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  • Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez speaks out after school board shakeup

    Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez speaks out after school board shakeup

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez spoke out for the first time Wednesday after all members of the Chicago Board of Education resigned and Mayor Brandon Johnson made his new appointments.

    Meanwhile, the Chicago City Council met Wednesday ahead of a now-canceled special meeting in the afternoon, where city leaders had planned to address the recent Board of Education shake up.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    Martinez spoke to ABC7 Wednesday, responding to criticism that he has no CPS funding plan and is relying on proposed cuts. He was also asked if he thought the mayor’s picks for a new school board could end up firing him.

    “I don’t know. I really don’t. I’m being sincere,” Martinez said. “I will say what’s great right now is that, you know, it’s very transparent what my contract says.”

    Martinez told ABC7 there has been a plan in place for months that Mayor Johnson was well aware of. The plan included using the city’s TIF surplus dollars to help fund CPS. Martinez said there a formal ask on April 30 for $462 million dollars in TIF funding to pay for pensions and union contracts, including one for the teachers union that included 4% raises.

    “At that time, we didn’t get an answer. We continued to ask. Eventually what we were told over the summer was that instead they wanted us to take out a loan,” Martinez said. “I was making a case to really solidify more TIF funding. I was surprised. So was our board. The response was instead borrow, and of course everything since then.”

    The previous school board was not willing to fire CPS CEO Pedro Martinez or secure a short term, high interest loan to help pay for a new teachers’ contract, which led to their mass resignation last week.

    “I did not expect for this to escalate to the way it did,” Martinez said.

    Using TIF funds is the same idea the Chicago Teachers Union presented in plan Wednesday.

    The Chicago Teachers Union, community leaders and CPS parents gathered near City Hall earlier Wednesday to propose what they are calling the “Revenue Recovery Package.”

    CTU leaders said the plan provides more than $1 billion in immediate revenue for city schools by redirecting TIF funds from developers to CPS.

    First District Cook County Commissioner Tara Stamps said it’s the city’s collective responsibility to care for children across Chicago.

    “What’s happening within Chicago Public Schools isn’t the responsibility of the Chicago Teachers Union, or CPS or parents. It’s all of our responsibility,” Stamps said. “How our children get educated in this city because whether you want to believe it or not, they are all our children.”

    The mayor now says Martinez is taking a page from their playbook.

    “Whatever is there that we can surplus, I’ve made a commitment. Those are my values. That’s not something that anybody had to call for me to do,” Johnson said.

    SEE ALSO | Future of ShotSpotter unclear after Mayor Brandon Johnson refuses to veto ordinance to revive system

    Meanwhile, multiple City Council members said Wednesday they have been working with the mayor’s office to have the outgoing and incoming board members appear at a hearing before the education committee to answer questions.

    City Council was supposed to hold special committee hearing Wednesday to hear from the mayor’s six new board picks.

    “We still have questions, process matter, how you do things matter and we need to make sure there is stability,” Ald. Maria Hadden said.

    The special meeting was canceled. It will be held later in the month as an Education Committee Hearing.

    At a future education meeting, City Council members want to question the mayor’s nominees appointed to be on the CPS board.

    “Right now we want to know about their biographies, we want to know about their mindsets, we want to know what they are bringing to the board as individuals and as a collective,” 15th Ward Alderman Ray Lopez said. “We know very little about these individuals and as a collective.”

    So, the agreement was to have the new appointed board members to come to a meeting and also we talk about the budget,” said 15th Ward Ald. Jeanette Taylor, Education Committee Chairman.

    The agreement was made with the mayor’s office, but before adjourning the regular City Council meeting Wednesday, Johnson made no guarantee the new school board members will show up.

    The mayor said the new school members are invited. He has no plans use his executive authority to make sure they attend. Alderpersons say they may subpoena the members, but the city’s law department insists the Education Committee has no subpoena power.

    Copyright © 2024 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    Christian Piekos

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  • CEO of company overseeing ShotSpotter sits down with ABC7 as clock ticks down on Chicago contract

    CEO of company overseeing ShotSpotter sits down with ABC7 as clock ticks down on Chicago contract

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — It is designed to trigger a near-instantaneous warning to police without a 911 call.

