City News
Now-fired Arizona produce inspector accused of human smuggling
Arrest could further stall nomination of ...
Read More New Phoenix affordable housing community welcomes tenants
La Esperanza Terrace offers nearly 100 ...
Read More 1st-of-its-kind fund provides scholarships for LGBTQ college students in California
The National Rainbow College Fund is ...
Read More How this Vietnamese service center uniquely caters to Santa Clara County community, refugees
The center integrates medical and dental ...
Read More San Jose opens 1st interim housing site on private land after less than year of construction
The City of San Jose officially ...
Read More Revoked international visas reinstated for several Bay Area college students, many still in limbo
In the last 24 hours, many ...
Read More SF to expand program that offers shelter beds to drug addicts if they accept treatment
San Francisco will be expanding a ...
Read More San Francisco considers ‘recovery first’ drug policy as overdose deaths rise
Supervisor Matt Dorsey's proposed shift in ...
Read More ‘They Still Deserve More’ protesters seek support for caretakers of people with disabilities
Funding increase has broad bipartisan support, ...
Read More Right of Coloradans with disabilities to live at home would be protected under Colorado bill
By Stephanie Wolf Apr. 29, 2025, 4:00 ...
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Chicago Spent $510.9M on Overtime in 2024, Including $273.8M for Police, Down Slightly From Last Year
Heather Cherone | Jared Rutecki | July 22, 2025, 4:38 pm The city of Chicago spent approximately $510.9 million on employee overtime in 2024 — 1.5% less than in 2023, with more than half of the total amount used to compensate Chicago Police Department officers for working extra hours, according to records obtained by WTTW News. The…
Read More Chicago Eliminates Parking Minimums Near Transit
Changes to a city ordinance make it easier to build ‘by-right’ car-free developments near train stations and pave the way for more affordable housing. July 23, 2025, 6:00 AM PDT By Diana Ionescu Writing in Streetsblog Chicago, Steven Vance and John Greenfield praise the city of Chicago’s recent move to eliminate parking minimums near train stations…
Read More Illinois officials express concern over Medicaid, SNAP cuts in new budget law
by: Jenna Barnes, Ethan Illers Posted: Jul 8, 2025 / 07:22 PM CDT CHICAGO (WGN) – Elected officials and local leaders gathered in downtown Chicago Tuesday to discuss their concerns now that President Trump’s so-called “big, beautiful bill” is law. WGN-TV listened in on a roundtable discussion with the American Civil Liberties Union and several Democratic members…
Read More LGBTQ+ health centers brace for Trump’s attacks
Chicago-area research labs and community health clinics are navigating illegal funding stoppages, censorship, and increasing anti-LGBTQ+ violence under President Donald Trump. by Devyn-Marshall Brown (DMB) June 25, 2025 John Peller’s two decades as an AIDS Foundation of Chicago (AFC) staff member have been marked by highs and lows. In 2010, after President Barack Obama signed the…
Read More What’s next for CPS?
New leadership and looming budget problems are on the horizon for Chicago Public Schools. by Maureen Kelleher June 26, 2025 June 18 was the last day on the job for Pedro Martinez, the long-embattled chief executive officer of Chicago Public Schools. Only a week before he left, the Chicago Board of Education narrowly voted to appoint…
Read More Travel time after Dobbs spiked in states that curbed abortion access, with Arizona seeing surge from Texas
Emma Bradford/Cronkite News July 14, 2025 WASHINGTON – In 14 states that made abortion all but impossible to obtain after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, women seeking to end a pregnancy had to drive four times further on average – 11.3 hours, up from 2.8 hours. “People are spending a lot of time…
Read More Core of who we are: ‘Black Folk Photography’ inspires reflection at Carver Museum
Travis Bradley/Cronkite News July 2, 2025 PHOENIX — The George Washington Carver Museum and Cultural Center wasn’t always a national landmark. Nearly 100 years ago, it was the Phoenix Union Colored High School – a symbolic representation of the reprehensible race relations in the Valley during the 1920s. Today, it is affectionately known as “The…
Read More Valley program helps people and the animals they can’t live without
ABC15 talked with Marion and her husband, Bob Auray, who founded what is now the Companion Animal Program at St. Vincent De Paul in Phoenix. By: Kaley O’Kelley Posted 6:48 AM, Jul 01, 2025 PHOENIX — It started with a simple question asked over lunch. Marion Auray, who had spent years working in animal rescue, was chatting…
Read More As tensions boil over Trump policy, Arizona high school athletes contend with immigration uncertainty in their communities
Sebastian Mondaca Sepulveda/Cronkite News June 9, 2025 PHOENIX – While President Donald Trump’s decision to deploy National Guard troops to Los Angeles has garnered national attention, a quieter storyline is unfolding at high schools in Arizona. Young athletes from diverse backgrounds are speaking out as they witness the growing fears in their communities surrounding deportation.…
Read More Hundreds march in Chicago Disability Pride Parade that celebrates diversity, demands accessibility
Katherine Weaver, Chicago Tribune Sat, July 26, 2025 at 2:31 PM CDT You wouldn’t guess that Matt Keeth has a severe visual impairment from the way he skateboarded up and down Chicago’s Disability Pride Parade in the Loop — if not for the red-and-white striped cane he rolls in front of him. Keeth, 31, a…
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