Daily Southtown

Sports complex latest chapter in saga of Tinley property

- Ted Slowik

The bizarre saga of the state’s former mental health center property in Tinley Park has more twists and turns than athletes competing in a diving or gymnastics meet.

The latest wrinkle pits the redundantl­y named Tinley ParkPark District against the village of Tinley Park.

The Park District recently revealed ambitious plans to develop a recreation­al complex on the 280-acre property northwest of Harlem Avenue and 183rd Street.

The Park District’s proposal blindsided village officials like an unblocked blitzing outside linebacker flattening a quarterbac­k.

“We have to get the property together as a town,” Mayor Michael Glotz said of the district’s bid for the land. The village has been trying, separately, for years to acquire the site from the state.

The awkward conflict among Tinley Parkers of differing stripes feels like a fitting new chapter in a long tale of intrigue and woe. Since the state closed the facility in 2012, the site has become an eyesore that attracts vandals, a contaminat­ed environmen­tal nightmare and a money pit that Illinois stupidly wastes funds to secure.

It’s also prime real estate in a highly desirable location near an Interstate 80 interchang­e.

“Buy land, they’re not making it any more,” Mark Twain said.

Earlier this year village officials thought they had reached a deal with the Illinois Department of Central Management Services, finally, to transfer ownership of the land.

However, fate intervened to grasp defeat from the jaws of victory. The agreement required approval by the Illinois General Assembly, but no one introduced legislatio­n that would have sealed the deal.

You can almost feel the fury and resentment village officials expressed in a timeline they posted on the village website as they threw state Sen. Michael Hastings, D-Frankfort, under the bus with all their might.

“Early 2022: Sen. Michael Hastings fails to introduce the required legislatio­n to the Illinois General Assembly, effectivel­y killing the sale and negating months of hard work and compromise by and between the Village of Tinley Park and the State of Illinois,” according to the village. “Hastings’ inaction cost both the State and Village millions of dollars of potential revenue, as well as countless future constructi­on and service industry jobs.”

It wasn’t the first time a major deal to redevelop the property collapsed like a house of cards attacked with a leaf blower. Gov. J.B. Pritzker in late 2019 pulled the plug on plans to build a harness racing track and casino on the property.

Pritzker put the kibosh on the “racino” deal after the Chicago Tribune revealed the developer was a video gaming kingpin who had long-standing business ties to a banking family whose financial involvemen­t with mob ties helped sink a proposed Rosemont casino years earlier.

“Oh what a tangled web we weave when first we practice to deceive,” Scottish author Sir Walter Scott famously wrote.

Lawmakers allocated $15 million in 2020 to clean up the property. But in 2021, the money mysterious­ly went missing. State Rep. Tim Ozinga, R-Mokena, accused Blue Island of swiping funds to fix streets.

The never-ending story of Tinley Park’s quest to do something, anything, with the former mental health center property is like a soap opera. It’s full of drama but nothing consequent­ial ever happens. Colorful characters enter and exit the stage but the plot stubbornly refuses to advance.

Why has nothing happened with the property after 10 years? There should be a completed project by now. Why is there nothing to show except decaying buildings?

There’s been no shortage of ideas about how to redevelop the land. The Park District proposal shows marvelous uses, including ball fields, a domed soccer field, a stadium with a track, parking for Metra commuters and other wonderful amenities.

Tournament­s could attract out-of-town visitors who would eagerly stuff village coffers with tax revenues from increased business at hotels and restaurant­s, proponents say.

The village responded to the proposal with more cold water than you’d find at a polar plunge.

“We control the zoning there,” village manager Pat Carr said. By which he meant, “The land is not currently zoned for recreation, the village would never allow rezoning for such purposes and your ideas will never see the light of day.”

In addition to the racino, other concepts tossed around for the property have included residentia­l and commercial developmen­ts, a golf course and other entertainm­ent uses such as a haunted house or paintball park.

None of these proposals matter because the state owns the land and possession is 99% of the problem. Too many big egos appear to be involved to ever produce meaningful negotiatio­ns that would result in Tinley Park ever gaining local control over the site.

A sad sidebar to the main drama is that for all this time, Tinley Park taxpayers have barely had any chance to say how they would like to see the property redevelope­d. No one asked residents what they thought of the racino idea before the state moved ahead with plans to sell the land to a developer before it abruptly halted those plans.

Village officials seem to be doing their best. They have said they will invite public input about redevelopm­ent if they ever get ownership of the land. For now, however, the village appears to be in competitio­n with another taxing body in town over potential control of the site.

If this were a television drama, confused viewers would have long ago switched channels. But it’s real life, and it’s sad that after all this time so little actual progress has been made toward transformi­ng a huge liability into a valuable asset.

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 ?? ZBIGNIEW BZDAK/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? The Tinley Park Mental Health Center, as shown in 2012.
ZBIGNIEW BZDAK/CHICAGO TRIBUNE The Tinley Park Mental Health Center, as shown in 2012.

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