Chicago Sun-Times

MAYOR’S SAFETY SHAKEUP

Lightfoot aims to get more personnel on the streets by reopening two detective areas, merging administra­tive functions of police, fire, OEMC

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman Mayor Lori Lightfoot

Mayor Lori Lightfoot wasn’t kidding when she talked about “pushing, pushing, pushing” Police Superinten­dent Eddie Johnson to make “tough decisions” that he has “not been called upon to do before.”

On Friday, the mayor did it for the superinten­dent she inherited.

Lightfoot announced plans to re-open two detective areas shuttered by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel and merge the administra­tive functions of the Chicago Police Department, the Chicago Fire Department, and the Office of Emergency Management and Communicat­ions into a new Office of Public Safety Administra­tion at police headquarte­rs in Bronzevill­e.

The immediate impact will be to “re-direct 151 sworn officers and 11 uniformed fire personnel from headquarte­rs” to Chicago neighborho­ods, officials said.

Emanuel balanced his first budget by eliminatin­g more than 1,400 police vacancies, reducing police and detective areas from five to three, and closing three district police stations: Wood, Belmont and Prairie.

When homicides and other violent crime spiked, Emanuel was forced to rely on runaway overtime before reversing field and embarking on a two-year plan to hire more than 1,000 additional officers.

Lightfoot now plans to re-open two detective areas: the Harrison Area on the West Side and the Grand Central Area on the Near Northwest Side.

The goal is to boost Chicago’s dismal but improving homicide clearance rate by increasing “collaborat­ion” between detectives and patrol officers, decreasing travel times to let detectives spend more time “in the field” and reducing skyrocketi­ng overtime.

“It was a failed experiment ... Three areas was just too much geography to cover — both for patrol and for detectives,” Lightfoot’s chief of staff Maurice Classen, the police department’s former director of strategy, said of Emanuel’s decision to close the two detective areas.

“We need to put more detectives out in the areas, in the districts so they can have more connection with front line officers, more connection with cases. That also decreases the amount of travel that it takes to get to [crime] scenes. Not only will it lead to ... less exhaustion. It’ll decrease overtime.”

Former Mayor Jane Byrne once created an Office of Public Safety to move one police superinten­dent out of the way to make way for another she preferred.

Lightfoot’s new Office of Public Safety Administra­tion is not about politics. It’s about efficiency, cost-cutting and putting more officers on the street.

Roughly 280 civilian employees in the finance, human resources, informatio­n technology and logistics divisions will come together at the new office at 35th and Michigan.

No civilian personnel will lose their jobs. But the consolidat­ion is expected to generate “savings over time” by replacing sworn officers with civilians and by reducing overtime expected to top $200 million this year for the three department­s.

Virtually every Chicago mayor talks about moving police officers from desk jobs to the street. None has managed to pull it off, acknowledg­ed Budget Director Susie Park,

CPD’s former deputy chief of finance and administra­tion.

The changes announced Friday are the “first down payment” toward “moving people back to the street,” Classen said. The next step is to eliminate some of the roughly 135 specialize­d units and move those officers back to the districts.

“We’re hoping to get another couple hundred [officers] from that,” he said.

Classen refused to identify specialize­d units on the chopping block, saying the mayor’s office is still “auditing where people are.”

The press release distribute­d by the mayor’s office quoted Johnson as saying he “welcomes” the change.

Classen underscore­d the point.

“The superinten­dent has always said that he’s a neighborho­od police guy. He’s a community policing guy. He wants people back in the districts,” the chief of staff said.

“As we’ve gone through this staffing surge, his feeling has been, we’ve got more people in the department. But we’re not getting enough back to the districts. He’s in support of anything that gets people back to the districts.”

 ?? FRAN SPIELMAN/SUN-TIMES ?? Budget Director Susie Park and chief of staff Maurice Classen talk Friday about Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s plan to put more police officers on the street by merging administra­tive functions of the Police and Fire Department­s and the Office of Emergency Management and Communicat­ions.
FRAN SPIELMAN/SUN-TIMES Budget Director Susie Park and chief of staff Maurice Classen talk Friday about Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s plan to put more police officers on the street by merging administra­tive functions of the Police and Fire Department­s and the Office of Emergency Management and Communicat­ions.
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