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Wednesday, January 30, 2019

It's cold out there!!!

The Chicago Police put this information out on twitter this past Saturday with regards to finding a warming center during this wave of frigid temps. As always call 311 to find a warming center near you or for a well-being check. And also noted in the tweet, police stations are warming stations as well.

Tuesday, January 29, 2019

CPS schools are closed on Wednesday #Chiberia

Many were concerned, especially on social media and with temps going to very chilly lows CPS is cancelling classes on Wednesday.
And here's the official word by the CPS' CEO
If you're looking for a warming center here's some information posted at The Sixth Ward. Feel free to call 311 to find one near you.

No. 9 most violent Chicago neighborhood Greater Grand Crossing

[VIDEO] This video about Greater Grand Crossing on the south side is no. 9 most violent neighborhood. This is what Maggio writes about this video (duration 15 minutes) which was posted to YouTube on January 13, 2018:
The Greater Grand Crossing neighborhood is home to white city park, the parkway gardens projects, and has the most violent block, O Block.

One positive thing this neighborhood has going for it, is New Beginnings Church and Pastor Corey Brooks and his youth organization Project Hood. What this area really needs is JOBS.

Out of all the top ten neighborhoods Grand Crossing and South Shore are the two I spent the least amount of time in because they are so far east.

Updated: This year in the Grand Crossing neighborhood, 131 people have been shot and, 22 have been killed and 109 have been wounded. These stats rank Grand Crossing at number 9 on the 2017 list of the most Violent neighborhoods in Chicago.

This video was made 6 weeks before the year ended. This video contains a mass shooting in the neighboring community of Chatham where 2 brothers were killed, and 5 others were wounded on Christmas day 2016.
For your convenience this is a map of the Greater Grand Crossing community area.
This video experienced some resistance when it was shared on Nextdoor last year. Most people there objected to Maggio's video because many have looked at his political leanings and some people considered him an outsider. I will also warn you that as he discusses the history of this area he will note a racist amusement park known as "White City" where Blacks were banned from patronizing however there were attractions that utilized Black workers. I don't know if this triggered anyone, but at least you'll know about it if you haven't watched the video yet.

Sunday, January 27, 2019

Woman shot dead in Roseland alley ‘was loved by so many’ #Ward09

About 2:35 a.m., officers responding to a call of shots fired found Ambriana Collins suffering from several gunshot wounds to her chest in an alley in the 10700 block of South Eberhart on the Far South Side, according to Chicago police and the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

Investigators were told a white truck was seen speeding from the scene of the shooting, police said.

Collins was pronounced dead at the scene at 2:51 a.m., authorities said. She lived in the neighboring West Pullman neighborhood.

Collins left behind a 4-year-old son named Angelo, according to her relative Shiela House, who said the boy’s father died from cancer last October.

“Everybody’s just so lost about it,” House said.

Another relative, Devin Williams, said Angelo might be staying with his grandmother for now.

House said Collins was a hardworking mother, noting that she was employed at both a Popeyes restaurant and a McDonald’s location at 103rd Street and Kedzie Avenue.

“We’re just so stunned,” House said. “Everybody called her Ambrii. She was loved by so many.”
An update to the incident reported by ABC 7 Chicago last Friday. Would like to share this video of the scene from the Sun-Times. You would find it in the article. [VIDEO]

Saturday, January 26, 2019

Capitol Fax: Today’s map

Well don't let the today fool you as this was actually posted by Rich Miller to his blog on Friday - just yesterday. He shared some other tweets from the Twitter page of Illinois Working Together (@IllinoisWorking) that illustrates the county by county unemployment rate.

Friday, January 25, 2019

ABC Chicago: Woman found shot to death in Pullman

The rest of the story
Police responded to a report of shots fired at about 2:35 a.m. in the 10700-block of South Eberhart Avenue. Police discovered a woman with several gunshots in her chest in an alley.

The woman was pronounced dead at the scene. Authorities have not released her identity.

Police said a truck, possibly white, was observed fleeing the scene. No one is in custody and Area South detectives are conducting a homicide investigation.

