Chicago Sun-Times

LOOP LEASE FOR ENVIRONMEN­T DEPT., POLICE OVERSIGHT PANEL OK’D BY COMMITTEE AMID GRIPES

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

A seemingly routine proposal to lease downtown office space ran into a buzz saw of opposition Tuesday from City Council members demanding that city department­s fill vacant government-owned space in Chicago neighborho­ods.

Over those objections, the Housing Committee ultimately agreed to enlarge the city’s footprint at 2 N. La Salle by 16,097 square feet, at a cost of $36,271 per month, but only because the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountabi­lity and reborn Department of Environmen­t desperatel­y need the space to solve an immediate crisis hampering operations.

The president of the police oversight panel, Anthony Driver, said the commission has lost staff and will “continue to lose more” if it is forced to continue sharing the seventhflo­or space at 2 N. La Salle with other city department­s. The space is so cramped that Executive Director Adam Gross is the only person with a private office.

“There was a detective who reached out to me who … has some concerns that she wanted to share, but I have to take her to a coffee shop. ... It’s inappropri­ate to be having those types of conversati­ons in a public space and not actually have an office,” Driver told the committee.

“Our lawyer who deals with very sensitive informatio­n doesn’t have an office,” Driver said. “When we did the superinten­dent search, we had 54 applicatio­ns of police leaders all around this country. I was very worried about a leak and folks’ informatio­n being made public.”

Driver said the space shortage is a problem both in filling jobs and in accommodat­ing people already hired. One staffer who just started and another about to come on board have “nowhere to go,” he said.

Deputy Chief Sustainabi­lity Officer Jared Policicchi­o told a similar story about cramped space hampering the new Department of Environmen­t’s ability to augment its skeletal staff of five with nine more full-time employees.

“We have no location for those folks to sit,” Policicchi­o said.

“Our top priority is building out that staff as quickly as possible because we can’t deliver on the agenda that you all want us to be working on if we don’t get those positions filled and have a place for them to go.”

Michelle Woods of the Department of Assets, Informatio­n and Services assured alderperso­ns she is “working to identify space” in Chicago neighborho­ods to replace 2 N. La Salle and other downtown office buildings. An assessment of City Hall is also underway to optimize space in that landmark building, she said.

But, that wasn’t enough to convince South Side Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20th) that a 15year lease at 2 N. La Salle, where the city has already paid $28 million to rent space, was the best deal for Chicago taxpayers.

That amount “could have fixed every vacant building that the city owns in my ward. ... For $28 million, we’ve bought that building. … I’m pretty sure we’d have bought that building twice,” Taylor said.

“And this thing about being downtown? I hate downtown. I hate the traffic. … Nothing is convenient here. … Please do not bring me back another lease with somebody talking about they need to move or they’re outgrowing the space because they gonna be in the 20th Ward on the community side messing with me,” Taylor said. “We all refuse to do this for anybody else.”

West Side Ald. Monique Scott (24th) said it’s “mind-boggling” that the city has already shelled out $28 million to lease space across the street from City Hall for six city department­s.

“Downtown is nice, and it’s exclusive, and it’s lovely. But … the work that you’re doing is in communitie­s. It’s not downtown. … If you’re serving us, you need to come inside the community instead of in your safe space for $28 million that we then in our communitie­s have to answer to because you want an office downtown.”

Housing Committee Chair Byron SigchoLope­z (25th) wrapped up the 90-minute gripe session with a promise.

“This is a process that must be revised” to take into account “how we are utilizing our existing assets as well as exploring new opportunit­ies in our neighborho­ods,” he said. “We will not have any additional leases without a review of such policies.”

 ?? GOOGLE MAPS ?? The city already leases space at 2 N. La Salle but will be expanding there.
GOOGLE MAPS The city already leases space at 2 N. La Salle but will be expanding there.

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