Chicago|News|
Don't Worry: CPS CEO Is Not A Non-Target Of Fed Corruption Probe
KONKOL COLUMN: Chicago schools cover legal fees of workers facing FBI questioning who aren't probe targets. CEO isn't one of them, CPS says.

Mark Konkol lives on the South Side. He is a White Sox fan. He has a dog, cat and a Wikipedia page. He plays bad guitar, drinks good rum and enjoys long motorcycle rides to the beach. He once was forced to trade his jeans for loaner fat-lady club pants to get in the Union League Club.
Konkol is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and Emmy-nominated producer. He was a producer, writer and narrator for the Chicagoland series on CNN. Konkol was the Writer at Large for DNAinfo Chicago. At the Chicago Sun-Times, he teamed up with his pals Frank Main and John J. Kim to produce a series of stories about "Why they won't stop shooting in Chicago" that was awarded the 2011 Pulitzer Prize for local reporting.
Konkol grew up in South Holland and graduated from Thornwood High School, which he likes to boast is where he struck out future Major League All-Star Cornelius “Cliff” Floyd in batting practice. Konkol also tells people that for two years he was the starting left guard on the Culver-Stockton College football team. That didn't last. He graduated from Western Illinois University.
Chicago's neighborhoods — that's where Konkol's most comfortable writing about guys he'll never forget including Bernard, the homeless guy in River North. And that “Grandpa Joe” character, who ended a confrontation with Mike Royko by saying, “You’ll never be Studs. You’ll never be Algren.”
And you don't have to say it, Konkol already knows he'll never be Royko.
He's fine with that — Royko was never on Twitter.
follow Mark on Twitter: @Konkolskorner
KONKOL COLUMN: Chicago schools cover legal fees of workers facing FBI questioning who aren't probe targets. CEO isn't one of them, CPS says.

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot took to Twitter in reaction to President Trump's performance during Tuesday night TV debate with Joe Biden.
"Our City, Our Safety" aims to reduce violence over the next three years by treating shootings and murders as a public health crisis.
Kentucky, Wyoming, Texas and Nevada get added to Chicago's emergency travel quarantine list that includes 22 states and Puerto Rico.
Mayor Lightfoot says that despite lifting coronavirus regulations on some businesses, it's too soon to talk about kids returning to school.
KONKOL COLUMN: Is a three-person news conference outside governor's Gold Coast mansion really an illegal protest?
Chicago officials moved to increase restaurant and health club occupancy and allow indoor service and late-night hours at bars.
KONKOL COLUMN: Pritzker's public pledge to deliver equity in Black community is "hypocritical lip service" without action, activist says.
If Chicago cops can draw fans to watch 'em play baseball in the suburbs, City Hall should let some Bears fans watch a game at Soldier Field.
Mayor Lightfoot called on Chicagoans to gather outside their homes at 7 p.m. for a citywide moment of silence in Breonna Taylor's memory.
Chicago Bears legend Gale Sayers, known as the "Kansas Comet," became the youngest player inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Billy Donovan, 55, who led the Oklahoma City Thunder to five straight playoff appearances, replaces Jim Boylen, who was fired last month.
Chicago public health commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady says she hopes people "think twice about going to Wisconsin right now."
Toronzo Cannon became an internationally acclaimed blues star while driving a CTA bus for 28 years. Last week, he drove his last route.
City Hall provides restaurants early guidance for cold-weather dining outdoor: Tents, temporary outdoor structures are OK.
Chatham's beloved Harold's Chicken Shack No. 55 may have closed, but food truck serving faithful regulars remains at 87th and Lafayette.
KONKOL COLUMN: Words of encouragement for the Western Courier, my alma mater's independent student paper: Keep reporting, WIU needs you.
Foodie author Dennis Foley cured writer's block by eating 60 hot dogs in 50 days. "No Ketchup" shares origins of Chicago's best dog stands.
Western Illinois University student Kavion Poplous who shot roommate turned himself into Chicago police Wednesday, officials said.
African American businessman Dan Ringo says he thinks CPS chief of staff guilty plea details show collusion that "Stevie Wonder can see."