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Record rainfall floods homes

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: Record rainfall has swamped hundreds of homes — and meteorologists say more flooding could be on the way.

🗞️ Plus: More cops are accused of Paycheck Protection Program fraud, the ex-CEO of Urban Prep Academies is charged with stealing $100K and more news you need to know.

📝 Keeping scoreThe Blackhawks ended their season with a feel-good win against the Sharks, 5-2; the Cubs bested the Phillies, 11-2; the White Sox fell to the Rays, 8-3.

☎️ Ask the mayor: Mayor Brandon Johnson will stop by WBEZ’s In the Loop with Sasha Ann Simons at 9 a.m. today to answer listeners’ questions live on air. Call in 866-915-WBEZ (866-915-9239).

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⏱️: An 8-minute read


TODAY’S WEATHER 🌧️

Cloudy with a chance of scattered showers and a high near 70.


TODAY’S TOP STORY 🔎

Workers dispose of water-damaged belongings in a Norwood Park home Wednesday after a major storm.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Flooding from record-breaking rainfall invades homes, flash flood possibility continues

By Zoe Singer

Record rainfall: Hundreds of residents reported flooding in their homes this week after record-breaking rainfall levels hit Chicagoland on Tuesday. O’Hare Airport set a record for April 14 rainfall with 2.43 inches, shattering the previous record for the date set in 1949, when 1.21 inches fell. Tuesday was the rainiest April day at O’Hare since it saw 3.54 inches in 2013.

Northwest deluge: The Norwood Park area on the city’s Northwest Side accounted for 114 of the more than 600 flooding complaints logged by the city’s 311 service request hotline from midnight Tuesday through late Wednesday morning.

Flood watch: A flood watch that includes areas around the Des Plaines River in Riverside and River Forest will remain in effect through Friday evening. All of Northern Illinois and Northwest Indiana are also under a flood watch, the National Weather Service said.

READ MORE


SUN-TIMES SERIES 🌧️

Flooding has been getting worse in Chicago in recent decades, according to a Sun-Times investigation.

Stronger, climate change-fueled thunderstorms are overwhelming the city’s sewers, and rain is falling harder and faster, backing up systems designed to allow water to flow.

Catch up on our flooding series:


LET’S HEAR FROM YOU 🗣️

If your home was affected by flooding this year, how have you addressed it? Be sure to tell us the neighborhood or suburb where you live.

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


PPP PROBLEMS 💰

Inspector General Deborah Witzburg on Wednesday said more cops allegedly committed Paycheck Protection Program fraud.

Jim Vondruska/For the Sun-Times

17 more Chicago cops bilked PPP loan program, inspector general says

By Frank Main and Kade Heather

New report: Inspector General Deborah Witzburg said Wednesday her office sustained allegations against 17 Chicago cops in the first four months of the year for allegedly scamming COVID-era relief funds, and that the police department agreed to move to fire them. The claims appeared in Witzburg’s recent first quarter 2026 report.

Eight face firing: Investigators dug into officers’ Paycheck Protection Program loan applications — cash meant to keep small businesses afloat during the pandemic in 2020 and 2021. Fraud claims were sustained against eight officers, but the Chicago Police Department hasn’t decided whether to fire them. Another cop quit while under investigation. The alleged ripoffs involving those nine cops totaled $284,000, according to Witzburg.

Other accusations: Witzburg’s report also alleged a high-ranking official of a previous mayoral administration used their city title to get a job for their child with a city contractor, then tried to secure nearly $10 million in payments to the contractor. A top aide for Mayor Brandon Johnson said the official referred to in the report worked for ex-Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration.

READ MORE


CITY COUNCIL RECAP ✶

City Council meets Wednesday at City Hall.

Giacomo Cain/Sun-Times


MORE NEWS YOU NEED 🗞️

Urban Prep Academies founder and ex-CEO Tim King

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times file


THINGS TO DO 🚢

Stefano Esposito tries the VR experience called “Titanic: A Voyage Through Time.”

