The Rundown | Chicago News - podcast cover

The Rundown | Chicago News

WBEZ Chicagowww.wbez.org
In one bite-sized episode every weekday, we'll keep you informed, tickled, geeked, and pondering on Chicago's news, culture and people. Each episode starts with a quick news roundup from the WBEZ newsroom, followed by a deep-dive into one of the biggest or most curious stories from our city. The Rundown podcast is a one-stop-shop for all things Chicago.
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Episodes

Lead paint worries, budget town halls, dropped murder charges

A WBEZ analysis shows Chicago Public Schools still has ongoing lead paint remediation projects, despite saying the work is done. Chicago leaders are hosting budget town halls to get feedback from residents. Cook County prosecutors have dropped murder charges for Carlishia Hood and her son.

Jun 27, 20236 min

Why the Chicago Sun-Times now offers a “right to be forgotten”

The Chicago Sun-Times announced a new policy earlier this month that allows people who have appeared in its news coverage to ask for a review – and possibly have those stories removed from internet searches. Sun-Times executive editor Jennifer Kho says the policy is a response to the permanence of the internet and Chicago’s history of unjust arrests. “At the Sun-Times,” Kho wrote when the policy went public, “we don’t think it’s fair for stories about arrests to follow people around forever if t...

Jun 26, 202313 min

Funding health care for kids, taxing music festivals, home sales in IL

An Illinois health care coverage program for kids loses millions in federal matching dollars due to clerical errors. An Illinois lawmaker wants a new ticket tax to help communities hosting major music festivals. Migrants in Chicago say they’re getting better treatment at police stations than they would at city shelters.

Jun 26, 20236 min

The definitive WBEZ guide to summertime in Chicago

The WBEZ Summer 250 is live! It’s our interactive guide to 250 (and counting) activities in the Chicago area this season. Stopping by to explain what’s inside the guide are WBEZ editor Cassie Walker Burke, who curated the content for the guide, and WBEZ visual producer Andjela Padejski, who designed the product experience.

Jun 23, 202315 min

Keeping Illinoisans on Medicaid, Metra upgrades, biking Lake Calumet

Illinois Medicaid providers are encouraging customers to renew their coverage plans. Three Metra stations on Chicago’s South Side are getting major upgrades that’ll make them more accessible to people with disabilities. Cook County is seeking resident input on ways to improve biking around Lake Calumet.

Jun 23, 20236 min

NASCAR worries, police in schools question, birthplace of House designation

As construction for NASCAR ramps up, O’Hare Airport concession workers warn severe understaffing could create havoc as the city braces for an influx of travelers for the race. Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson won’t call for an end to police in schools — despite opposing the practice as a candidate. The so-called “birthplace of House Music” will be officially designated as a historical landmark.

Jun 22, 20236 min

‘A lot of chaos’: A look at abortion access in the U.S. one year after Dobbs

It’s been a year since the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, which overturned Roe v. Wade and eliminated the constitutional right to abortion. What’s happened since? “A lot of chaos,” according to Lee Hasselbacher, the director of the University of Chicago’s Center for Interdisciplinary Inquiry and Innovation in Sexual and Reproductive Health. Lee explains the implications of the Dobbs decision one year in – for healthcare providers, pregnant people, tourists and everyone else.

Jun 21, 202317 min

The fight over Urban Prep, helping domestic violence survivors, banking equity

Urban Prep Academy is still fighting to stay open, even as CPS plans to open a replacement school this fall. The city of Chicago is officially launching another cash assistance program– this time for survivors of domestic violence. Three years after a WBEZ investigation into disparate home lending by banks, Chicago leaders say work still needs to be done.

Jun 21, 20236 min

A violent weekend, CTA survey results, funding for Burge victims memorial

After three shootings in the Chicago area, including one where at least 23 people were injured, one fatally, an Illinois congressman reiterates that guns are the problem. A recent survey shows that more people would use the CTA if there was expanded service during the weekday. A private foundation is funding a memorial to victims of former Chicago Police Commander John Burge and his “Midnight Crew.”

Jun 20, 20236 min

Tony Smith changes the world one student (and one photo) at a time

Tony Smith came of age during Chicago’s house music scene in the late 1970s. Chosen Few and Frankie Knuckles were his neighbors, and they helped him find his footing in Chicago’s arts scene, a space he’s occupied ever since. Smith’s a multimedia artist – a photographer, a musician, a documentarian and an archivist – and today he teaches his students at the Hyde Park Art Center how to have their own voice through art – and how it can make a difference. This episode was produced by Ari Mejia for W...

Jun 16, 202310 min

Juneteenth celebrations, temporary casino approved, Board of Education updates

Bally’s hopes to open a temporary casino in Chicago by the end of the summer after an initial greenlight from a state regulatory board yesterday. Some community groups are asking Mayor Brandon Johnson to solicit their input as he chooses new Board of Education members. Cook County’s annual Juneteenth festivities start today.

Jun 16, 20235 min

Coerced confession settlement, Douglass Park tensions, police reform questions

The City of Chicago may enter a multimillion dollar settlement over a coerced confession. The Chicago Park District gave the green light to three major music festivals in Douglass Park, despite complaints from residents. A former city official is sounding the alarm about Chicago’s slow pace of police reform.

Jun 15, 20236 min

Chicago closed 50 schools a decade ago. Was it worth it?

