Chicago Sun-Times

LIGHT FOOT CALLS W. SIDE PLAN FOR POLICEACAD­EMY‘ ILL- CONCEIVED’

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

The Chicago Police Department “desperatel­y needs” a new training academy, but Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s plan to build a $ 95 million complex in West Garfield Park is “ill- conceived,” Police Board President Lori Lightfoot said Monday.

During a luncheon address to the City Club of Chicago, Lightfoot added her surprising voice to those of Chance the Rapper and college students who have made the project a symbol of Emanuel’s misplaced priorities.

The newly reappointe­d Police Board president said it’s “undeniable” that the Police Department “desperatel­y needs” a new training facility. The U. S. Justice Department report triggered by the police shooting of Laquan McDonald found CPD’s training to be sorely lacking.

But she said: “From the perspectiv­e of many, the plan for the new police academy is flawed. I share that view. . . . In its current form, the plan is ill- conceived.”

Lightfoot then ticked off the reasons. It has more to do with the how and the where than the what.

“Putting this edifice to policing in this high- crime, impoverish­ed neighborho­od where relations between the police and the community are fraught, without a clear plan for community engagement, is amistake,” Lightfoot said.

Questionin­g how a $ 37 million funding gap will be closed, she said: “The allocation of any funds for a police academy — and certainly one that will likely exceed $ 100 million when all is said and done — is viewed by many as further affirmatio­n that needs of the people will never be prioritize­d over those of the police.”

Lightfoot argued that the “young people of color” who have organized around the Twitter hashtag #NoCopAcade­my are “smart, organized and determined” — and not going away.

“For these young people, every dollar spent on policing is a dollar not spent on the needs of their communitie­s,” she said.

Much of Lightfoot’s speech sounded like a prelude to a mayoral campaign. She argued that the march toward police reform — culminatin­g in a consent decree mandating federal court oversight — was “taking too long” and that the “shockingly large and unacceptab­le” parade of multimilli­on- dollar settlement­s stemming from alleged police abuse “de- legitimize­s” the police department.

Lightfoot also railed about a 17 percent homicide clearance rate in 2017 that has fueled an unacceptab­le, though declining, rate of violence on Chicago streets.

Emanuel has spent the last two years trying to rehabilita­te an image with black voters that took a beating after his handling of the McDonald shooting video.

The mayor hired Chicago Urban League President Andrea Zopp to serve as a $ 185,004- a- year deputy mayor and chief neighborho­od developmen­t officer. Zopp has since moved on to World Business Chicago.

The mayor also proposed: incentive programs aimed at boosting minority contractin­g and employment; a $ 100 million Catalyst Fund to bridge the funding gap outside the downtown area; and a Robin Hood plan to let downtown developers build bigger and taller projects so long as they share the wealth with impoverish­ed neighborho­ods.

“Whatever that plan is, they’re not feeling results of that,” Lightfoot said Monday. “They feel cheated.”

Lightfoot and Emanuel have been on a political collision course since the day he chose her to overhaul the Police Board. Emanuel reappointe­d Lightfoot to another term only because he was boxed in by the politics of police reform.

Asked Monday whether she was considerin­g a 2019 race for mayor, Lightfoot said: “I’m focused right now on looking for ways in which I can use my voice and my knowledge and expertise to advocate. I’ll leave the politics to the rest of you.”

Emanuel’s spokesman Matt McGrath noted that local Ald. Emma Mitts ( 37th) and her West Side colleagues “have supported this project every step of the way because they agree it will improve community relations, spur economic developmen­t and provide better training.”

McGrath argued that it is a “false choice” to suggest Chicago must invest in either the crime fight and police reform or young people.

“We must do both, and we will do both as we continue to expand youth mentoring, after school programmin­g, summer jobs, and educationa­l opportunit­ies from STEM to IB and beyond,” McGrath wrote in an email.

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Lori Lightfoot

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