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Jan 16, 2024

Despite Decades of Cries for Help, Chicago Failed to Aid Blind Pedestrians. Now, City Wants Lengthy Timeline to Fix Problem

Fewer than 2% of Chicago’s signalized intersections have an accessible pedestrian signal that provides auditory and tactile guidance to blind, low-vision and deafblind pedestrians — despite more than two decades of requests and years of internal acknowledgement from city staffers about the need for such accommodations.

Jan 16, 2024

Emails Show Johnson, City Officials Notified About Sewage, Roaches and Illnesses at Pilsen Migrant Shelter Almost 2 Months Before Boy’s Death Highlighted Problems

Emails from late October exclusively obtained by WTTW News shine new light on the timeline of when Mayor Brandon Johnson and his administration were made aware of conditions at a migrant shelter in Pilsen and what exactly those conditions were. 

Jan 15, 2024

Jan. 15, 2024 - Full Show

Using the arts to repair homes and combat neighborhood disinvestment. And on this Martin Luther King Jr. Day we take a nuanced look at the revered civil rights leader.

Jan 15, 2024

Project Aims to Repair Englewood Homes, Combat Disinvestment Through the Arts

Artist Tonika Lewis Johnson is highlighting historical injustices while working to revitalize vacant lots in Englewood. It’s part of her latest project, “unBlocked Englewood.”

Jan 15, 2024

In 1978, Coretta Scott King Spoke With WTTW About Her Husband’s Life and Legacy

Coretta Scott King discusses her husband's legacy during a 1978 interview on WTTW. 

Jan 12, 2024

Week in Review: Johnson Suspends Migrant Eviction Policy; Trump Sounds Off in Courtroom

Chicago bears down for an icy winter storm. And assessing the GOP Iowa caucus on the weekend before voters there go to the polls.

Jan 9, 2024

Jan. 9, 2024 - Full Show

A ban on extremist police officers is set to go into effect in Chicago. The dangers facing American democracy in 2024. And the history of dibs, Chicago’s tradition of saving parking spots.

Jan 9, 2024

UChicago Terrorism Expert Says America a ‘Tinderbox’ in 2024

Saturday marked the third anniversary of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol by supporters of then President Donald Trump.

Jan 9, 2024

Spotlight Politics: Policy Banning Chicago Police Officers From Joining Extremist Groups to Take Effect

The ban on Chicago police officers belonging to extremist groups takes effect Saturday. The U.S. Supreme Court took a pass on the latest challenge to Illinois’ assault weapons ban. And why it took decades to prove former Ald. Ed Burke's corruption and abuse of power.

Jan 9, 2024

Chicago Public Schools Receives $20M to Buy 50 Electric School Buses

Chicago Public Schools was among 67 winners of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s first Clean School Bus Program.

Jan 9, 2024

Director of UChicago’s Forum for Free Inquiry and Expression on Campus Controversy and University Presidents

“Those schools, the presidents that were up there testifying, while they were saying, ‘oh you know we preserve freedom of speech, we value freedom of speech,’ they in fact do have records of suppressing speech,” says Tom Ginsburg of the Forum for Free Inquiry and Expression. 

Jan 8, 2024

Jan. 8, 2024 - Full Show

The push to create a permanent board to oversee the Chicago Police Department begins. An attorney trying to disqualify former President Donald Trump from the ballot in Illinois. And free expression on college campuses. 

Jan 8, 2024

Illinois Joins States Considering Challenges to Donald Trump’s Candidacy on Insurrection Grounds

A legal challenge from five voters has made Illinois the 18th state forced to grapple with whether former President Donald Trump should be disqualified from the 2024 ballot.

Jan 8, 2024

WTTW News Explains: How Did Dibs Become a Chicago Winter Tradition?

Every winter, Chicago stands divided around a practice commonly known as “dibs” – when car owners use janky household objects to reserve their precious shoveled-out parking spaces. So how did it begin? 

Jan 8, 2024

Push to Create Permanent Chicago Police Oversight Board Begins

Applications are now open to serve four-year terms on the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability, which is designed to give Chicagoans real control of the police department as part of an effort to build trust in officers and police brass and put an end to repeated allegations of misconduct.