Chicago Sun-Times

Lightfoot expands Sunday hours to 10 more branch libraries

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s rolling plan to establish Sunday hours at Chicago’s 77 branch libraries will expand this month to 10 more branches across the city.

Starting April 18, the Altgeld, Mount Greenwood, South Shore, Back of the Yards, Chinatown, Merlo, Edgewater, Independen­ce, Richard M. Daley and Austin branch libraries will open on Sundays from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Those 10 will join nine other branch libraries that have been open on Sundays since December 2019. The Harold Washington Library Center downtown and three regional libraries — Woodson, Sulzer and Legler — are open 68 hours per week, including Sundays.

The Sunday expansion was bankrolled by an $18 million property tax increase in Lightfoot’s first budget. It was supposed to come to all 77 branch libraries as fast as a hiring blitz would allow. But the citywide rollout stalled during the pandemic, as the city was forced to close its libraries during the stay-at-home shutdown under pressure from library employees.

Sunday hours are now expected at all 77 branch libraries by the end of this year.

Lightfoot chose the $7.5 million Altgeld branch library built by her predecesso­r as the backdrop for Wednesday’s long-awaited announceme­nt.

The 14,164-square-foot branch at 955 E. 131st Street is the fourth partnershi­p forged between the Chicago Public Library and the Chicago Housing Authority.

Two years ago, the library and the CHA opened three projects that combined branch libraries and affordable and mixed-income housing — in the Little Italy, Northtown and Independen­ce neighborho­ods.

The Altgeld branch is the fourth. It was built to serve residents of the CHA’s Altgeld Gardens and will house a child care facility operated by the Centers for New Horizons; a YOUmedia space for teens, complete with a student recording studio; and a Maker Lab for patrons of all ages.

Lightfoot decided to expand library service during her first months in office, which came as no surprise.

Former Library Commission­er Mary Dempsey, whose 2011 resignatio­n protested Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s draconian cuts to library hours and services, is a close friend, former co-worker, campaign advisor and contributo­r to Lightfoot.

And Lightfoot’s wife, Amy Eshleman, served as an assistant library commission­er under Dempsey. Eshleman is credited with helping to develop YOUmedia, a digital center tailor-made for teenagers. Eshleman attended Wednesday’s announceme­nt.

Newly appointed Library Commission­er Chris Brown said he “can’t help but be proud” of the city’s commitment to revitalizi­ng libraries and expanding access.

“Whether partnering with the Chicago Housing Authority to design and revitalize libraries or eliminatin­g overdue fines so every Chicagoan is ensured access or renovating and re-establishi­ng a regional library on the city’s West Side as part of the mayor’s Invest South/West initiative, the Chicago Public Library is providing more equitable services,” Brown said.

“And with the support of Mayor Lightfoot, by the end of ’21, all 81 Chicago Public Library branches in your own neighborho­ods will be open on Sundays.”

Ald. Anthony Beale (9th), whose ward includes the Altgeld branch, joined the mayor for Wednesday’s announceme­nt. He made it a point to credit Emanuel for the new branch and for the innovative partnershi­p with the CHA.

Afterward, Beale argued the money spent on the Sunday expansion could be better spent on more pressing problems.

One Summer Chicago applicatio­ns being accepted

Also on Wednesday, Lightfoot announced applicatio­ns are open for One Summer Chicago, the annual summer jobs program for young people, ages 14 to 24.

The program will run from July 5 to Aug. 13 and include both remote and socially distanced, in-person jobs and life skills training for 21,000 young people. The deadline to apply for those coveted positions is June 11. Applicatio­ns can be found at OneSummerC­hicago.org.

 ?? LEE BEY PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? The new Altgeld Family Resource Center includes a Chicago Public Library branch.
LEE BEY PHOTOGRAPH­Y The new Altgeld Family Resource Center includes a Chicago Public Library branch.

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