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Johnson merges shelter programs, closes migrant ‘landing zone’

Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration closed the city’s landing zone for newly arrived asylum seekers slightly ahead of schedule, announcing Friday a new shelter intake center on the Lower West Side open to anyone experiencing homelessness.

The closure of the landing zone – at 800 S. Desplaines St. in the West Loop – is part of a plan to merge two shelter systems for the unhoused. In October, Johnson announced the city would end shelters specifically designated for newly arrived asylum seekers by the end of the year.

Former Mayor Lori Lightfoot developed a separate shelter system for immigrants in 2022 in response to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott busing thousands of asylum seekers to Chicago and other liberal-leaning cities.

“We definitely started in the crisis response mode, and many, many of you remember having people sleeping in police stations and at the airports and the city working very diligently to keep up and open shelters,” said Beatriz Ponce de León, deputy mayor of immigrant, migrant and refugee rights. “But we knew that that response was not going to be sustainable, and that we had to also build toward other types of support that put people on the path to resettlement.”

Anyone seeking a shelter bed will have to make a request through 311 under the city’s new One System Initiative.

On Friday, the city opened a new intake center at 2241 S. Halsted St. that will be open 24 hours a day seven days a week with capacity for 200 beds and available for single adults, said Maura McCauley, first deputy commissioner of the Department of Family and Support Services.

There wasn’t much activity outside of the brick Halsted building Friday afternoon. Two white doors were marked “entry” in red.

The building connects to a former warehouse that once served as a makeshift and overcrowded shelter for migrants.

At that shelter, a 5-year-old boy, Jean Carlos Martinez, became ill last December and later died from sepsis and a bacterial infection that causes strep throat.

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A recently opened homeless intake center occupies an old warehouse located at 2241 S. Halsted St. in the Pilsen neighborhood.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Time

Asked if conditions will improve at shelters in Chicago, the city said it is working on better training and is moving away from hiring contractors and instead working with local social service agencies to manage the spaces moving forward, McCauley said.

As of Friday, there were an estimated 2,476 migrants living in the city-run shelters, though the city will stop creating a daily census of this population as it moves toward a merged system, said Harley Jones, who is helping coordinate the city’s response to migrants.

The city plans to close by the end of the month a shelter at 1310 N. Elston Ave., which housed about 135 single men and women.

Two shelters serving migrants, located at 4900 S. DuSable Lake Shore Dr., and 7353 S. Cicero Ave., are operated by the state and will become part of the merged system, Ponce de León said. The state is providing funding to help immigrants in shelters find stable housing.

The three other shelters that had housed migrants will now become part of the One Shelter System, she said. Those shelters are located at 640 W. Irving Park Road, 3034 W Foster Ave. and 2641 S. Calumet Ave.

The merger of shelter systems comes as the city’s department overseeing them loses its leader, Brandie Knazze, the commissioner for the department who recently announced her resignation.

The changes also come weeks before Donald Trump starts a second term as president. The president-elect promised his supporters to ramp up deportations of immigrants.

Ponce de León said Johnson is committed to upholding the city’s welcoming city stance.

“We are working on guidance that will go to all departments and agencies so that they know what to do in the case of any federal agents coming and, you know, requesting assistance with deportation raids,” Ponce de León said.

Contributing: Adriana Cardona-Maguigad, Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere



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Dan DeFranza takes over as Notre Dame football coach

When Dan DeFranza’s family moved to the Northwest Side decades ago, his dad looked around for a high school to become a fan of.

The choice was Notre Dame, a decision that set the course of DeFranza’s life.

“I’ve been coming to events at Notre Dame since I was a little boy,” DeFranza said. “It’s literally been a part of my life forever. I dreamed of going to school there.”

He did, and after spending 30 years as the Dons’ defensive coordinator, the 1990 Notre Dame graduate is the school’s new head football coach. DeFranza succeeds Mike Hennessey, who retired earlier this month after 38 seasons and 205 wins.

DeFranza was a captain on Hennessey’s best team, the 1989 club that went 11-3 and finished second in Class 5A. He went on to play football at Eastern Illinois, majoring in economics and minoring in history.

An injury during his junior season derailed DeFranza’s college career. When Hennessey heard the news, he sent DeFranza a three-page letter that lifted his spirits at a difficult time in his life.

