Office of the Chicago City Clerk

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Office of the Chicago City Clerk Attendance and Divided Roll Call Votes Attendance for the May 12, 2010 Meeting of the Chicago City Council Present - Aldermen Moreno, Fioretti, Dowell, Hairston, Lyle, Harris, Pope, Balcer, Beale, Cárdenas, Olivo, Burke, Foulkes, Thompson, Thomas, Lane, Rugai, Cochran, Brookins, Muñoz, Zalewski, Dixon, Solis, Maldonado, Burnett, E. Smith, Graham, Reboyras, Suarez, Waguespack, Mell, Colón, Rice, Mitts, Allen, Laurino, Doherty, Reilly, O’Connor, Daley, Tunney, Levar, Shiller, Schulter, M. Smith, Moore, Stone -- 47 Absent - Aldermen Preckwinkle, Jackson, Austin -- 3 Divided Roll Call Votes May 12, 2010 Meeting of the Chicago City Council There were three divided roll call votes for the May 12, 2010 meeting of the Chicago City Council. PO2010-1842: Execution of Intergovernmental Agreements with Chicago Board of Education for School Improvements. (Click here for entire text of legislation) SO2010-1851: Issuance of General Obligation Refunding Bonds, Series 2007A-K for School Purposes. (Click here for entire text of legislation) Or2010-370: Execution of Settlement Agreement Re: Thomas Dunn, Denny Robinson, and Veronica Imperial, on Behalf of Themselves and Similarly Situated, and Leonard Kimball, Individually, v. City of Chicago. (Click here to entire text of legislation) SO2010-1850: Amendment of Municipal Code by Creation of New Chapter 2-55 and Authorizing Other Municipal Code Amendments regarding the Office of Inspector General. (Click here for entire text of legislation) Key: Y=yes | N=no | A=absent | NV=not voting | V=Vacant E= Excused for voting under provisions of Rule 14 of City of Chicago Rules of Order and Proceedings. The issue and it's respective votes are as follows: PO2010- SO2010- Or2010- SO2010- Issue: 1842 1851 370 1850 1st Ward: Proco Joe Moreno Y Y Y N 2nd Ward: Robert Fioretti N N Y N 3rd Ward: Pat Dowell N N Y N 4th Ward: Toni Preckwinkle A A A A 5th Ward: Leslie Hairston Y Y Y Y 6th Ward: Freddrenna Lyle Y Y Y Y 7th Ward: Sandy Jackson A A A A 8th Ward: Michelle Harris Y Y Y Y 9th Ward: Anthony Beale Y Y Y Y 10th Ward: John A. Pope Y Y Y Y 11th Ward: James A. Balcer Y Y N Y 12th Ward: George A. Cárdenas Y Y Y N 13th Ward: Frank J. Olivo Y Y Y Y 14th Ward: Edward M. Burke E E Y Y 15th Ward: Toni Foulkes Y Y Y Y 16th Ward: Joann Thompson N N Y Y 17th Ward: Latasha R. Thomas Y Y Y Y 18th Ward: Lona Lane Y Y Y Y 19th Ward: Virginia A. Rugai Y Y Y Y 20th Ward: Willie Cochran Y Y Y Y 21st Ward: Howard Brookins Jr. Y Y Y Y 22nd Ward: Ricardo Muñoz N N Y N 23rd Ward: Michael R. Zalewski Y Y Y Y 24th Ward: Sharon Denise Dixon Y Y Y Y 25th Ward: Daniel S. Solis Y Y Y N 26th Ward: Roberto Maldonado Y Y Y N 27th Ward: Walter Burnett, Jr. Y Y Y NV 28th Ward: Ed H. Smith Y Y Y NV 29th Ward: Deborah Graham Y Y Y Y 30th Ward: Ariel E. Reboyras Y Y Y Y 31st Ward: Ray Suarez Y Y Y Y 32nd Ward: Scott Waguespack N N Y N 33rd Ward: Richard F. Mell Y Y Y Y 34th Ward: Carrie M. Austin A A A A 35th Ward: Rey Colón Y Y Y N 36th Ward: John A. Rice Y Y Y Y 37th Ward: Emma Mitts Y Y Y Y 38th Ward: Thomas R. Allen Y Y Y Y 39th Ward: Margaret Laurino Y Y Y Y 40th Ward: Patrick J. O'Connor Y Y Y Y 41st Ward: Brian G. Doherty N N Y Y 42nd Ward: Brendan Reilly N N Y N 43rd Ward: Vi Daley N N Y N 44th Ward: Thomas Tunney N N Y N 45th Ward: Patrick J. Levar Y Y Y N 46th Ward: Helen Shiller Y Y Y Y 47th Ward: Eugene C. Schulter Y Y Y N 48th Ward: Mary Ann Smith Y Y Y N 49th Ward: Joe Moore N N Y N 50th Ward: Bernard L. Stone Y Y Y N Totals: Yes: 36 36 46 28 No: 10 10 1 17 Excused: 1 1 0 0 Not voting: 0 0 0 2 Absent: 3 3 3 3 Vacant: 0 0 0 0 .
