Chicago Sun-Times

BIG SHOES TO FILL

New deputy mayor Rivkin succeeding Koch, who oversaw Navy Pier rehab, pension funding fix

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

Chicago taxpayers got their money’s worth from their $ 1- a- year deputy mayor — including a steady stream of corporate relocation­s, dedicated funding sources for all four city employee pension funds and the revitaliza­tion of Navy Pier and the neighborho­od that surrounds McCormick Place.

Now, attorney Robert Rivkin will try to fill Steve Koch’s big shoes and help Mayor Rahm Emanuel execute strategies tailor- made to share the wealth of downtown developmen­t with long- neglected neighborho­ods.

Rivkin spent 4 ½ years as general counsel under former U. S. Transporta­tion Secretary Ray LaHood, one of Emanuel’s closest friends in politics.

The new deputy mayor’s resume also includes stints as a federal prosecutor, CTA general counsel and as senior vice president of Delta Air Lines and Chicago- based Aon Corp.

More recently, Rivkin has worked as a city consultant helping Emanuel deliver the elusive dream of building a high- speed rail line between downtown and O’Hare Airport into a reality.

In that role, he and Koch recently traveled to Los Angeles to meet with visionary billionair­e Elon Musk of Space X and Tesla fame. They checked out the Jetsons- like technology that Musk hopes to build in tunnels beneath Los Angeles and maybe even do the same in Chicago.

The mayor’s office refused to let Rivkin be interviewe­d about the deputy mayor’s job he will assume in mid- August with a $ 185,000- ayear salary that matches the one paid to Andrea Zopp, the deputy mayor for neighborho­od developmen­t.

LaHood said Rivkin is uniquely qualified to deliver for Chicago.

“He’s one of the smartest lawyers I have ever known … and he also has worked with Rahm. He knows his personalit­y. He also knows Chicago,” LaHood said.

“Bob’s intimate knowledge of the Department of Transporta­tion — the programs that are available, where the money is, the bureaucrac­y that you have to work with — is gonna be an opportunit­y that hasn’t existed before for the city.”

LaHood noted that the Trump administra­tion came out Thursday with a “very bold statement about putting money into rail and making rail a priority.” That bodes well for the O’Hare express project, the former transporta­tion secretary said.

Koch said his replacemen­t has a huge leg up on where he was when he joined the Emanuel administra­tion in 2012 after a career in investment banking. That’s because of Rivkin’s long career at all levels of government.

“I didn’t know s--- about this when I started. I don’t know that I had been at City Hall more than a couple of times in my entire life,” Koch said.

“He’s got a real advantage in that he knows how to function in this context. It took me a year to learn that. Two years to learn that. Some people might say I never learned it.”

Koch said he spent one- third of his time on city finances, one- third on economic developmen­t and infrastruc­ture and one- third on “special projects” like O’Hare express, the 606, the DePaul basketball arena and the failed Lucas Museum.

“From the revitaliza­tion of Navy Pier to constructi­on of the event center at McCormick Square to the completion of the 606 trail to the recruitmen­t of countless corporate headquarte­rs, I have been able to count on Steve to get important projects to the finish line,” Emanuel was quoted as saying in a press release.

After wrapping up his work at City Hall, Koch, 61, plans to spend two months riding his bike the length of the Mississipp­i River to raise $ 1 million for the Greater Chicago Food Depository. The money he raises will provide 3 million meals for needy kids.

“I am at a point in life where I know I want to do a couple of other things. I’m not a young man. So, I want to do ’ em while I still can,” Koch said.

“It just seems like the right point [ to leave] in terms of where the city is at and where I’m at personally.”

 ??  ?? Steve Koch ( left) says his successor, Robert Rivkin, has “got a real advantage in that he knows how to function in this context.”| SUN- TIMES LIBRARY ( LEFT); LINKEDIN ( RIGHT)
Steve Koch ( left) says his successor, Robert Rivkin, has “got a real advantage in that he knows how to function in this context.”| SUN- TIMES LIBRARY ( LEFT); LINKEDIN ( RIGHT)
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