Chicago Sun-Times

INDUSTRIAL POLLUTERS WOULD FACE NEW HURDLES TO OPEN UNDER ZONING LAW CHANGES PROPOSED BY MAYOR

- 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.

Industrial polluters would face more hurdles to set up near homes, schools and parks under Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s proposed change to the city’s zoning law.

The measure follows a promise made by Lightfoot in July to reduce air pollution in the city’s Black and Latino communitie­s and is expected to be introduced at the City Council meeting Wednesday. An amendment to the city’s zoning ordinance would require heavy industrial sources of pollution, like asphalt plants, to undergo more scrutiny, including required public hearings, before they are allowed to open even in designated manufactur­ing areas of the city.

Specifical­ly, industrial operators would be required to seek what’s called special-use permits, which mandate more procedural requiremen­ts and approvals and allows for public hearings before city approval.

Community and environmen­tal groups, citing several industrial developmen­ts on the South and West sides, have been pressing Lightfoot to stop sources of air pollution from moving into areas of the city that already suffer from poor air quality.

Southeast Side residents are fighting industrial metal shredder General Iron’s move from Lincoln Park to their community. Little Village activists want the city to halt the developmen­t of a Target distributi­on center that would bring hundreds of diesel trucks to their neighborho­od each day. McKinley Park organizers have said the MAT Asphalt plant across from their park should not have been built.

It’s unclear whether city approvals for any of the controvers­ial developmen­ts would have turned out differentl­y under the proposed changes. Lightfoot’s top environmen­tal adviser said the asphalt plant, opened in 2018, is an example of a project that would have received more scrutiny under the mayor’s zoning ordinance.

MAT Asphalt is “exactly the type of developmen­t we had in mind when we put this ordinance together,” said Angela Tovar, Lightfoot’s chief sustainabi­lity officer. “We can no longer rely on these zoning measures to guide where these businesses go.”

The law would also require certain entities, such as day cares and schools, to go through a rigorous review before they’re allowed to locate close to industrial sites, a requiremen­t that provides “better, more proactive planning to mitigate more environmen­tal harm,” Tovar said.

Additional­ly, no new landfills, incinerato­rs or mining operations would be allowed in the city, though Tovar said there are no current applicatio­ns to the city for such sites.

Lightfoot announced she would back zoning changes in July, saying the city had to address the issue of polluted communitie­s. Her office also released a report linking poor health in low-income communitie­s of color to the impacts of air pollution. Chicago’s “history of segregatio­n and disinvestm­ent in Black and Latinx communitie­s” was to blame, the report said.

Community groups say the Lightfoot measure doesn’t go far enough.

“Instead of actually fixing what their air report is telling them, they are just trying to do the bare minimum,” said Kim Wasserman, executive director of Little Village Environmen­tal Justice Organizati­on.

Tovar said the proposed ordinance is a first step and promised to work with environmen­tal groups on additional laws, such as one recognizin­g cumulative burdens of neighborho­ods already inundated with pollution.

“The changes to the zoning ordinance are a step forward but just a step, and more changes are needed,” said Nancy Loeb, director of the Environmen­tal Advocacy Center at Northweste­rn Pritzker School of Law who is representi­ng residents opposed to General Iron’s move to the Southeast Side.

The same type of zoning rules Lightfoot proposes, she said, are allowing General Iron to “move from the affluent, mostly white Lincoln Park neighborho­od to the heavily burdened, low-income community of color on the Southeast Side.”

 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s top environmen­tal adviser cited the opening of MAT Asphalt in McKinley Park as a reason to change city zoning rules.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s top environmen­tal adviser cited the opening of MAT Asphalt in McKinley Park as a reason to change city zoning rules.

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