Recommended publications
  • Chicago's Evolving City Council Chicago City Council Report #9
    Chicago’s Evolving City Council Chicago City Council Report #9 June 17, 2015 – March 29, 2017 Authored By: Dick Simpson Maureen Heffern Ponicki Allyson Nolde Thomas J. Gradel University of Illinois at Chicago Department of Political Science May 17, 2017 2 Since Mayor Rahm Emanuel and the new Chicago City Council were sworn in two years ago, there have been 67 divided roll call votes or roughly three per month. A divided roll call vote is not unanimous because at least one or more aldermen votes against the mayor and his administration. The rate of divided roll call votes – twice the rate in Emanuel’s first four year term – combined with an increase in the number of aldermen voting against the mayor – are indications that the aldermen are becoming more independent. Clearly, the city council is less of a predictable “rubber stamp” than it was during Mayor Richard M. Daley’s 22 years and Emanuel’s first four year term from 2011-2015. However, this movement away from an absolute rubber stamp is small and city council is only glacially evolving. The increase in aldermanic independence is confirmed by a downward trend in the vote agreement with the mayor, with only five aldermen voting with him 100% of the time and another 22 voting with him 90%. The number of aldermen voting with the mayor less than 90% of the time on divided votes has risen to 23 over the last two years. Aldermen are also more willing to produce their own legislation and proposed solutions to critical city problems than in the past rather than wait for, or to clear their proposals with, the 5th floor.
    [Show full text]
  • From Rubber Stamp to a Divided City Council Chicago City Council Report #11 June 12, 2019 – April 24, 2020
    From Rubber Stamp to a Divided City Council Chicago City Council Report #11 June 12, 2019 – April 24, 2020 Authored By: Dick Simpson Marco Rosaire Rossi Thomas J. Gradel University of Illinois at Chicago Department of Political Science April 28, 2020 The Chicago Municipal Elections of 2019 sent earthquake-like tremors through the Chicago political landscape. The biggest shock waves caused a major upset in the race for Mayor. Chicago voters rejected Toni Preckwinkle, President of the Cook County Board President and Chair of the Cook County Democratic Party. Instead they overwhelmingly elected former federal prosecutor Lori Lightfoot to be their new Mayor. Lightfoot is a black lesbian woman and was a partner in a major downtown law firm. While Lightfoot had been appointed head of the Police Board, she had never previously run for any political office. More startling was the fact that Lightfoot received 74 % of the vote and won all 50 Chicago's wards. In the same elections, Chicago voters shook up and rearranged the Chicago City Council. seven incumbent Aldermen lost their seats in either the initial or run-off elections. A total of 12 new council members were victorious and were sworn in on May 20, 2019 along with the new Mayor. The new aldermen included five Socialists, five women, three African Americans, five Latinos, two council members who identified as LGBT, and one conservative Democrat who formally identified as an Independent. Before, the victory parties and swearing-in ceremonies were completed, politically interested members of the general public, politicians, and the news media began speculating about how the relationship between the new Mayor and the new city council would play out.
