Chicago Sun-Times

GENERAL IRON OWNER SAYS LIGHTFOOT BROKE RULES, POLITICIZE­D PERMIT PROCESS

- 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.

A controvers­ial scrap metal operator claims in a legal filing that Mayor Lori Lightfoot was politicall­y driven to ignore the city’s own rules and deny the controvers­ial business a permit to open earlier this year — almost a year after it was told officials were “days away” from approving it.

In rejecting the operating permit for Southside Recycling in February, the city made a decision that was a “result of bad faith, bias and/or improper political influence,” lawyers for the business say in a recent filing with the city’s Department of Administra­tive Hearings.

Reserve Management Group wants the decision reversed but would first like to force the city to turn over records of emails and other documents as it builds its case against the Lightfoot administra­tion. The case claims the mayor’s office illegally denied the permit for the business formerly known as General Iron after it was relocated and rebuilt at East 116th Street along the Calumet River.

Reserve Management lawyers will argue their case for the release of documents before a city administra­tive hearing judge on Monday.

Specifical­ly, they want to know how the city determined how additional reviews for the business, including a health impact analysis, were necessary before issuing the permit and why such procedures aren’t required of other businesses in Chicago, including competitor Sims Metal Management in Pilsen.

A several-years uproar over the business’ planned move to a working-class, Latino-majority community from the North Side resulted in many protests, including marches and a monthlong hunger strike. Federal housing officials opened a civil rights investigat­ion, and the head of the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency stepped into the dispute.

The company also argues that it passed other requiremen­ts set by the city and the state, including air pollution modeling. Southside Recycling was picked by the city as “a guinea pig for its unannounce­d new initiative­s” related to health and the environmen­t, the filing said.

After agreeing to buy General Iron in 2019, Reserve Management signed an agreement with the Lightfoot administra­tion to close the scrap metal and car-shredding operation’s longtime Lincoln Park location at the end of 2020. Much of the manufactur­ing that formerly dominated the area along the North Branch of the Chicago River was being redevelope­d. After the February permit denial, a Reserve Management affiliate applied to reopen operations in Lincoln Park, but the city rejected the plan and a separate hearing on that denial is set for July 14.

Reserve Management said that it appeared that the shredding operation was heading toward approval last year. In fact, a city lawyer told the company on March 31, 2021, that the Chicago health department was “days away” from issuing a draft permit, the filing said. The lawyer’s name was not disclosed and the city is not commenting on the case. Reserve Management also declined to comment.

The interventi­on of EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan in May of last year lengthened the permit applicatio­n process. Regan asked Lightfoot to conduct a study to determine if another polluting business on the city’s heavily industrial Southeast Side would be overly burdensome to public health. The company wants to see correspond­ence between Regan and Lightfoot.

At an initial administra­tive hearing last month, city lawyer Bradley Wilson said City Hall would be willing to turn over some documents and argued that the reasons for the denial were laid out in public documents.

Administra­tive law judge Mitchell Ex asked the two sides to work out an agreement on the release of records.

 ?? BRIAN RICH/SUN-TIMES ?? General Iron’s owner closed its Lincoln Park site at the end of 2020 under an agreement with the city. The business is challengin­g Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s February denial of a permit for it to relocate to the Southeast Side.
BRIAN RICH/SUN-TIMES General Iron’s owner closed its Lincoln Park site at the end of 2020 under an agreement with the city. The business is challengin­g Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s February denial of a permit for it to relocate to the Southeast Side.

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