“He told me I had a football mind and I should stay involved in the game,” DeFranza said. “My old high-school coach reaching out to me — that changed my life.”

When DeFranza got out of college, he went to work as a broker at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and joined Hennessey’s staff as a defensive backs coach. Two years later, he took over as defensive coordinator.

After 17 years as a broker, DeFranza changed careers to become a social studies teacher at Notre Dame. He rose to department chair and is currently the school’s assistant athletic director.

He freely admits he owes it all to Hennessey. “I never would have had that thought if it wasn’t for my high-school football coach writing a 21-year-old kid out of the blue,” DeFranza said.

DeFranza has had chances to move on from Notre Dame over the years. But the only time he seriously considered leaving was when Naperville North coach Sean Drendel, a close friend, approached him about the Huskies’ defensive coordinator job.

DeFranza stayed in Niles, though, and now he’s ready to build on the foundation Hennessey established. He’s in the process of putting together a staff and hasn’t decided yet if he’ll continue to run the defense or hire a coordinator.

The Dons finished 3-6 this season, missing the IHSA playoffs for the second straight year.

What is DeFranza’s measure of success?

“The goal of any program is to make the state playoffs,” he said. “Getting back to the playoffs consistently, have the kids go play college football. [And] how could I say a state championship isn’t a goal?”

Comings and goings

TF South has hired 1997 alum and longtime assistant Trent Jensen to succeed Bob Padjen, who retired after eight seasons. Next season will be the first time in the program’s 67-year history that a member of the Padjen family won’t be playing or coaching for the Red Wolves.

-In a surprise move, St. Laurence didn’t renew the contract of Adam Nissen, who led the Vikings to a Class 4A runner-up finish in 2023 and a quarterfinal berth this season. Nissen was 35-28 with three IHSA playoff berths and one Prep Bowl title in six seasons.

– Mike Burzawa, who won three consecutive state titles at Driscoll from 2005-07, has stepped down at Evanston after 17 years.

– St. Patrick alum Luke Mertens has resigned after three seasons as the Shamrocks’ coach.

– Other high-profile jobs that are currently open include Homewood-Flossmoor, Lane, Libertyville and Rolling Meadows.



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Rest of NFL was right about Bears’ offensive line, which is their most glaring deficiency

When the Bears hired former offensive linemen to run their team in general manager Ryan Poles and assistant general manager Ian Cunningham in 2022, it seemed as though, if nothing else, they would get that part of the roster right.

Far from it.

As Poles and Cunningham close a disastrous third season and face a now-or-never 2025, they’ll likely be looking for four new starters. Only right tackle Darnell Wright, the No. 10 overall pick last year, is sure to return — and even he might need to move to left tackle.

Plenty has gone wrong as the Bears sit 4-10 ahead of their home game Sunday against the Lions, but no deficiency glares like the offensive line. Poles believed it’d be at least league-average and noted “the best depth I’ve ever had.”

That miscalculation is at the top of the list of ways he failed rookie quarterback Caleb Williams, right there with entrusting him to Matt Eberflus and Shane Waldron.

Williams has been sacked 58 times, most in the NFL, and while that’s partly due to indecision in the pocket, he often had no chance. Against the Vikings, outside linebacker Jonathan Greenard stormed past rookie left tackle Kiran Amegadjie and hit Williams from his blind side for a strip-sack just as he finished dropping back.

In too many instances, Poles and Cunningham thought they knew something the rest of the league didn’t.

The Bears have invested one first-round pick on the line and have spent the second-least in the league. Pro Football Focus ranked their line 26th this week.

Conversely, the top 10 lines all were built with premium resources:

– The Lions are ranked fifth and have spent the 10th-most. They acquired three of their five starters with first-round picks.

– The Eagles, who have the top-rated line, pumped two firsts and two seconds into it, and left tackle Jordan Mailata was a seventh-rounder who proved himself and earned a second contract for $68 million over three years.

– As the Chiefs look for a three-peat, they’re spending more on the offensive line than at any other position. Three of their top eight salary-cap hits are for linemen.

Among the linemen on the top 10 units, 26 were first- or second-round picks by their current team and six were major trade or free-agent pickups, typically veterans who made at least one Pro Bowl.

The Bears, meanwhile, tried to be clever.