    ShotSpotter, the gunshot detection technology, has monitored Chicago neighborhoods for more than six years at a cost of tens of millions of dollars.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    But is it working? Is it making the streets safer?

    It is a high-stakes debate that will come before the Chicago City Council’s public safety committee on Monday morning.

    ABC7 sat down with the CEO of the company that oversees ShotSpotter as the clock ticks down on Chicago’s short-term contract extension that is set to expire two weeks from Sunday night.

    “I canceled ShotSpotter. It’s canceled!” Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson said.

    That was the shot across the bow, a doubling-down in May on a campaign commitment by Johnson to do away with the city’s gunshot detection system known as ShotSpotter.

    READ MORE | ShotSpotter Chicago: How police use high-tech equipment to fight crime

    Keeping that campaign promise, the mayor abruptly ended the six-year, multimillion dollar contract in February.

    The unilateral move triggered a months-long political power struggle in city council chambers, through the ranks of the police department and deep into Chicago’s most violent neighborhoods.

    “I’m for technology that’s going to help us get to a location quicker and help us save lives,” said Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling.

    Under pressure from city council members, Johnson agreed to a six-month, $8.6 million extension to keep the technology in place through the city’s historically violent summer months and the Democratic National Convention.

    That extension cost more than the city paid for ShotSpotter for all of 2023.

    SEE ALSO | Chicago police supt. defends ShotSpotter, says communication with mayor ‘could have been better’

    At ShotSpotter’s Northern California headquarters, ABC7 sat down for an exclusive interview with Ralph Clark, CEO of SoundThinking, the company that runs ShotSpotter.

    “It’s critically important that folks understand that 80% to 90% of criminal gunfire doesn’t generate a 911 call,” Clark said.

    This was days after the violent July Fourth weekend.

    “When you look at 109 people shot in one weekend, nearly 500 ShotSpotter alerts, is ShotSpotter really being an effective tool in cutting down on gun violence if it’s that rampant?” asked ABC7 Reporter Liz Nagy.

    “The purpose and design of ShotSpotter is to aid and facilitate the fast and precise response of first responders and police to the scene of gunshot wound victims,” Clark said.

    Following a torrent of historically violent years, Chicago contracted with ShotSpotter in 2018, signing a three-year $33 million deal.

    The audio gunshot detection system is meant to instantly alert police to gunfire without a person having to dial 911.

    READ MORE | ShotSpotter supporters push to keep technology in Chicago after Democratic National Convention

    In March 2021, Chicago police responded to an alley in Little Village, alerted by ShotSpotter.

    There, a teenage boy with a gun ran from police, dropping the weapon a split second before he turned toward the officer. The officer shot and killed 13-year-old Adam Toledo.

    The shooting led to Johnson’s future campaign promise to do away with ShotSpotter.

    Inside ShotSpotter’s incident review center in California, the sound of gunfire is constant.

    A team of analysts rely on a network of acoustic sensors attached to city streetlights and buildings on both public and private properties.

    “A gunshot can only fly in one direction, so we’re looking for a directional sensor pattern,” one employee said.

    Thousands of sensors hang over 100 square miles of Chicago neighborhoods, largely monitoring the streets of the South and West sides.

    SEE ALSO | Former Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson says city should keep ShotSpotter

    “A disproportionate number of your transmitters are placed in low-income, Black and Brown, non-white, very poor communities. You don’t decide that?” Nagy asked.

    “We’re placed where 85% of gun violence victimization takes place. That happens to also be at-risk, underserved communities that are often of color,” Clark responded.

    Days before Johnson abruptly canceled the city’s contract in February, the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office released its report on ShotSpotter, finding the technology ineffective and failing to make an impact on arresting shooters.

    The ABC7 I-Team has been reporting on the efficacy of ShotSpotter for years.

    READ MORE | ShotSpotter contract to end nearly 3 years after I-Team raised doubts about effectiveness, value

    Our most recent analysis of Chicago Police Department data from January 2018 through March 2024 shows the average response time of officers to the scene of a gun crime, alerted by ShotSpotter, is eight minutes and six seconds.