    [Show full text]
  • Letter Sent to Mayor Lightfoot and Relevant Committee Chairs
    June 27, 2019 The Honorable Lori Lightfoot City Hall 121 N. LaSalle Street Chicago, Illinois 60602 Dear Mayor Lightfoot, Congratulations on your recent inauguration as mayor of Chicago! We are excited to work with you on making Chicago’s transportation system deliver better economic and social mobility for its residents, while also reducing congestion and harmful pollution caused by vehicles in the city. As you consider ways to generate revenue to improve public transit, create a more equitable transportation system, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions and other pollution, we encourage you to (1) consider and eventually implement congestion pricing with clear performance metrics (i.e., revenue and congestion reduction targets); (2) structure the city’s ridehail tax in a more equitable way that also encourages people to use shared modes of transportation instead of single passenger private rides; and (3) dedicate revenue to improving sustainable forms of transportation, including biking, walking, and public transit through capital investments, equitable development in transit station areas, and embracing innovations such as microtransit to extend the reach of the transit network. First, we support congestion pricing, especially in areas with a high density of transit options and bad congestion, such as the central business district and certain expressways, with the goal of reducing road use, congestion, and pollution. A congestion pricing program should account for the impact of all types of vehicles on Chicago’s streets, whether privately owned cars, taxis, ridehail vehicles, or commercial vehicles. All take up space on the streets and contribute to pollution. We also believe it is important that it be done on a dynamic, variable fee basis that would account for the number of passengers in the vehicle, the time of day, the type of vehicle, location, and passengers’ ability to pay.
    [Show full text]
  • Mayor Emanuel Announces New Public Art in All 50
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 22, 2017 CONTACT: Mayor’s Press Office 312.744.3334 [email protected] MAYOR EMANUEL ANNOUNCES NEW PUBLIC ART IN ALL 50 WARDS AS PART OF THE YEAR OF PUBLIC ART The 50x50 Neighborhood Arts Project represents a $1 million investment in artist-led community projects in Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Mark Kelly, Commissioner of the Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE), joined aldermen and cultural leaders today at the National Museum of Mexican Art to announce the artists participating in the 50x50 Neighborhood Arts Project. The City of Chicago has commissioned dozens of local artists to create new sculptures, murals and other public artworks in all 50 wards this summer and fall— representing a $1 million investment in artist-led community projects. 50x50 is part of the Year of Public Art, a citywide initiative involving DCASE, the Department of Transportation, Chicago Park District, Chicago Public Library, Chicago Transit Authority and other departments to bring more art into public spaces. “The Year of Public Art is a celebration of the lasting contributions the arts make to communities across Chicago” said Mayor Rahm Emanuel. “In every neighborhood in Chicago there are talented artists, working across all mediums, who can add to the cultural fabric of their communities. The 50x50 Neighborhood Arts Project is a $1 million investment in Chicago's neighborhoods, building on Chicago's legacy of public art and enabling local artists to share their work with the world." Additionally, DCASE, in collaboration with the Department of Family and Support Services, have also set aside opportunities for a Public Art Youth Corps paid internship program as part of One Summer Chicago.
    [Show full text]
  • Rahm Emanuel's Rubber Stamp City Council
    Rahm Emanuel’s Rubber Stamp City Council Chicago City Council Report #7 June 8, 2011- November 15, 2014 Authored By: Beyza Buyuker Melissa Mouritsen Dick Simpson University of Illinois at Chicago Department of Political Science December 9, 2014 By Thanksgiving 2014, more than 250 candidates had filed to run for alderman as had ten mayoral candidates. The city council approved Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s $7.3 billion budget with $62.4 million in tax increases by a vote of 46-4 and the following week approved an ordinance to raise the minimum wage to 13 on hour by 2019. At the same time, three aldermen called upon the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Chicago Inspector General, and the city comptroller to investigate potentially illegal campaign contributions to Mayor Emanuel from financial firms that manage city pension funds. As the 2015 elections loom, it is a time of both controversy and strong mayoral control of the city council. Despite signs of occasional controversy and opposition, the city council under Mayor Rahm Emanuel has remained a rubber stamp. Mayor Emanuel has recently lost some support compared to his first two years as the council has had more frequent divided roll call votes. Nonetheless, it continues as a rubber stamp council. In fact, for his entire three and a half years under Mayor Emanuel it has remained more of a rubber stamp than under either Mayors Richard J. or Richard M. Daley. Histograms of voting behavior show that the city council in the last two years under the Mayor Emanuel was more likely to disagree with mayor than during his first two years.
