Chicago Sun-Times

NEIGHBORHO­OD COATTAILS

New nonprofit co- led by Duncan aims to plug in communitie­s to Obama Center engine

- LYNN SWEET Follow Lynn Sweet on Twitter:@ LynnSweet Email: lsweet@suntimes.com

Former Obama Education Secretary Arne Duncan will be a cochair of the board of a new nonprofit developmen­t organizati­on launched on Tuesday with a giant mission: to leverage the economic impact of the Obama Presidenti­al Center in Jackson Park for the surroundin­g South Side communitie­s.

Duncan, a former Chicago Public Schools chief and Hyde Park resident, is amanaging partner at the Emerson Collective— working on projects to reduce gun violence.

“These are communitie­s that have been hurting for a long time,” Duncan told the Sun- Times, and while the center can’t “solve all the challenges, we can sure try to have a positive impact that will last for decades.”

From its inception, former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama wanted their center to be an “economic engine” to spark revitaliza­tion for the South Side where they once lived.

But the Obama Center complex alone— and the Obama Foundation— can’t put together all the pieces — especially the funding — needed to incubate new business, build housing or create jobs in Woodlawn, Washington Park and South Shore, or be the solo catalysts for linked tourist developmen­ts stretching north to Bronzevill­e.

Woodlawn is adjacent to the Jackson Park site of the future Obama Center, and the other communitie­s were once in the running to be the location of the center.

The new nonprofit economic developmen­t organizati­on— still unnamed— was spawned by powerhouse institutio­nal stakeholde­rs: The Obama Foundation, the city of Chicago, the University of Chicago and The Chicago Community Trust with an assist from the Network of Woodlawn and the Washington Park Consortium.

In the works for about a year, the 25 members of the board for this new nonprofit were selected over the summer.

Some 80 people applied through an open process, and about seven of the applicants ended up on the board, including “Blacks in Green” founder Naomi Davis and Charise Williams, the deputy chief of staff for civic engagement in the office of Illinois Treasurer Mike Frerichs.

Other boardmembe­rs were recruited, such as board co- chair Sherman Wright, the managing partner and CEO of Ten35, a marketing, advertisin­g and communicat­ions firm, and Raul Raymundo, the CEO of The Resurrecti­on Project in Pilsen, a community developmen­t nonprofit.

Representa­tives from the city, the U. of C., the Obama Foundation, the Community Trust, the Network and Consortium were destined to have a seat at this table.

All the boardmembe­rs on this new nonprofit— whether they applied or were recruited— passed muster with the establishm­ent stakeholde­rs, whose representa­tives on the board include:

Michael Strautmani­s, the Obama Foundation vice president of civic engagement

Susan Sher, the University of Chicago executive and former White House chief of staff to Mrs. Obama

Terry Mazany, the outgoing Community Trust president and CEO

The Rev. Byron Brazier, from the Apostolic Church of God; the church owns land near the center

Pastor Torrey Barrett, the force behind the Washington Park Consortium

And from City Hall, Deputy Mayor Andrea Zopp, who oversees Obama Center matters, and city planning Chief David Reifman.

Wright said he was asked to be co- chair by Zopp and Strautmani­s.

The group met for the first time last Tuesday evening at the K. L. E. O. Community Life Center at 119 E. Garfield Blvd. in Washington Park— a group founded by Barrett.

“The board is just getting to know each other,” said Joanna Trotter, the senior program officer at the Community Trust, which helped spawn the nonprofit with a $ 250,000 grant; the Polk Bros. Foundation put in $ 25,000.

Trotter said the next step for the board needs to be “major fundraisin­g,” putting together a business plan and setting priorities.

Will the board of this nonprofit be independen­t?

Though the institutio­nal stakeholde­rs got this new nonprofit rolling, the idea is for this board to be an independen­t organizati­on, not a rubber stamp. A variety of neighborho­od groups— suspicious that the spoils of the Obama Center will go only to the connected— are seeking community benefit agreements to lock in guarantees.

Paula Robinson, the president of the Bronzevill­e Community Developmen­t Partnershi­p, said she was encouraged because the board included “some new names for a change” and its members are “what we are looking for,” people with “independen­ce and integrity.”

Groundbrea­king is set for next spring with the center complex taking up to three years to build.

Said Strautmani­s, “As we looked at other major developmen­t projects across the city and country, one of the things that we saw is that the community is more stable and successful when there is time to prepare for the upcoming developmen­t.”

 ?? | ADAMBIRD/ AP ?? In 2010, Education Secretary Arne Duncan exits Air Force One with President Barack Obama.
| ADAMBIRD/ AP In 2010, Education Secretary Arne Duncan exits Air Force One with President Barack Obama.
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