presson June 17, 2021 at 3:38 pm Read More »

8 LGBTQ+ Friendly Restaurants in ChicagoAudrey Snyderon June 17, 2021 at 2:28 pm

Pride Month isn’t just a time for members of the LGBTQ+ community to show their pride— it’s an opportunity for all of us to show up for the LGBTQ+ community. Show your support by visiting one of these LGBTQ friendly restaurants (some of them LGBTQ+-owned) in Chicago.

Wood

3335 N Halsted St, Chicago IL 60657

Named for the craft of owner Franco Gianni’s father, Wood is “an upscale casual dinner and drinks destination” in Northalsted. With small plates like San Marzano Flatbread, large plates like Pan-Roasted Monkfish, and cocktails both innovative and traditional, Wood has something delicious for every palate.

Advertisement

Tweet

5020 N Sheridan Rd, Chicago IL 60640

Advertisement

One of the greatest brunch spots in Chicago is also the sister establishment of Big Chicks. With breakfast burritos, an amazing staff, and a welcoming atmosphere, Tweet is one of the best places you can hit up during Pride Month.

D.S. Tequila Co.

3352 N Halsted St, Chicago IL 60657

This popular tex-mex spot is within walking distance of Wrigley Field, Belmont Theater District, and Center on Halsted. With a great beer list, a rotating frozen drink menu, and trivia nights, D.S. Tequila Co. is a jewel in the crown of Lakeview.

Jennivee’s Bakery

3301 N Sheffield Ave, Chicago IL 60657

Jenni Vee, an immigrant from the Philippines, opened her own bakery in East Lakeview, serving delicious cakes and pastries reminiscent of traditions from both the United States and the Philippines. Her shop caters to both late-night sweet tooths and pre-planned, custom orders.

R Public House

1508 W Jarvis Ave, Chicago IL 60626

In its own words, R Public House is “a community-driven pub that welcomes everyone.” Not only does the pub offer a great selection of craft beers and cocktails, but also donates proceeds from the events it hosts.

Wilde Bar & Restaurant

3130 N Broadway, Chicago IL 60657

With an impressive menu of signature cocktails (and “Wilde Favorites”!) and a tantalizing lunch and dinner menu, Wilde Bar & Restaurant is a great place to celebrate Pride Month in style.

Rogers Park Social

6920 N Glenwood Ave, 60626

A neighborhood-oriented bar, Rogers Park Social offers an array of craft beers and intriguing cocktails. It’s even run by residents of the neighborhood in an effort to further “infuse the spirit of community, diversity, and service” into every facet of your experience there.

Big Jones

5347 N Clark St, Chicago IL 60640

This Southern kitchen and bar embodies the essence of hospitality. Chef Paul Fehribach not only cooks up a mean shrimp and grits, but also volunteers with Cooking Up Change, Share Our Strength, and other organizations.

The post 8 LGBTQ+ Friendly Restaurants in Chicago appeared first on UrbanMatter.

Read More

8 LGBTQ+ Friendly Restaurants in ChicagoAudrey Snyderon June 17, 2021 at 2:28 pm Read More »

Skanking Lizard helped birth Chicago’s live reggae sceneSteve Krakowon June 17, 2021 at 11:00 am


Skanking Lizard’s new vinyl retrospective, Original Chicago Reggae: 1978-1996, quadruples the number of formally released tracks in their discography.

Since 2004 Plastic Crimewave (aka Steve Krakow) has used the Secret History of Chicago Music to shine a light on worthy artists with Chicago ties who’ve been forgotten, underrated, or never noticed in the first place.…Read More

Skanking Lizard helped birth Chicago’s live reggae sceneSteve Krakowon June 17, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »