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Latest from Reset with Sasha-Ann Simons
Illinois politicians react to Trump’s guilty verdict. Lawmakers approve a $53 billion state budget in Springfield.
From bagels to THC-infused candy to a new custom dark milk chocolate, Segal’s creations inspire delight.
Drowning can often be fast and silent. Reset gets tips on how to help someone you see struggling in the water.
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Mayor Brandon Johnson and CPS officials staved off bills that would limit their control but fell short of securing much-needed funding.
For the first time, Mexicans abroad can vote in person at locations around the world.

“This is just a target-rich stew for the Russians to try lots of things and see what works,” says Max Bergmann of the Center for Strategic International Studies.
The move brings light to a disciplinary process that has long faced criticism for being secretive and overly lenient.
WBEZ reviewed six campus encampments to compare their duration and size, and the responses they got from police and university officials.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is running for re-election, but some members of the Indian diaspora worry Modi’s style of governance promotes Hindu nationalism.
Donald Trump has been convicted in his New York hush money trial, a landmark jury verdict making him the first former American president to be found guilty of felony crimes in the nation’s nearly 250-year history.
Since the first reported case on March 7, over 30,000 vaccines have been administered, primarily to migrants in shelters.
“This city has a history of attacking and trying to bring down their African American leaders,” CTA President Dorval Carter Jr. told a City Council committee.
The move follows through on a campaign promise Johnson made to reopen clinics that were shuttered under former Mayor Rahm Emanuel.
Drifting smoke from fires across North America are still expected to cause air pollution in Chicago, but experts say it’s likely to be milder than what caused last year’s thick haze and dangerous air quality.
The conservative group Judicial Watch filed a class action arguing that Evanston’s first-in-the-nation reparations plan violates the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment because it uses race as a requirement for eligibility.
Learning English is a priority for asylum seekers as they create new lives outside of city-run shelters.
For tourists, Illinois is the place to be for the historic cicada emergence. The 17-year brood in the state’s northern half and the 13-year brood in the southern part are set to converge near Springfield.
Illinois mistakenly overspent its latest round of funding and will run out of money for hundreds of programs that serve about 15,000 kids in Chicago. The programs’ advocates encourage state lawmakers to intervene.
Even with shifting priorities, the school district says it has successfully maintained the funding it provides to schools overall.
In January, a Yellow Banana executive promised the city his company would improve after multiple delays opening stores in underserved South and West side communities.
The Chicago Department of Public Health is focused on training city workers and people who live in areas with the highest suicide rates.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office optimistically put out a statement to celebrate the budget’s spending measure after it cleared the Illinois House. But the revenue measure was trickier.
Neighborhoods
The National Museum of Mexican Art plans to turn this long-vacant structure into the Yollocalli youth arts center.
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