City Services

  • Monthly photo calendar for 2025: "The City that Doesn't Work"

    2 December 2024
    stand

    Inside Chicago Government has created a monthly picture calendar for 2025.

    It features photos of Chicago city employees on the job, which we gathered from all over town.

    We've titled the calendar "The City that Doesn't Work," cribbed from Chicago's unofficial slogan, "The city that works."

    We'll send the calendar—printed in Chicago on high-quality, photographic card stock, with its own desktop stand—to folks who subscribe to Inside Chicago Government at the Chief of Staff level.

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    Our inspiration for the calendar is captured by this quote from former inspector general Joe Ferguson, in a Sept. 5 interview with the Chicago Sun-Times:

    "The Water Department operates under 17 different collective bargaining agreements . . . It routinely involves staffing modest-sized street projects with a whole array of people who have to take turns doing their job with everybody else sort of standing around a hole or standing by waiting for their turn. There have got to be ways to do this better."

    Learn about Chicago's "The city that works" slogan here (requires Superintendent or higher subscription):

    Available only to subscribers. Subscribe here for unlimited access. Subscribers: log in.

  • Chicago Police sergeant: district station crumbling, flooding, and unhealthy for years

    28 December 2023

    At a November public meeting, a Chicago Police Dept. sergeant revealed unsafe and unhealthy conditions at the 11th District police station on the West Side.

  • Why have so many Venezuelans fled to Chicago?

    2 November 2023

    Since August of 2022, over 19,000 migrants have come from the U.S. southern border to Chicago—thousands of whom are now camped out in the city's police stations and airports.

    Migrants
    Migrants residing at a North Side police station
    in November. Photo by Dave Glowacz.

    According to the city of Chicago, most the migrants have come from Venezuela. What caused them to flee their homeland?

    A recent report from the Great Cities Institute of the University of Iliinois at Chicago gives some clues.

    The report is titled, "The Current Migrant Crisis: How U.S. Policy Toward Latin America Has Fueled Historic Numbers of Asylum Seekers." Its author, Juan González, is a senior research fellow at the institute—and a co-host of the long-running "Democracy Now!" news broadcast.

    In these excerpts from the 17-page report, González describes the U.S. government's economic pressures on the nation of Venezuela:

    "In late 2014 President Obama signed an executive order—not publicly released until March 2015—in which he declared that conditions in Venezuela had become a national emergency and an 'extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.' The order never spelled out exactly how a small South American country hundreds of miles away, with a standing army of only 100,000 troops, could suddenly become a threat to world’s most powerful nation. Nonetheless, Obama launched a series of economic sanctions against Venezuela."

    "His successor Donald Trump followed in 2017 with even broader sanctions which closed off Venezuela's access to Western debt financing, forced many U.S. and foreign companies to leave the country, and crippled its oil industry, the Venezuelan government’s main source of revenue. Trump even froze the assets in 2019 of CITGO Petroleum, a U.S. company that is wholly owned by Venezuela’s state oil company. CITGO’s refineries and gas stations in the U.S. are enormously valuable. In 2022 they generated . . . more than $2.8 billion in profit, but Trump’s actions effectively prevented any of that money from reaching the Venezuelan government and its people."

    "Meanwhile, the White House joined with the United Kingdom to freeze Venezuelan gold reserves stored in the Bank of England worth an estimated $2 billion."

    "The effect of these massive U.S. sanctions caused the Venezuelan state to lose between $17 billion and $31 billion in oil revenues between 2017 and 2020. Given that Venezuela normally imports 90 percent of its pharmaceuticals and 70 percent of its food, the loss of such a vast quantity of U.S. dollars from its shrinking oil exports has crippled its economy."

  • Sept. City Council takes shelter, chance on finance

    6 October 2023

    In a discussion by journalists Dave Glowacz and Ben Joravsky, Dave and Ben evaluated audio from September, 2023 meetings of the Chicago City Council.