    With just a 911 call, and no ShotSpotter alert, data shows the response time grows to 10 minutes and 48 seconds.

    “Time literally is tissue. So, getting to these scenes even 60 seconds, 90 seconds, two minutes before a traditional 911 call – that you may or may not get – can make the difference between a life being saved or not being saved,” Clark said.

    New city data shows nearly 145,000 ShotSpotter alerts between January 2021 and July 2024. Just 7.1% found a shooting victim on the other end of that alert.

    Some city council members cite that data as reason enough to get rid of ShotSpotter.

    SEE ALSO | Mayor Johnson, Chicago City Council disagree on who can end use of ShotSpotter technology

    “About 83% to 88% of ShotSpotter alerts turn up nothing. And if I had an oven that didn’t work 88% of the time when I turned it on, I’d be looking for a new oven,” said 1st Ward Ald. Daniel La Spata.

    The contract is set to expire Sept. 22. By then, Chicago taxpayers will have spent a total of $53 million on ShotSpotter.

    In May, the city council voted 34 to 14 in favor of keeping ShotSpotter. Johnson continues to say he is not budging.

    “I think we have to work with the mayor to find a reasonable solution that we can all – we may not be 100% agreeable on – but again, that most of us can find some solution and help the police department do their job,” said 28th Ward Ald. Jason Ervin.

    “Unless you’ve got another tool that says hey give us something else. And the person in charge of keeping them safe is who? The superintendent of police! He says he needs ShotSpotter as a tool, that he wants it. But yet, somebody who is not an expert in safety says, ‘Get rid of it,’” said 17th Ward Ald. David Moore.

    City council members told ABC7 ShotSpotter or not, that money must be spent within Chicago’s $2 billion annual police budget.

    READ MORE | Chicago aldermen question police about controversial ShotSpotter technology

    Now, as the clock ticks down on the city’s remaining days of its contract, SoundThinking is preparing to dismantle its sensors Sept. 23. They will have 60 days to remove the technology entirely.

    Chicago’s contract with SoundThinking has a built-in 60-day transition period.

    The mayor’s office told ABC7 in a statement, again, “During that two-month period, law enforcement and other community safety stakeholders will continue to assess tools and programs that effectively increase both safety and trust, and issue recommendations to that effect.”

    But many city council members are determined to find a way to keep ShotSpotter in place.

    On Monday morning, representatives from SoundThinking and Chicago’s Emergency Management Center will present the latest data, collected since March, on ShotSpotter’s efficacy.

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    Liz Nagy

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  • Chicago Jewish leaders refuse meeting with Mayor Brandon Johnson on antisemitism in the city

    Chicago Jewish leaders refuse meeting with Mayor Brandon Johnson on antisemitism in the city

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Jewish leaders have declined an offer to meeting in a roundtable with Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson to address antisemitism, accusing him of disrespecting the city’s Jewish community.

    Ald. Debra Silverstein said the mayor’s staff reached out last week about convening a roundtable Monday with Jewish leaders to talk about antisemitism in the city. She and State Senator Sara Feigenholtz and State Representative Bob Morgan declined.

    The three sent Johnson a letter, telling the mayor, “Before calling for a roundtable on antisemitism a true leader should begin by demonstrating a modicum of empathy for the Jewish community.”

    “We need our mayor to unite us instead of continuing to divide us,” she said. “I do not feel that the Jewish community feels that he’s got our back.”

    Silverstein said the mayor has fences to mend fences with the community.

    “I think that the mayor needs to pay attention to everybody in the city of Chicago, and I do not feel that the Jewish community feels that he’s got our back,” Silverstein said.

    The letter takes Mayor Johnson to task for casting the tie-breaking vote to pass the city’s Israel-Hamas ceasefire resolution, and for not condemning what they say were antisemitic chants and flyers at a student walkout the day of the vote.

    “They were praised for walking out, but what about the Jewish kids that go to CPS, the Jewish kids whose parents call me and say my child is afraid to go to school? What are we doing about them?” said Silverstein.