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Immersive VR experience coming to Chicago lets visitors explore the Titanic

By Stefano Esposito

VR sailing: One hundred and fourteen years ago this week, the Titanic sank, taking thousands of passengers with it. A new virtual reality experience lets Chicagoans to strap on a headset and explore a digital recreation of that fateful voyage. Sun-Times reporter Stefano Esposito gave it a go. 

What it’s like: “Titanic: A Voyage Through Time” is an immersive experience that gives you the sensation of being in a three-dimensional world while wearing a virtual reality headset as you traipse through a giant gallery space in Old Town. Guests start out exploring the wreck, and then they’re led — by members of the crew — to different parts of the ship, above and below deck, as it makes its way toward disaster.

If you go: You’ll find the “Titanic” experience at 108 W. Germania Place, where creators hope to welcome “passengers” later this month. A ticket for the 45-minute adventure starts at $24.99 for adults and $19.99 for students, seniors and children ages 10 and older. It is presented in English and Spanish.

READ MORE


WATCH: ABOARD THE VR TITANIC ▶️


ON WBEZ 91.5 FM 📻

In the Loop with Sasha-Ann Simons, 9 a.m.

Say More with Mary Dixon and Patrick Smith, 10 a.m.

LISTEN LIVE 🎧


FROM THE PRESS BOX ⚾🏀


CHICAGO MINI CROSSWORD 🌭

Today’s clue: 4A: One of the most common non-English languages spoken in Chicago

PLAY NOW


BRIGHT ONE 🔆

“Soy Frankelda” is the first stop-motion animated film made entirely in Mexico.

Provided/Chicago Latino Film Festival

Chicago Latino Film Fest takes movie fans to Mexico, Venezuela, Cuba and beyond

By Ambar Colón

The Chicago Latino Film Festival is back this year with an abundance of titles. Organizers say they are using the festival as a cultural bridge between Latin American countries and the U.S. by showcasing international cinema alongside local independent works for two weeks at the Landmark’s Century Centre Cinema in Lake View, starting Thursday and running through April 27.

After more than 40 years under founder Pepe Vargas’ leadership, the event is the largest and longest-running festival dedicated to showcasing work by Latino filmmakers in the U.S.

The first-ever feature-length animated movie made entirely in Mexico, “Soy Frankelda,” and the opening night feature, “Aún Es De Noche En Caracas” from Venezuela, are two highlights among the 51 feature-length and 31 short films in this year’s festival.

Several local filmmakers are premiering shorts — written, filmed and produced in the city — at this year’s festival. Learn more about these local titles here.

FULL FILM FEST PREVIEW HERE


YOUR DAILY QUESTION ☕️

Yesterday, we asked you: Should Chicago continue to have delivery robots on the city’s streets?

Here’s some of what you said…

“I think delivery robots are part of our future. I support them. There have been very few glitches so far, and as far as I know, no one has been injured. The technology will continue to improve. Within a year or two, I doubt anyone will think twice about them.” — David Shiner

“Chicago should not have delivery robots. These food delivery jobs are typically the types of jobs that our youth would have as they were finishing high school or during the summer. Our kids, and adults for that matter, could benefit from these jobs. It doesn’t seem very smart to allow bots to take over the workforce, no matter how small it starts. Additionally, the property damage will only increase, and soon, more people will be injured too.” — Dee Crawford

“Delivery robots and autonomous vehicles are just a way for tech companies to drain money out of Chicago and lay off workers. There is no benefit to the local economy.” — Mike McMains

“I would take more delivery robots on our sidewalks over the current situation … our streets are routinely choked with double-parked delivery drivers. A drive along Lincoln Avenue between Webster and Fullerton any evening of the week is chaos!” — Tom Stroud


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Written and curated by: Matt Moore
Editor: Eydie Cubarrubia


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