Chicago Sun-Times

ALD. HAIRSTON ACCUSES HER RUNOFF OPPONENT OF BEING A DEADBEAT

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

Fighting for her political life, five-term incumbent Ald. Leslie Hairston (5th) is accusing her opponent in the April 2 runoff of being a deadbeat, denying sorely needed revenue to the city he hopes to serve.

Hairston’s campaign consultant Delmarie Cobb on Tuesday released a list of 60 tickets and four warnings piled up by William Calloway since March 2014.

The violations range from parking at an expired meter or in street cleaning zones and driving without wearing seat belts to more serious red-light and speed-camera tickets.

Only three of those fines have been paid, according to the 2½-page list released by Cobb, showing the number and status of each ticket.

Calloway’s campaign manager, Bobby Burns, was quick to shoot down the deadbeat charge.

“All of those tickets have been resolved. He would be unable to run for office if he had outstandin­g debts,” Burns said Tuesday.

Most 5th Ward residents are more concerned about “being overticket­ed themselves” than they are about Calloway’s debt history, Burns said.

“The 5th Ward is the 13th-most ticketed in the city. We’d like to help folks with that problem,” the campaign manager said.

Cobb also attached a copy of the complaint filed last week by Calloway’s landlord seeking to evict him from his campaign office at 2030 E. 71st.

The complaint, filed by P and L Building IP, LLC, claims Calloway owes $15,000 in unpaid rent. A court hearing is scheduled for next week.

According to Cobb, it’s the sixth time Calloway has faced eviction notices for failing to pay rent or for leaving an apartment without paying what he owes.

“Calloway talks about transparen­cy and helping small businesses, but not paying your bills is detrimenta­l to small businesses. It seems the real reason Calloway is running is he’s looking for a job. Instead of lying about his opponent’s record, he needs to get his own house in order,” Cobb was quoted as saying in an emailed statement.

Calloway said he’s in the process of setting up a payment plan that would allow him to stay in his campaign office. He said he fell behind on rent, only because, unlike Hairston, “I have pledged not to take any contributi­ons from developers to maintain my independen­ce.”

On Feb. 26, Calloway forced Hairston into a runoff. She finished first with 48.5 percent, or 6,284 votes. He finished second in a field of three with 26.7 percent, or 3,464 votes.

Calloway is a community activist who helped force Mayor Rahm Emanuel to release the Laquan McDonald shooting video on Monday set his sights on the City Council.

He was one of two men who filed the Freedom of Informatio­n request that ultimately prompted a judge to order Emanuel to release the dashcam video that showed Chicago Police Officer Jason Van Dyke firing 16 shots into the body of the black teenager.

After Van Dyke was convicted of second-degree murder and 16 counts of aggravated battery, Calloway put incumbent black aldermen on notice.

“No black elected official showed up for us. It was just us. Our generation showed up,” Calloway said then.

“The City Council that voted for the settlement­s have to be removed. … Today, justice was delivered for Laquan McDonald, but it doesn’t stop there. … These other aldermen have to go. No black aldermen showed up for this.”

African-American aldermen have been harshly criticized for signing off on a $5 million settlement to the family of Laquan McDonald — before a lawsuit had even been filed — without asking tough enough questions or seeing the incendiary shooting video.

Asked about Calloway’s claim on the day he declared his candidacy for alderman, Hairston initially defended the $5 million settlement.

“I did my job as a council member. Hindsight is always 20-20,” she said.

“The families decide what the settlement is. It is our job as legislator­s to approve the recommenda­tions of what the parties agree to. Aldermen are not part of the settlement negotiatio­ns.”

A few minutes later, Hairston called back to say that she had been reminded by her publicist that she was “out of town” and, therefore, did not attend the City Council meeting where aldermen signed off on the settlement.

“I have nothing to defend. I wasn’t there. I’m just setting the record straight,” she said.

 ??  ?? William CallowayAl­d. Leslie Hairston
William CallowayAl­d. Leslie Hairston

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