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

View our 2019 elections page #Ward09

Now one of the tabs for this blog. No one from the last election is on the ballot this year in Ward 09, however, we shall see if incumbent Alderman Anthony Beale will once again be re-elected to his office. He's been an Alderman since 1999.

I've been mostly paying attention to The Daily Line's 2019 Alderman election spread sheet. I see that Marcia Brown-Williams has been removed from the ballot due to petition objections. Her name will be stricken from the 2019 page.

Otherwise I will keep an eye out for other updates as I find them.

I will note our still public 2015 election page which was updated months after the election with vote totals for the candidates who were running at that time.

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

The 10th most violent neighborhood: Back of the Yards...

[VIDEO] This is the start of Maggio's top 10 most violent Chicago neighborhoods series. This entry uploaded to YouTube on January 6, 2018 is of the Back of the Yards neighborhood with a duration of just over 8 minutes. The description he posted:
The Back of the yards neighborhood will never be known as New City, to me, or the residents of this community, this neighborhood is the least violent of the top ten.

Back of the Yards is a diverse community where the gangs are at each other’s throats, this problem has a racial component to it, that nobody dares to mention.

The violence raging in this community is total and the weaponry being used to kill and maim people is shocking. Weapons like AR-15s and AK-47s are regularly used in gang shootings in and the communities that surround the back of the yards neighborhood.

The stats show of the 33 rifle related shootings, 46 people were shot and 13 were killed in these attacks. The battles raging in this neighborhood have a vendetta based history that goes back decades.

There are a lot of good people that live in this neighborhood that are trapped by the violence, it must also be realized these gangs could not survive for decades without some sort of support from within the community.

I was born and raised in the neighboring community of Bridgeport, I worked and partied in this neighborhood for decades. It is a shame to see the senseless violence raging without no end in sight in this neighborhood.

And for your frame of reference, a map of the New City community area of which Back of the Yards is considered a part of.

Via Chicago CityScape
 I wish I could've had a map that showed the bordering streets. From the Encyclopedia of Chicago with regards to Back of the Yards:
Located in the community area of New City, the neighborhood extends from 39th to 55th Streets between Halsted and the railroad tracks along Leavitt Street, just south and west of the former Union Stock Yard and adjacent packing plants, a giant sprawl that was until the 1950s the largest livestock yards and meatpacking center in the country.

Monday, January 21, 2019

14-year-old boy shot in Fernwood

Saw this on my Facebook feed this morning video of the scene where teenaged boy was shot after being dropped off by his "Uber"
The boy was dropped off by the ride-share vehicle in the first block of West 105th Street at about 2:28 a.m., police said. He was approached by two male suspects who spoke with the boy before police said they opened fire.

The boy was grazed in the head and ran inside a home and is hospitalized at Comer Children's Hospital. Police said he is in fair condition. The ride-share driver was not injured.

The suspects fled the scene, police said. No one is in custody and Area South detectives are investigating.
And as always be careful out there! 

Saturday, January 19, 2019

Before posting Maggio's top 10 violent Chicago neighborhoods...

[VIDEO] Yesterday I posted about sharing Victor Maggio's top 10 series of Chicago's most violent neighborhoods. I wanted to mention this segment from FOX News' The Ingraham Angle last year. I shared a few more videos from this edition on The Sixth Ward not long after it had aired.

Back in September 2018, host Laura Ingraham hosted an hour long town hall with an audience and in this particular segment you see above she spoke with Gianno Caldwell - who was shown in the neighborhoods talking with residents and gang members - and then Maggio. This segment is a little over 8 minutes and I'm sharing this so that you will get to see and here from Maggio and his thoughts on the violence in the city.

My plan is to post each of those 10 videos about the most violent Chicago neighborhoods every Tuesday at 9:00 AM. Just bear in mind these are year old videos and hopefully after 10 weeks, you will see Maggio's perspective on the violence plaguing Chicago's most trouble neighborhoods.

