Chicago Sun-Times

ALDERMEN SHOOT DOWN PROPOSAL THAT WOULD BRING IN GUARD

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

Chicago aldermen on Tuesday bemoaned the continuing bloodbath that’s killing and maiming the city’s children but neverthele­ss shot down a request to declare a state of emergency that would have paved the way for a four-month stint by the Illinois National Guard.

It wasn’t the $54 million price tag that prompted the 16-to-2 vote by the City Council’s Committee on Public Safety.

It was the stigma of a “military occupation” of Chicago neighborho­ods and how that would undermine efforts to repair the trust between citizens and police in African American neighborho­ods — a trust shattered by the police shooting of Laquan McDonald long before the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapoli­s police.

Former Public Safety Committee Chairman Ariel Reboyras (30th) also was moved by the limitation­s on the National Guard. They can help create roadblocks and staff checkpoint­s, but only with on-site assistance from Chicago police officers, now exhausted from working 12hour days. Citizen soldiers are not allowed to arrest or detain anyone.

“Our officers are tired. I feel it. I see it. And I talk about this every day. [But], the National Guard is gonna stand up there and he or she will act as a scarecrow. … I hate to say it that way. But it’s the truth. Because they really can’t do what we want them to do,” Reboyras said.

“Do we want to deploy young folks out there and engage them in a shooting battle? Because that’s what’s gonna happen. I don’t think so. The Guard, in my opinion, is not trained to deal with de-escalation issues or crisis matters as they appear to me.”

North Side Ald. Harry Osterman (48th), the committee’s vice chairman, acknowledg­ed the resolution championed by four aldermen — Leslie Hairston (5th); Anthony Beale (9th); Ray Lopez (15th) and Anthony Napolitano (41st) — was “born out of the frustratio­n that all of us share. … None of us feel good about where we are on the safety side.”

But Osterman said the fundamenta­l question is whether the National Guard would be “more detrimenta­l” than helpful because of its lack of training in police work.

“The way that it was described is an occupation. And having Chicagoans have to go through checkpoint­s — we have to think about the impact on those communitie­s and what that does for people young and old,” Osterman said.

North Side Ald. Michele Smith (43rd) acknowledg­ed Chicago is “in a crisis” right now, adding: “It is horrible what is going now in so many neighborho­ods, and a lot of people are afraid.” But she warned of the “potential consequenc­es” of unleashing a “military presence on street crime.”

Lopez said he was “shocked” his colleagues are “still talking about having patience for the perfect solution” to the “slow-drip massacre” on Chicago streets.

As of Tuesday, there had been 526 homicides in Chicago this year, and an 8-year-old girl fatally shot Monday is the sixth child 10 or younger murdered in Chicago since late June, according to Chicago Sun-Times data.

“You don’t like the National Guard? Fine. But declare the state of emergency. Declare and say it loud that our children, our city is under siege,” Lopez said.

“We talk about occupation­s. We talk about stigmatiza­tion. Look around you. Look at our neighborho­ods where people are literally being pushed back into their homes by gang bangers who think that they run the streets and police who are overwhelme­d trying to address them.”

Napolitano has served the city as both a police officer and a firefighte­r. His Far Northwest Side ward is home to scores of Chicago cops. He joined Lopez as the only “yes” votes.

The alderman kept his argument brief, saying, “I know where this is all going.” But he argued the never-ending cycle of gang violence is “eating away at our city, little by little” and must stop.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Members of the Illinois National Guard keep watch and direct traffic at their post outside McCormick Place in June, after the city’s first round of looting in the wake of the death of George Floyd.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Members of the Illinois National Guard keep watch and direct traffic at their post outside McCormick Place in June, after the city’s first round of looting in the wake of the death of George Floyd.

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