Chicago Sun-Times

LIGHTFOOT ACCUSED OF ABDICATING RESPONSIBI­LITY FOR RETAIL CRIME WAVE

‘The biggest problem for all of us is that our leaders who need to sit down … and work on it are pointing fingers at each other as opposed to working constructi­vely with us,’ said Rob Karr, president of the Illinois Retail Merchants Associatio­n

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

Mayor Lori Lightfoot was accused Thursday of abdicating responsibi­lity for the retail crime wave sweeping Chicago and, instead, pressuring merchants to implement their own costly and unworkable security measures.

Twice in the last month — and as recently as this week — Lightfoot urged Magnificen­t Mile merchants victimized repeatedly by smash-and-grab robberies to follow the lead of their counterpar­ts in Milan, London, Paris, Rome and along Hollywood’s Rodeo Drive.

She specifical­ly mentioned security guards at the door, entrance cameras, merchandis­e “either chained and roped or put behind glass” and customers being “buzzed into” stores.

On Thursday, Illinois Retail Merchants Associatio­n President Rob Karr flatly rejected all of the mayor’s ideas.

He branded the suggestion­s “extraordin­arily dishearten­ing,” “misinforme­d” and “false” — yet another example of how Lightfoot “continues to point fingers and play the blame game.”

“Some merchandis­e can be locked up but not all of it. That’s not how retail works. The consumer wants an experience. You can’t have an experience if all of the merchandis­e is locked up behind a counter or chained to a wall,” Karr told the Chicago Sun-Times.

“Do we really want every retailer having to decide whether or not they’re gonna buzz someone in? What kind of questions do they interrogat­e the consumer with to try to decide whether to let someone in? That might work for a few extraordin­arily small … stores. But that is not gonna work for the vast majority . ... Retail has to be open-facing to the consumer. We are not a factory that can be locked behind a gate. We are not City Hall or the Capitol that can have security officers with arresting authority at the doors.”

Karr was taken aback that Lightfoot — the first African American female and first openly gay person to serve as mayor of Chicago — would promote a buzz-in requiremen­t he claims would “undoubtedl­y” trigger charges of racial profiling.

“Do we really want that type of environmen­t for our neighborho­ods? Think about Little Village. Think about the East Lake View area. Think about all the retail corridors. Because it’s not just the Mag Mile. It’s all of those retail corridors that are impacted,” he said.

“We’d be getting screamed at for [racial profiling]. And furthermor­e, it would push more people to simply go online. Why would you go to a store if you can’t touch, feel and try on the merchandis­e?”

For the first time in his 27 years at the state’s premier retail trade group, Karr said he is “starting to see the impact of organized retail crime show up in reports to shareholde­rs.”

Businesses are citing safety and crime as “No. 1 and No. 2” on the list of factors that will determine whether they remain viable, and, if so, where their stores will be located.

Karr argued that Chicago’s future as a downtown business center and a magnet for convention­s and tourism literally depends on how quickly the crisis is abated.

Also on Thursday, Karr urged the City Council to amend Lightfoot’s stalled sports betting ordinance to give all Chicago retailers a crack at opening a sportsbook on the premises.

The ordinance limits sports betting to a downtown casino; in or within a five-block radius of the United Center, Soldier Field, Wrigley Field, Guaranteed Rate Field and Wintrust Arena; and at an off-track betting facility in the city “provided that no sports wagering is conducted at the OTB’s affiliated horse racing track.”

“Think a sports bar situation or a dining establishm­ent that’s tailored to more of a sports environmen­t. That might be ideal for that type of setting,” Karr said.

“We’re overthinki­ng it when we’re gonna have to limit it. It will limit itself . ... It doesn’t fit for every establishm­ent. It only fits for some. … I have a hard time believing that a sit-down restaurant that doesn’t have the TVs and the sports vibe [is] gonna offer sports betting.”

Karr acknowledg­ed that Chicago sports moguls will resist the competitio­n. “It would grow the revenue pie,” he said. “It all comes down to what revenue options the state and city want. Do they want to grow that or do they want to limit it?”

In response to Karr’s complaints, the mayor’s office released a statement that said, “Public safety requires partnershi­ps between government, business, and community, and Mayor Lightfoot remains firmly committed to continuing and strengthen­ing these partnershi­ps.”

The statement noted that City Hall is “constantly evaluating and refining its entire public safety infrastruc­ture, and consistent­ly utilizes feedback from the business community in that process.”

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot speaks during a news conference on the West Side on Nov. 1.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES Mayor Lori Lightfoot speaks during a news conference on the West Side on Nov. 1.
 ?? ?? Rob Karr
Rob Karr

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