Chicago Sun-Times

CITY IS REQUIRED TO HAVE A CHIEF ADMINISTRA­TIVE OFFICER; IT HASN’T FOR DECADES

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

Chicago’s municipal code requires that a chief administra­tive officer be appointed by the mayor and confirmed by the City Council — but Mayor Lori Lightfoot and her predecesso­rs have ignored that mandate, setting the stage for “poor coordinati­on” and “fingerpoin­ting” among city department­s, Inspector General Deborah Witzburg said Tuesday.

Witzburg cited the botched Hilco smokestack demolition in Pilsen as just one of 11 “missed opportunit­ies to promote efficiency and economy through interdepar­tmental coordinati­on” that might have been different, if only the chief administra­tive officer’s job had been filled.

Other examples include: fairness and consistenc­y in the disciplina­ry process for Chicago police officers; informatio­n sharing among department­s that might have developed a strategy to reduce the $250 million in settlement­s over five years stemming from police wrongdoing; lack of consistent standards for selecting and evaluating capital improvemen­t projects; and a failure to communicat­e that affected the maintenanc­e, cost and life span of police vehicles.

Poor interdepar­tmental communicat­ion was further blamed for missing the 60-day deadline for releasing video of use of force incidents involving Chicago police officers and $5 million in spending over 10 years to serve 3,000 young people at Chicago’s Juvenile Interventi­on and Support Center “without knowing whether it created positive or negative outcomes,” the advisory states.

“Over the years across a variety of projects,” the inspector general’s office “has identified lapses in good coordinati­on among city department­s. And that’s handicappi­ng the city’s ability to deliver effective and efficient city services. The municipal code speaks specifical­ly to the need for coordinati­on among city department­s and requires the mayor to appoint an administra­tive officer, among whose duties is ensuring coordinati­on among city department­s,” Witzburg told the Sun-Times.

“That position has been vacant during all of this administra­tion and all of the recent predecesso­r administra­tions. It’s supposed to be an administra­tive officer appointed by the mayor and confirmed by City Council,” added Witzburg. Her office “has recommende­d that the mayor appoint such a person for two reasons. Doing so would improve coordinati­on, and the law requires the mayor to do so and following the law isn’t optional.”

Former Inspector General Joe Ferguson, Witzburg’s predecesso­r, concluded the city’s “negligence and incompeten­ce” allowed a demolition dust storm to blanket Little Village in April 2020, just as the pandemic was getting started.

City officials were warned the Easter weekend implosion could cause “almost cataclysmi­c” harm and were advised to take precaution­ary measures, but failed to do so, Ferguson concluded, blaming Hilco and three city officials in two department­s — Buildings and Public Health — for poor planning for the implosion of the nearly 400-feet-tall chimney at the old Crawford coal-fired power plant.

When the structure was brought tumbling down, it spewed a massive dust cloud that covered

homes, yards, cars and everything else in the area near the plant.

On Tuesday, Witzburg acknowledg­ed there is no way of knowing whether the Hilco debacle could have been prevented had a chief administra­tive officer been in place.

But, she said, “In that investigat­ion, we identified a failure to communicat­e or intervene when there was a change in plans from the contractor. … We can’t have a situation where we have more than one city department with responsibi­lity for making sure something doesn’t go wrong, and then it does go wrong, and we’re just pointing fingers across department­s.”

In a March 13 letter to the inspector general, Lightfoot’s chief of staff Sybil Madison “strongly” disagreed with Witzburg’s claim that “a lack of adequate communicat­ion and coordinati­on among city department­s has been a common or widespread problem at the root of various adverse events and inefficien­cies.”

Madison further claimed Witzburg has provided “no concrete explanatio­n” of how the appointmen­t of a chief administra­tive officer “might have some tangible benefit that could have prevented or mitigated the adverse outcomes” the inspector general identified.

“Chiefs of staff since at least the early 1990s have managed these functions working closely with other officials to optimize the communicat­ion and coordinati­on necessary for effective management. … The current administra­tion has carried out these functions very effectivel­y under this organizati­onal approach,” Madison wrote.

Lightfoot, her chief of staff and chief operating officer hold regular meetings with city department heads to deliver programs requiring coordinati­on across multiple city department­s and city agencies, Madison said.

“This comprehens­ive approach allows for better and more efficient coordinati­on among city agencies and department­s than a single officer could achieve,” the chief of staff wrote.

Veteran political observers, who asked to remain anonymous, also questioned the wisdom of a mayoral-appointed chief administra­tive officer confirmed by the City Council.

They noted it is the job of the mayor and his or her senior team to carry out the mayor’s agenda and ensure city department­s and agencies communicat­e. No mayor “would or should allow their executive management team to answer to anybody but them,” they said.

“The people hold the mayor accountabl­e, and that’s how it should be,” one veteran observer said. “If the code says otherwise, it needs to be changed.”

 ?? FILE ?? Chicago is required by code to have a chief administra­tive officer. It hasn’t — going back at least through the Richard M. Daley administra­tion.SUN-TIMES
FILE Chicago is required by code to have a chief administra­tive officer. It hasn’t — going back at least through the Richard M. Daley administra­tion.SUN-TIMES

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