Chicago Sun-Times

$ 160 MILLION PROGRAM TO RE- LIGHT STREETS OK’D

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

The City Council on Wednesday approved a $ 160 million program to re- light Chicago — but only after shining the light on Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s murky, pay- as- you- go financing plan.

Instead of using his much- ballyhooed- but- slow- starting Infrastruc­ture Trust to attract private investors to bankroll the four- year conversion of Chicago’s 270,000 outdoor lights, the “smart lighting” program is being financed by Chicago taxpayers.

That means an as- yet- unexplaine­d mix of general obligation bonds backed by property taxes, tax- increment- financing ( TIF), operating funds or “other funding sources.”

Leslie Darling, executive director of the Infrastruc­ture Trust, has given alternate explanatio­ns for the financing detour.

At first, she told the City Council’s Budget Committee that the city was “not interested in privatizin­g a critical public safety asset” such as street lights.

Then she acknowledg­ed it would have been “a lot more expensive to use private financing,” because investors were demanding too great a return. That would have required “significan­t reductions to critical elements” that the city was unwilling to make, she said.

Either way, the financing program can only be described as pay as you go.

An estimated $ 10 million in annual energy savings will be “leveraged to pay for this capital investment,” reducing the cost to Chicago taxpayers, according to Transporta­tion Commission­er Rebekah Scheinfeld.

“The remainder of the cost will come from the city’s general capital program. The Budget Department will be working on an ongoing basis to identify available TIF or bond proceeds, additional operating dollars or other funding sources that will go towards this each year,” Scheinfeld has said.

At last week’s Budget Committee meeting, that explanatio­n was not enough to satisfy Ald. Scott Waguespack ( 32nd), chairman of the City Council’s Progressiv­e Caucus.

“I’m finding it hard to believe that we sat there with all of these people in the Infrastruc­ture Trust and no one can give us a specific breakdown of TIF, bonded out dollars and other resources that are specifical­ly going to be pegged to this contract for the next four or five years so that we know how to budget for it and it’s not sort of, let’s play it by ear and see what happens next year depending on, either the savings or how many light fixtures we put up,” Waguespack said.

The project includes a $ 150 million contract with Ameresco and a $ 10 million contract with a yet- to- be- identified constructi­on manager.

Roughly $ 87.2 million will be spent on brighter LED lights, with the installati­on beginning this summer in South and West Side neighborho­ods where violent crime is highest.

The new lights will also be likely to change the overhead look of Chicago. LED lights are whiter than the yellow lights air travelers now see when flying into or out of O’Hare and Midway Airports.

Another $ 37.2 million will be spent to replace selected poles and wiring.

It also includes $ 30 million for a “management system” allowing city workers to monitor and control lighting levels from a central location; it also will alert the city when lights go out, shortening the time between outages.

“Right now, we don’t know if a light is out unless someone sees it,” Scheinfeld has said.

Despite the concerns about financing, Ald. Michael Scott ( 24th) was all for the idea of shining a brighter light on Chicago streets.

“Lawndale and Englewood — these high- crime areas. Being able to go in there first and make sure that light is bright. People are safer,” he said.

 ?? SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? The city wants to save money by replacing outdated streetligh­ts with energyeffi­cient LED technology.
SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO The city wants to save money by replacing outdated streetligh­ts with energyeffi­cient LED technology.

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