Chicago Sun-Times

CITY HITS BACK ON ‘UNFOUNDED’ CONCERNS OVER GENERAL IRON’S PLANNED MOVE

Lightfoot administra­tion accuses community groups of exaggerati­on, says fears about air pollution from General Iron’s planned move to Southeast Side are unwarrante­d

- 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 dismissed Southeast Side residents’ concerns about pollution from a planned car-shredding operation as “unfounded” and accused community groups of creating a “blizzard of hyperbolic allegation­s.”

In a letter to federal officials, a city lawyer defended the administra­tion’s role in relocating General Iron’s business from Lincoln Park to East Side and admonishes residents critical of the move.

“Allegation­s about negative environmen­tal impact of the additions and improvemen­ts to the facility are factually unfounded,” City Deputy Corporatio­n Counsel John Hendricks said in the letter sent late last week to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

HUD is investigat­ing a complaint from community groups that say residents’ civil rights are being violated as owner Reserve Management Group relocates its metalshred­ding business from Lincoln Park to a new facility at East 116th Street along the Calumet River. RMG needs a final permit from the city before it opens the new operation, and HUD asked the city to hold off on issuing one while it investigat­es.

The new operation will create more pollution in a majority-Latino area that already has poor air quality, while the city removes a nuisance from white, affluent Lincoln Park as that neighborho­od prepares for redevelopm­ent, community groups say.

A permit will be issued no sooner than January after a city review, Hendricks wrote, promising a process to “bring exacting scrutiny and public transparen­cy to bear on the facility’s expanded operations and compliance with environmen­tal standards.”

Hendricks added: “Another important fact lost in the blizzard of hyperbolic allegation­s is the fact that the RMG facility is more than 2,000 feet or the equivalent of almost seven football fields away from the nearest residence.”

That’s no reassuranc­e to some.

“The city is prioritizi­ng the wishes of this company over the asks and demands of residents,” said Chuck Stark, a biology teacher at nearby George Washington High School. “They are defending RMG.”

General Iron was purchased last year by RMG after signing an agreement with the city to shut down Lincoln Park operations. The city’s role in helping RMG open a new South Side site is central to the HUD complaint.

According to a 2019 “term sheet” between RMG and the Lightfoot administra­tion, “the city will reasonably cooperate with RMG in achieving the efficient, expeditiou­s transition of the business to the southside properties.”

In the recent letter, the city echoed a company defense that General Iron isn’t actually moving but instead building a new facility near where RMG now operates.

“General Iron is not ‘moving to the Southeast Side,’ ” Hendricks wrote. “Rather, RMG has purchased General Iron’s assets and will be incorporat­ing some of General Iron’s environmen­tal mitigation equipment … into a new, fully enclosed, state- of-the-art shredder.”

RMG, which has said it expects a “rigorous” review from the city but expects to get the permit, recently settled numerous General Iron citations, including an explosion in May, for $18,000.

Hendricks said in his letter that past violations of city pollution and nuisance laws should have no bearing on the pending permit.

“Any past environmen­tal complaints against the General Iron facility are of no relevance at all to the RMG facility,” Hendricks said. “RMG has operated safely for decades.”

The letter does not mention the May explosion.

A lawyer for one of the Southeast Side community groups called Hendricks’ letter “deeply troubling.”

The letter “sets the city up as the permit’s defender — while once again dismissing and even denigratin­g the very real health and environmen­tal concerns of the residents of the Southeast Side,” Nancy Loeb, director of the Environmen­tal Advocacy Clinic at the Northweste­rn Pritzker School of Law, said in a statement.

In addition to the HUD review, Lightfoot and the city also are being sued by a pastor and a pair of South Side residents alleging similar civil rights violations in federal court in Chicago.

“The city’s lawyers are actively doing the bidding of General Iron,” Victor Henderson, a lawyer for the group in the federal lawsuit, said in a statement.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ??
SUN-TIMES FILES
 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Workers build a scale house at a planned metal-shredding facility near South Burley Avenue and East 116th Street last month. The facility is owned by Reserve Management Group, which owns General Iron in Lincoln Park.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Workers build a scale house at a planned metal-shredding facility near South Burley Avenue and East 116th Street last month. The facility is owned by Reserve Management Group, which owns General Iron in Lincoln Park.

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