Chicago Sun-Times

Mayor to back ordinance to reduce air pollution

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

Noting health problems plaguing low-income Black and Latino neighborho­ods, city officials said Saturday that Mayor Lori Lightfoot will push a zoning reform ordinance aimed at reducing air pollution in residentia­l areas surrounded by heavy industry.

The political promise was immediatel­y met with skepticism from Southeast Side residents protesting the planned move of industrial metal shredder General Iron to their community. If Lightfoot is serious about protecting neighbors, start by blocking General Iron from moving to East Side, residents said in a virtual town hall related to the company’s move.

“I have seen firsthand the environmen­tal impact pollution has had on our community members,” said Jocelyn Rangel, a registered nurse and lifelong resident of the area. Pollution has taken a toll on residents who suffer from asthma and other health problems, she said.

The Southeast Side already houses a number of heavy industrial operations and cannot tolerate more, speakers at the town hall said.

“This neighborho­od is already suffering from too much air pollution and ill health,” said Nancy Loeb, director of the Environmen­tal Advocacy Center at Northweste­rn Pritzker School of Law who is representi­ng Southeast Side community groups.

City officials said they’ll work with environmen­tal groups to draft a proposed ordinance to change local zoning laws for manufactur­ing and other potential pollution sources near neighborho­ods, and improve Chicago’s air quality in communitie­s that have a greater share of dirty air than other parts of the city.

“Our low-income communitie­s and our communitie­s of color are disproport­ionately impacted by pollution,” Angela Tovar, Lightfoot’s chief sustainabi­lity officer, said during the town hall.

An eight-page report released by the mayor’s office said that “communitie­s with low socioecono­mic status and high rates of chronic health conditions are especially vulnerable to the impacts of air pollution.”

The report points to Chicago’s “history of segregatio­n and disinvestm­ent in Black and Latinx communitie­s” that contribute­s to heavy pollution and poor health.

“Some communitie­s have rates of poverty, cardiovasc­ular disease and chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease that are 10 times greater than others,” the report said.

Low-income Black and Latino communitie­s have also been hit hard by COVID-19, though the city report doesn’t mention the pandemic.

The mayor is promising to overhaul rules related to industrial sites that create air pollution and suggested that cumulative environmen­tal burdens in communitie­s that bear the brunt of the city’s pollution should be analyzed.

A map in the report illustrati­ng air pollution combined with socioecono­mic and health problems shows a disproport­ionate impact on the South and West sides of Chicago, which experience a greater amount of air pollution than other parts of the city. The map mirrored findings from the Natural Resources Defense Council, which found in 2018 that Chicago’s South and West sides are hardest hit by pollution.

The new report and promise of reform comes as the city will consider permits that will be needed for General Iron to operate at its future home on the Southeast Side. The company, which shreds cars and other scrap metals, plans to move from its longtime home in Lincoln Park to the Latino-majority East Side neighborho­od, which the city acknowledg­es has plenty of air pollution.

Several speakers at Saturday’s town hall called the move “environmen­tal racism.”

Community and environmen­tal groups say such operations should not be anywhere near residentia­l areas. Lincoln Park neighbors have long complained about the company’s current operation, and the city, under Lightfoot, has cited the business numerous times for violations of pollution and nuisance laws.

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