Chicago Sun-Times

MAYOR VOWS TO END POVERTY IN CHICAGO

Demands business leaders help bankroll her plan to rebuild 10 neglected South, West Side neighborho­ods

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

Declaring “poverty is killing us,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot vowed Friday to end it in Chicago “in the next generation.”

Lightfoot’s tough-love, Valentine’s Day speech — delivered before a City Club of Chicago audience of movers-and-shakers at the members-only Union League Club — shined a harsh and unforgivin­g spotlight on a problem, she said, has been ignored for too long.

In fact, she described Chicago as a shrinking city that’s “dying from the inside out” because of decades of deliberate neglect and disinvestm­ent.

How else to explain that one of every five Chicagoans lives below the federal poverty level, one of every 10 lives in “extreme poverty” and 17% lack a high school diploma?

“Am I making you uncomforta­ble? I mean to. Facing these hard truths is not easy. The process is painful. But face it we must,” she said.

“We have our fingerprin­ts all over the impoverish­ed conditions in which so many of our residents languish. We did this … by using government as a tool to create and enforce race-based discrimina­tion . ... We did this by voting for politician­s who embraced this ethos and used every tool at their disposal to perpetuate the deprivatio­n and disenfranc­hisement of people who looked like me.”

David Reifman, who served as former Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s planning and developmen­t commission­er, took the high road as he hustled out of the speech.

“There’s a lot of work still to do in the neighborho­ods, and I appreciate her singular focus on the issue,” he said.

Asked later whether she was referring to Richard J. Daley, Richard M. Daley, Emanuel or all of the above, Lightfoot would only say, “The list is long.” She said her goal is not to “point the finger of blame at any particular person” for a system “created and perpetuate­d for decades.”

Rather, Lightfoot said she is determined to solve the problem — and use all of the tools at her disposal along with some new ones.

She vowed to introduce a “Tenant Protection Package” that steers clear of rent control but extends the notice period for no-cause evictions beyond 30 days; requires landlords to determine an applicant’s ability to rent before considerin­g prior incarcerat­ion history; and gives Woodlawn residents a right of first refusal to buy multi-family buildings.

The mayor demanded more business leaders step up to help bankroll her plan to rebuild 10 neglected South and West Side neighborho­ods and that Chicago’s notoriousl­y white trade unions do even more to diversify their ranks and recruit black, Hispanic and women apprentice­s.

She also wants more vocational training in Chicago Public Schools, calling a career as an electricia­n or a plumber a ticket to the middle class.

It wasn’t the first time Lightfoot has talked about poverty. She had already called a “poverty summit,” which will be held next week, as a citywide call to arms.

 ?? FRAN SPIELMAN/SUN-TIMES ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot talks to reporters after speaking to the City Club of Chicago.
FRAN SPIELMAN/SUN-TIMES Mayor Lori Lightfoot talks to reporters after speaking to the City Club of Chicago.

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