Chicago Sun-Times

Lightfoot says she’s heard demands of hunger strikers fighting General Iron move

- 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 told hunger strikers protesting the relocation of General Iron to the Southeast Side that she wants to work with community members to address concerns about pollution and health but stopped short of agreeing to the protesters’ demand to deny a permit to the metal-shredding operation.

In a letter dated Tuesday, Lightfoot laid out a number of her aspiration­s and some achievemen­ts related to social, racial and health equity but repeated a statement that General Iron owner Reserve Management Group’s applicatio­n for a city permit is under review. Community members have opposed the facility, saying it will bring more air pollution to an area of the city already burdened by environmen­tal hazards.

Three protesters began a hunger strike almost three weeks ago, and since that time, the number has grown. They demand that Lightfoot reject the permit that will allow RMG to open a car- and metal shredding operation at East 116th Street along the Calumet River. Southeast Side residents have said the relocation of General Iron from mostly white, affluent Lincoln Park to the Latino- and Black-majority Southeast Side is environmen­tal racism. Multiple federal government bodies are investigat­ing civil rights complaints related to the city’s part in moving the business, to be rebranded Southside Recycling, to the Southeast Side.

“I have heard your demand and understand that your position, and the position of the broader environmen­tal justice movement, is for a denial of this permit,” Lightfoot wrote. “We are committed to following all pertinent regulation­s around this permit process.”

Lightfoot promised to incorporat­e environmen­tal considerat­ions into future planning efforts around the Southeast Side, including remediatio­n funding for contaminat­ed land, and talked about her commitment to equitable distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccines.

The letter wasn’t enough to stop the hunger strikers, who now number more than 10, including Ald. Byron Sigcho Lopez (25th). Sigcho Lopez joined the strike Tuesday and said he would abstain from food “as long as it is needed.”

In a statement, the strikers criticized the mayor’s response.

“After weeks of hunger strike, Mayor Lightfoot refuses to commit to changing policies that are rooted in racism and deny General Iron’s permit,” the statement reads. “The mayor’s letter is evasive to our demand.”

Lightfoot “has the power to stop this hunger strike and deny the permit at any moment,” Sigcho Lopez said in a text.

The hunger strike has drawn support from local, state and federal politician­s, including former Gov. Pat Quinn, who helped draft a citizens resolution filed at City Hall on Tuesday to urge a denial of the permit.

 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? A few dozen protesters held a vigil at City Hall on Tuesday demanding the city stop the relocation of a General Iron plant to the Southeast Side.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES A few dozen protesters held a vigil at City Hall on Tuesday demanding the city stop the relocation of a General Iron plant to the Southeast Side.

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