COVID-19 money was supposed to go to one-time expenses, not to adding positions and programs that would continue long after the aid was gone.
Ezike, a regular face on Illinois TV screens in the worst days of the pandemic, acknowledged she violated the state's "revolving door" ethics law when she took the job as CEO of Sinai Chicago in 2022,
As U.S. police departments release preliminary or finalized 2024 crime numbers, many are reporting historic declines in homicides and drops in other violent crimes compared to 2023
Total funding for Chicago startups was $2.5 billion last year, up 3% from 2023, research firm PitchBook and the National Venture Capital Association say. But the number of deals was down 11% to 317 and well off the recent peak of 481 investments in 2021.
The average driver lost $771 in time and productivity due to traffic jams in 2024, a transportation analyst at INRIX told Newsweek. INRIX, a global transportation data and analytics leader, released its 2024 global traffic scorecard, identifying and ranking congestion trends in nearly 1,000 cities across 37 countries.
Former Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike, who led the agency during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, has been fined $150,000 for violating an anti-corruption law.
She has been fined for violating a state revolving-door ethics law when she left her job as director of the Illinois Department of Public Health in March 2022 to become president and CEO of Sinai Chicago hospital system.
As U.S. police departments release preliminary or finalized 2024 crime numbers, many are reporting historic declines in homicides and drops in other violent crimes compared to 2023.
The city’s cultural arts department increased grants to artists during the COVID-19 pandemic. Now, with an arts economy in flux, close observers are wondering what the future holds.
Former Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike, who led the agency during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, has been fined $150,000 for violating an anti-corruption law.
Programs partly funded by the flow of opioid settlement cash are beginning to turn the tide, experts and preliminary data suggest.
She started her career at the Tribune as an overnight crime reporter in 2019 and has since covered Cook County government, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and George Floyd protests on Chicago ...