Chicago Sun-Times

Though Lightfoot halted demolition at shuttered Little Village coal plant, activists fear it’s still imminent

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

Days after Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced that another demolition at a shuttered coal-fired plant in Little Village would temporaril­y be halted, a group of community activists on Sunday pushed to prevent the building from coming down “until COVID-19 passes.”

Lightfoot’s administra­tion gave the goahead Thursday to demolish a “turbine structure” at the site of the former Crawford power plant. But when protesters showed up at Lightfoot’s Logan Square home that night, she swiftly called off the demolition and said it “will not move forward for the next several days.”

However, activist Raul Montes Jr. fears the demolition is still imminent.

Montes and Blue Island Mayor Domingo Vargas led a news conference Sunday near the site and pushed for a moratorium on any demolition­s at the site until October. They were joined by Kenneth Klein, a Little Village resident who believes he developed lung cancer and COPD from living near the plant.

“We want transparen­cy,” Montes told the Chicago Sun-Times. “People were not getting notice of the demolition that was going to occur. There’s no transparen­cy, and we just feel that we want justice for this. We’ve gone through enough already”

The push for added transparen­cy comes after an April 11 smokestack implosion at the site sent a cloud of dust billowing through Little Village. Local Ald. Mike Rodriguez (22nd) has also voiced his opposition to any immediate demolition work and has called for work crews to leave the site.

Montes worries the dust from the blast exacerbate­d the conditions of individual­s such as Klein and others with respirator­y illnesses, who are particular­ly susceptibl­e to COVID-19.

In the wake of the debacle in April, Lightfoot blamed Hilco Redevelopm­ent Partners, slapped the firm with $68,000 in fines and vowed to overhaul a flawed city regulatory system that allowed it to happen. She also ordered a six-month moratorium on implosions at the site — a ban that wouldn’t have affected the recently delayed demolition.

Neverthele­ss, Montes believes the city’s actions were nothing more than “a slap on the wrist to a company that has a lot of money.” Meanwhile, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul has sued Hilco, MCM Management Corp. and Controlled Demolition Inc. for violating state pollution laws.

In reversing course last week, Lightfoot vowed to engage with the local community to discuss “the structural­ly dangerous condition of that small building.” But as far as Montes can tell, that hasn’t happened, and he now fears that Lightfoot will simply “go ahead with the demolition” in the coming days.

“We’re being stonewalle­d,” said Montes, who is also pushing for an evacuation of the area surroundin­g the site in the event of an explosion.

Lightfoot’s office didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

 ?? PROVIDED ?? Little Village resident and cancer patient Kenneth Klein, activist Raul Montes Jr. and Blue Island Mayor Domingo Vargas hold a news conference at the site of the shuttered Crawford coal plant in Little Village on Sunday.
PROVIDED Little Village resident and cancer patient Kenneth Klein, activist Raul Montes Jr. and Blue Island Mayor Domingo Vargas hold a news conference at the site of the shuttered Crawford coal plant in Little Village on Sunday.

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