    Silverstein, who is the only Jewish member of the Chicago City Council, said the mayor’s perceived silence has enabled city council meetings to, at times, devolve into chaos.

    “I think our mayor really needs to lead, and I think our mayor needs to speak out, and I and my community are not feeling safe,” she said.

    A spokesperson for the mayor declined to comment on the letter. Representatives from multiple Jewish groups were also invited to the meeting, and we’ve learned the Anti-Defamation League and Jewish United Fund also declined the invitation.

    “He has a lot of fences to mend,” Silverstein said. “I hope it’s not irreparable, but he needs to make a move.”

    Copyright © 2024 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    Eric Horng

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  • 4th District Rep. Jesús ‘Chuy’ García defeats primary challenge by Ald. Ray Lopez, AP projects

    4th District Rep. Jesús ‘Chuy’ García defeats primary challenge by Ald. Ray Lopez, AP projects

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Three-term U.S. Rep. Jesús “Chuy” García has won the Democratic primary against Chicago Alderman Raymond Lopez, the Associated Press projected.

    The congressman, who dominated in funding and endorsements, was facing his first primary challenger since 2018, when he won congressional office.

    García thanked those who helped make his reelection possible.

    Three-term U.S. Rep. Jesús “Chuy” García has won the Democratic primary against Chicago Alderman Raymond Lopez, the Associated Press projected.

    “I say ‘thank you’ from the bottom of my heart,” García said.

    The congressman, born in Mexico, spoke on Tuesday night of his 41-year journey to bring more diversity to all levels of government.

    Both García and Lopez are Democrats, but they have very different views on major issues. Last month, ABC7 sat down with both candidates to talk about key issues and what might decide the race.

    Lopez had argued García is no longer the right fit for Illinois’ 4th Congressional District, which is predominantly Hispanic and includes working-class communities and neighborhoods on the city’s Southwest Side as well as wealthy suburbs.

    Lopez, 45, is one of the most conservative members of the Chicago City Council, often backing police. He has called García an “extreme Democrat.”

    García, 67, says voters have repeatedly put him in office, including in 2022 after a remap added new territory to the district. He’s also a former state legislator and city alderman.

    García dominated in fundraising, raising $376,000 last year compared to Lopez’s $46,000 in the same time period, according to federal election records. He picked up endorsements from labor groups, while Lopez had support from the Chicago police union.

    But that support was not enough for Lopez on Tuesday night. He has unsuccessfully run for mayor, and now congressman.

    “So Wednesday, city council, back to work, back to doing what I do best. And hopefully, this will be a wakeup call for many members of Congress who saw challengers in the primary that they need to start delivering for their districts,” Lopez said on Tuesday night.

    Earlier Tuesday, Lopez said his day was like most election days for him.

    He brought donuts to poll workers and gave $50 at 20 sites for the workers to buy lunch. He said he has always brought food and added the cash after the COVID-19 pandemic started, because he said the workers preferred to buy lunch and not share.

    “My judges actually asked if they could just buy their own. I said, ‘Fine. We can help facilitate that,’” Lopez said.

    But offering cash to poll workers now has the attention of the attorney general’s Election Integrity Unit, which confirmed the office is looking into a complaint filed by García about Lopez’s gifts to poll workers.

    “This is a distraction when we should talk about issues he’s had months, to talk about things. And all he wants is to talk about is the kind of donut I brought for breakfast,” Lopez said.

    García said the action of giving out money at a polling place is not the image Illinoisans want of their elected officials.

    “It’s fine to take donuts, but when you start passing cash around in envelopes, it sure raises a lot of concerns,” García said. “I think anytime cash is being spread around at a polling place on Election Day certainty suggests there could be efforts to move Chicago backwards. Chicago ain’t moving backward.”

    ABC7 Political Analyst Laura Washington said García filing the complaint is a way to emphasize the difference between him and Lopez.

    “He may be, more than anything, trying reinforce in the voters’ minds that Ray Lopez is the past represents the Democratic machine’s past,” Washington said.

    Meanwhile, there’s no Republican running in the heavily Democratic district, so García is expected to win outright in November.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Copyright © 2024 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    Leah Hope

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