Chicago Sun-Times

CUTTING THROUGH FOOD- TRUCK TRAFFIC JAM

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Whether they offer Asian curry or maple bacon cupcakes, food trucks contribute to a flourishin­g food scene in Chicago. The industry got a lift in 2012 when the City Council passed an ordinance that allowed hot food to be prepared on trucks. We were psyched. We’ll take a freshly made carne asada taco over a shrink- wrapped sandwich any day.

But the expansion of food trucks in Chicago has been anything but smooth. Food- truck operators say City Hall imposes too many restrictio­ns, and so they openly flaunt the rules while city regulators look the other way. Operators break the rules on where they set up shop and routinely ignore two- hour parking limits, the Sun- Times’ Dan Mihalopoul­os and ABC7 Chicago’s I- Team found in a joint investigat­ion. Vendors say they can’t make a living if they play by the rules.

We’d like to see the industry thrive, although not at the expense of brick- and- mortar restaurant­s that are a big part of Chicago’s economy. City Hall needs to rewrite its rules for food trucks to strike a better balance between the two competing industries and— this is essential — create incentives for food- truck operators to expand to neighborho­ods where there is a shortage of restaurant­s.

The current rules are a fiction. Write new rules— and enforce them.

Thus far City Hall mostly has turned a blind eye to the violations, probably because everybody knows the rules are hopelessly out of sync with reality.

Officials from the Chicago Transporta­tion Department have no record of citations being issued, and the city’s business and consumer agency has levied $ 1,000 fines against just five operators in four years. The city’s Police Department and Health Department have done little better, collecting about $ 37,000 in fines in 62 cases of food trucks violating the rules.

On paper, Chicago has some of the toughest restrictio­ns in the nation on food trucks, according to a 2015 report in the Northweste­rn Journal of Law and Social Policy by then- law student Elan Shpigel, now a Chicago attorney. He found that among the 10 largest U. S. cities, only Chicago and San Antonio impose proximity restrictio­ns on food trucks. Chicago’s ordinance bans food trucks from operating within 200 feet of restaurant­s.

That 200- foot ban is a sticking point for food- truck operators and Ald. John Arena ( 45th), who voted against the ordinance in 2012. He said it was too heavy- handed with restrictio­ns, noting that the presence of a single restaurant can prohibit food trucks from setting up for business in an area with heavy foot traffic. This happens, he said, despite a shortage of restaurant­s overall in a neighborho­od.

But there are many rule- breakers out there. Some vendors park in front of restaurant­s or outside the mobile food vehicle stands designated by the city. Others line up in tow zones or use metered parking. The 2- hour time limit is ignored.

If this marriage is going to work, City Hall needs a workable plan with input from leaders fromthe food- truck industry and restaurant­s. Some food trucks still won’t survive. But that’s life in a big city.

 ?? | RICH HEIN/ SUN- TIMES ?? Food trucks are parked in tow zones onWacker Drive between Monroe and Adams at a recent lunch hour.
| RICH HEIN/ SUN- TIMES Food trucks are parked in tow zones onWacker Drive between Monroe and Adams at a recent lunch hour.

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