Chicago Sun-Times

King says Chicago needs a mayor who can represent the ‘entire city’

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

Chicago needs a mayor who can “represent the entire city — not just segregated parts” of it, mayoral challenger Sophia King argued Thursday, portraying herself as a bridge builder in a sea of candidates “on the fringes.”

“There is a lot of dissension between the administra­tion and the police and our teachers. With all of my colleagues leaving — 16 of us — we’re at a pivotal point. We really need some stability in this city,” the outgoing 4th Ward alderperso­n told the City Club of Chicago.

“Chicago deserves a mayor who truly leads with collaborat­ion to get things done. And that’s what I’m offering. I will be a mayor that leads with collaborat­ion to bring us all together to get things done, “she said.

King then touted a 6oe-year record that includes championin­g the $15-an-hour minimum wage she called “ahead of our time” and a $4 billion developmen­t on the site of the old Michael Reese Hospital.

Calling violent crime the “elephant in the room” of the mayor’s race, King said residents across the city have their “heads on a swivel . ... Crime is everywhere.” They’re demanding to know, “Where are the police? We need more police presence.”

King’s plan calls for having Chicago police officers work 10 hours a day, four days a week to get 50% more coverage and still give officers three days off to rest, decompress and spend time with their families.

She also wants to create a reserve of 1,000 retired officers to put police on the CTA and use retired officers during holidays and festivals so you “don’t have to pull from the neighborho­ods.”

King also wants to create an Office of Violence Prevention and combine city funds with private contributi­ons to make a $200 milliona-year commitment to violence interventi­on programs. Young people at the highest risk would be offered up to $600 a week to entice them to move “from the streets to jobs.”

“We have to put resources into young people so they don’t have to choose” the gang life, King said.

“Too many kids are disengaged. We have to engage them. The best thing you can do is find out what their passion is and hold it over their heads when they’re out of line,” she said.

King is a former high school chemistry teacher at the elite Latin School of Chicago and helped found Ariel Community Academy in North Kenwood-Oakland.

She also touted her education plan, which centers on growing the number of selective-enrollment options at Chicago Public Schools to mirror the “strong neighborho­od component” and elementary school feeder program already in place at Kenwood Academy, which she called the “best high school in Chicago.”

Mayoral challenger Brandon Johnson has a tax-the-rich plan to bankroll $1 billion in new spending on public schools, transporta­tion, housing, health care and job creation.

King never mentioned Johnson by name on Thursday but referred to the Cook County commission­er and Chicago Teachers Union organizer when she talked about the candidates who claim that what Chicago needs most to stop violence is to “invest in people.”

“Yes, we do have to invest in people. But doing that is not gonna stop somebody with a gun at your head trying to carjack you,” she said.

Johnson won’t commit to filling 1,700 police vacancies. Former Schools CEO Paul Vallas, businessma­n Willie Wilson and U.S. Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia have promised to make filling those vacancies the first order of business.

King described herself as the candidate in the middle, with the experience to lead.

“This is no time to be flying the plane and building it at the same time. We did that. What I’m offering is somebody with a track record of getting things done, working with people, bringing them together,” she said.

King, whose ward includes Soldier Field, also weighed in on the Bears’ decision to acquire land in Arlington Heights.

She argued that Lightfoot’s “combative style pushed them away to begin with.”

But after reaching out to now-retired Bears President Ted Phillips, King said the door is still open to negotiatin­g.

“If the state is going to give them incentives, it should be to keep the Bears in Chicago,” she said. “He specifical­ly said to me, ‘We cannot talk right now. But as soon as that deal closes’ — which it did — ‘we can have conversati­ons again.’ I would seek to have those conversati­ons,” King said.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES FILE ?? “Too many kids are disengaged. We have to engage them,” says mayoral candidate Ald. Sophia King.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES FILE “Too many kids are disengaged. We have to engage them,” says mayoral candidate Ald. Sophia King.

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