They’ve continued to count on Braxton Jones, a 2022 fifth-rounder, at left tackle. Center Coleman Shelton was available in free agency for just $3.5 million on a one-year deal. Right guard Matt Pryor, on his fourth team in five seasons, signed for $1.1 million.

The rest of the NFL didn’t agree that those were starting-caliber players.

The only high draft choice on the Bears’ line other than Wright is left guard Teven Jenkins, whom Ryan Pace picked in the second round to play left tackle. His conversion to guard is a success, but a contract extension is risky because of durability concerns.

Jenkins is questionable for Sunday due to a calf injury, and Jones is questionable because of a concussion.

Poles’ lone financial splurge on the line was the three-year, $30 million contract he gave Nate Davis, who had red flags about work ethic and wasn’t the team’s top target at guard. He played 16 games over two seasons before the Bears cut him.

Poles and Cunningham could attack this with their three picks in the first two rounds of the upcoming draft, currently Nos. 9, 36, and 40, perhaps taking a tackle in the first round and two interior linemen in the second. However, that would leave other significant needs unaddressed, including an almost equal shortfall on the defensive line.

That dilemma illustrates the essence of the problem: As other issues loom, the Bears are trying to fix the one thing they should’ve nailed down from the start.



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Upgrade Illinois’ power lines to keep lights on as energy demands rise

Illinois is facing a looming energy crisis. As the state strives for a cleaner, more reliable electric grid in the face of rising demand and a growing economy, we can choose to meet the moment with the homegrown clean power we know we need, or we can fail to invest in the infrastructure to support our communities.

The men and women of the Laborers’ International Union of North America Midwest Region are the best-trained workers in the industry, and they are ready to build our clean energy future. Critical to that success is interregional high-voltage direct current transmission infrastructure.

Direct current, long-distance power lines — designed to efficiently deliver clean energy where it’s needed when it’s needed — are key to fixing the problem. These interregional power superhighways do not just help meet climate goals. They’re about creating high-quality jobs, bolstering energy reliability and lowering energy bills for Illinoisians.

Speaking as a proud representative of the union workforce that builds and maintains our nation’s critical infrastructure, I know that interregional high-voltage direct current projects have the potential to be a win for our economy, a win for our residents, environment and workers. It’s time we take these wins and build a better future for Illinois.

Constructing hundreds of miles of these transmission lines is no small feat. These projects demand a skilled workforce capable of handling intricate installations, often in challenging conditions. Unions, particularly my union are the best, and often only, resource for that workforce.

Modernizing and upgrading America’s electric transmission system could create an additional 150,000 to 200,000 good-paying, family-supporting jobs every year over the next two decades and make energy delivery more efficient and reliable.

Strengthening grid reliability

Safety is the top priority for LIUNA. Through our quality work, our members make Illinois safer every day by improving vital infrastructure. Many of us take for granted the safety provided by our power grid, assuming it will always be working or quickly returned to order. However, as extreme weather events become more frequent, our energy system must be strengthened. Interregional high-voltage direct current transmission lines are a critical solution for delivering high-capacity clean power to Illinois during times of peak demand.

Let’s say Illinois is facing a historic winter storm that threatens the ability to provide reliable and affordable energy to communities: these transmission lines can transfer surplus electricity from other parts of the country where energy generation is not impacted by the same dramatic weather. This capability doesn’t just prevent blackouts — it ensures that essential services like hospitals, schools and emergency responders have the power they need when they need it.

LIUNA members, like many Illinois residents, are grappling with the very real and present-day challenge of rising energy costs. Just as road investment reduces wasted gas money and time, transmission infrastructure will help save money for consumers too. A recent study by the Department of Energy found that $1.60 is saved for every $1 spent on transmission, with the greatest cost-savings from HVDC lines. Similar analysis has shown that interregional transmission between the two organizations that manage the power grid in Illinois (PJM and MISO) could provide $1 billion in savings each year.

HVDC transmission is the cost-effective solution Illinois needs as it considers its energy future.

In this moment of continued division and polarization, interregional high-voltage direct current transmission offers a rare unifying opportunity. It’s a chance to bring together labor, business and government to build a cleaner, more resilient energy system—one that works for everyone.

