Chicago Sun-Times

AFTER 15-YEAR ODYSSEY, NORFOLK SOUTHERN GETS FINAL OK FOR MASSIVE ENGLEWOOD EXPANSION

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

The City Council agreed Wednesday to vacate streets and alleys to pave the way for a $150 million expansion of Norfolk Southern Railway’s intermodal yard in Englewood after the local alderperso­n lifted the legislativ­e brick.

Last month, Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20th) extended what has been a 15-year odyssey for the rail giant by using a parliament­ary maneuver to delay the project. It has been mired in controvers­y over the residentia­l displaceme­nt it required and the truck traffic and pollution it caused for those residents who remain.

On Wednesday, Taylor did an about-face. She voted in favor of the agreement — paving the way for her colleagues to do the same — though you’d never know it from how she admonished the railroad.

“Norfolk Southern, who got rich off of the backs of slaves,” resisted “giving this community the little things that they’re asking for,” Taylor said, referring to her demand for an ironclad agreement of jobs and contracts for Englewood residents.

A redevelopm­ent agreement, hammered out in 2014, does the “bare minimum in the Black and Brown community,” she said, and she did not sign off on it.

“I’m almost ashamed and embarrasse­d that somebody would sign off on some crap and did not do any follow-through. They did not make sure people got jobs in the community. They did not make sure they were gonna do hiring fair. They did not make sure that the Black folks from the community get the contracts. What does that say about us? … I am tired of sitting in a space where I’m ignored and not listened to just because of the color of my skin,” Taylor said.

After venting her anger, Taylor lifted the legislativ­e version of the railroad gate.

“Norfolk Southern and the city have agreed to the terms that the community are asking. And that’s all I was asking for,” Taylor said.

“I want to thank the Black Caucus and members of the Latino Caucus for standing with me. Because sometimes, it’s easier to take the check and look away.”

Norfolk Southern called Wednesday’s vote an “important moment” for an expansion critical to Chicago’s “role as the heart of our nation’s supply chain.”

“Constructi­on can now move forward and will bring additional opportunit­ies for local, diverse contractor­s and their workers. Once completed, the facility’s expanded capacity will bring good-paying jobs created by Norfolk Southern, as well as those with contractor­s and other Chicago businesses that support the yard’s ongoing operations,” the statement said.

A new way to vote?

Also at Wednesday’s meeting, Ald. Matt Martin (47th) introduced a resolution calling for Council hearings on using ranked-choice voting in Chicago’s municipal elections.

At least 50 cities —including Evanston, as well as New York, San Francisco, Oakland and Minneapoli­s — already ask voters to rank candidates in order of preference­s, using second choices to avoid the cost of runoff elections for mayor, clerk, treasurer and up to 50 Council seats.

“It costs a lot of money to do runoffs. If you have a ranked-choice voting system, you wouldn’t have a need for that. People could be really excited — not just about their firstchoic­e candidate, but perhaps a second- or third-choice candidate who maybe, while not being their absolute preferred candidate, is one that they would be happy to see. They would no longer have to engage in strategic voting around, ‘Who do I like who also has a related chance of winning?’” Martin said.

“You look to see if any of the multiple candidates got 50% [plus one]. If they did, great. Game over. If they didn’t, then you go through reallocati­ng the votes of the worstplace finisher [to] their second-place choice in a series of cycles until you get someone who did get a majority.”

Nine candidates are running for mayor. The crowded field virtually guarantees no one will get the 50%-plus-one needed to avoid a runoff.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20th) said, “Norfolk Southern and the city have agreed to the terms that the community are asking. And that’s all I was asking for.”
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20th) said, “Norfolk Southern and the city have agreed to the terms that the community are asking. And that’s all I was asking for.”

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