Chicago|News|
Chicago Schools Stay Remote, Negotiations With CTU Remain Stalled
Chicago Public School officials extended a negotiation "cooling-off" period with the teachers union over terms for returning to classrooms.

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
Chicago Public School officials extended a negotiation "cooling-off" period with the teachers union over terms for returning to classrooms.

KONKOL COLUMN: Gov. Pritzker's hand-picked statistical calculations provide a skewed reality about the state's coronavirus vaccine response.
KONKOL COLUMN: Group led by CTU Vice President Stacy Davis Gates sent a robotext lobbying for governor to remove teacher-strike speed bump.
Mayor Lightfoot backs off her lockout threat as in-person learning negotiations with Chicago Teachers Union seem to inch closer to a deal.
KONKOL COLUMN: There's something beautiful about Woodstock celebrating a movie that made it famous, as it always does, even during pandemic.
Chicago Teachers Union members who don't show up for work Monday will be blocked from remote learning portals, setting the stage for strike.
Mayor Lightfoot said if Chicago Teacher Union members don't show up for work Monday "we will have no choice but to take further action."
Indoor-dining capacity to remain at 25 percent up to 25 people even if Chicago reaches metrics that allow for larger gatherings.
KONKOL COLUMN: Gov. Pritzker needs to explain, not blame, why other states perform better under the same federal vaccine rollout rules.
Two teenage girls allegedly put a driver in a chokehold and stole the vehicle on the West Side around 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, police said.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot said negotiations with the teachers union must continue "for as long as it takes to get a deal done."
Chicago Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara faces firing again for allegedly filing a false report against former top cop.
KONKOL COLUMN: While Chicagoans return to work as coronavirus spread slows, strike-happy CTU uses pandemic as a political bargaining chip.
Chicago school official: “The district has no choice but to ask parents to keep your children home," on Wednesday.
"As a Black woman I’m stepping up and getting it, and we need everyone to do the same," Mayor Lori Lightfoot said after getting vaccinated.
Two brothers claim St. Sabina's activist priest the Rev. Michael Pfleger abused them during sleepovers at church rectories in the 1970s.
State officials lift coronavirus restrictions to allow Chicago restaurants to resume indoor dining at 25 percent capacity up to 25 people.
City inspector general calls for changes to police policies in the aftermath of a botched raid that left an innocent woman handcuffed naked.
CPS officials push ahead with reopening more in-person learning as Chicago Teachers Union threatens a walkout in protest.
First responders, teachers, grocery clerks, transit workers and corrections employees among eligible to get coronavirus vaccines next week.