Chicago Sun-Times

PASTOR URGES MAYOR: DROP CASINO BID FROM COMPANY TIED TO PARKWAY GARDENS

- BY MITCH DUDEK, STAFF REPORTER mdudek@suntimes.com | @mitchdudek

A South Side religious leader called on Mayor Lori Lightfoot to remove the owners of a housing complex that’s been hit with a slew of code violations in recent months from the pool of potential bidders for a Chicago casino.

Bishop Larry Trotter, senior pastor of Sweet Holy Spirit Church, said Related Midwest should not be rewarded with a casino because of its “deplorable” track record as the owner of the Parkway Gardens housing complex in Woodlawn, where city inspectors found more than 50 building violations in March.

“The potential owner of the city’s first casino has this slum landlord thing over his head, then why would the city applaud him to be one of the final candidates?” Trotter said, referring to the president of the company, Curt Bailey.

Related, a real estate and developmen­t firm, has partnered with

Chicago-based Rush Street Gaming in a bid to build a casino in Chicago. Their bid is one of five bids Lightfoot is considerin­g. Her pick would need City Council approval and a green light from the Illinois Gaming Board.

A spokeswoma­n for Related didn’t immediatel­y return a request for comment. The company pledged earlier this year to address the building code violations at Parkway Gardens.

“If we just remain silent, there will be more and more deplorable housing issues and at the end of the day our people suffer,” Trotter said Tuesday during a news conference at his church in South Chicago. Several members of his church live at Parkway Gardens, he said.

Messages left with a spokesman for Lightfoot weren’t immediatel­y returned.

Related is one of Chicago’s most active developers. Among its projects is a plan to turn 62 acres along the Chicago River on the Near South Side into “The 78” — the city’s 78th community.

Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20th), who’s been highly critical of Related’s management of Parkway Gardens, said Tuesday that she agrees with Trotter.

“Why should Related be rewarded with a casino and The 78? We should not be rewarding people who treat our neighbors and citizens like crap,” Taylor said.

Taylor said Related has made some progress in addressing issues at Parkway Gardens but “is not moving fast enough.”

Related put the massive housing complex up for sale in April — touting its contract with federal housing authoritie­s that ensures subsidized rent for years to come — but weeks later pulled it off the market.

As a child, former first lady Michelle Obama lived in Parkway Gardens before it was turned into 694 units of affordable housing.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Bishop Larry Trotter says Tuesday, “If we just remain silent, there will be more and more deplorable housing issues and at the end of the day our people suffer.”
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Bishop Larry Trotter says Tuesday, “If we just remain silent, there will be more and more deplorable housing issues and at the end of the day our people suffer.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States