For union workers, these projects mean jobs that pay well and provide benefits. For communities, they mean a more stable power supply and lower energy bills. And for Illinois and the country, they mean a modernized grid capable of meeting the demands of the 21st century.

It’s time for policymakers to prioritize interregional HVDC transmission as the cornerstone of America’s energy future. By building these energy highways, we can create jobs for today, power a cleaner tomorrow, and ensure a stronger, more reliable grid for generations to come.

David A. Frye is a vice president and Midwest regional manager for the Laborers’ International Union of North America (LIUNA), representing over 50,000 families throughout 10 states, including Illinois, Indiana, Missouri and Kansas.

The views and opinions expressed by contributors are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Chicago Sun-Times or any of its affiliates.

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House approves funding bill and sends to Senate hours before government shutdown deadline

WASHINGTON (AP) — Hours to go before a midnight government shutdown, the House approved a new plan late Friday from Speaker Mike Johnson that would temporarily fund federal operations and disaster aid, but drops President-elect Donald Trump’s demands for a debt limit increase into the new year.

Johnson insisted Congress would “meet our obligations” and not allow federal operations to shutter ahead of the Christmas holiday season. But the day’s outcome was uncertain after Trump doubled down on his insistence that a debt ceiling increase be included in any deal — if not, he said in an early morning post, let the closures “start now.”

The bill was approved 366-34, and now goes to the Senate, for expected quick passage.

“We will not have a government shutdown,” Johnson said ahead of the vote.

It was the third attempt from Johnson, the beleaguered House speaker, to achieve one of the basic requirements of the federal government — keeping it open. And it raised stark questions about whether Johnson will be able to keep his job, in the face of angry GOP colleagues, and work alongside Trump and billionaire ally Elon Musk, who have called the legislative plays this time.

Trump’s last-minute demand was almost an impossible ask, and Johnson had almost no choice but to work around his pressure for a debt ceiling increase. The speaker knew there wouldn’t be enough support within the GOP majority to pass any funding package, since many Republicans prefer to slash federal government and certainly wouldn’t allow more debt.

Instead, the Republicans, who will have full control of the White House, House and Senate next year, with big plans for tax cuts and other priorities, are showing they must routinely rely on Democrats for the votes needed to keep up with the routine operations of governing.

“So is this a Republican bill or a Democrat bill?” scoffed Musk on social media ahead of the vote.

The new 118-page package would fund the government at current levels through March and adds $100 billion in disaster aid and $10 billion in agricultural assistance to farmers.

Gone is Trump’s demand to lift the debt ceiling, which GOP leaders told lawmakers would be debated as part of their tax and border packages in the new year. Republicans made a so-called handshake agreement to raise the debt limit at that time while also cutting $2.5 trillion in spending over 10 years.

It’s essentially the same deal that flopped the night before in a spectacular setback — opposed by most Democrats and some of the most conservative Republicans — minus Trump’s debt ceiling demand.

Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries was in contact with Johnson, but Democrats were cool to the latest effort after the Republican speaker reneged on their original bipartisan compromise.

“Welcome back to the MAGA swamp,” Jeffries posted.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the top Democrat on the Appropriations Committee, said it looked like Musk, an unelected official and the wealthiest man in the world, was calling the shots for Trump and the Republicans.

“Who is in charge?” she asked during the debate.

Still, most Democrats approved the bill’s passage.

Trump, who has not yet been sworn into office, is showing the power but also the limits of his sway with Congress, as he intervenes and orchestrates affairs from Mar-a-Lago alongside Musk, who is heading up the incoming administration’s new Department of Government Efficiency.

“If there is going to be a shutdown of government, let it begin now,” Trump posted early in the morning on social media.

Trump does not fear government shutdowns the way Johnson and the lawmakers see federal closures as political losers that harm the livelihoods of Americans. The incoming Trump administration vows to slash the federal budget and fire thousands of employees. Trump himself sparked the longest government shutdown in history in his first term at the White House, the monthlong closures over the 2018-19 Christmas holiday and New Year period.

More importantly for the president-elect was his demand for pushing the thorny debt ceiling debate off the table before he returns to the White House. The federal debt limit expires Jan. 1, and Trump doesn’t want the first months of his new administration saddled with tough negotiations in Congress to lift the nation’s borrowing capacity. It gives Democrats, who will be in the minority next year, leverage.

