Chicago Sun-Times

GROUPS SAY FEDS SHOULD INVESTIGAT­E CITY FOR MOVING HEAVY INDUSTRY TO LOW-INCOME NEIGHBORHO­ODS

- BY BRETT CHASE, STAFF REPORTER bchase@suntimes.com | @brettchase Brett Chase’s reporting on the environmen­t and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

The city of Chicago’s role helping General Iron move from affluent white Lincoln Park to a majority-Latino Southeast Side neighborho­od to make way for the Lincoln Yards redevelopm­ent violated federal fair housing laws and should be investigat­ed, community groups say.

The move is an example of years of unfair zoning and land-use practices that discrimina­te against Black and Latino residents while benefiting white neighborho­ods that have seen their home values soar, the groups said in a complaint filed with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t Wednesday. These longtime practices violate the U.S. Fair Housing Act, and the city should be ordered to change the way it plans and zones for industrial operations that pollute, the groups say.

“The city has unlawfully discrimina­ted against protected classes based on its long history of moving industrial uses to low-income communitie­s of color,” the complaint alleges, noting an agreement in September 2019 between the city and General Iron laying out the business’ move to the East Side community to make way for the planned $6 billion Lincoln Yards residentia­l and commercial developmen­t in Lincoln Park.

The city supports General Iron’s move to the Southeast Side, the complaint said, despite years of complaints and city actions alleging pollution and nuisance violations in Lincoln Park. The North Side facility has been the source of noxious fumes, explosions, dust that carried outside the boundaries of its operation and a substance called auto shredder fluff which is created by the shredding of junked cars, the groups said.

The city receives various types of funding from HUD, the complaint notes. As part of its funding agreement, the city must abide by the Fair Housing Act. If HUD agrees to investigat­e, it could pressure the city to review its planning and developmen­t.

A HUD spokesman said the agency is reviewing the complaint, which was filed by the Southeast Environmen­tal Task Force, the Southeast Side Coalition to Ban Pet Coke, and People for Community Recovery.

“We’re demanding an end to policies that entrench environmen­tal racism,” Peggy Salazar, director of the Southeast Environmen­tal Task Force, said during a news conference Thursday.

The groups charge Chicago has a “long and infamous history of segregatio­n” and Chicago ordinances allow heavy industrial operations close to homes, schools and parks.

The complaint said the city’s role planning for Lincoln Yards developmen­t in Lincoln Park was discrimina­tory as Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s administra­tion and the Chicago City Council helped move heavy industrial operations, such as General Iron, to lowincome Black and Brown neighborho­ods. In their complaint, the groups cite city emails, obtained through open records requests, that they say prove the Emanuel administra­tion showed favorable treatment to General Iron and then-owner the Labkon family. Over more than 20 years, the Labkons made hundreds of thousands of dollars in political donations, including contributi­ons to Emanuel, state election board records show.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot and the City Council continue to carry on discrimina­tory practices, the complaint alleges. The groups use language from the Lightfoot administra­tion’s own recent report on air quality across Chicago that states “structural racism and economic hardship” contribute to an equity gap in the city “making it more likely for certain people to live in polluted communitie­s.”

An agreement signed almost a year ago between the Lightfoot administra­tion and General Iron was a “triggering action” for the discrimina­tory fair housing complaint, the groups said. That agreement helps General Iron leave its longtime North Side home by the end of the year.

In a statement, a Lightfoot spokeswoma­n reiterated a recent promise from the mayor to back a zoning reform ordinance, calling it a “first step toward addressing our city’s long-standing issues related to environmen­tal justice.”

The complaint notes other areas of the city that landed industrial operators as a result of the Lincoln Yards redevelopm­ent, which replaces an industrial corridor that long operated on Chicago’s North Side.

A. Finkl & Sons steel company moved to 1355 E. 93rd St. in predominan­tly Black Burnside, for instance. The city is relocating its fleet operations where city vehicles, including fire engines and garbage trucks, are maintained and repaired to Englewood, a community that is almost 98% Black.

In the past, city officials emphasized the economic developmen­t and new jobs that would come with the moves, but the complaint alleges “the city’s primary role in enabling the relocation­s occurred in response to significan­t public pressure by Lincoln Park residents and elected officials.”

“Land-use practices in Chicago have been discrimina­tory,” said Cheryl Johnson, a longtime activist and executive director of People for Community Recovery. “That is totally racism.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES STAFF ?? Residents on the Southeast Side have opposed the move of General Iron to their neighborho­od.
SUN-TIMES STAFF Residents on the Southeast Side have opposed the move of General Iron to their neighborho­od.

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