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What’s next for the Bears after Indiana announcement

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: The Bears announced Friday they’re moving forward with plans to build a stadium in Indiana. But there’s still a lot to do to make it happen, so Illinois isn’t completely out of contention. We unpack where things stand — and what’s next.

🗞️ Plus: Police quickly close a probe into an ICE-involved crash, what a grocery CEO’s death means for food access in Chicago and more news you need to know.

📝 Keeping scoreThe Cubs were bested by the Giants, 2-1; the White Sox lost to the Phillies, 9-5; the Sky fell to the Tempo, 85-68.

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TODAY’S TOP STORY 🔎

From left, Chicago Bears co-owner Brian McCaskey, President and CEO Kevin Warren, and co-owners George McCaskey and Patrick McCaskey.

Nam Y. Huh/AP Photos file

Bears’ board of directors votes to push stadium to Hammond, Indiana

By Patrick Finley and Fran Spielman

Bear Down south?: The Bears’ board of directors met Thursday and decided to move forward with their plans to build a stadium in Indiana, positioning the team to play its home games out of state for the first time in its 106-year history. The team announced Friday it would “advance our stadium development project in Hammond.”

Illinois still an option: The Bears’ Friday announcement tips the scales significantly toward Indiana — but falls short of eliminating Illinois from contention. A source said Arlington Heights is still an option, if the state finds a way to give the Bears property tax certainty on the 326-acre plot they own. It’s unclear if waiting until the Senate and House reconvene this fall would be too late, though. The team considers Arlington Heights — not Chicago — the only viable choice in Cook County.

Dome dreams: The Bears were lured by a sweetheart deal approved by Indiana three months ago, when lawmakers there authorized a stadium authority backed by taxes on admissions, hotels, restaurants and tolls. The Bears have committed $2 billion to their stadium project. The team would keep all revenue generated by the stadium and have the option to buy it back in 40 years, when Indiana taxpayers have paid off the bonds.

What’s next: The Bears have a lot of work to do on the Hammond site before they can finalize a deal — dozens, if not hundreds, of boxes to check in Indiana, ranging from big-picture finalizing details to the mundane traffic studies. It figures to take months.

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IMMIGRATION ✶

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents scream at a woman whose car was struck by a federal vehicle Tuesday morning in Albany Park.

Violet Miller/Sun-Times

Chicago police quickly close probe of hit-and-run crash during chaotic ICE arrest

By Violet Miller at Jon Seidel

Investigation closed: Chicago police quickly closed an investigation into a hit-and-run crash involving a federal immigration agent who helped detain a man earlier this week in Albany Park.

Key context: The crash happened Tuesday morning in the 3100 block of West Lawrence Avenue, where U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents chased, shocked and detained a shirtless man as a crowd gathered and documented the violent arrest. Before the man was apprehended, an ICE agent appeared to crash into a woman’s car.

More on immigration: A controversial U.S. Department of Justice official who’s caught the attention of the “Broadview Six” defendants has been in contact with Chicago U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros’ office and was involved in Operation Midway Blitz, sources told the Sun-Times.

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GROCERIES 🛒

Yellow Banana CEO Joseph Canfield

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times file

Save A Lot operator’s death triggers default with Chicago — jeopardizing food access, city deal

By Mariah Rush and Lauren FitzPatrick

CEO dies: Last year, Southwest Side residents celebrated the grand reopening of a Save A Lot, the last from a deal backed by $13.5 million in city money to renovate six of the discount grocery stores in food deserts. The man behind the project, Yellow Banana CEO Joseph Canfield, died of a stroke April 10 at age 54, officials said. 

Uncertain future: Canfield was tasked with leading the Chicago stores owned by Ohio-based Yellow Banana and was required to keep them open for at least 10 years. Yellow Banana hasn’t named a successor, and Save A Lot says they’re unaware of an interim CEO. While the Save A Lot stores are still operating, Canfield’s sudden death has triggered a default in their redevelopment agreement with the city, the Sun-Times has learned.

At issue: The default means city officials could force the beleaguered company to pay back millions it received to open stores in neighborhoods traditional grocers had abandoned. And Yellow Banana has yet to be submit the city a succession plan required in case of a key death.

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A new art show, “From Memory to Movement: Emmett Till at 85,” is on display at Blanc Gallery in Bronzeville.

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Bulls broadcast announcer Stacey King attends a game in November.

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BRIGHT ONE 🔆

Fans play at Pokémon Go Fest in Grant Park on Friday.

Manuel Martinez/WBEZ

Families and fans connect at Pokémon GO fest

By Cindy Hernandez and Kade Heather

Thousands roamed Grant Park this weekend for Pokémon GO Fest, which gathered the multigenerational fandom of the video game, trading card and TV show empire for three days.

This year’s fest was so popular, organizers had to scale back its gameplay in other parts of the city, citing strains on cellphone networks as several major events happened nearby including Blues Fest, Beyond Wonderland and a U.S.-Germany soccer match. 

As their children wandered the park in search of Pokémon on Friday, many parents found themselves taking a trip down memory lane, recalling their own experiences with the popular franchise that launched 30 years ago.

“I remember playing the game with my friends but I eventually grew out of it,” said Steve Tan, 42, of Bridgeport. “Then my kids started playing and I picked it back up because of them. Now they’re teaching me.”

The franchise’s Pokémon GO game is essentially an app with which, through augmented reality, players can walk around and find Pokémon, overlaying a virtual world onto real-life surroundings. 

Launched 10 years ago, fans of Pokémon GO say the game has helped them connect with other Pokémon lovers and explore their surroundings.

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WATCH: POKÉMON GO FEST ▶️


 

YOUR DAILY QUESTION ☕️

How do you feel about the Bears possibly moving to Hammond, Indiana?

Respond to this question via email here (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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