Chicago Sun-Times

Zoning panel to vote on Pilsen district this year; protesters disrupt Tunney’s restaurant

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

As community advocates continue to push back against a proposal to turn the Pilsen neighborho­od into a landmark district, Ald. Tom Tunney (44th) said the Zoning Committee he chairs is now slated to cast a crucial vote on the long- delayed plan in early December.

The news came Sunday after protesters disrupted the brunch rush at Tunney’s Ann Sather restaurant in Lake View. As activists in a passing car caravan blared their horns, others stormed the kitchen where Tunney was working and raised concerns the proposed ordinance would lead to further gentrifica­tion and added costs for building owners.

“[Tunney is] very upset right now,” Moises Moreno, an organizer with Pilsen Alliance, told reporters after disrupting the brunch service. “He should be — because he’s messing with the wrong community.”

Tunney later told the Sun-Times a vote has been set for the Dec. 1 Zoning Committee meeting. And while he acknowledg­ed the “neighborho­od will probably win out,” Tunney warned that rejecting the plan would leave its historic buildings open for demolition.

Meanwhile, Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th) sided with his constituen­ts and continued to oppose the proposed ordinance, which initially sought to create a landmark district covering nearly 900 buildings from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

“It would absolutely mean more displaceme­nt [and] higher costs. It will certainly accelerate a process that the people have been concerned about,” said Sigcho-Lopez, adding that at least 10,000 primarily Latino residents have been pushed out of Pilsen over the last decade.

On Thursday, WBEZ reported Chicago’s planning commission­er, Maurice Cox, pitched a new option that would protect 465 buildings in the neighborho­od. Sigcho-Lopez scoffed at that proposal as he continued pushing a separate ordinance that would create a “demolition-free” zone covering the same area as the proposed historic landmark district plus the site of St. Adalbert’s Church.

The lengthy battle over Pilsen’s landmark designatio­n was extended in May, when Sigcho-Lopez and other members of the City Council voted unanimousl­y on a six-month delay to accommodat­e the needs of the Chicago Department of Planning and Developmen­t. Given the Landmarks Commission already approved the plan last May, an ordinance is set to take effect in January if it’s not voted on.

However, Sigcho-Lopez claimed Tunney and Mayor Lori Lightfoot “unilateral­ly decided to vote on this extension” instead of allowing a vote ahead of the initial deadline in May.

“It is disingenuo­us for them to keep repeating that I voted in favor of the ordinance [when] their procedural maneuvers left me no choice,” he said.

Lightfoot’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment, but Tunney said he was abundantly clear about the timeline.

“We had three . . . Zoom meetings, and I told the aldermen that subsequent to the three meetings, we would be on the next Zoning Committee,” he said.

But for Kyle Frayn, a Pilsen resident who attended Sunday’s protest, the drawn- out process serves as an example of “the city machine politics trampling the community’s interests and needs.”

 ?? TOM SCHUBA/SUN-TIMES ?? Kyle Frayn holds a sign targeting Ald. Tom Tunney and opposing turning Pilsen into a landmark district on Oct. 25.
TOM SCHUBA/SUN-TIMES Kyle Frayn holds a sign targeting Ald. Tom Tunney and opposing turning Pilsen into a landmark district on Oct. 25.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States