Imagine how you’d feel if your elementary school permanently closed its doors in the summer between your 2nd and 3rd grades, severing your relationship with friends, teachers and an entire community. For tens of thousands of Chicago students, that kind of situation was a reality in 2013, when then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel and the Chicago Board of Education closed 50 schools in one fell swoop. Ten years later, WBEZ and the Chicago Sun-Times analyzed why that decision was made and how it affected studen...

Jun 14, 202327 min

New book ‘Carmageddon’ imagines a society with less car dependence

Daniel Knowles rides his bike almost everywhere. When he’s not cycling, he takes the CTA from his home in Wicker Park. Knowles is from the United Kingdom and has traveled the world as a reporter, so he has seen how people across the globe get around town. His main takeaway: We need to lower our reliance on cars. From automobiles’ well-publicized drawbacks—car deaths and climate impact—to lesser-known contributions to housing insecurity and racial inequities, driving may be taking more from us th...

Jun 12, 202324 min

How to do summer festivals: Two cents from Chicago natives

It’s summer festival season in Chicago! From Market Days to World Dumpling Fest to the African/Caribbean International Festival of Life and dozens more, the city’s festivals give you the chance to eat, dance, and enjoy a new part of the city. WBEZ digital audience engagement manager Taylor Faye Nazon and Bekoe from our sister station Vocalo give us their top recommendations and advice for getting out there this year. Find a full list of this summer’s festivals at do312.com ....

Jun 09, 202320 min

Gov. Pritzker signs more than $50 billion state budget, but not all are happy

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker has signed next year’s more than $50 billion state budget. Wildfires in Canada mean hazy skies in Chicago, but, our air quality is on the upswing, says the Illinois State Climatologist. The American Lung Association quantifies the health benefits of more electric vehicles in Illinois.

Jun 08, 20236 min

Why are we talking about SCOTUS so much?

It seems like the Supreme Court is making more and more landmark decisions affecting Americans’ day-to-day lives. To explain the court’s role in democracy – how it started from the bottom and how it’s here – we spoke with Sarah Konsky, a law professor at the University of Chicago and the director of the university’s Jenner & Block Supreme Court and Appellate Clinic. She explains how the court is using its power more often and whether the other branches of government are pushing back.

Jun 07, 202323 min

Bike safety worries, demands from sexual abuse survivors, Bears’ negotiations

Biking advocates say they’re concerned for their safety with an increase in road construction around the Chicago area. Sexual abuse survivors are demanding Illinois do more to “out” Catholic religious leaders credibly accused of sexual abuse. As the Chicago Bears continue negotiations for a possible new stadium in Arlington Heights – some observers say they’re looking for leverage to get a better deal.

Jun 07, 20236 min

New Chicago officers, EV charging stations, family-friendly Pride events

Brandon Johnson addressed Chicago’s newest police officers as the city’s mayor. Illinois will use the last of its Volkswagen settlement money to buy and install 348 new electric vehicle charging ports around the state. In an effort to bring more family-friendly Pride events to Chicago – the “Queer Fam Pride Jam” is coming to the Salt Shed music venue on June 17.

Jun 06, 20236 min

Paying homage to the history of jazz in Chicago

Chicago jazz artists jammed on the South Side in the Jazz in the Alley sessions of the 1960s and 70s. On June 10, a one-night-only event will pay homage to these jams at The Auditorium Theatre: “Memoirs of Jazz in the Alley.” Isaiah Collier and The Chosen Few will join video artist Rasean Davonte Johnson and the South Chicago Dance Theatre to perform during the multimedia event. Kia Smith is the dance theatre’s founder, and she created Memoirs of Jazz in the Alley. Her father was celebrated saxo...

Jun 05, 202323 min

Artist Edra Soto explores ‘belonging’ through architectural interventions

Edra Soto loves photo archives, and her latest installation at the Hyde Park Art Center is itself an archive. Over 10 years, she has created what she calls architectural interventions through her GRAFT project. These pieces take the form of structural installations, often in public spaces. Her new exhibit, Destination/El Destino: A Decade of GRAFT, captures years of architectural interventions through fragments and photos. In this episode, we talk to Edra about her origin story as a Puerto Rican...

Jun 02, 202322 min

Lead pipe replacement money, police drones at parades, racial disparities report

Federal funding for lead pipe replacement is coming to Illinois – but there’s more to the issue than just replacing pipes. Illinois lawmakers passed a measure expanding police use of drones in public at certain events. A new report from the Chicago Urban League highlights wide outcome disparities between Black and white residents in the city.

Jun 02, 20236 min

Temporary migrant aid, dreaded shrink-flation, drinking water contract talks

Chicago’s City Council approved tens of millions to aid asylum-seekers arriving in the city but the aid is only temporary. Shrink-flation is still showing up on store shelves and hitting consumers in the pocketbook. DuPage County leaders are talking about building their own pipeline to Lake Michigan, bypassing a continued agreement with Chicago.

Jun 01, 20236 min

The joys and struggles of a new mother’s first 12 weeks

Motherhood can be beautiful, rewarding, overwhelming, sad and everything in between. As part of our WBEZ series “The First 12 Weeks,” a new Chicago mother from West Englewood shares moments of both joy and frustration. This audio diary was produced by WBEZ reporter Araceli Gomez-Aldana.

May 31, 20239 min

Migrant resources questions, religious equity, Stevenson expansion pushback

As the migrant crisis grows, residents in some neighborhoods where the asylum seekers are housed question why support is showing up only now. State lawmakers passed proposals to increase religious equity in state prisons, hospitals and schools. Environmental groups are concerned about a push to expand the Stevenson Expressway.

May 31, 20236 min
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