“Congress must get rid of, or extend out to, perhaps, 2029, the ridiculous Debt Ceiling,” Trump posted — increasing his demand for a now five-year debt limit increase. “Without this, we should never make a deal.”

Johnson had tried at first to appease Trump’s demands, but ultimately had to work around them.

Trump and Musk unleashed their opposition — and social media army — on the original plan Johnson presented, which was a 1,500-page bipartisan compromise he struck with Democrats that included the disaster aid for hard hit states, but did not address the debt ceiling situation.

A Trump-backed second plan, Thursday’s slimmed-down 116-page bill with his preferred two-year debt limit increase into 2027, failed in a monumental defeat, rejected by most Democrats as an unserious effort — but also by conservative Republicans who refuse to pile on the nation’s red ink.

On Friday morning, Vice President-elect JD Vance and Trump’s pick to be incoming Director of the Office of Management and Budget, Russ Vought, arrived early at the speaker’s office at the Capitol, where a group of holdouts from the hardline House Freedom Caucus were meeting with Johnson.

Later, during the lunchtime meeting of House Republicans in the Capitol basement, Johnson asked for a show of hands as they determined the path forward, Republican Rep. Ralph Norman said.

Government workers have already been told to prepare for a federal shutdown which would send millions of employees — and members of the military — into the holiday season without paychecks.

President Joe Biden, in his final weeks in office, has played a less public role in the debate, drawing criticism from Trump and Republicans who are trying to shift the blame for any shutdown on him.

Biden has been in discussions with Schumer and Jeffries, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Friday.

But, she said: “Republicans blew up this deal. They did, and they need to fix this.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer called the original agreement “the quickest, simplest, and easiest way we can make sure the government stays open while delivering critical emergency aid to the American people.”

The speaker’s election is the first vote of the new Congress, which convenes Jan. 3, and Johnson will need the support of almost every single House Republican from his razor-thin majority to ensure he can keep the gavel. Democrats will vote for Jeffries.

As the speaker twisted in Washington, his peril was on display. At Turning Point USA’s conservative AmericaFest confab, Trump ally Steve Bannon stirred thousands of activists late Thursday with a withering takedown of the Louisiana Republican.

“Clearly, Johnson is not up to the task. He’s gotta go,” Bannon said, drawing cheers. He smiled and cocked his head at the response, adding: “President Trump? These are your people.”



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Party City’s party is over, shutting stores nationally, including more than 20 Chicago locations

We break down complex business news to help you understand how money moves in Chicago and how it affects you.

Party supply retailer Party City is closing down all of its stores. The company has more than 20 locations in the Chicago area.

The party supply retailer is winding down operations effective immediately, CNN first reported on Friday, though it isn’t immediately clear when stores in Chicago and beyond will close. Some store employees received letters that the company would close stores Feb. 28 and employees would be terminated, according to CNN.

At a North Center store at 3417 N. Western Ave., a long-time shopper said she was shocked to learn of the closure. Lucy, a more than 40-year resident of Roscoe Village who asked to be identified only by her first name, said she can’t remember a time when Party City wasn’t open on Western Avenue.

Lucy was waiting for her daughter to pick out New Year’s Eve hats. She said she heard of Party City’s unwinding from a fellow shopper after commenting on how many sales the store was running.

“Everyone likes Party City,” Lucy said. “It has everything. I don’t have to go far.”

Party City at 3417 N. Western Ave. in North Center.

Party City at 3417 N. Western Ave. in North Center.

A manager at Party City’s North Center location, who asked to remain anonymous while still employed with the company, said they heard the news Friday from other store managers.

The manager hadn’t heard about a closing date and was told to keep following the schedule.

“I’m still in the dark,” the manager said.

Party City corporate officials did not respond to a request for comment.

The New Jersey-based chain’s closure comes after nearly 40 years of business, the tail end of which was rife with financial turbulence. The retailer filed for bankruptcy in January 2023, CNN reported, canceling nearly $1 billion in debt through the proceedings. The company tapped a new CEO, Barry Litwin, four months ago, with a focus on strengthening Party City’s financial health.

In a video call with corporate employees, which CNN said it viewed, Litwin said Party City’s “very best efforts have not been enough to overcome” its financial struggles. The growth of e-commerce and pop-up concepts like Spirit Halloween have put a dent in Party City’s sales. In addition to party supplies, Party City is known for selling Halloween costumes and balloons.