  • May mayoral debut: dodge 'em, and maybe mayhem

    14 June 2023

    In a discussion by journalists Dave Glowacz and Ben Joravsky, Dave and Ben probed audio from 2023's May meetings of the full Chicago City Council.

  • March City Council: failure to communicate

    3 April 2023

    In a discussion by journalists Dave Glowacz and Ben Joravsky, Dave and Ben heard and weighed parts of the March 15, 2023 meeting of the full Chicago City Council.

  • What newly-elected aldermen need to know, and who might tell them

    1 February 2023

    In an audio interview, First Ward Ald. Daniel La Spata described the training needs of newly-elected City Council members.

  • Aldermen's pique at Lightfoot's 2023 budget, nominations

    29 November 2022

    In a discussion by journalists Dave Glowacz and Ben Joravsky, Dave and Ben listened to and evaluated meetings of the Chicago City Council that took place in October and November of 2022.

  • Sept. council kicks former public-housing land to soccer billionaire

    8 October 2022

    In a discussion by journalists Dave Glowacz and Ben Joravsky, Dave and Ben heard and assessed parts of the September, 2022 meeting of the full Chicago City Council.

  • Douglass Park festivals sock residents, block bike lanes

    21 August 2022

    Amid residents' complaints about intrusive festivals in Douglass Park, another concern has emerged: motor vehicles blocking the area's protected bike lanes.

  • New South Side TIF district intends CHA housing and charter school

    26 January 2022

    The city of Chicago has proposed at new tax-increment financing district south of the Stevenson expressway, west of South Cicero Ave.

  • A bonanza of Mayor Lightfoot's text and e-mail messages

    14 January 2022

    An open-government bonanza revealed e-mail and text messages to and from Mayor Lori Lightfoot spanning the years 2019 to 2021.

  • New Ill. law means more low (and not so low) income housing

    29 August 2021

    In this audio piece, housing specialists and others talk about how the creation of low-income housing in Chicago is tied to higher-income apartments—pursuant to a new Illinois incentive for developers.

  • July City Council: recondite fight on police oversight

    3 August 2021

    In a discussion by journalists Dave Glowacz and Ben Joravsky, Dave and Ben examined July meetings of the Chicago City Council.

  • India refuters, industry polluters grip March City Council

    21 April 2021

    In a discussion by journalists Dave Glowacz and Ben Joravsky, Dave and Ben listen to audio highlights of 2021's March meeting of the full Chicago City Council.

  • October City Council: aldermen pump brakes on contracting and TIF

    25 October 2020

    In an interview by Ben Joravsky with Dave Glowacz on the Chicago Reader's Ben Joravsky Show, Dave and Ben deconstructed audio from October 2020's meetings of the Chicago City Council finance committee, and the full council.

  • July City Council: landlords, landmarks, copwatch, and tribute

    5 August 2020

    In an interview by Ben Joravsky with Dave Glowacz on the Chicago Reader's Ben Joravsky Show, Dave and Ben give their persepectives on audio from the July 2020 meeting of the full Chicago City Council.

  • Aldermen trace race space in June council meeting

    5 July 2020

    In an interview by Ben Joravsky with Dave Glowacz on the Chicago Reader's Ben Joravsky Show, Ben and Dave listened to audio from the June 2020 meeting of the full Chicago City Council—and part of a "confidential" conference between the mayor and alderman.

  • Lightfoot hops hurdles in South/West leap for cash

    17 March 2020

    Funding for Mayor Lori Lightfoot's INVEST South/West project moved to full City Council approval, but with aldermanic hurdles along the way.

  • City Council wrap-up: Lightfoot scold, aldermen fold

    20 January 2020

    In an interview by Ben Joravsky with Dave Glowacz on the Chicago Reader's Ben Joravsky Show, Ben and Dave discussed the City Council's dramatic Jan. 2020 debate of a resolution regarding businesses having LGBT owners—and other council actions.

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