Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago buildings chief Frydland stepping down

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman Contributi­ng: Tim Novak

After five years as Chicago’s buildings commission­er and 31 years with the city,

Judy Frydland is calling it quits.

“I started in 1989 as an unpaid law clerk and worked my way up, then had a marvelous career and great support all the way throughout,” Frydland, whose resignatio­n takes effect June 30, said Tuesday.

“I have a mother that’s 90 years old. She’ll be 91 October 1, God willing. And I need to spend some time with my family. I love the city. I love my job. But my family has to come first at this time. I need to spend this time with my mom because, if something happens to her this year and I waited one more year, I don’t think

I could forgive myself. She’s been through so much in her life.”

Frydland’s mother and father, Rachmiel and Estelle Frydland, both survived the Holocaust with stories so chilling they could fill a book — and did, in her father’s case.

Her father’s entire family was wiped out by the Holocaust. Her mother’s family just barely escaped being annihilate­d.

Their daughter has spent the last five years running a city department once known as a revolving door for those at the top and a haven for corruption for inspectors at the bottom.

Not so under Judy Frydland.

In 2018, City Hall threw the book at the owner of a Little Village building where 10 children died in a rear coach house fire.

More recently, there was the disastrous smokestack demolition at a power plant in Little Village that prompted Mayor Lori Lightfoot to discover it had been 15 years since the last implosion in Chicago. Despite the dangers and need for “massive road closures” and sign-offs by at least five city agencies when explosives are used, there was “no separate, in-depth permitting process” for implosions.

For the most part, the Frydlandru­n Department of Buildings has been free from the embarrassi­ng scandals that used to be routine.

“Five years as building commission­er may be a record-breaker. I’m not sure. We got a modern building code. We streamline­d the permit process. We created a bad actors’ ordinance to go after bad contractor­s. We’ve done a lot,” Frydland said.

In an emailed statement, Lightfoot thanked Frydland for her “three decades of service to Chicago’s residents, businesses, and communitie­s.”

The mayor said Frydland “leaves behind a legacy of strengthen­ing City operations through modernizin­g our building codes, working with communitie­s to maintain housing stock, and streamlini­ng our permitting process.”

 ??  ?? Judy Frydland
Judy Frydland

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