Corporate employees were told Friday was their last day, according to CNN.

A customer walks out of Party City in North Center during a clearance sale Friday.

A customer walks out of Party City in North Center during a clearance sale Friday.

Party City’s North Center store did not have any signs Friday afternoon indicating the retailer’s imminent closure or final day. But there were a slew of ongoing sales, like 50% off select Christmas wrapping materials, 20% off New Year’s Eve decorations and 20% off Valentine’s Day accessories.

Party City isn’t the only smaller chain to be struggling in the face of big box competitors. Retailer Big Lots announced Thursday it will start running “going out of business” sales after filing for bankruptcy in September.

Signs that indicate that products are 20% off are displayed at Party City in North Center on Friday.

Signs that indicate that products are 20% off are displayed at Party City in North Center on Friday.



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Autobús de caridad difunde alegría navideña a personas sin hogar

El mejor lugar para cobertura de noticias y cultura latina en Chicago. | The place for coverage of Latino news and culture in Chicago.

Juan Roca pasó su 52 cumpleaños haciendo exactamente lo que quería: ayudar a difundir la alegría navideña entre los necesitados.

“Puedo celebrar con mi familia otro día”, dijo Roca. “Aquí es donde quiero estar. Me necesitan más aquí”.

Roca, junto con otros voluntarios del Night Ministry, se reunieron el miércoles en la esquina de la calle 54th y Halsted en Back of the Yards para repartir comida caliente, chocolate caliente y calcetines navideños llenos de regalitos a los miembros de la comunidad sin hogar.

El Night Ministry, con sede en Bucktown, brinda apoyo y servicios a los miembros de la comunidad sin hogar.

Roca, el gerente de operaciones de alcance, dijo que heredó su amor por ayudar a los necesitados de su madre, quien solía repartir comida caliente a las personas sin hogar en Perú.

Comenzó a trabajar para el Night Ministry en 2019 y dijo que el trabajo que ha podido hacer ha sido “gratificante”.

“Llegué a trabajar en una iglesia ayudando a los estudiantes, pero estaba atrapado en una oficina”, dijo Roca. “Quería hacer más. Quería estar en la calle ayudando a los necesitados. Me encanta conocer a la gente de estas comunidades”.

A volunteer hands out food during The Night Ministry’s distribution of holiday stockings at its Health Outreach Bus near West 54th Place and S Halstead Avenue in New City, Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024. | Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Un voluntario reparte alimentos durante la distribución de calcetines navideños del Night Ministry desde su autobús el miércoles.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

El autobús de alcance del Night Ministry hace paradas semanales en varios vecindarios de los lados sur y oeste para repartir comida y brindar otros servicios. Pero durante los días festivos, el grupo hace que sus paradas sean un poco más especiales.

Todos los años, los voluntarios del Night Ministry reparten calcetines navideños llenos de gorros, guantes, kits de higiene personal y otros artículos necesarios como regalo a los residentes necesitados.

“Durante los días festivos, queremos celebrar la temporada con las personas a las que servimos”, dijo Burke Patten, gerente de comunicaciones del Night Ministry. “Son una forma de mostrarles a las personas que nos preocupamos por ellas”.

Se escuchó un coro de “gracias” y “Feliz Navidad” de los hombres, mujeres y niños que hicieron fila para recibir sus regalos. Los niños también recibieron pequeños juguetes para llevarse.

Juan Roca, Manager of Outreach Operations, repacks a socking during The Night Ministry’s distribution of holiday stockings at its Health Outreach Bus near West 54th Place and S Halstead Avenue in New City, Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024. | Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Juan Roca, encargado del Night Ministry, prepara los calcetines navideños para regalar a los invitados que llegan al autobús. “Estamos agradecidos de poder ayudar. Queremos que se sientan importantes, porque lo son”.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Paten dijo que el equipo esperaba repartir más de 370 calcetines navideños. Se entregaron alrededor de 60 en su parada en Back of the Yards.

“Esta podría ser su única comida del día, no lo sabemos”, dijo Roca. “Pero estamos agradecidos de poder ayudar. Queremos que se sientan importantes, porque lo son”.

