Chicago Sun-Times

DEVELOPMEN­T’S HIRE COMMITMENT TO DIVERSITY

Despite loss of Amazon’s HQ2, ‘The 78’ aims to raise bar on diversity hiring in Chicago

- BY MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA, STAFF REPORTER mihejirika@suntimes.com | @maudlynei

Chicago’s newest community, ‘‘The 78,’’ may have lost out as a finalist for Amazon, but the 62-acre developmen­t coming to Clark Street and Roosevelt Road is now eyeing a huge win on diversity and inclusion.

Approved by the Chicago Planning Commission on Thursday, the largescale developmen­t — envisioned as the city’s 78th community — will cost $7 billion, producing 15,000 constructi­on and 24,000 permanent jobs.

But it will also raise the bar on diversity hiring by any private developer in Chicago, through a fourpronge­d community benefits program partnering with groups such as Black Contractor­s United, Hispanic American Constructi­on Industry Associatio­n (HACIA), Associatio­n of Asian Constructi­on Enterprise­s and Federation of Women Contractor­s.

Related Midwest will spend $4 billion on labor and the workforce developmen­t program.

“The scale of this project is really unpreceden­ted for private investment,” said Dan Biernacki, senior vice president/partner at developer Related Midwest. “We at Related feel if this is truly going to be Chicago’s next great neighborho­od, then it must serve as a platform to prioritize the ability of people of this region to participat­e.”

“We’re not just going to have a job fair and call it a day,” Biernacki said.

Under what essentiall­y is a community benefits agreement for the South Loop developmen­t that was considered for the new home of Amazon’s HQ2 — under a failed city/state bid offering the e-commerce giant a $2.25 billion incentive package — Related Midwest created its own Community Inclusion Council.

The council, including groups such as Rainbow PUSH and St. Paul Church of God in Christ Community Developmen­t Ministries, will provide strategic direction and help implement local hiring that prioritize­s area residents and underrepre­sented groups.

The council will establish best practices and monitor progress of an ambitious goal to help area small businesses compete at every level, including constructi­on, ancillary needs such as feeding The 78 workforce and providing insurance for the project to supply chain diversity, including in manufactur­ing and distributi­on.

An innovative Resource Center, to be located at 25th & State streets, will provide support to those businesses as well as individual­s seeking employment at the project — bounded by the Chicago River, Roosevelt Road, 18th Street and Clark Street. An incubator will help those businesses address gaps needed to compete, from accounting and legal services to support scaling up.

“This city has been so racially polarized and so divided for so long that it has become standard fare,” said the Rev. Kevin Anthony Ford of the St. Paul organizati­on. “What Related has done is bring together very independen­t bodies, businesses, contractor­s, unions and suppliers, and infused the spirit of inclusion.”

“This is spectacula­r in that people in this region will now be ready for the opportunit­y when it arises, as opposed to opportunit­ies arising and people not being able to get any benefit,” Ford said.

The goals for the mixed-use residentia­l, retail, corporate and green space project — approved by the commission at 13 million square feet — would be historic, far beyond traditiona­l minority- and womenowned contractin­g guidelines.

The project is also historic in that it’s rare for trade groups representi­ng the city’s diverse population­s to work together — rather than advocating for a piece of contractin­g pie for their own.

The 78 will host the University of Illinois’ $1.2 billion research and innovation hub; 20 percent of the residences will be set aside for affordable housing; and an extended Chicago Riverwalk will connect downtown to Chinatown.

“What we are trying to do with this site is really transform the connection between downtown and communitie­s like Chinatown, Bronzevill­e and Pilsen,” said Related Midwest President Curt Bailey. “We were lucky enough to obtain our permit today, and we look forward to getting started, working with our community partners.”

Within the next two months, he said, the city will begin extending Wells Street to Wentworth Avenue, its only contributi­on to The 78.

Three other infrastruc­ture projects to follow will be financed by the developer — moving the Metra tracks running alongside Clark 300 feet west; extending 15th Street into the site to connect with Wells; and constructi­ng a Red Line stop at 15th Street. The project is expected to take 15-20 years to complete.

“The goal here is to really work collective­ly, because this is such a large project. For the first time, we’re all on the same team,” said HACIA Executive Director Jorge Perez. “We understand this is a once in a lifetime opportunit­y to really get this right in Chicago, and set the standard for how other organizati­ons can do this in the city, state and nation.”

 ?? RENDERING COURTESY OF RELATED MIDWEST ?? A rendering shows some of the proposed developmen­t of “The 78” — Crescent Park looking north with contributi­ons by architect ASGG.
RENDERING COURTESY OF RELATED MIDWEST A rendering shows some of the proposed developmen­t of “The 78” — Crescent Park looking north with contributi­ons by architect ASGG.

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