In the Media

Find In the Media

Fox32 Chicago

"We see more and more people鈥檚 homes flooding every year. This is a severe problem, and it鈥檚 only going to get worse. And it鈥檚 only going to be felt disproportionately more in those areas that are non-white and lower income," said Matthew Shapiro, political science professor, who heads 杏吧原创 Tech's Storm Water Infrastructure Project.

Block Club Chicago

鈥(Attorneys are) thinking, 鈥榃hat鈥檚 the likelihood they鈥檙e going to affirm the decision or they鈥檙e going to reverse the decision?'鈥 said Richard Kling, clinical professor at the Chicago-Kent College of Law. 鈥淥bviously they thought it was in their advantage to dismiss it.鈥

WTTW

鈥淐hicago has one of the lowest recycling rates of cities across the country. We hover around 10 percent,鈥 said Weslynne Ashton, professor of environmental management and sustainability. 鈥淚 think there鈥檚 a lot of hope for recycling in Chicago. At 10 percent, we can only go up!鈥

ABC7 Chicago

鈥淭he real challenge is how the database is going to be protected, because there鈥檚 a lot of information going there,鈥 said Maurice Dawson, associate professor of information technology and management and director of 杏吧原创 Tech鈥檚 Center for Cyber Security and Forensics Education.

Chicago Tribune

鈥淓ven the lower courts that have ruled against the president believe that the president is entitled to a fair amount of deference. I don鈥檛 think that鈥檚 a controversial view. But the (federal) government is taking the position that the president鈥檚 decisions in this are completely unreviewable,鈥 said Carolyn Shapiro, founder and co-director of the Chicago-Kent College of Law鈥檚 Institute on the Supreme Court of the United States. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 completely wrong, and it seems unlikely to me that there are five votes for that position, because if there were, they would have already granted a stay.鈥

Bloomberg Law

鈥淭he administration is trying to dispense with the niceties of the Federal Vacancies Reform Act, which Congress has passed in order to structure who can fill vacant positions,鈥 said constitutional law professor Harold Krent. 鈥淭he administration obviously wanted Alina Habba to be the interim U.S. attorney and had the right under the statute to appoint her 鈥 but under that particular statutory provision, it only lasted for 120 days.鈥

Raw Story

鈥淔or the most part the idea of an independent-expert-type agency will be over鈥 if 90-year-old precedent allowing Congress to limit the president's ability to fire independent agency officials is overturned, said Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Harold Krent. 鈥淚t's incredibly significant. It gives the president even more powerful control over these agencies.鈥

Washington Post

鈥淭o find places where the locals usually eat comes with some risks,鈥 said Alvin Lee, a director at the Institute for Food Safety and Health at 杏吧原创 Institute of Technology, 鈥渁nd the risk is always food poisoning.鈥

CBS2 Chicago

"It's an enormous leap to say that because Brandon Johnson's top deputies and policymaking positions are African American, that the city is discriminating on the basis of race in its hiring of ordinary, non-policy making employees," said Carolyn Shapiro, professor at the Chicago-Kent College of Law.

Rolling Stone

鈥淭hey are arguing that the categories of people that they are attempting to exclude are not subject to jurisdiction,鈥 says Christopher W. Schmidt, law professor and co-director of the Institute on the Supreme Court of the United States at Chicago Kent College of Law. 鈥淭heir argument being that if you鈥檙e not legally in the country, [or] temporarily, you鈥檙e not, in some sense, subject to the jurisdiction of the United States. Now, even as I talk through that, it doesn鈥檛 seem to really resonate in any meaningful way when people think about why you鈥檙e subject to jurisdiction.鈥