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CTA’s railroad protectors keep Chicago on track

Good afternoon, Chicago. ✶

If you’ve spent any time outside this week, then I don’t have to tell you how cold it is.

But in case you’re wondering, it’s cold enough that some steel CTA tracks have cracked — and that’s where the “protectors of the railroad” come in. 

In today’s newsletter, we’re shining a light on these unsung figures and learning more about how they keep the trains — and our city — running. 

Plus, we’ve got reporting on closing arguments in the trial of former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, a snowplow named “Snower Wacker” and more community news you need to know below. 

⏱️: A 7-minute read

— Matt Moore, newsletter reporter


TODAY’S TOP STORY

What happens when it’s so cold that CTA rails crack

Reporting by Mohammad Samra

Call the ‘protectors’: How cold does it get in Chicago? So brutally cold that the Chicago Transit Authority’s steel rails can crack. That’s when the “protectors of the railroad” are called. “Our job is just to keep the train running,” said Bill Costagliola, general manager of track and structure maintenance at CTA.

How it works: For minor cracks, crews can put on a pair of joint bars — a 36-inch piece that connects the tracks — as a temporary fix. But for bigger cracks, like one found Jan. 14 on the Red Line near the Cermak-Chinatown stop, the section of the cracked rail needs to be cut out and a new section installed. 

Ready to act: As wind chills as low as 28 below zero hit the city in recent days, about 200 CTA maintenance workers were available during business hours, and 40 workers have been on watch on the overnight shift to repair any issues on the 265 miles of track they oversee.

‘They’re out there’: “They protect the railroads,” said Lenny Romano, vice president of infrastructure maintenance. “Without them, [trains] wouldn’t be able to run. They’re working late at night [or] in the wee hours of the morning. You don’t see them, but they’re out there.”

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WHAT ELSE IS GOING ON?

Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan enters the Dirksen Federal Courthouse Wednesday.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times


RICH HEIN 1955–2025

Rich Hein shoots in the newsroom in September 2018.

Colin Boyle/Sun-Times

Rich Hein, a Sun-Times photo editor whose theatrical work was art, dies at 70

By Neil Steinberg

Rich Hein looked through the lens of his camera into the hearts of people. He shot the city for nearly half a century, taking thousands of images that captured the human condition, first for suburban newspapers, then for 40 years on staff at the Chicago Sun-Times, rising to become its photo editor.

“Rich was a tough but fair boss,” said Alex Wroblewski, pausing from shooting the inauguration of President Donald Trump in Washington Monday for Agence France-Presse. “I wouldn’t be where I am today without him. He opened the door for me. A sweet and gracious man.”

Mr. Hein, 70, died Sunday in Naperville. He felt chest pains, drove himself to Edward Hospital, waved off a wheelchair, and walked into the ER, where he collapsed and could not be revived.

“He was an all-around photographer; he could do anything,” remembered John H. White, who won a Pulitzer Prize at the Sun-Times. “He could do any kind of news. I always called him ‘the professor’ because he was a teacher; he’d explain things. He took the time to teach me many things. He was a great photographer, a great educator.”

In addition to his Sun-Times work, Mr. Hein was a fixture on the Chicago theater scene, shooting publicity stills for stage productions.

“His photos for the theater community were artworks themselves; they were gorgeous,” said Bill Ruminski, news editor at the Sun-Times.

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BRIGHT ONE ✨

A snowplow works on Howard Street near Rogers Avenue in November.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times file

City announces winning names in third annual snowplow contest

Reporting by Sun-Times Wire

Scoop, There It Is! The nod to the 1993 hit and jock jam staple “(Whoomp!) There It Is” is among the six winning names in Chicago’s third annual snowplow-naming contest.

The other winning names, announced by the city’s Department of Streets and Sanitation, include Bozo the Plown, Lollaplowlooza, My Kind of Plow, Snower Wacker and Bean There, Plowed That.

Thousands of residents selected the six out of 50 finalists posted on Jan. 10, according to the Department of Streets and Sanitation. Chicagoans had until midnight Tuesday to weigh in on their favorite.

Last year’s winning names were “Skilling It,” “CTRL-SALT-DELETE,” “Casimir Plowaski,” “Ernie Snowbanks,” “Mies van der Snow” and “Bad, Bad Leroy Plow.”

The winning snowplow names will be emblazoned on signs that will be installed on snowplows in each of the city’s six snow districts.

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YOUR DAILY QUESTION ☕️

Finish this sentence: It’s so cold in Chicago, _____.

Email us (please include your first and last name). To see the answers to this question, check our Morning Edition newsletter. Not subscribed to Morning Edition? Sign up here so you won’t miss a thing!


Thanks for reading the Sun-Times Afternoon Edition. 
Got a story you think we missed? Email us here.


Written by: Matt Moore
Editor: Esther Bergdahl
Copy editor: Angie Myers

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