Chicago Sun-Times

Park District still discrimina­tes decades after consent decree lifted: report

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

Thirty years after the Chicago Park District’s release from a U.S. Justice Department consent decree, the district still is tinged with racism, funneling more resources to parks in white communitie­s of means while parks in poor black and Latino communitie­s are neglected, according to a report released Wednesday.

The new report by Friends of the Parks, which found significan­t inequities in programmin­g and capital investment­s correlatin­g with race and income levels across the city, was issued as the district’s board of commission­ers approved a budget for 2019.

Included in that budget was a $2.7 million increase in its contract with SmithGroup­JJR, the company hired to oversee the South Shore and Jackson Park renovation­s that include a controvers­ial new golf course near the site of the Obama Presidenti­al Center.

The new report, “State of the Parks,” is the first such comprehens­ive analysis of district spending in decades, by the same group that filed the 1982 discrimina­tion lawsuit leading to the 1983 federal consent decree. The decree was dismissed in 1989.

“On the 35th anniversar­y of the consent decree which was put in place to remedy the Chicago Park District’s systemic discrimina­tion against minority communitie­s, Friends of the Parks’ analysis finds that the Chicago Park District again is balancing its budget on the backs of African-American and Latino communitie­s,” said Friends of the Parks board member and former Chicago Park District Board of Commission­ers President Maria Saldana.

“In 2018, the Chicago Park District invested the least in park programmin­g, capital and park acreage in communitie­s that need it the most. And we see a similar approach in their proposed 2019 budget,” Saldana said.

The report was released at a press conference before the district’s monthly meeting, where the group’s president, Juanita Irizarry, ticked off its key findings:

Parks programmin­g on the predominan­tly white North Side is significan­tly greater than that on the predominan­tly black South Side, and South Side parks of similar size to those on the North Side have significan­tly smaller budgets.

Capital investment requests in black communitie­s are approved at half the rate of those in white communitie­s.

Latino communitie­s had the least amount of parkland, and their parks got the least amount of investment.

Park Board President Jesse Ruiz took issue with the findings at the meeting. District spokeswoma­n Michele Lemons said the board would be issuing a response to the report, but it was not received by late Wednesday.

Regarding reasons for the increase to the original $1.1 million contract with SmithGroup­JJR, Lemons said: “The increase in the contract amount will enable the district to move forward with designing a broader scope of projects than the previous contract allowed.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES LIBRARY ?? A new report by Friends of the Parks finds that fewer resources are being spent on parks in minority communitie­s.
SUN-TIMES LIBRARY A new report by Friends of the Parks finds that fewer resources are being spent on parks in minority communitie­s.

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