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Could United Center redevelopment help a landmark church?

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: Residents and leaders are criticizing Walgreens’ decision to close its only Chatham location when the South and West sides have fewer pharmacy locations than other areas of the city.

🗞️ Plus: Lawmakers tackle a deadline to keep the Bears in Illinois, what major redevelopment around the United Center may mean for a 140-year-old church and more news you need to know.

📝 Keeping scoreThe Cubs beat the Reds, 5-4; the White Sox shut out the Angels, 6-0.

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⏱️: An 8-minute read


 

TODAY’S WEATHER ☁️

Mostly cloudy with a high near 60.


TODAY’S TOP STORY 🔎

Ald. William Hall (6th) speaks at a news conference criticizing the planned closure of the Walgreens store in Chatham.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

Leaders, residents decry Walgreens’ decision to close only Chatham location

By Mariah Rush

Store closing: Dozens of South Side residents gathered Monday outside of a Chatham Walgreens, waving signs saying “Senior Lives Matter” and “End Corporate Abandonment,” after learning the store will be closing June 4. Walgreens said theft and violent incidents led to its decision to close the shop at 8628 S. Cottage Grove Ave. It’s the only Walgreens in the neighborhood, with the nearest location more than one mile away.

Residents’ concerns: Neighbors and local leaders say low-income families visit the store because it’s within walking distance, and that the area has a large population of older adults who don’t drive and rely on the pharmacy for medication access.

Key context: Since 2025, at least seven Walgreens locations on the South Side have shuttered or will close, including the area’s only specialty pharmacy at 2351 E. 71st St., which will shut May 19. The South and West sides have fewer pharmacies than other areas of the city. Access to the two largest pharmacy chains in Chicago, Walgreens and CVS, is much higher in the city’s majority white communities than in majority Black or Latino areas.

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STADIUM SAGA 🏟️

Rendering of a proposed Bears stadium in Arlington Heights.

Provided by Manica Architecture

Homeowners’ property tax relief is ‘negligible’ in current Bears stadium bill

By Mitchell Armentrout

Not settled: A residential property tax relief provision helped the Chicago Bears’ stadium bill pass the Illinois House last month, but Gov. JB Pritzker’s office says any help for homeowners under the proposal would be “negligible.” 

Clock is running: That sends lawmakers back to the drawing board to hammer out so-called megaproject legislation that can keep together a diverse Democratic caucus — and keep the Bears in Illinois. The Illinois Senate reconvenes Tuesday with four weeks left to reach a deal.

Key context: Dozens of other states have such megaproject legislation to incentivize large-scale developments, allowing companies that invest in big projects to negotiate discounted payments with local taxing bodies. Pritzker has long pushed for such a measure to attract business to Illinois.

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ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN 📐

Greater Union Baptist Church on Chicago’s Near West Side was built 140 years ago as Church of the Redeemer.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Could United Center redevelopment effort help a landmark church?

By Lee Bey

Once-grand landmark: It’s hard to miss the 140-year-old Greater Union Baptist Church’s imposing red brick Romanesque Revival exterior at 1956 W. Warren Blvd. It was built for a congregation of 600, but today has about 40 members, and has been closed for services since 2022 due to a faulty HVAC system. Gas service to the building is also shut off because of an unpaid $14,000 bill. 

Key context: The church, a protected city landmark since 2023, is on the north edge of the area covered by The 1901 Project, the United Center owners’ $7 billion plan to convert acres of parking lots around the stadium into a new community of residential, retail, parks and entertainment spaces.

What’s next?: Much of the neighborhood that once supported Greater Union was wiped away by years of demolition; in more recent decades, residences closest to the stadium were bulldozed to create parking. Will the historic church somehow benefit from the new neighborhood that will rise around it? Sun-Times columnist Lee Bey considers the outlook.

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MORE NEWS YOU NEED 🗞️

Members of the Chicago Zoological Society teamsters picket Monday outside the Brookfield Zoo.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times


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CHICAGO MINI CROSSWORD 🌭

Today’s clue: 4D: WNBA star Natasha who recently signed with the Chicago Sky

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BRIGHT ONE 🔆

Leo Catholic High School Principal Shaka Rawls received a Golden Apple leadership award Monday.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Leo High School principal gets surprised with Golden Apple award

By Emmanuel Camarillo

Shaka Rawls, the principal at Leo Catholic High School in Auburn Gresham, knew something was up Monday when he saw all the cars in the school’s parking lot.

What he didn’t know was that those friends, family members and elected officials were there to congratulate him for winning the Golden Apple Award for Excellence in Leadership, one of the most prestigious honors for Illinois school principals.

Rawls, principal at Leo since 2016, was selected as one of the leadership award winners from among nearly 100 nominees. Golden Apple winners, which also include teachers, are being surprised with accolades this month. All winners get a cash award of $5,000, and leaders also get $5,000 for their schools.

Under Rawls’ leadership, Leo seniors have a 100% college acceptance rate and the share of ninth graders who are on track to graduate within four years has increased by 20%, according to the Golden Apple Foundation, which awards the prizes each year.

Rawls also spends time mentoring students. He sits with them at lunch and lets them know he is available if they need someone to talk to. Rawls’ role feels personal to him because he once walked the school’s halls as a student. He graduated from Leo in 1993 and wants to give the students access to the kinds of resources and relationships he has now, but didn’t back then.

“When I look at every student in this building, I see me,” Rawls said.

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YOUR DAILY QUESTION ☕️

Yesterday, we asked you: What’s the best household item you’ve scored in a Chicago alley? Do you still have it in your home today?

Here’s some of what you said…

“I once found a brand new, 3-foot-by-8-foot wood door with glass center that fit my house perfectly! It was half of a two-door set and it looked like the other half had been damaged in an installation.” — Alice Berry

“A set of six Chicago Cutlery steak knives in a wooden block. That was 20 years ago and we still use them regularly!” — Stephanie Kulke

“Probably a huge cat tree. I had to go find my roommate to help lug it home. The cat loved it.” — Lee Collier

“In an alley in Little Italy … it was dining room or kitchen table, light brown, like a beige color … I found it back in 2010.” — Sasja Alskare

“I found a DuSable class ring — 1979. I misplaced it when I moved out of ChiTown.” — Maurice Moore


PICTURE CHICAGO 📸

A rainbow appears above the Wrigley Field scoreboard Monday.

Sage Zipeto/Getty Images


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Written and curated by: Matt Moore
Editor: Eydie Cubarrubia



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