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One woman’s search for a new kidney

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: Thousands of people in Chicago and nationwide need kidney transplants, and like Christine Hernandez, they have to launch extensive marketing and advocacy campaigns to find donors.

🗞️ Plus: Gov. JB Pritzker slams Mayor Brandon Johnson’s corporate head tax pitch, one neighborhood’s tavern-style pizza revival and more news you need to know.

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⏱️: A 9-minute read


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“I feel like my life is just passing me by, and all I’m doing is searching constantly for a kidney,” Christine Hernandez says.

Zubaer Khan/Sun-Times

Woman’s campaign to find new kidney spans social media, billboards, TV — and she’s still searching

By Elvia Malagón

Kidney campaign: Christine Hernandez hands out business cards with a QR code leading to information about how people can donate a kidney to her. She has also shared her story on billboards. Her family has worn T-shirts to get the word out and she has pleaded on social media. Her husband even emblazoned a graphic on his car. But she remains without a donor. 

Thousands wait: More than 93,000 people nationwide are reportedly awaiting kidney donations, with an estimated 3,753 of them in Illinois. That can often mean dealing with the health effects of kidney disease while asking strangers to donate. The practice is so common, the National Kidney Foundation of Illinois coaches people on how to promote their cases. Getting a kidney transplant through a living donor raises the survival rate.

Donor’s story: Experts say there’s fear around donating organs. Alison Toback, who decided to donate her kidney to a stranger last December, says she hasn’t experienced any complications. “Compared to having a baby, it was nothing,” the mother of two said.

‘Fighting for my life’: Hernandez says she feels herself growing weaker and fatigued while dealing with swelling. “I’m fighting for my life,” she says. “But I need somebody to help me fight.”

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Mayor Brandon Johnson presented his proposed 2026 budget to the Chicago City Council last week.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

Record $1B TIF surplus emerges as key point of friction in mayor’s proposed budget

By Fran Spielman and Mitchell Armentrout

Johnson’s pitch: Mayor Brandon Johnson was accused Tuesday of proposing a $1 billion tax increment financing surplus to bail out Chicago Public Schools at the expense of neighborhood improvement projects, a move roundly condemned by City Council members. The record TIF surplus that would provide $552.4 million to help bankroll a new teachers contract emerged as the key point of contention during the first day of Council hearings on Johnson’s proposed $16.6 billion budget.

Governor’s POV: Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday slammed the mayor’s proposal to revive a corporate head tax, which would charge companies with more than 100 employees $21 per month per employee. “It penalizes the very thing that we want, which is, we want more employment in the city of Chicago,” Pritzker told members of the Economic Club of Chicago.

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Ald. Jessie Fuentes (26th) speaks outside Humboldt Park Health on Oct. 3.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Ald. Fuentes seeks $100K in damages after confrontation with ICE agents

By Fran Spielman

Laying groundwork: Ald. Jessie Fuentes (26th) on Tuesday laid the groundwork for filing a lawsuit accusing federal agents of shoving, handcuffing and nearly arresting her Oct. 3 after she went to a hospital emergency room to check on a constituent whose leg was severely injured during an immigration raid.

Action explained: The federal tort claim Fuentes filed seeks $100,000 in damages and is a prelude to a federal lawsuit. Fuentes said she couldn’t “care less about the money,” adding her motive is to hold federal agents accountable for “terrorizing and brutalizing” her constituents in the name of immigrant enforcement.

More headlines:

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MORE NEWS YOU NEED

Midway Airport could offer slot machines for travelers.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times file


WATCH: FED FUNDING CUTS EXPLAINED ▶️

The Sun-Times’ Lynn Sweet explains how President Trump is slashing federal funds to Chicago, the state of Illinois, and other blue cities and states. | Sun-Times


CHICAGO STORIES 🗞️

George Wendt Way honors the late “Cheers” actor who was born and raised near 92nd Street and Bell Avenue in Beverly.

Zubaer Khan/Sun-Times

‘George Wendt Way’ unveiled in Beverly on ‘Cheers’ actor’s childhood block

By Kaitlin Washburn

Hometown honors: The late George Wendt, a son of Beverly and a beloved actor, was celebrated Sunday afternoon with an honorary street sign in the far South Side neighborhood.

Key context: Wendt, who got his start on the Second City stage and was best known for playing Norm Peterson on the hit 1980s sitcom “Cheers,” died this year at 76 from a heart attack in his California home.

‘Couldn’t be prouder’: “George has become loved by the whole world,” Wendt’s niece Erin Muldoon Stetson told the crowd of family, friends and neighbors gathered for Sunday’s dedication. “And we couldn’t be prouder, most of all because he always stayed true to himself behind the scenes.”

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Diners share pizza at Pizz’Amici on Grand Avenue in West Town.

Manuel Martinez/WBEZ

Where can you find the best tavern-style pizza in Chicago? Try Grand Avenue

By Maggie Hennessy

The buzzy, nearly year-old, modern tavern-style pizzeria Pizz’Amici sits on a mile-plus stretch of a near-west Grand Avenue corridor that’s home to several beloved pillars of Italian-American dining in Chicago.

Among those pillars: Coalfire Pizza, which debuted its bubbly, coal-forged, thin crust pies almost 19 years ago.

Recently, this slice of West Town has become something of a pizza row, bolstered by some of the city’s most-hyped pizzerias, like Professor Pizza Slice & Pie and the six-month-old Zarella Pizzeria & Taverna — all delivering their takes on tavern-style pizza, too.

But why is everyone settling on Grand? Beyond the historic Italian connection, Coalfire owner Dave Bonomi speculates that rent has something to do with it, as Grand Avenue remains cheaper than the saturated, downtown-proximate West Loop, which sits just south.

What’s happening on Grand Avenue isn’t just a lot of pizza, however. It’s next-level pie in a town that knows the difference.

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Written and curated by: Matt Moore
Editor: Eydie Cubarrubia


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