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ICE raids could lead to rising rents

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: Chicago area property owners and managers say fear of federal immigration agents is causing missed payments and delayed maintenance — costs they may be forced to pass on to other tenants.

🗞️ Plus: The push to dump Mayor Brandon Johnson’s top adviser, researchers’ “Chicago Rat Hole” truth and more news you need to know.

📝 Keeping scoreThe Blackhawks crushed the Blues, 8-3.

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⏱️: A 9-minute read


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TODAY’S TOP STORIES

John Warren of Forte Properties stands at the Cicero apartment complex recently raided by ICE.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

ICE raids could lead to rising rents, building managers say

By Lizzie Kane

Residents in fear: Chicago area property owners and building managers say that fear among residents is palpable following an increase in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids. Residents are reportedly scared to leave their homes to go to their jobs, delaying rent payments — and are afraid to open their doors for maintenance workers, who also are scared to schedule repairs.

Rent raising: Property managers and owners point to already rising business costs, now compounded by raid-related fears, as reasons why they’re considering increasing rents. Rent hikes would come as Chicago is in the midst of a severe housing shortage, particularly for affordable units.

The response: One building owner and manager in Washington Park and Bronzeville has started going to his buildings when work is scheduled so that his contractors aren’t vulnerable to federal agents. Another manager is providing her residents with resources for rental assistance, hoping they can clear their debts, though eviction is still on the table.

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A nurse clinician prepares to administer a COVID-19 vaccine.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times file

As some kids got COVID-19 vaccines this fall, one group of children were left out

By Elvia Malagón

Doctors delayed: Over the last few weeks, about 1,000 children have gotten the COVID-19 vaccine at the Chicago-area pediatrician’s office where Dr. Susan Sirota works. But her practice and others like it were unable to administer a dose for kids from low-income homes, because a federally funded program known as Vaccines for Children was delayed. “We had this situation where all children are not allowed to have timely protection,” Sirota said. 

At-risk kids: Vaccines for Children provides free shots to children covered by Medicaid. Doctors and clinics in the area were able to finally place their orders for Vaccines for Children doses Oct. 8, following a delay from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that pushed back the start of the ordering period. 

Free shots: Starting Saturday and running through March 28, Cook County residents can receive free flu and COVID-19 shots weekly at Cook County Department of Public Health vaccination clinics.

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Chicagoans and tourists are flocking to the Loop in record numbers.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times file

Driven by arts and culture, downtown pedestrian traffic exceeds prepandemic levels, report finds

By Ambar Colón

Driven downtown: New data from the Chicago Loop Alliance shows that Downtown pedestrian traffic now exceeds levels from 2019, with more visitors drawn by arts, culture and dining.

The numbers: On weekends, pedestrian traffic in the Loop is up 16% compared to 2019, according to the CLA. That number is largely driven by arts and culture events attended by people who aren’t normally downtown — think Broadway shows, art exhibits and Lollapalooza — the CLA said. 

Reality check: Even as the Loop evolves, there are concerns that threats from President Donald Trump to send the National Guard to Chicago — currently delayed due to a federal appeals court ruling — could impact progress.

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FACT CHECK ✅


MORE NEWS YOU NEED

Mayor Brandon Johnson and senior adviser Jason Lee, right.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times file


CHICAGO STORIES 🗞️

Researchers created a comparative analysis of the “Chicago Rat Hole” using several different photos of the imprint and objects like coins for scale.

The Royal Society

‘Chicago Rat Hole’ was not made by a rat, say rodent researchers

By Kaitlin Washburn

Rat hole revealed: Nearly two years after the “Chicago Rat Hole” became a viral sensation, scientists have weighed in on the debate over what type of critter made the splat.

‘Hole’ other animal: Researchers analyzed the famous imprint and found the creature responsible was not a rat but most likely a squirrel, according to a paper published in the journal Biology Letters.

Key context: The “rat hole” briefly became the city’s hottest attraction in early 2024. People came from across the city to visit the Roscoe Village splat. Some left offerings like spare change and Malör shots. Others got engaged and married next to it. The image became a mascot for a 16-inch softball team and a popular tattoo. The hole was even filled in overnight in an act of “ratribution,” but neighbors quickly excavated it.

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FROM THE PRESS BOX 🏈🏀⚾


BRIGHT ONE 🔆

Oriana Kruszewski, owner of Oriana’s Orchard, shows off a Korean giant pear on her farm in Winslow, Illinois.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

How ‘pear whisperer’ Oriana Kruszewski became a darling of Chicago’s top chefs

By Erica Thompson

Oriana Kruszewski has developed a popular following among Chicago chefs. They say they are inspired by her wisdom, culled from years tending a 40-acre farm in Winslow, Illinois, that she purchased at $3,000 an acre decades ago. It was a meager price compared to what the land is worth today, she says. 

During fruitful years, Kruszewski yields about 20 tons of pears and about 400 pounds of pawpaws, some of which are used in dishes and beverages at North Pond, Feld, Eden and Moody Tongue.

She is also a beloved longtime vendor at Green City Market and Logan Square Farmer’s Market, as well as the subject of a short documentary, “Oriana’s Orchard,” which premiered at the brewery Middle Brow, another one of her customers, and will be released in the future.

Born in China and raised in Hong Kong, Kruszewski said pears were too expensive and therefore a novelty for her family. As an adult, she became determined to grow her own, so she could enjoy them anytime.

But before her green thumb adventures, Kruszewski moved to the U.S. at 28, married a year later and worked in marine insurance while raising two kids. In her late 40s, she started growing pears in her backyard as a hobby.

She gave them “to my friends and other people, like my doctor,” said Kruszewski, who lives in Skokie when she isn’t at the farm. “They were impressed.” Once she began producing more than she could consume, her business was born.

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GAMES AND CROSSWORDS 🧩

This week’s Chicago-style crossword theme is: Fall fest!

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YOUR DAILY QUESTION ☕️

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Written and curated by: Matt Moore
Editor: Eydie Cubarrubia


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