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Obama Center Airbnb boom, affordable housing worries

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: More Airbnbs are popping up on the South Side as the Obama Presidential Center nears its June 19 opening, which housing advocates worry is driving the disappearance of affordable housing.

🗞️ Plus: New bill targets e-bikes and e-scooters, drama at Simeon Career Academy, and more news you need to know.

📝 Keeping scoreThe Cubs beat the Athletics, 7-6.

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⏱️: An 8-minute read


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TODAY’S TOP STORY 🔎

The Woodlawn neighborhood surrounds the Obama Presidential Center.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Obama Center causes Airbnb boom, disappearance of affordable units, advocates say

By Esther Yoon-Ji Kang and Cam Rodriguez

Center of attention: As Airbnb hosts open rooms and apartments to tourists coming to check out the Obama Presidential Center, some see real opportunity. But others worry that in historically affordable neighborhoods, like Woodlawn, things are changing.

At issue: Researchers say short-term rentals can deplete a neighborhood’s housing stock, pushing up prices and rents. Housing advocates and renters say they’re being priced out. Some advocates and lawmakers also say the city isn’t doing enough to enforce laws meant to protect the housing supply.

Zooming in: While licenses for short-term rentals have declined citywide since 2019, they have increased by 46% in the 20th Ward, which includes most of the Woodlawn community just west of the Obama Presidential Center.

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WATCH: OBAMA PRESIDENTIAL CENTER TOUR ▶️


TRANSPORTATION 🚲

A bill passed in Springfield would outlaw high-speed e-bikes from riding on bike paths.

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times

Fast e-bikes and e-scooters will require license, insurance under new bill

By David Struett and Anna Savchenko

Powering down?: Lawmakers in Springfield passed legislation this week regulating high-speed electric bikes, e-scooters and other battery-powered devices that are fueling an uptick in emergency room visits. 

Nuts and bolts: The bill on Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk would classify e-bikes and e-motos that travel faster than 28 mph as motor vehicles starting Jan. 1, 2027, and would subject their riders to drunk driving laws. Owners would be required to have a driver’s license, carry insurance and register these vehicles, which would not be allowed on bike paths or lanes. E-scooters, electric skateboards and electric unicycles would be prohibited from operating past 28 mph on roads, bike lanes, bike paths and sidewalks.

Teen perspective: The number of e-scooters on the streets has meant an uptick in crashes, some fatal. Many teenagers are unfazed by the risks and prefer the scooters for transportation. WBEZ spoke with students at Lane Tech College Prep, the city’s largest high school, to hear why they ride.

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ARTS AND HEALTH ❤️

Students Laura Fajardo-Riascos, left, and Kennedy Naseem perform for 4-year-old Gino and his grandma, Mary Frakes, at Lurie Children’s Hospital.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

New program brings playful performances to kids in hospitals

By Courtney Kueppers

Play is the thing: This semester, 10 Northwestern University students have been bringing playful, small-scale theater to the city’s pediatric hospitals. The interactive show features two actors, a giant cardboard backpack full of props – and imagination. It can be performed for an audience as small as one, beside a child’s hospital bed, or for a larger group in a lobby or playroom.

The goal: Titled “Let’s Go Camping!,” the show was developed in part by Northwestern professor Elizabeth Brendel Horn, who wants to provide young patients a chance for a fun, imaginative escape and to give theater students a wider idea of what they can do with their degrees.

Change of plans: Student Laura Fajardo-Riascos said that as she prepared for graduation, the class inspired her to shift her focus on theater for young audiences vs. appearing onscreen. “I’ve just realized that there’s so much more that you can do with performance and acting and the art of theater,” she said.

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PUBLIC SAFETY 🚨

FBI agents work a scene in East Garfield Park last week, a day after Abdulhafedh Abdulhafedh was killed in a shooting involving agents.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times


MORE NEWS YOU NEED 🗞️

Rideshare driver Mark Balentine sits with his rental car in Bronzeville.

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times


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FROM THE PRESS BOX 🎙️⚾🏀🏈


CHICAGO MINI CROSSWORD 🌭

Today’s clue: 2D: Cubs pitcher Imanaga who has been honored with a namesake Portillo’s meal

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BRIGHT ONE 🔆

Deonte Haywood felt shy when he started at Simeon, but he brought major stage presence to his role as a Southern preacher in his school’s production of “The Piano Lesson.”

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

At Simeon Career Academy, drama students shine in school’s first play in decades

By Sarah Karp

Simeon Career Academy is known for its sports and trades programs. 

So when the high school decided to put on its first play in recent memory, students had no idea what they were in for.

With money from a grant the school had won, drama teacher David Hossler hired a director and bought materials so Simeon’s carpentry program could build the set for “The Piano Lesson.” They also paid adults to help with the music and production design.

But the job was not easy. Even though the students were enrolled in an upper-level drama class, most of them had never been in a play before. And because Simeon had not done plays, many had not even seen one.

The students turned actors practiced daily for most of the school year. At home, they went over their lines, recruiting their moms to help. And even on dress rehearsal day, there were stumbles and stops.

“It’s been a pretty serious, hard process, because I never did a play before,” senior Semaj Jackson said. “But we’re getting through it.”

She said the actors sometimes made mistakes during rehearsals and would laugh for “like 10 minutes.” But on the day of the play, they got it together.

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YOUR DAILY QUESTION ☕️

What was the first play or musical you ever saw?

Reply here with your answer (please include your first and last name). We may run your answer in a future newsletter or story.


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Written and curated by: Matt Moore
Editor: Eydie Cubarrubia



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