Friday, January 18, 2019

Maggio News: Top 10 most violent Chicago neighborhoods from last year

Last year I posted a video with regards to Roseland from Maggio News who's website seeks to engage in citizen journalism. Victor Maggio's journalism sends him to the hot spots of the city's violence. He records the gritty action as you will see on his YouTube channel.

Regardless what I failed to do both here and at The Sixth Ward is show all ten of his vids that show Chicago's most violent neighborhoods. Here on this blog I did show his video on Roseland which is at #8. And I also noted the reaction to at least two of his videos, that I had shared on Nextdoor.

Especially those affected by the violence on the city's streets I understand the passionate reaction to these videos. Also it should be noted for this series he utilized this website HeyJackass.com to determine the most violent areas of Chicago.

I want to share Maggio News' top 10 violent neighborhoods. The plan is to share all 10 videos not every single day, but over weeks. Since these videos are from last year I'll post them at 9:00 AM though I haven't decided on what day exactly. However my plan is to start as soon as next week.

It's up to you if you want to continue to follow Maggio, but then I want your feedback on these videos and his reporting. Is he right? Is he talking about something he knows nothing about? Are there solutions to the issues of violence? Send me your thoughts.


Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Curbed Chicago: CTA completes $280 million 95th Street terminal overhaul #Ward09

I know this is old news at this point and had already shared one article about this, but Curbed Chicago also covered the opening of the north terminal at 95th. It really does look like a hub of activity, and it does seem like an airport. Perhaps CTA's answer to Midway Airport...
There are some other articles I would like to share with regards to transit projects in Chicago.

Friday, January 11, 2019

Opinion: Let’s quit brainwashing kids that it’s a college degree or nothing

I found this article on fb on Sunday and it leads me to some conclusions about what I should've done once I finally graduated from high school. And perhaps how I fared in the work world.

Why is it college or bust not only for some educators, but parents as well?
Back when I began teaching, I seldom saw the students who were uninterested in the academic journey for a four-year degree. For they were the ones who had acquired internships, started apprenticeships, or took jobs in industry and manufacturing, as the culmination of vocational education programs in high school.

But these days I’m seeing more students with William’s dilemma, who are funneled to my classroom for lack of better options.

They are told by their high school counselors that they will not get a decent job without a college degree. And that high school qualifies them only for a low-wage job in the fast food industry.

Parents have been even more sensitive to the counselors’ warnings. So even when students found they enjoyed working in the building trades, or had a knack, say, for auto repair, their parents saw vocational education as a dumping ground for below average children: Not my child!
When I graduated from high school I never held a job. Sometimes I wonder where I'd be if I had learned a skill - especially a business skill such as accounting or bookkeeping - so that I could be employable even if college was my journey. I feel as if my career would've been better off without the thinking that college would make everything better for me.

In some respect I was like William. While I think my grades at Harlan was such a fluke that quite a few in my family expected me to to do well in college well it took me some time to finally get my degree. But either way, even if college was my path what if I had some other things going even as I continue to study. I still wonder about that now.

Let's continue:
In Chicago schools, vocational classes have been severely reduced, and schools and programs entirely dismantled over the past two decades. This is bad news for students like William, and bad news for the city as it competes for Amazon’s new headquarters, which comes with 50,000 jobs, many requiring not college degrees, but vocational education.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 68 percent of high school graduates go to college. This means that absent vocational training, 32 percent of our young people are unqualified for a job with which they can lift themselves out of poverty.

Of those who do go to college, 40 percent never finish, including William, who dropped before the end of the semester.

How to solve this problem?

We need to debunk the inference made by parents that vocational and technical jobs are inferior. Such a notion has led many of them to steer youngsters unwilling or unsuited for academic study into frustration, failure and depression.
College isn't for everyone, and tuition around the country has gone up. That means many students and their families are scrambling to pay for it. That means student loans you must pay off once you're out of school, and many of these students once they start working will have a hard time paying those loans off. This means perhaps we need to have an honest discussion with our young people about what they want to do once they graduate from high school and push them from there.

