Divvy + CTA deal. If you buy a 30-day CTA or Pace bus pass, a pilot program launching this month will give you a $5 credit for Divvy bike and scooter rentals.
■ Here’s how.
■ Mayor Johnson’s picked a bike-lane champion to head Chicago’s Transportation Department.
■ Also: A former Cook County public defender to serve as deputy mayor for community safety …
■ … who may be called on to deal with a new city inspector general report that finds “inconsistency” in the Chicago Police Department’s practice of stripping enforcement powers from cops under investigation.
■ Block Club: Police say Chicago’s infamous “Puffy Coat Bandits” are part of a crime ring that’s been targeting downtown diners for years.
‘Farewell to foam.’ That was one of the appeals to Illinois lawmakers as hundreds of environmentalists traveled to Springfield to push passage of bills to save the planet.
■ Also under consideration: Legislation to legalize a “green death option,” human composting …
■ … and a proposal to give those convicted of reckless driving an alternative to losing their licenses: Installation of devices that would limit their vehicles’ ability to exceed speed limits.
‘A program that is being proposed by this president with his intentions to destroy the Department of Education.’ The Chicago School Board’s OK’d a resolution calling on Gov. Pritzker to reject a federal program to divert taxpayer dollars to cover private school tuition.
■ Dentists caring for needy Chicago public school students are asking the state to take control of a program they say the city has mismanaged.
‘The ceasefire doesn’t exist. The future is awful.’ The American Prospect’s David Dayen: “Iran taking operational control of the Strait of Hormuz has enormous ripple effects.”
■ Jeff Tiedrich at Everyone is entitled to my own opinion: “Donny … agreed to a ceasefire without really understanding what the terms were—which is pretty much Donny’s entire business model, to act first and think never.”
‘A president shouldn’t be able to walk away from threatening to wipe out an entire civilization.’ USA Today’s Chicago-based columnist Rex Huppke: “If Vice President JD Vance were smart—and I very much don’t think he is—he would use this disgraceful moment to turn on the president and position himself as a less insane choice to lead the country.”
■ Dan Froomkin at Heads Up News: The imperative to remove Donald Trump from power is going viral.
■ Republicans across the country are coming to grips with a wave of election routs, in Wisconsin and elsewhere: “We got our butts kicked.”
‘The last person who should be running the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department.’ Columnist and former Labor Secretary Robert Reich says the woman with that job now—and a leading candidate to become the next U.S. attorney general—“is intent on reversing civil rights” …
■ … witness her investigation of the star witness against Trump in congressional hearings about the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot (New York Times gift link).
■ In the Justice Department’s declaration that the Presidential Records Act is unconstitutional, former U.S. prosecutor Joyce Vance sees the Trump administration “killing history.”
■ Popular Information: Trump’s Commodity Futures Trading Commission is going to war with states—to protect his family’s business partners.
MAD about late night. The venerable satire magazine’s June issue turns its sights on TV’s end-of-day shows …
■ … including a eulogy for Stephen Colbert’s Late Show.
■ That follows a “MAD about DC” satire that former DC Comics editor Mike Gold declares the magazine’s funniest issue in years.
R.I.P., Kindles. In a move that Wired says will spur a new wave of electronic trash, Amazon’s planning to cut off support—including the ability to download new e-books—for Kindle readers released before 2012.
■ Here are the 11 models affected.
■ ZDNet explains how to jailbreak one of those forlorn devices to become “the ultimate open-source reader.”
Mind those Ns and Qs. Yesterday’s Chicago Public Square misspelled Iran—an error identified by several helpful readers, of whom the first was Barry Koehler.
■ Mistakes hurt, but having readers who take the time to set things straight eases the sting.
■ Journalism critic Dick Tofel: “Starting long news stories with anecdotes may have outlived its usefulness.”
Happy Local News Day … a national day of action conceived by the founder of the Montana Free Press and being observed nationwide—by organizations including MS NOW (the former MSNBC), the Sun-Times and Investigate Midwest …
■ … which makes this an apt day to thank readers such as Vidas Germanas, Mark Dean, Clive Topol, John O’Connell, Ann Fisher, Maureen King, Peter Kuttner, Judy Hoffman, Geoff Anderson, Fritz Holznagel, Dave Kraft, Peggy Conlon-Madigan, Susanne Riedell, Heather Alger, Jon Lederhouse, Bob Back, Joan Berman, Robert A. Shipley, Brent Brotine, Ricky Briasco, Nancy and Barney Straus, Keelin Wyman, John Gilardi, Jessica Mackinnon, Susan Gzesh, Rosalind Rouse, Deirdre Walton, Avery Cohen, Geraldine Delaney, Clifford Johnson, Ian Morrison, Julie Martin, Steve Johnson and Louise Kiernan, Matt Griffin, Liz Meisterling, saknrad, Kathy Catrambone, Marianne Goss, Glenn Jeffers, Tim Colburn, Jerry Role, Debbie Becker, Bill Oakes and Carollina Song—who, over the last 9+ years, have pitched in to help cover the cost of producing Square.
■ Join their ranks today—for as little as $1, just once—and see your name atop tomorrow’s roll call.
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Thanks. Mike Braden made this edition better.
