Chicago Sun-Times

EMANUEL TO LAYOUT THIRD- TERM AGENDA IN SPECIFIC TERMS

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

Mayor Rahm Emanuel campaigned for a second term on a promise to put a “specialty focus” high school within 3 miles of every family, free top- performing schools from burdensome mandates, and achieve an 85 percent graduation rate by 2019.

He promised to make computer science a graduation requiremen­t for high school students and to “reinvent” senior year, with more students taking college courses and holding internship­s.

Now, themayor is preparing to lay out his ambitious agenda for a third term— on issues ranging from education, crime and police reform to small business, neighborho­od stabilizat­ion and affordable housing — in an attempt to persuade Chicago voters to give him a third chance.

“A little more than half the students in the city at 4 years old have full- day pre- K. And I’ll lay out a very specific four- year plan of universal full- day for every 4- year- old,” the mayor told WGN Radio on Monday during a live, call- in interview.

“Then, I’m gonna talk about very specifical­ly affordable housing, home ownership and what I call neighborho­od integrity, how to deal as best we can with gentrifica­tion and then, something very specific on public safety and police accountabi­lity. And this Friday, I’ll be laying out a vision and a very specific plan on our small business economy and our neighborho­od economy.”

By laying out his third- term agenda in very specific terms, Emanuel is hoping to contrast himself with his opponents, most of whom have talked in generaliti­es without laying out specific plans for the serious problems confrontin­g Chicago.

Afield that’s getting more crowded by the minute already includes: embattled Circuit Court Clerk Dorothy Brown; fired Chicago Police Supt. Garry McCarthy; former Chicago Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas; Chicago Principals and Administra­tors Associatio­n President Troy La Raviere; tech entreprene­ur Neal Sales- Griffin; millionair­e businessma­n Willie Wilson, and community activist Ja’ Mal Green.

Chicago Police Board President Lori Lightfoot and County Commission­er Bridget Gainer are also considerin­g entering the race.

So far, McCarthy has been the most specific of the mayoral challenger­s.

He’s proposing a “partially elected, partially appointed” school board to dilute the power of a bureaucrac­y manipulate­d by a “bullying mayor.”

McCarthy also wants to call a halt to school closings, end “perpupil funding formulas” and distribute education dollars “more equitably . . . based on student needs.”

On the all- important issue of city finances, McCarthy’s policy statement proclaims that “shady accounting tricks and constant tax hikes will not help fund our municipal and teacher pensions.”

But it does not spell out McCarthy’s ideas for meeting those ballooning obligation­s. It pledges only to “keep that promise” to fully fund city employee pensions.

The only specific idea he has mentioned so far is his proposal to put a full- blown casino on the secure side of O’Hare Airport.

Emanuel considers city finances his strength after identifyin­g dedicated funding sources for all four city employee pension funds.

But McCarthy’s policy statement argues otherwise.

“The economy of crime, coupled with the mayor’s lack of fiscal responsibi­lity, has put Chicago on a dangerous path towards financial ruin,” the McCarthy policy states, arguing that shootings and murders cost Chicago $ 9.6 billion—$ 1 billion more than the entire city budget.

“Our neighborho­ods deserve to be our priority again. The mayor has forgotten that,” McCarthy said. “Themayor’s own emails havemade it abundantly clear that he is running a true ‘ pay- to- play’ operation out of City Hall. That must stop.”

 ?? MAXHERMAN FILE PHOTO/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? Mayor Rahm Emanuel said in a radio interview Monday, “A little more than half the students in the city at 4 years old have full- day pre- K. And I’ll lay out a very specific four- year plan of universal full- day for every 4- year- old.”
MAXHERMAN FILE PHOTO/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES Mayor Rahm Emanuel said in a radio interview Monday, “A little more than half the students in the city at 4 years old have full- day pre- K. And I’ll lay out a very specific four- year plan of universal full- day for every 4- year- old.”

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