Chicago Sun-Times

ANTI- VIOLENCE INVESTMENT STRATEGY

City treasurer to propose using $ 57M in excess ‘ portfolio earnings’ to help stop bloodshed in long- neglected neighborho­ods

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@suntimes.com Twitter: @fspielman

City Treasurer Kurt Summers will propose Wednesday that $ 57 million in excess “portfolio earnings” generated by his office be used to stop the bloodshed on Chicago streets — by investing in long- neglected inner- city neighborho­ods.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s 2017 budget included a $ 100 million “Catalyst Fund” to bridge the funding gap outside Chicago’s thriving downtown.

Summers, who sold the idea to the mayor who appointed him, calls it “Fund 77” because that’s how many neighborho­ods Chicago has and that’s where the need is. Whatever you call it, the fund has not yet launched. That’s supposed to happen “within the month.”

Now, Summers wants to sweeten the pot — using the $ 57 million in 2016 investment returns he claims to have generated over and above the $ 68 million assumed in the mayor’s budget. The treasurer’s office manages the city’s $ 7 billion investment portfolio.

That would mean the fund would launch with $ 157 million and have more to invest over a three- year period in projects that create jobs in gang- infested neighborho­ods with high concentrat­ions of poverty and unemployme­nt.

Summers said there’s a reason why he announced the initiative at the Bronzevill­e Incubator, 300 E. 51st Street.

The unemployme­nt rate in Bronzevill­e is “four times higher” than the rest of the city and the median income is “less than half,” he said. And last weekend, there was a violent attack across the street.

“You can’t police your way out of poverty. The roots of our problems are economic. We can’t solve them without economic solutions,” Summers said Wednesday.

The treasurer said he generated the windfall by being a “better steward of the city’s money.”

“I’m standing up and saying, ‘ These monies should be directed toward the single- biggest issue facing our city,’ ” he said.

Last fall, the City Council’s Progressiv­e Caucus demanded that the ordinance creating the Catalyst Fund include an ironclad guarantee that the money will be invested in neighborho­ods truly in need.

Summers assured them that would happen — without a guarantee.

“There is a perception issue that, in certain communitie­s, to make an investment is a riskier investment . . . [ and] you need to be compensate­d more for that,” Summers said then.

“The reality is, if you look at just the sale of the Mariano’s in Bronzevill­e at 39th and King Drive — the liquidity that created for those developers who took the ‘ additional risk’ of developing in that marketplac­e and then immediatel­y sold it — that tells you that, when you have the courage to see through what is a traditiona­l underwriti­ng [ and] investment bias in those communitie­s, you can be rewarded.”

At the time, Summers said the city’s $ 100 million in seed money would be matched by “three times” that much in outside capital. No more than 20 percent would go to any one project.

A seven- member board that includes the treasurer would select private managers who would be required to invest the money in low- income neighborho­ods and census tracts covered by the Community Reinvestme­nt Act.

“We have a great deal, unfortunat­ely, on the South and West Sides. Those are where some of our largest pockets of need are. But it’s not limited to those. If you look at areas like Uptown or in Clearing, Garfield Ridge and Archer Heights approachin­g Midway, there are qualified census tracts all over the city,” he said.

Under questionin­g from aldermen, Summers described the difference­s be- tween the new so- called “fund of funds” administer­ed by outside money managers who make investment decisions and the Infrastruc­ture Trust he chairs that has been slow to get off the ground.

The Catalyst Fund would have its own capital, with the city contributi­ng the money in pieces through 2018. It would invest in taxable private projects with a mandate to turn a profit.

The Infrastruc­ture Trust depends on tax- exempt deals and is limited to government- related projects. Under Summers’ leadership, the Trust is about to embark on “the biggest lighting program in North America,” after what he called a “three- year slow start.”

“Large ideas should go through the Infrastruc­ture Trust. But when there’s infrastruc­ture tied to a developmen­t or tied to a specific revenue opportunit­y — or if it’s of a size that may be too small for the trust to take on — this [ Catalyst Fund] would be a great opportunit­y,” he said.

The $ 100 million in initial seed money also came from funds generated by the treasurers’ ability to double investment returns.

But, Summers has said there is an “additional back- stop”: money generated by the sale of the Chicago Skyway and city parking meters that was supposed to be invested in “human and neighborho­od infrastruc­ture,” but never was.

“We can use that if, for some reason, we don’t continue to exceed returns,” Summers said.

The treasurer said he had a “prospect list of local corporatio­ns, banks, insurance companies, institutio­nal investors, Taft- Hartley funds, union funds and local pension plans.”

But it was likely to take “the better part of a year” to attract funding and start investing, he said.

“No private investor wants to have a blind investment in something that’s viewed as a political fund or a pool of capital that’s controlled by politician­s. They have to see that this is real . . . and that they’ll have an ability to get real market opportunit­ies and returns,” he said.

“YOU CAN’T POLICE YOUR WAY OUT OF POVERTY. THE ROOTS OF OUR PROBLEMS ARE ECONOMIC. WE CAN’T SOLVE THEM WITHOUT ECONOMIC SOLUTIONS.” KURT SUMMERS, City treasurer

 ?? MARK BROWN ?? is taking the day off.
MARK BROWN is taking the day off.
 ??  ?? City Treasurer Kurt Summers SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO
City Treasurer Kurt Summers SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO

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