Thursday, January 10, 2019

Woman defends herself at a bus stop in Fernwood #ChiMayor19

[VIDEO] Tuesday morning a woman was waiting for a bus near 103rd & Wallace and was forced to use her own conceal carry gun on a teenaged attacker. His attempt to claim a victim whatever his motives cost him his life. I don't like to read about the death of a teen, however, I'm glad that a woman had the wherewithal to not allow herself to be victimized.

You think someone like an Ed Burke - longtime Alderman of the 14th ward who was recently charged by federal authorities with extortion - cares whether or not you use a gun to protect yourself. Well it doesn't matter when federal authorities raided his offices they found 23 guns. Also bear in mind he usually had a police protection detail with him as well which he was stripped of once he resigned his powerful position as chair of the city council committee on finance.

Finally this is one of the more important issues in this year's mayoral campaign what you would've read on today's CapFax blog. An important issue for many Chicagoans, public safety.
Not to say everyone owning a gun will protect each and every citizen, however, citizens are concerned. Why not empower citizens to defend themselves in the absence of police.

Saturday, January 5, 2019

The new 95th terminal is now open... #Ward09 #BuildingwithBeale

The CTA terminal at 95th is 90% complete. The north terminal is now open as of Friday morning. As a result it gives me the excuse to share this article from the Tribune before the north terminal opened:
The $280 million project replaces the original 50-year-old rail and bus terminal at the southern end of the Red Line, which runs along the Dan Ryan Expressway. The station, one of the busiest on the CTA system, serves 20,000 daily commuters and sees about 1,000 CTA, Pace and Greyhound bus trips on an average weekday, CTA officials said.

The four-year station construction was also a necessary step in building the extension of the Red Line south to 130th Street, which is part of the agency’s long-range plan.

“This is a huge, huge accomplishment for the city of Chicago and the Far South Side,” said Ald. Anthony Beale, 9th. Beale said the station will be more user-friendly for bus, rail and pedestrian traffic and will draw business to the area.

The south terminal was completed last spring. Having two terminals eliminates the conflict between eastbound and westbound buses on 95th Street, allowing eastbound buses to use the south terminal and westbound buses to use the north terminal, CTA officials said. Previously, there was only a north terminal.

The new station includes a heated, glass-enclosed pedestrian bridge over 95th Street, connecting the north and south terminals and cutting down on conflicts between cars and people walking. The number of bus bays has increased to 26, from 12, CTA officials said.

The station also will have more turnstiles and Ventra vending machines, a longer train platform to reduce overcrowding, additional bike racks, and new signage.

“I think it’s a great lift to the community,” said Ald. Howard Brookins Jr., 21st. “It’s a beautiful station. It will spur additional economic development down 95th Street, and it will ease traffic going down that corridor.”
As for that future CTA Red Line extension:
The construction of the new station needed to be done before the Red Line can be extended to 130th Street, CTA officials said. Last year, the CTA picked a route for the extension, which will include four new rail stations. The agency is now preparing to complete the preliminary design and engineering work needed to pursue federal funding for the project.
You want to know the financial scale?
The cost of the station exceeds that of two recent big projects: the $203 million Wilson Street station rebuilding on the Red Line’s north branch and the $75 million Washington/Wabash station in the Loop. The 95th Street station construction was larger than the other projects and included track work in the rail yard at 98th Street, CTA officials said.
Finally seems like an unnecessary expense:
The new station, which has a distinctive red roof, will feature two new public art displays by Chicago native Theaster Gates. The south terminal will have a pair of tapestries made from the strips of decommissioned fire hoses that are sewn together, and the north terminal will include a radio station and DJ booth that will broadcast over the station’s public address system.
A DJ Booth and a radio station, really? Though I hear that there will be public bathrooms available. Still not sure about that idea of DJ at a transit terminal.

Regardless can't wait to see the finished project... 

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

2018 year in review

One of the annual traditions of The Sixth Ward is to review the important stories that we covered during a given year. Check it out at your convenience.

Looking forward to what's coming in 2019.