Linet Babu Varghese, de 20 años, comenzó a trabajar como voluntaria el lunes y durante tres días manejó desde su casa en el suburbio de Des Plaines para subirse al autobús.

“Quería enfocarme en ayudar a las personas sin hogar”, dijo Varghese. “Creo que es una comunidad que a menudo se pasa por alto. Me ha encantado conocer a las personas que pasan por aquí”.

Traducido por Jackie Serrato, La Voz Chicago



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Trump taps west suburban Catholic school leader as next Vatican ambassador

President-elect Donald Trump on Friday announced he’ll nominate west suburban Catholic school board leader Brian Burch as the next U.S. ambassador to the Vatican.

Burch, the co-founder and president of the conservative political action committee CatholicVote, is the president of the Seton Montessori School board in Villa Park. He lives with his wife, Sara, and nine children in the western suburbs.

“He has received numerous awards, and demonstrated exceptional leadership, helping build one of the largest Catholic advocacy groups in the Country,” Trump said in a statement. “He represented me well during the last Election, having garnered more Catholic votes than any Presidential Candidate in History!”

In a social media post, Burch said he was “committed to working with leaders inside the Vatican and the new Administration to promote the dignity of all people and the common good. I look forward to the confirmation process and the opportunity to continue to serve my country and the Church.”

Burch couldn’t immediately be reached for direct comment.

His organization has encouraged parents to scour local library shelves for Pride Month displays and preemptively check out titles “pushing eroticism and trans ideology” to keep them away from children.

CatholicVote’s “Hide the Pride” campaign targeted up to 100 libraries nationwide, Burch told the Sun-Times in June 2022.

“We’ve urged parents to exercise responsibility in their community to remove what we believe to be inappropriate books from these displays, so kids’ innocence is protected,” Burch said then. “These books provoke conversations best reserved for families, at the time and place and manner of the parents’ choosing — not libraries.”

The CatholicVote political action committee, which is based in Madison, Wisconsin, raised $1.7 million in support of Trump’s 2024 campaign, according to campaign finance watchdog OpenSecrets.

Joe Donnelly, President Joe Biden’s most recent ambassador to the Vatican — a post formally known as ambassador to the Holy See — stepped down in July. Laura Hochla has served in Donnelly’s place as chargé d’affaires since then.



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Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton polling shows she may have her sights set on a different office

We’re less than nine months from when candidates can begin circulating petitions for the 2026 election, so we’re rapidly approaching the time when major figures will need to decide whether to run or not. Because of that, a lot of people are polling.

The state’s two big dogs, Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and Gov. JB Pritzker, are still not saying what they plan to do, although Durbin has said he’ll make his plans known after the start of the new year.

Pritzker has been polling, although his campaign wouldn’t comment. A friend who was polled said the questions varied from migrant and immigration policy, to a possible constitutional amendment to protect abortion rights, to crime response and whether he should stand up to President-elect Donald Trump if he tries to violate the rights of Illinois residents or whether he should find a way to work with the Trump administration to benefit Illinois.

There were the usual right direction vs. wrong direction questions, and questions rating the governor’s performance on things like fiscal management and taxes, and where they believed Pritzker stood on the political ideological spectrum.

Pritzker’s poll tested the statewide popularity of people like Mayor Brandon Johnson and Reps. Lauren Underwood, D-Ill., and Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill. The governor also tested Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton’s popularity.

Stratton is also polling. A source with knowledge of the poll and the thinking behind it said Stratton is “keeping her options open” as a decision by Pritzker looms. However, the person stressed that Stratton has “no plans of not keeping her day job.”

Stratton has been actively fundraising since the summer of 2023 and has also become more visible, appearing with the governor at many of his governmental and campaign stops and doing several of her own events.

Stratton’s poll tested Durbin’s popularity, which is standard in these sorts of things, but that’s an office she could seek. Also, if Pritzker decides not to run again, the decision will likely create a down-ticket cascade as people attempt to move up the ladder. Like Pritzker, Stratton tested the popularity of several other elected officials.

Stratton’s poll tested various background messages with potential voters, which is also common. For instance, a question tested how her relationship to Pritzker plays with voters: “Juliana Stratton has worked with JB Pritzker since day one to get big things done for Illinois. JB calls her his partner in governing. Together, they turned the Illinois economy around and along with accomplishments like raising the minimum wage, making historic investments in infrastructure, and giving one point eight billion dollars in tax relief to working families in Illinois.” Voters were then asked to rate her favorability between one and 10.

