
SubX.News® Street Report April 2, 2026
Chicago looks calm on the surface. It isn’t.
Late afternoon downtown Thursday is supposed to be packed.
Instead, the center of the city feels hollow.
Thursday’s route was simple: downtown at Stetson, west into Pilsen at 23rd and Halsted, under I‑55 at Lock, and out to Bubbly Creek.
Rolling up Michigan near Stetson. The light says rush hour. The street says something else.
Four‑thirty‑six in the afternoon, there’s no traffic. No movement. People are being funneled through one place, and that’s it.
The road is beat to pieces. Deep potholes. Broken curb. Loose chunks of concrete sitting in the gutter like junk nobody bothered to clear.
You got rocks downtown you can use to break into cars. That’s the problem with that.
Expensive Chicago on top. Towers, hotels, glass and steel.
Underneath: busted pavement, loose bricks, almost no regular people.
The speeches say “recovery” and “investment.”
The ground says neglect.
Moving west into Pilsen, toward chronic city negligence, shows what’s really going on with the current city administration.
Blind Eye City
In the shadow of the Dan Ryan at 23rd and Halsted, the camera is on the street outside the city shelter and the people living around it.
Migrants and unhoused residents are outside, exposed to violence, drugs, and neglect, with a shelter and open public land right next to them.
I’m doing my news and stuff, talking about corruption.
People are saying, oh, you can’t say this, you can’t post this.
I said, man, you need to start being honest. You know, you need to be honest.
Why aren’t we fighting for the people that need help?
On the corner, the work is out in the open.
Migrants are dealing drugs here. But they’re not in control. They’re just runners … distributors, really, that’s about it.
Remember, migrants are migrants.
They’re new to this country.
They are supplied and controlled by drug gangs locally.
Dealing drugs is a choice.
Living on the Halsted sidewalk is a choice. But when the violence and the guns get added in, that’s when the real trouble starts.
The same shelter where 5-year-old Jean Carlos Martinez died in 2023 from 4 infectious diseases.
Even the medical professionals on the ground called it preventable. Pediatrician Pranshu Bhardwaj wrote that this boy’s death was not an accident.
This is not a technical problem.
It’s a moral one.
This is not about hiding negativity.
It’s about safety for the homeless and others.
But the city doesn’t do it. Why?
‘Cause they’re loyal to the lie.
The demand is simple: stop pretending, use land as a resource, and protect the people already living on the edge.
From there, the route drops back under the concrete.
Fences Over People
Down the street from Halsted, under I‑55 at Lock Street, the same story keeps playing: a city that only shows up when it wants to move people, not protect them.
Under the structure, there’s a clear spot where someone used to sleep.
State money goes into fencing instead of housing the people who need it. Someone lives here under the highway.
Fencing is drilled in on an angle, set in concrete, with limited access signs bolted, lots of tax dollars spent to do this work to keep people out.
The same government that says, don’t harm people, don’t cause trauma, spends public money to build a fence instead of spending money to get housing.
A few feet away, the concrete is busted under the CTA Orange Line.
Scarce resources go to keeping the homeless out, not to getting them in a house or an apartment, and not to fixing the concrete. More money wasted that doesn’t fix the problem.
Loyal to the lie. Fencing instead of repairs. Fences instead of people.
From Stetson to Halsted to Lock, the Day Ends at Bubbly Creek
Concrete ledge. Dirty water. Southside sky going dark.
Eleanor Street Boathouse at Park 571, a sleek Studio Gang training center and boat storage complex built as part of the city’s river revitalization push.
In the shadow of what used to be the Holsum Bakery at 2883 S. Hillock, where the smell of fresh baked bread once covered this stretch of I‑55.
Downstream, the cost of the lie shows up in blood and headlines.
The names and places stack up:
Sheridan Gorman murdered on a pier at Tobey Prinz Beach.
Tyrese Smith executed at an Englewood Gas Station.
Eight‑year‑old shot at Dunkin’ on 35th and Rhodes.
On one side of the river: glass, grants, rowing machines, and press releases about “access” and “equity.”
On the other: busted streets, migrants running dope outside a city shelter, fences over people under the expressway, and kids dead or shot with no real outrage.
City Hall keeps selling a comeback story, but the blocks from Stetson to Halsted to Lock to Bubbly Creek say something else.
That gap between the brochure and the body count is the truth.
Loyal to the Lie, Brandon’s Chicago.
Limited Access sign under I-55 and Lock where fencing is installed to keep homeless people out next to crumbling CTA viaducts 645pm April 2nd 2026 Archer and Lock SubX.News®
Editor’s Note: This report is based on a live feed video drive on April 2, 2026 and live broadcast radio, police traffic, and independent scanner feeds:
Chicago economy crime and migrant update 400pm April 2nd 2026 https://youtu.be/dpp2ap_uEu0
No traffic huge potholes bricks and boulders all over and this is by a very expensive area by Stetson about 4:35 p.m. April 2nd 2026 https://x.com/SubxNews/status/2039821721302151269
Police Accident or medical emergency here on to Dan Ryan inbound 31st Street but it’s cleared up now about 5:05 p.m. April 2nd 2026 https://x.com/SubxNews/status/2039827182302707960
City failure 23rd and Halsted 608pm Apr 2, 2026 https://youtu.be/hwV0s0awAAc
Fences Over People … The State of Illinois spends money building fences rather than housing or even fixing up the messed up concrete 6:45 p.m. April 2nd 2026 Archer and Lock https://youtube.com/shorts/Dp35GNR8uew
The Preventable Death of Jean Carlos Martinez Rivero April 27, 2024 https://chicagomaroon.com/42109/viewpoints/op-ed/the-preventable-death-of-jean-carlos-martinez-rivero/

SubX.News® On-the-Spot Reporting