Good morning, Chicago.

In the heart of Lincoln Park, a new installation has drawn the fury of some neighborhood residents.

At issue is a stretch of Dickens Avenue where a series of bike lanes, lower speed limits, and slightly more than 200 feet of road closed to cars have formed a cycling “greenway.” The $1 million project, which also includes new crosswalks, speed bumps and curb bump-outs, has been in the works for years. Advocates and city officials say it will make the road more comfortable for all users, including cyclists traveling to Oz Park, the Lincoln Park Zoo and the lakefront.

But for some residents of the North Side neighborhood, the greenway has for years represented a threat. They fear the risk cyclists whizzing by might pose to students and pedestrians on a shared path near Lincoln Park High School, and say the street closure has the potential to further snarl traffic in a congested area. The bike project is an unnecessary and confusing eyesore, some have said, and many complain about the communication between public officials and the community.

Read the full story from the Tribune’s Sarah Freishtat.

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Heather Mack, right, and her mother, Sheila Von Wiese Mack, smiling in first class on the plane to Indonesia in 2014.

Heather Mack is scheduled to be sentenced in a federal courtroom today, marking the end of a sensational legal saga that began nearly a decade ago when she helped murder her mother and stuff her body in a suitcase at a Bali resort.

Shameka West looks over damage from a burst pipe in her CHA apartment in the Washington Park neighborhood, Jan. 16, 2024.

It had been two days since the pipes burst in Shameka West’s Washington Park apartment and flooded every room.

With each step West took Tuesday, water seeped from the living room carpet. The ceiling was brown with water stains, and the paint was peeling. Small sections of the walls had been cut open, leaving exposed wires. Her back door was frozen shut.

“This is terrible,” West said, gesturing to the muddied floors of the apartment, which she rents through the Chicago Housing Authority. All of the family’s food had been piled high on the dining room table. “I’m not taking my children back here.”

Zack Johnson inspects an R Guns-brand TRR-15 model rifle at R Guns on April 29, 2023, in Carpentersville.

A bipartisan panel of Illinois lawmakers approved guidelines covering how state police will maintain and enforce a registry of gun owners who possess high-powered firearms that are now banned.

The requirement for residents who possessed guns covered by the ban before it took effect on Jan. 10, 2023, to register those firearms by Jan. 1 has been one of the law’s most controversial aspects.

Republican presidential candidate former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley speaks at a campaign event Jan. 16, 2024, in Bretton Woods, N.H.

ABC News on Tuesday canceled the next Republican presidential debate after Nikki Haley said she wouldn’t participate unless former President Donald Trump takes part in it, leaving Gov. Ron DeSantis as the only candidate committed to Thursday’s event in New Hampshire.

“We’ve had five great debates in this campaign,” Haley said in a statement, released as she campaigned in New Hampshire. “Unfortunately, Donald Trump has ducked all of them.”

A resident outside boarded up apartments at 14437 S. Halsted St. in Harvey, Jan. 8, 2024.

More than two weeks after apartment units in Harvey were boarded up with some residents inside, the Housing Authority of Cook County says it is working to find new housing for them while the city’s mayor insists officials are not the bad guys.

The proposal would increase the minimum wage to $16.25 per hour at establishments with 100 or more employees and $15.50 with fewer than 100 employees. Evanston currently follows the Cook County minimum wage.

Students get on a bus outside Chicago's Skinner West Elementary School in 2021.

The annual report from the Office of Inspector General made public accusations that a former Chicago Public Schools assistant principal embezzled $274,000 in after-school program payments.

She was not named in the document, but records show she was named in a 17-count indictment with stealing from Skinner West Elementary School on the Near West Side.

“How is it that somebody could take more than $200,000 from a school-based after-school program, and no one at the school notices that the money is gone? And then further, how is it possible that that much money could be stolen and the program could manage to run unabated?” Inspector General Will Fletcher told the Tribune.

Wilmette has flipped the switch allowing lights for the first time ever at Loyola’s Academy’s football field.

Despite the win for Loyola Academy football fans, the lights come with some tough restrictions, conditions and highest fines in the country.

Pedestrians bundle up against the cold in Chicago’s Loop with temperatures below zero on Jan. 14, 2024.

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It’s hard to write with mittens on and your teeth chattering, but you count your blessings if you don’t have to work outdoors during another polar vortex.

Thinking warm thoughts during this current stretch of frigid weather is the only way to survive, and fortunately there’s been enough going on in the sports world to keep us occupied, from the NFL playoffs to the Cubs Convention to the White Sox equipment truck leaving for Arizona, writes Paul Sullivan.

Here are 10 takeaways from a wild week.

Author Rick Telander in his home library on Jan. 14, 2024, in Highwood. Telander recently published the book "Sweet Dreams" with 42 poems, each matched with illustrations by guest artists from around the world.

If you know anything about Rick Telander, you know that he has been a must-read sports columnist with the Sun-Times for more than 30 years, having been hired away from Sports Illustrated. You might know that before that, he played football for Northwestern University, where he also studied English literature and poetry.

But even the most devoted fans and even some close friends will be surprised to discover that Telander is also a poet and the proof comes in a charming new book, “Sweet Dreams: Poems and Paintings for the Child Abed.”

Pãozinho de queijo at Sinhá Elegant Cuisine.

The holidays are over and the bitter January cold is settling in, but there’s still cause for excitement: Chicago Restaurant Week 2024 is upon us, offering deals at restaurants across the city.

This year, the event spans 17 days and features prix fixe menus for brunch, lunch and dinner at more than 400 restaurants. For those overwhelmed by the options, the Tribune Food team looked over menus to find especially exciting ones.



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