Chicago Sun-Times

Hilco pulls fueling center from Little Village warehouse plans

City to limit truck traffic to Pulaski Road

- BY MANNY RAMOS AND BRETT CHASE Staff Reporters

Community organizers in Little Village said Friday some recent concession­s from the developer of a warehouse project are a small victory, but more remains to be done.

Hilco Redevelopm­ent Partners is building the Target warehouse and distributi­on center on the former site of the Crawford Power Generation Station. Revisions were submitted to the city earlier this year, and the city’s Department of Planning and Developmen­t approved those changes on the last week of February, according to city documents.

The most significan­t change is eliminatin­g an on-site fueling center that would have included a 2,500-gallon fuel tank. The city also put in writing that trucks must use only Pulaski Road between the distributi­on center and Interstate 55.

City Council approval wasn’t needed for those changes because they are considered minor alteration­s, a city spokesman said Friday.

Gary Epstein, executive vice president of Hilco, said the plan always was for trucks to use Pulaski.

“We have worked very closely with stakeholde­rs to design incoming and outgoing traffic routes that eliminate the need for trucks to use residentia­l streets,” Epstein said. “Additional­ly, we’ve worked closely with our tenant on the updated design of this state-of-the art facility which included the removal of the fuel tank.”

Anthony Gonzalez of the community group Mi Villita believes their efforts led to the fuel tank’s removal, and “though it is small, it is still a big win for us,” he said.

“There is still a fight to be had, but wins like this are giving hope to our community,” Gonzalez added. “We see a lot of trucks disregardi­ng signs and driving through residentia­l streets, so we hope these trucks do what is required of them and stick to Pulaski.”

Kim Wasserman, executive director of Little Village Environmen­tal Justice Organizati­on, said the change in truck routing is good news, but she still worries about the concentrat­ion of air pollution the trucks will create along Pulaski — pollution that will blow into the community, she said.

“It’s a small win,” Wasserman said about the truck route. “But it brings up a new problem.”

Hilco has faced steep opposition from some in the community over its plans.

Last year, the botched implosion of a smokestack on the site blanketed Little Village in dust. Hilco and its two contractor­s settled a $370,000 lawsuit brought by the state over air pollution violations.

Brett Chase’s reporting on the environmen­t and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust. Manny Ramos is a corps member in Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster Sun-Times coverage of Chicago’s South and West sides.

 ??  ?? A man protests last May against Hilco near the site of the closed Crawford power plant near West 33rd Street and South Pulaski Road.
A man protests last May against Hilco near the site of the closed Crawford power plant near West 33rd Street and South Pulaski Road.

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