Chicago Sun-Times

Taxpayer cost of Lake Shore Drive, Kennedy marches was nearly $215K

- BY MANNY RAMOS, STAFF REPORTER mramos@suntimes.com | @_ManuelRamo­s_ Manny Ramos is a corps member in Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster Sun-Times coverage of issues affecting Chicago’s South and West sides.

A Labor Day protest march may have failed to reach the Kennedy Expressway near O’Hare Airport, but it did reach into taxpayers’ pockets to the tune of tens of thousands of dollars.

Police agencies assigned to the march spent at least $152,871.52 on their efforts, according to informatio­n obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times under the Illinois Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

Add to that the cost of an August march that shut down a northern stretch of Lake Shore Drive, and the total tally hits $214,662.82.

Illinois State Police wouldn’t say how many officers it allocated for the Labor Day protest; it did, however, provide the total personnel cost, including benefits: $119,391.90. The Chicago Police Department sent 48 officers, which cost taxpayers $27,526.33. The site, near the Park Ridge/ Rosemont border, also was staffed by 24 Park Ridge police officers ($5,528.22) and two officers from Rosemont ($425.07).

The stated goal of the Kennedy protest, organized by the Rev. Gregory Livingston, was to gather on Cumberland Avenue near the Kennedy, then march onto the highway and block traffic. In the end, several dozen protesters showed up, but they were outnumbere­d by state troopers who filled the on-ramp, effectivel­y blocking their path. Police arrested 12 marchers, including Livingston, who refused to get off the ramp.

It was the last of three attempts this summer to march onto an expressway to draw awareness to violence and other issues facing neighborho­ods on the South and West sides of Chicago.

Livingston said the number of law enforcemen­t used for the Labor Day protest was excessive.

“When they come out there in that level of force, it is evidence to me of the levels of powers being threatened by the truth we are trying to draw awareness to,” Livingston said, adding that the problems he was trying to call attention to also could be considered a burden on taxpayers.

“The violence in this city is a bigger burden on the taxpayer, the lack of adequate education in this city is a larger burden upon the taxpayers, and inadequate health care is more of a burden on the taxpayer,” Livingston said.

According to the State Police, the staffing was needed and consistent with how they approach every protest. The agency “will always ensure we take the necessary steps to do everything in our power to keep the public safe,” Sgt. Jacqueline Cepeda said.

As for Livingston’s Lake Shore Drive march, the Chicago Police Department estimated the cost of personnel was $61,791.30, according to informatio­n obtained under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

That march drew a few hundred people who marched on the highway from Diversey to Belmont, where they left Lake Shore Drive and headed to Wrigley Field. They rallied outside Wrigley for about an hour, chanting and listening to speeches, before dispersing.

For a much larger march that shut down a portion of the northbound Dan Ryan Expressway — which included Police Supt. Eddie Johnson walking arm-in-arm with the Rev. Micheal Pfleger — the state police cost was about $198,000. The total estimated cost to taxpayers for that march was over $300,000.

 ?? TIM BOYLE/FOR THE SUN-TIMES ?? Police stand near a Kennedy Expressway on-ramp near O’Hare Airport on Labor Day.
TIM BOYLE/FOR THE SUN-TIMES Police stand near a Kennedy Expressway on-ramp near O’Hare Airport on Labor Day.

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