    [Show full text]
  • Office of Cook County Clerk David
    POST-ELECTION REPORT Presidential Primary Election Suburban Cook County February 5, 2008 Table of Contents Highest Presidential Primary Turnout in 20 Years 1 Partisan Turnout by Township 2 Party Shift to Democratic Ballots Continues in Suburban Cook 3 Party Shift on Township Level Creates Near Democratic Sweep 4 Presidential Primary Results: • McCain Sweeps Suburban Townships 5 • Obama Takes 21 of 30 Townships 6 Results of Crowded Democratic State’s Attorney’s Race 7 Touch Screen v. Paper Ballot Voting 8 More Voters Agree: “Don’t Worry, Vote Early” 9 Township Turnout during Early Voting 10 Early Voting and Touch Screens: Survey Shows Wide Support 11 Early Voting and Touch Screens: Security, Accessibility and Flexibility 12 Suburban Cook County and Chicago Combined Summary Report • Ballots Cast 13 • Presidential Preference – DEM 13 • U.S. Senator – DEM 13 • Rep. in Congress – DEM 13-14 • Delegates National Nominating Convention – DEM 14-20 • State Senator – DEM 20-21, 60 • Rep. in Gen. Assembly – DEM 21-25, 60-62 • Water Reclamation Commissioner – DEM 25 • State’s Attorney – DEM 25 • Circuit Court Clerk – DEM 25 • Recorder of Deeds – DEM 25-26 • Board of Review – DEM 26 • Judges – DEM 26-29, 62-63 • Presidential Preference – REP 29-30 • U.S. Senator – REP 30 • Rep. in Congress – REP 30-31 • Delegates National Nominating Convention – REP 31-39 • State Senator – REP 39-40, 68 • Rep. in Gen. Assembly – REP 40-44, 69-70 • State’s Attorney – REP 44 • Judges – REP 44-47 • Presidential Preference – GRN 47 • Rep. in Congress – GRN 47-48 • Rep. in General Assembly – GRN 51 • Water Reclamation Commissioner – GRN 53 • Winnetka Village Trustee 56 • Countywide Referendum 56 • Referenda 57-60, 82-83 • Ward Committeeman – DEM 63-68 • Ward Committeeman – REP 70-76 • Ward Committeeman – GRN 78-82 HIGHEST PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY TURNOUT IN 20 YEARS Turnout reached 43 percent in suburban Cook County for the Feb.
    [Show full text]
  • Chicago's City Council's Increasing Independence
    Chicago's City Council's Increasing Independence Chicago City Council Report May 7, 2003 – November 15, 2006 Authored By: Dick Simpson and Tom Kelly University of Illinois at Chicago Department of Political Science December 27, 2006 1 In our earlier study of the Chicago City Council, from May 7, 2003 until December 7, 2005, we highlighted the Council’s newly found independence. In this last year, from December 15, 2005 to November 15, 2006, there has been increasing independence in city council voting. During the last eleven months there have been 20 divided role call votes, approximately two per month. The average aldermanic support for the mayor on these key divided votes has decreased slightly from 84% to 83%. More importantly, the mayor lost the “Foie Gras Ban” and the more critical “Big Box” ordinance, which for the first time since he was elected in 1989, forced him to use his mayoral veto. His father, Richard J. Daley, did not have to use the mayoral veto during his 22 years in office. On the other hand, Mayor Harold Washington used his veto powers frequently during his first four-year term. This Mayor Daley’s near total control of the previously rubber stamp city council has been weakened by the continuing patronage and corruption scandals. He has faced growing opposition at the grassroots, including labor unions, community groups, and organizing in the minority communities by previous and current mayoral candidates Jesse Jackson Jr., Luis Gutierrez, Dorothy Brown, and Bill "Dock" Walls. Five major issues have dominated the city council in the last year: (1) foie gras ban in restaurants, (2) aldermanic pay, (3) minimum wage requirements for large retailers (“Big Box Ordinance”), (4) a requirement for hotels to inform guests of a hotel workers’ strike, and (5) the downtown parking garage deal.
    [Show full text]
  • 2011 City of Chicago Candidate Questionnaire PART 2: Chart of Responses from Candidates Visit Aidschicago.Org/Candidate for Candidate Statements and More
    2011 City of Chicago Candidate Questionnaire PART 2: Chart of responses from candidates Visit aidschicago.org/candidate for candidate statements and more. 2011 Candidate Responses Y= Yes, N= No, ?= Don't Know, * see written response Questions HIV prevention funding fundingIncreased clinics for STD fundingIncreased for Needle Exchanges and screening STD/HIV treatment in Chicago Public Schools andCampaign for male female condoms Media campaign to combat homophobia Workplace trans cultural competency training Funding Health of LGBT for the Office Funding for the Chicago Black CaucusGayMen's Housing for people with HIV & restore funding Office Name (Incumbant in Italics) Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Q6 Q7 Q8 Q9 Q10 Carol Moseley Braun* Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Gery Chico* Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y ? Rahm Emanuel* Y N Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Mayor Miguel Del Valle* Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Patricia Van Pelt Watkins* Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y William Walls III* Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Patricia Horton Goran Davidovac Mersaydes L Young Clerk Frank L Coconate Arthur 'Art' Andros Sandi Jackson Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Susana A Mendoza Stephanie D Neely Treasurer Elida M Cruz Joe Moreno Ward 1 Ronald Baltierra Deborah Lopez* Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Robert Fioretti Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Federico Sciammarella Genita Robinson Ward 2 James A. Bosco* ? Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Melissa Callahan Enrique G.
