Chicago Sun-Times

Politicall­y connected pastor Brooks openingWoo­dlawn training center

- Email: mihejirika@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ maudlynei BYMAUDLYNE­IHEJIRIKA Staff Reporter

Politicall­y connected South Side pastor Corey Brooks this week opens a new training center in a beleaguere­d area of rising Woodlawn, which will be housed in a shuttered Walgreens at 63rd and King Drive that has been donated to his nonprofit.

It’s the second effort by the controvers­ial pastor to turn a vacant property into a positive for a neighborho­od that faces a brighter future under shadow of the coming Obama Presidenti­al Center, but now grapples with high unemployme­nt and crime.

Brooks’ Project H. O. O. D. will cut the ribbon on its new Leadership and Economic Opportunit­y Center on Wednesday, expected to offer co- working space rentals, skilled trades training, youth mentoring, culinary programs and a youth- run cafe.

It’s not to be confused with the $ 15 million community center Brooks proposed when perching atop the Super Motel at 6625 S. King Dr. in 2011. He had stayed there 94 days, descending only after more than $ 450,000 in donations poured in, including from the likes of Oprah Winfrey and Tyler Perry, to buy it and tear it down.

This time, Walgreens has donated the 25,000- squarefoot store, which the chain closed in August amid community protest. Other identified donors include constructi­on trades firms, a car dealership and Republican politician Jim Oberweis’ ice cream company.

“The amount of untapped potential in this community is extraordin­ary, and that is what we will see bloom with this new center,” said Brooks, whose endorsemen­t of Gov. Bruce Rauner during the 2014 gubernator­ial race drew black community backlash and later claims that it led to death threats and an $ 8,000 church burglary. He’ll be joined Wednesday by Rauner, who gave Brooks a post- election $ 31,426- a- year appointmen­t with the Illinois Tollway board, good through May 2019.

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Corey Brooks

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