*A crackdown on illegal valet parking operations.



*Impose larger fines for those who evade city stickers by registering their vehicles outside city limits but keep them in Chicago.



*Approve higher fines for tow truck drivers who tow multiple cars a short distance from where they are illegally parked before going back to take each car to the tow company lot. The practice, known as staging, already is against the law, but the proposal would allow police to issue tickets of between $500 and $1,000 against tow truck drivers rather than just reporting the practice to state licensing officials.



*Aldermen voted to sign off on a $5 million legal settlement for a man who lost his leg after being hit by a car that skidded on ice caused by a leaky water main.



*End free Sunday parking in some areas.



*Require those who unlock cell phones to take down identification information. The idea is to make it tougher on cell phone thieves to profit.



*Allow small digital advertising signs to start up again after a nine-month moratorium, with some restrictions.



*Outlaw new petcoke storage terminals while requiring three existing operations along the Calumet River to file quarterly reports on the amount of petroleum coke and coal shipped through Chicago. The Emanuel administration scuttled a proposal that would have allowed factories to store and burn the refinery byproduct anywhere in the city.



After the council meeting, Mayor Rahm Emanuel is scheduled to take reporters' questions for the first time since the Tribune reported Friday that some scenes of CNN's documentary series "Chicagoland" were coordinated by City Hall and the show's producers.



The mayor's office announced late Tuesday that it would propose a measure to add six more food truck locations. The sites to be considered: 437 S. Columbus Drive, 200 S. LaSalle St., 151 N. Franklin St., 185 N. Upper Columbus Drive, 105 E. Monroe St. and 300 S. Wabash Ave.



