Both Mayor Daley and Governor Quinn rejected the Ricketts family's proposal to renovate Wrigley Field using up to 35 years' worth of amusement tax growth in a bond offering. And it looked like both took very different approaches to do so.
Quinn, Daley Say "No" To Ricketts' Wrigley Renovation Plan
Daley Administration Defends Landing Fee Hikes
Responding to a letter that United and American Airlines issued to the press airing their grievances with Aviation Department heads for hiking landing fees at O'Hare by nearly 40 percent, Aviation Commissioner Rosemarie Andolino shot back Wednesday, expressing disappointment with the airlines for taking their complaints public and claiming that the city isn't trying to pre-pay debt on the O'Hare expansion. Andolino said that the fees are to pay for runways that came on-line in 2008. Andolino told the Sun-Times:
United, American Ticked at the City Over O'Hare Expansion
United and American Airlines are pushing back at Chicago's Department of Aviation over a proposed 38% increase in landing fees this year. The airlines and the city are in dispute over when to start paying down the debt issued to finance the project. The Tribune breaks it down:
Massive Public Works Bill Could Give Lawmakers $500 Million for Pet Projects
State legislators approved a huge $29 billion public works program to create jobs and repair the state’s infrastructure, however roughly $500 million can be spent in legislator’s home districts on pet projects such as $50k for the Candlewick Lake Association, a gated lakefront community near Rockford with a 220-acre lake and a 9-hole golf course. The community did not ask for the money but according to Candlewick’s general manager, “We certainly will find good use for it,” he told WBBM. Other projects slated for grants include:

