Chicago Sun-Times

$5.3 million subsidy OK’d for affordable homes in N. Lawndale, area still affected by ’68 riots

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

Five months ago, Mayor Lori Lightfoot and community groups pledged to build 250 homes in North Lawndale, a community still ravaged more than 50 years after the riots that followed the assassinat­ion of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

The plan called for selling city-owned parcels for $1 each to groups that have stitched together $27.5 million in private and public funds for constructi­on. On Monday, that ambitious plan to help rebuild Chicago’s West Side took a giant step forward.

The City Council’s Finance Committee agreed to provide $5.3 million from two West Side tax increment financing (TIF) districts to clean up and prepare sites.

“Anybody who knows anything about North Lawndale knows that, in ’68 when the riots came, they tore up a lot of our commercial districts as well as burned a lot of homes,” said Ald. Michael Scott Jr. (24th). “And we have not gotten back since then.

“My effort has been to develop housing in that community,” he said. “A hundred new houses in our community. I’m just so proud of this project . ... If this program works, hopefully, we will get to 1,000” homes.

The formidable city subsidy will keep the price of the homes affordable by removing “a lot of that cost, that burden that would [otherwise] go onto the homeowner,” Scott said.

The innovative approach to affordable housing is a partnershi­p between the city and United Power for Action and Justice, a coalition of organizati­ons. Also involved are Chicago Neighborho­od Initiative­s and the Lawndale Christian Developmen­t Corp.

The groups say there is $10 million in the new state budget to provide average subsidies of $30,000 to each homebuyer. And there is a $12.25 million revolving constructi­on fund provided by JP Morgan Chase and several foundation­s.

With the TIF and homeowner subsidies, the goal is to offer homes for no more than $230,000, according to CNI president David Doig, a former city planning commission­er and Chicago Park District superinten­dent.

“They’re about $270,000 or $280,000 all in. And then, when you strip out the site work and the environmen­tal cost, we can get these down to like $220,000 or $230,000,” Doig said.

Budget Committee Chairman Pat Dowell (3rd) was impressed that the model homes displayed in photograph­s at Monday’s Finance Committee meeting can be delivered “at that price point.”

The price will help “families who want to stay in city” remain in a community that is “on the up-rise,” Dowell said.

Housing Committee Chairman Harry Osterman (48th) added, “This is a really transforma­tive project, one that we should look to replicate around the city. … I am 110% in support.”

Near West Side Ald. Walter Burnett (27th) said he appreciate­s Doig “returning to his roots” on the West Side. “He started on the West Side, went out to Pullman. Now he’s coming back to the West Side. Maybe he’ll do something on the North Side, too, one day,” Burnett said.

During the August news conference when the North Lawndale program was unveiled, protesters used a megaphone to drown out the parade of elected officials at the podium. They claimed the homes would be built by outsiders and occupied by people who don’t live in North Lawndale.

On Monday, Scott addressed those fears head-on under questionin­g from Ald. Ray Lopez (15th), who feared the developer would seek a waiver from the 50% residency requiremen­t.

Noting that the Lawndale Christian Developmen­t Corporatio­n is led by Richard Townsell, a “community developer in his own right and a community resident,” Scott said Townsell is “trying to get 100% of the folks that are there as resident be builders.”

Also on Monday, the Finance Committee agreed to earmark $3.5 million in money from the Chicago/Central Park TIF to help Interfaith Housing Developmen­t Corp. bankroll a 43-unit affordable apartment complex at 414 N. Central Park in Burnett’s ward.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Ald. Michael Scott Jr. (24th) says, “If this program works, hopefully, we will get to 1,000” homes.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Ald. Michael Scott Jr. (24th) says, “If this program works, hopefully, we will get to 1,000” homes.

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