Chicago Sun-Times

Feds tell mayor to hold off giving General Iron permit while ‘persuasive’ case against move is investigat­ed

- 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.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administra­tion should hold off on issuing a final operating permit for General Iron’s owner as the government investigat­es whether the move to the Southeast Side violates the civil rights of residents there, according to a federal official.

In a letter to the city’s Law Department, a U.S. Housing and Urban Developmen­t official in Chicago said a federal civil rights inquiry likely would be hampered if the city issues the permit.

Last month, HUD officials confirmed they were investigat­ing after Southeast Side community groups filed a complaint with the agency saying the business’ move from white, affluent Lincoln Park to a Latino-majority neighborho­od, surrounded by predominan­tly Black neighborho­ods, was a violation of federal fair housing laws.

The complaint alleges the city is aiding the transfer of the metal-shredding operations — a nuisance that causes air pollution — to the South Side through a Lightfoot administra­tion agreement signed with the business’ owner last year.

As a recipient of HUD funding, the city is required to adhere to the Fair Housing Act, which promotes integrated housing and aims to prevent segregatio­n. Chicago’s zoning and land-use practices are discrimina­tory, Southeast Side groups allege.

“The city’s actions to facilitate this transfer are central to this complaint,” Lon Meltesen, director of HUD’s Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunit­y in Chicago, said in a letter dated last week. “Any further actions to this effect could frustrate efforts to settle this matter.”

Meltesen added that a preliminar­y review of the complaint brought against the city “finds persuasive complainan­ts’ evidence that this transfer would subject complainan­t organizati­ons and the neighborho­ods they represent to serious and irreparabl­e injury.”

Under an agreement with the city signed in fall 2019, General Iron will stop accepting scrap metal at its North Side location at the end of the year and will begin dismantlin­g its operation there.

Owner Reserve Management Group is building a new shredding operation along the Calumet River at East 116th Street but needs a final city permit for so- called metal recycling. The company hopes to be up and running on the South Side within the first three months of 2021.

The fair housing complaint was brought by three groups: the Southeast Environmen­tal Task Force, the Southeast Side Coalition to Ban Petcoke and People for Community Recovery. The groups have pointed to city citations for pollution and nuisance. Recently, RMG paid $18,000 to settle its outstandin­g complaints with the city.

“I’m only hoping it’s indicative they are taking our complaint seriously,” said Peggy

Salazar, executive director of the Southeast Environmen­tal Task Force. “I hope HUD holds [the city] accountabl­e.”

A separate lawsuit in federal court in Chicago also alleges residents’ civil rights are being violated.

In his letter, Meltesen asked the city to respond to his request Tuesday, adding “your commitment to pause any action to facilitate this transfer of metal recycling operations is crucial to the successful resolution of this complaint.”

Meltesen didn’t return calls seeking comment. A HUD spokeswoma­n in Washington said the agency cannot publicly comment on cases under investigat­ion.

A spokeswoma­n for Lightfoot declined to comment on whether or how the city would answer. In a statement, the city said RMG’s applicatio­n for the permit has been filed, and informatio­n on a “community engagement process” will be announced this week.

In its own statement RMG said it expects the city “will conduct its own rigorous review of the operating permit applicatio­n, ensuring that the state and local government bodies with the closest interests and best informatio­n have and will engage in a fair process.”

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 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? General Iron wants to move its metal-shredding operation from Lincoln Park to the Southeast Side.
SUN-TIMES FILES General Iron wants to move its metal-shredding operation from Lincoln Park to the Southeast Side.

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