Chicago Sun-Times

OB AMA NEEDS TO KEEP HIS PROMISE TO SOUTH SIDE

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Affection, admiration and a hearty standing ovation for Barack Obama from South Side residents on Thursday contrasted with their impassione­d pleas, soon after, for a big guaranteed cut of the money and jobs sure to come when the Obama Presidenti­al Center is built in Jackson Park.

Obama, speaking via webcam at the meeting in Chicago, left no doubt that a binding contractua­l agreement won’t be coming. But he asked the disappoint­ed South Siders to take him at his word that their community will reap significan­t benefits.

And, with that, the burden fell to Obama to remember where he came from.

These are the folks who gave him a home. They launched his career. To let them down now would be a grave injustice. Even in the absence of a formal community benefits agreement— even without giving his written word — Obama and his foundation have an immense responsibi­lity to come through for their new South Side neighbors with jobs, affordable housing, financial help for the local schools and other community benefits.

Benefits agreements usually are drawn up when profit- driven investors redevelop neighborho­ods, Obama said to explain why an agreement isn’t suitable here. “We are a nonprofit and aren’t making money. We’re just bringing money to the community,” he said.

Obama expressed a second concern with community benefits agreements. “It’s not inclusive enough,” he said. “I would then be siding with who? What particular organizati­ons would end up speaking for everybody in that community? People will come out of the woodwork to be gatekeeper­s.”

Over and over, the president and his developers promised an open and inclusive process. They emphasized that the presidenti­al center will be as welcoming to every South Sider as it is to foreign dignitarie­s. Five thousand constructi­on jobs will be open mainly to residents of the South and West sides.

But not getting a benefits agreement is a letdown, to be sure, for longtime residents who fear being left on the sidelines. They worry about being displaced if property values swell. They want a guarantee on jobs because there have been too few in their community.

“The city is notorious for not keeping their word,” Sharon Payne of Woodlawn told reporters Thursday. “This is pushing in, and it’s going to push out workingcla­ss people.”

Meantime, the former president is saying, I’m with you. Trust me.

Not until they see it will they believe it.

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