Another test question notes that Stratton “is the first Black Lieutenant Governor and first Black woman constitutional officer in Illinois ever,” and after talking about her life on the city’s South Side, closes with, “As a descendant of enslaved people, she understands the systemic barriers facing marginalized communities. She works every day across Illinois to rebuild neglected communities.”

The poll talks about her time as the “primary caregiver” to her mother, who had Alzheimer’s disease and lived with Stratton for three years before passing away. “She says it was both the honor of her life as well as incredibly difficult. Stratton was also raising three daughters at the same time, sandwiched between two generations and caring for everyone. Stratton managed it all and knows how hard Illinois families have it.”

The poll touts her experience as a mediation attorney. “That means her whole job was to get opposing sides to compromise, see things from the other’s point of view, and get both sides to agree to a solution. And Stratton had a very high percent success rate. Who better to lead us when everyone is so divided? Stratton has the skills and the know how to help bring both sides together to get things done.”

After testing other candidates’ popularity, Stratton’s poll also asked whether her support of various issues made respondents more or less likely to approve of her, including raising the minimum wage; enacting a large infrastructure plan; criminal justice reform; balancing the budget, improving pension funding and achieving nine credit upgrades; helping pass a bill to “enshrine reproductive rights into state law”; leading the Council on Rural Affairs and the Council for Women and Girls; and “stood up to the NRA” by helping pass an assault weapons ban.

That should give you an idea of the messaging to expect if Stratton decides to run for a different office.

Rich Miller also publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and CapitolFax.com.

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Bears S Adrian Colbert calls ex-Packers QB Aaron Rodgers ‘brother for life’ after ayahuasca trip

Bears journeyman safety Adrian Colbert had never met NFL star Aaron Rodgers or tried ayahuasca before a trip to Costa Rica in the recent offseason. Now he’s a fan of both, calling Rodgers “a brother for life.”

Colbert, who is on the Bears’ practice squad and has played in three games this season, described the excursion as “very powerful” and said it led to a deep connection between him and Rodgers.

“I was very moved by the type of person that he is — very caring, intelligent, vulnerable, strong-willed,” Colbert told the Sun-Times. “I admire him, especially with how free and vulnerable he was even with that type of recognition in the world.

“He’s a strong and loving person that people don’t see from the outside. People misunderstand him because in this game or any other type of professional setting, they expect you to fall in line. When you fall in line, you lose a sense of yourself. He inspired me to live my life, my truth and not really care what other people think.”

Rodgers is in his second season with the Jets, but before that tormented the Bears during his run as Packers starting quarterback from 2008 through ’22. He went 25-5 against the Bears, including the playoffs, and screamed, “All my [expletive] life, I own you,” to fans at Soldier Field in a 2021 game.

So Colbert’s warm feelings toward him are an outlier at Halas Hall.

Nonetheless, Colbert was invited on the trip by Bills linebacker Von Miller and Dolphins safety Jordan Poyer, both friends of his. Those three, along with Rodgers and five other people, did an ayahuasca ceremony for six hours each on back-to-back nights, then spent two hours in an ancient sweat lodge, then had another six-hour ayahuasca ceremony.

Ayahuasca is a psychoactive drink made from plants that Colbert called “a brew” and said a person drinks as many cups as they want based on how their body reacts to it.

“It’s kinda like tea, but it’s not tea,” he said. “They don’t sell it at Starbucks.”

Colbert repeatedly mentioned the “vulnerability” of the experience and said it had a lasting effect by guiding him to live freely. One lasting image was Rodgers dancing inhibited during the ceremony.

“I hit him up a couple weeks ago just expressing the gratitude for him making that entire experience easier,” Colbert said. “He taught me what ‘surrender’ meant in ceremony, and it was nonverbal. It was how eloquently he flowed through the ceremony when the music was playing and he was dancing. It was really cool.

“I used to always be so insecure at not being able to dance or not being good at something, so I wouldn’t even try it even though it made me feel good, but seeing him do that gave me the power to join along and embrace it.”

Colbert plans to go back with his girlfriend next year and hopes Rodgers will invite him back as well.



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