Chicago’s street vendors want the city to address licensing and crime
From Albany Park to Pilsen, Chicago street vendors have faced challenges for years around licensing and public health requirements.
From Albany Park to Pilsen, Chicago street vendors have faced challenges for years around licensing and public health requirements.
Chicago Public Library abandoned its physical kids museum passport program in favor of a new digital program. The offerings increase and decrease access in different ways.
For some, like Heather Clark, home means independence when navigating the world as a person living with motor disabilities.
Erwin Lopez Rada is a Venezuelan immigrant who was forced to leave his country because of political repression, and has made a new home in Chicago.
In Illinois, 8% of the population doesn’t speak English very well, and that’s a barrier for immigrants participating in civic life.
Members of the transgender community find affirmation and support from those closest to them despite rifts with relatives over their identities and laws targeting them.
Can Blackness be quantified? And if so, by whom?
The independent Black publishing house lost nearly $190,000 worth of inventory after a pipe burst last winter.
“Everybody deserves a second chance,” says Sun-Times columnist Mary Mitchell. She explains the policy with executive editor Jennifer Kho.
Millions of dollars in rental assistance has helped prevent thousands of evictions, but a mounting housing affordability crisis remains.