Chicago Sun-Times

General Iron gets state approval to open car-shredding operation on Southeast Side

- BY BRETT CHASE, STAFF REPORTER bchase@suntimes.com | @brettchase

General Iron will be allowed to build its new car-shredding operation on the Southeast Side, Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administra­tion ruled Thursday, despite warnings from residents and local politician­s about the health risk from added pollution in the Latino-majority community.

The Illinois Environmen­tal Protection Agency said it approved the constructi­on and air pollution control permit for General Iron to move from Lincoln Park to the East Side neighborho­od because the company met the agency’s guidelines for approval, though some added requiremen­ts were put in the permit to reduce emissions from the facility.

“The agency must act on substantiv­e issues within its express statutory and regulatory authority, not public opposition or favor for projects,” Illinois EPA said in an accompanyi­ng document with the permit. “That a project is located in one place or another, or is moving from one place to another, is properly the realm of zoning and land-use decision making. To this end, the city of Chicago made clear decisions.”

The state’s decision comes as community organizers, environmen­tal groups and Chicago politician­s implored Pritzker and his environmen­tal agency to deny a constructi­on permit to the business because of a history of pollution violations and because of the potential health impacts on a community that already suffers high rates of asthma and other health problems. Residents and elected officials have called the decision to allow the operation to move from Lincoln Park to the Latino-majority East Side environmen­tal racism.

“While the city is improving and investing . . . we get the garbage,” said community activist Gina Ramirez.

The state agency responded to those charges in its document, saying “the Illinois EPA strongly rejects any insinuatio­n that racism played any role in the review of this permit applicatio­n. The agency’s review was performed strictly according to relevant legal and technical requiremen­ts.”

In a separate statement, a Pritzker spokeswoma­n said the governor would work with legislator­s to strengthen the state’s authority on environmen­tal permits.

General Iron has said it will have adequate air pollution controls, but environmen­tal lawyers working with activists disagreed and called a draft permit offered earlier by the Illinois EPA extremely weak in a heavily industrial area that was formerly home to multiple steelmaker­s. On Thursday, the agency said it heard the criticism and strengthen­ed pollution control requiremen­ts, including installati­on of air monitoring devices and limits on emissions and hours of operation.

There was a push from Chicago politician­s to deny the permit or delay a decision. On Wednesday, six South Side lawmakers wrote a letter to the governor and to Illinois EPA urging denial of the permit because it would add pollution to the area’s already poor air quality.

The community groups also argued that the Pritzker administra­tion should examine more than 30 pollution and nuisance citations against General Iron from the city of Chicago just since December. Illinois EPA officials said they would not consider those violations in making their decision.

The Pritzker spokeswoma­n said in the statement that the agency’s “hands were tied” because of legal limitation­s. “There is a broader regulatory problem that most severely impacts the health and safety of low-income communitie­s, especially those of color,” she said. “The Environmen­tal Protection Act needs to be modernized, including considerat­ion for the concentrat­ion of emitting sources in environmen­tal justice communitie­s.”

General Iron said it had little choice in leaving its longtime home on the North Side as the area around the 1909 N. Clifton Avenue site is being transforme­d by the $6 billion Lincoln Yards developmen­t. In 2018, General Iron announced a merger with Reserve Management Group (RMG) that would move the metal-shredding operation to South Burley Avenue and 116th Street along the Calumet River. Last year, RMG completed its acquisitio­n of the business and most of General Iron’s assets.

“We are looking forward to commencing operations in early 2021 with the most technologi­cally advanced facility available,” RMG said in a statement. “The permit imposes strict conditions that will ensure we keep our commitment to respect and protect air quality and public health.”

Brett Chase’s reporting on the environmen­t and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

 ?? GOOGLE ?? General Iron was given the OK by regulators to move to 11600 S. Burley Ave. on the Southeast Side.
GOOGLE General Iron was given the OK by regulators to move to 11600 S. Burley Ave. on the Southeast Side.

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