    [Show full text]
  • Tuesday, February 26, 2019 LOCAL
    International Union of Operating Engineers LOCAL 399 Chicago Municipal Primary Election Tuesday, February 26, 2019 Support Candidates who Support Union Labor and Local 399! CHICAGO MAYOR Neutral CHICAGO CITY CLERK CHICAGO CITY TREASURER Anna Valencia Ameya Pawar CHICAGO ALDERMANIC 1st Ward Proco "Joe" Moreno 26th Ward Neutral 2nd Ward Brian Hopkins 27th Ward Walter Burnett, Jr. 3rd Ward Patricia "Pat" Dowell 28th Ward Jason C. Ervin 4th Ward Sophia King 29th Ward Chris Taliaferro 5th Ward Leslie A. Hairston 30th Ward Ariel E. Reboyras 6th Ward Roderick T. Sawyer 31st Ward Felix Cardona, Jr. 7th Ward Gregory Mitchell 32nd Ward Scott Waguespack 8th Ward Michelle A. Harris 33rd Ward Deborah Mell 9th Ward Anthony Beale 34th Ward Carrie M. Austin 10th Ward Susan Sadlowski Garza 35th Ward Amanda Yu Dieterich 11th Ward Patrick Daley Thompson 36th Ward Gilbert Villegas 12th Ward George Cardenas 37th Ward Emma Mitts 13th Ward Marty Quinn 38th Ward Nicholas Sposato 14th Ward Edward Burke 39th Ward Neutral 15th Ward Raymond Lopez 40th Ward Patrick J. O’Connor 16th Ward Toni Foulkes 41st Ward Tim Heneghan 17th Ward David Moore 43rd Ward Derek Lindblom 18th Ward Derrick Curtis 44th Ward Tom Tunney 19th Ward Matthew J. O’Shea 45th Ward Jim Gardiner 20th Ward Jeanette Taylor 46th Ward James Cappelman 21st Ward Howard Brookins, Jr. 47th Ward Michael Negron 22nd Ward Michael Rodriguez 48th Ward Harry Osterman 23rd Ward Silvana Tabares 49th Ward Maria Hadden 24th Ward Michael Scott, Jr. 50th Ward Debra L. Silverstein 25th Ward Alex Acevado Local 399 encourages its Chicago Area members to vote in the upcoming February 26, 2019 Chicago Municipal Primary Election.
    [Show full text]
  • SENT ELECTRONICALLY VIA EMAIL Honorable Lori Lightfoot Mayor
    SENT ELECTRONICALLY VIA EMAIL Honorable Lori Lightfoot Mayor, City of Chicago 121 North LaSalle Street, 5th Floor Chicago, Illinois 60602 Dr. Janice Jackson Chief Executive Officer, Chicago Public Schools 42 West Madison Street Chicago, Illinois 60602 January 3, 2021 Dear Mayor Lightfoot and Dr. Jackson: As elected representatives of our communities—and many of us CPS parents ourselves—we appreciate that our public schools are a critical provider of social services for young Chicagoans, and that COVID-19 has posed unique and significant challenges for our most vulnerable students that will be felt for years to come. We recognize that educators worked tirelessly to make remote learning last semester as enriching as possible for students, and understand the stress that this learning environment places on many working families, as parents simultaneously juggle childcare and work responsibilities. However, we are deeply concerned that Chicago Public Schools’ current plan for students and staff to return to school buildings does not meet the district’s objective of increasing equity for students, and fails to adequately address a number of safety concerns identified by parents, students, and staff in light of the ongoing pandemic. During an October briefing for elected officials, CPS discussed enrollment data showing a lack of online engagement from our city’s most vulnerable students. CPS also pointed to survey data indicating that parents of African American and Latino students conveyed a strong interest in enrolling their students in in-person learning. But CPS’s current reopening plan has not won the confidence of many of these parents. In the most recent CPS survey, less than a quarter of CPS families opted for in-person learning.
