Chicago Sun-Times

TOUGH SHREDDING

Alderman to oppose General Iron’s move of metal operation to S.E. Side, activists say

- Brett Chase’s reporting on the environmen­t and public health is made possible by a grant from the Chicago Community Trust. BY BRETT CHASE, STAFF REPORTER bchase@suntimes.com | @brettchase

Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza (10th) has told community organizers that she will publicly oppose a controvers­ial metal-shredding operation’s move to their East Side neighborho­od, according to four people who took part in a conference call with her this week.

The planned move of General Iron from Lincoln Park to an industrial area along the Calumet River at South Burley Avenue and 116th Street later this year has been contentiou­s since it was announced in July 2018. Residents say they are concerned about potential air pollution from the facility in a community that has a history of environmen­tal problems.

“Having her backing is definitely what the community needs right now,” said Gina Ramirez, a Southeast Side organizer who said Garza made the promise on a call with several environmen­tal groups on Wednesday. Three other people on the call confirmed her statements in interviews with the Sun-Times this week.

John Heroff, Garza’s policy adviser, said the alderman will soon make a statement on the matter but declined to comment on the meeting with the community members.

Cited by city

On May 18, the company was fined $6,000 by the city after two explosions occurred at General Iron’s North Side location, which added to community concern in Garza’s ward about the safety of the new location in addition to air pollution concerns, said Ramirez, who is a member of the South East Side Coalition to Ban Petcoke and the Southeast Environmen­tal Task Force.

At its current location at 1909 Clifton Ave., General Iron has been the target of numerous complaints from nearby residents and has been slapped with multiple violations of city and federal environmen­tal laws. In 2018, General Iron announced that it was entering into a “strategic partnershi­p” with Reserve Management Group that would bring the car and metal shredder to the Southeast Side where RMG already operates several businesses.

In September, Garza signaled support for the move after the company agreed to deploy an enclosed shredder equipped with suction hoods, high-efficiency filters, solar panels and air monitoring technologi­es.

“After working alongside the city and General Iron to carefully review the company’s proposal, we are confident in the current plans to protect the environmen­tal health of our community while allowing additional jobs for our residents. I commend the city of Chicago for taking the initiative to broker this agreement that will give all parties even greater assurance that the company will exhaust all environmen­tal measures as part of its relocation and expansion to the 10th Ward,” she said in a statement at the time.

The new facility is expected to be built pending a permit approval from the Illinois Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

Late Thursday, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said she “is committed to protecting the health and wellness of Chicago’s residents and remains steadfast in holding General Iron accountabl­e as it executes a planned merger with RMG.”

The statement continued: “In approving the permitting for the new facility, the city required that the new site have enhanced environmen­tal controls, and the company has committed to meeting these requiremen­ts. Mayor Lightfoot remains in conversati­on with Ald. Garza to continue to monitor the situation and ensure that all regulatory and environmen­tal standards are met.

Randall Samborn, a spokesman for General Iron and RMG, didn’t comment.

Years of problems in ward

For the past seven years, Southeast Side groups have been fighting industrial polluters that have blown petroleum coke dust into the air and contaminat­ed the soil with the metal manganese. Tenth Ward residents have become more vocal about General Iron’s planned move in recent weeks, and a community petition, that organizers say has 3,000 signatures, is circulatin­g to pressure Garza and Lightfoot to stop it, Ramirez said.

Lincoln Park residents have long complained about the visible dust from General Iron’s site. East Side residents say they don’t want the same problems, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“It’s time for Chicago to prioritize the health and well-being of all residents, not just those on the North Side,” said Nancy Loeb, director of the Environmen­tal Advocacy Center at the Northweste­rn Pritzker School of Law.

Loeb, who is advising community organizers along with the Natural Resources Defense Council, said Garza was also asked by advocates to support a halt on any new constructi­on or permits of industrial metal shredders through at least the end of the year and preferably during the length of the pandemic.

The parties would also like Garza to object to the Illinois EPA air permit for General Iron and asked her to encourage Lightfoot and the city Department of Public Health to craft stringent rules on all metalshred­ding companies.

The EPA permit “must be denied due to the disproport­ionate harms that General Iron poses,” said Meleah Geertsma, a senior attorney for NRDC. Garza “can weigh in with the Illinois EPA lending her voice to those of her constituen­ts.”

The Illinois EPA is taking public comment on the General Iron air permit through June 13 and has received more than 90 comments via email, said agency spokeswoma­n Kim Biggs.

 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ?? ABOVE: Gina Ramirez, a community organizer and Southeast Side resident, is concerned about General Iron’s plan to open a metal-shredding plant near her home. LEFT: The approximat­e site of the planned plant near 116th Street and Avenue O on Thursday.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ABOVE: Gina Ramirez, a community organizer and Southeast Side resident, is concerned about General Iron’s plan to open a metal-shredding plant near her home. LEFT: The approximat­e site of the planned plant near 116th Street and Avenue O on Thursday.
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 ??  ?? Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza
Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza

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