Chicago Sun-Times

Lightfoot poised to lead historic conversati­on about race in Chicago

- LAURA WASHINGTON lauraswash­ington@aol.com | @MediaDervi­sh Laura S. Washington is a columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times and a political analyst for ABC7 Chicago.

On Monday, Lori Lightfoot will become Chicago’s first African American woman and openly gay mayor. She won her landslide election on a campaign pledge to “bring in the light.”

Can Chicago’s 56th mayor help us finally see the light on race?

In Chicago, race has forever been the third rail of politics. Few will talk about it, yet every malady that faces this city — in crime, policing, housing, education, economic developmen­t — is rooted in racial inequity.

I love my city dearly, for its beauty, diversity, panache and muscle. I also grew up on the city’s South Side, one of the nation’s most segregated urban enclaves, where race plays a role in every imaginable ill.

The toxins of segregatio­n, discrimina­tion and division are embedded in our DNA. Yet few political leaders will even acknowledg­e race and its impact on Chicago.

Few will ask the paramount question: What does race have to do with it? One major exception: Harold Washington, our first African American mayor.

And, now, Lori Lightfoot. Perhaps, that’s because Lightfoot, like Washington, is black. She has lived the pain of racism and discrimina­tion. And perhaps because Lightfoot was not born and bred here, unlike every other Chicago mayor in modern history.

Lightfoot did not participat­e in, nor preside over, the countless chapters of our ugly racial history. Chapters like the 1919 race riots, the illegal school segregatio­n of the 1960s and 1970s, the police murder of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald in 2014.

Lightfoot doesn’t have to defend our racial legacy, but she can help us acknowledg­e and work to reconcile it.

Lightfoot’s profession­al history has earned her a penetratin­g understand­ing of the roles race and racism play in this city.

In her roles as president of the Chicago Police Board and chair of the Police Accountabi­lity Task Force, she learned firsthand the insidious ways that, for more than a century, Chicago has dismissed people of

color, as their communitie­s suffer on the receiving end of police misconduct, corruption, disrespect and discrimina­tion.

Policing Chicago-style “has not adequately taken into account the segregatio­n in our city and that race does matter,” she told National Public Radio shortly after her April 2 election.

Now, Lightfoot is taking another historic turn, to expose and examine Chicago’s racial inequities, in every arena.

Last week, Lightfoot announced she would establish the city’s first Office of Racial Equity and Racial Justice. It will be led by Chief Equity Officer Candace Moore, now a senior staff attorney for the Education Equity Project at the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights.

Moore will be “tasked with creating and advancing new policies and practices through the lens of equity,” according to Lightfoot’s press release.

Moore will examine city government, “take stock of how it works, examine data measuring the outcomes of city policies and open dialogue with people across the city,” reports Alden Loury, a senior editor at WBEZ. “The office will also be tasked with teaching city workers about what equity means.”

Moore told WBEZ that she plans to engage Chicagoans by “bringing in community members [and] talking about the history of what’s happened, harm that has been created and what solutions would look like.”

That will be a historic conversati­on.

LIGHTFOOT DOESN’T HAVE TO DEFEND OUR RACIAL LEGACY, BUT SHE CAN HELP US ACKNOWLEDG­E AND WORK TO RECONCILE IT.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES FILE ?? On Monday, Lori Lightfoot will be inaugurate­d as Chicago’s 56th mayor.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES FILE On Monday, Lori Lightfoot will be inaugurate­d as Chicago’s 56th mayor.
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