    [Show full text]
  • Aldermen Moreno, Fioretti, Dowell, Burns, Hairston, Sawyer, Jackson
    Attendance for the September 12, 2012 Meeting of the Chicago City Council Present - Aldermen Moreno, Fioretti, Dowell, Burns, Hairston, Sawyer, Jackson, Harris, Beale, Pope, Balcer, Cárdenas, Quinn, Burke, Foulkes, Thompson, Thomas, Lane, O’Shea, Cochran, Brookins, Muñoz, Zalewski, Chandler, Solis, Maldonado. Burnett, Ervin, Graham, Reboyas, Suarez, Waguespack, Mell, Austin, Colón, Sposato, Mitts, Cullerton, Laurino, P. O’Connor, M. O’Connor, Reilly, Smith, Tunney, Arena, Cappleman, Pawar, Osterman, Moore, Silverstein -- 50. Absent – None Divided Roll Call Votes September 12, 2012 Meeting of the Chicago City Council There was one divided roll call vote for the September 12, 2012 meeting of the Chicago City Council. O2012-5539: Correction of City Council Journal of Proceedings of June 6, 2012. Key: Y=yes | N=no | A=absent | NV=not voting | V=Vacant E= Excused for voting under provisions of Rule 14 of City of Chicago Rules of Order and Proceedings. The issue and it's respective votes are as follows: Issue: SO2012-4489 1st Ward: Proco Joe Moreno Y 2nd Ward: Robert Fioretti Y 3rd Ward: Pat Dowell Y 4th Ward: William Burns Y 5th Ward: Leslie Hairston Y 6th Ward: Roderick Sawyer Y 7th Ward: Sandi Jackson Y 8th Ward: Michelle Harris Y 9th Ward: Anthony Beale Y 10th Ward: John A. Pope Y 11th Ward: James A. Balcer Y 12th Ward: George A. Cardenas Y 13th Ward: Marty Quinn Y 14th Ward: Edward M. Burke Y 15th Ward: Toni Foulkes Y 16th Ward: Joann Thompson Y 17th Ward: Latasha R. Thomas Y 18th Ward: Lona Lane Y 19th Ward: Matthew O’Shea Y 20th Ward: Willie Cochran Y 21st Ward: Howard Brookins, Jr.
    [Show full text]
  • Aldermen Moreno, Fioretti, Dowell, Burns, Hairston, Sawyer, Harris
    Attendance for the July 25, 2012 Meeting of the Chicago City Council Present - Aldermen Moreno, Fioretti, Dowell, Burns, Hairston, Sawyer, Harris, Beale, Pope, Balcer, Quinn, Burke, Foulkes, Thompson, Thomas, Lane, O’Shea, Cochran, Brookins, Muñoz, Zalewski, Chandler, Solis, Maldonado. Burnett, Ervin, Graham, Reboyas, Suarez, Waguespack, Mell, Austin, Colón, Sposato, Mitts, Cullerton, Laurino, P. O’Connor, M. O’Connor, Reilly, Smith, Tunney, Arena, Pawar, Osterman, Moore, Silverstein -- 48. Absent – Aldermen Jackson, Cardenas, Cappleman -- 3 Divided Roll Call Votes July 25, 2012 Meeting of the Chicago City Council There was one divided roll call vote for the July 25, 2012 meeting of the Chicago City Council. SO2012-4489: Amendment of Titles 2, 4, 7, 9, 10 and 17 of Municipal Code regarding mobile food vehicles. (Click here for the entire text of legislation) Key: Y=yes | N=no | A=absent | NV=not voting | V=Vacant E= Excused for voting under provisions of Rule 14 of City of Chicago Rules of Order and Proceedings. The issue and it's respective votes are as follows: Issue: SO2012-4489 1st Ward: Proco Joe Moreno Y 2nd Ward: Robert Fioretti Y 3rd Ward: Pat Dowell Y 4th Ward: William Burns E 5th Ward: Leslie Hairston Y 6th Ward: Roderick Sawyer Y 7th Ward: Sandi Jackson A 8th Ward: Michelle Harris Y 9th Ward: Anthony Beale Y 10th Ward: John A. Pope Y 11th Ward: James A. Balcer Y 12th Ward: George A. Cardenas Y 13th Ward: Marty Quinn A 14th Ward: Edward M. Burke Y 15th Ward: Toni Foulkes Y 16th Ward: Joann Thompson Y 17th Ward: Latasha R.
    [Show full text]