Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Mayor calls on well-heeled audience to fight poverty

- By Gregory Pratt

Invoking her personal experience growing up poor in Ohio, Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Friday challenged a crowd of wellheeled businessme­n and civic leaders downtown to join her administra­tion in addressing Chicago’s deeply entrenched poverty.

She also announced plans to introduce several reform proposals around housing. They include a law to ensure renters get more than 30 days to find a new place to live during no-fault evictions, a measure mirroring Cook County’s “Just Housing” ordinance aimed at ending housing discrimina­tion against people with arrest records, and a pilot program in Woodlawn giving qualified community buyers the right of first refusal to purchase certain multifamil­y buildings when an owner puts a building up for sale.

But first, Lightfoot opened her speech before a white tablecloth lunch audience at the City Club of Chicago with a stark declaratio­n: “Poverty is killing us. All of us. Literally and figurative­ly.”

Lightfoot ran through a number of everyday scenes in the city that she said illustrate the problem: children relying on school for food, a life expectancy rate that’s 17 years lower for black and brown residents in one neighborho­od compared with the life span of other mostly white neighborho­ods and the high costs of Chicago’s gun violence.

“Am I making you uncomforta­ble?” she asked. “I mean to.”

One of the things that kept her up at night during the Chicago teachers strike was the large number of students who rely on school meals for their food, she told the audience.

At one point, Lightfoot said government and leaders helped shape the problem by using government to create and enforce racebased discrimina­tion.

“We did this by voting for politician­s who embraced this ethos and used every tool at their disposal to perpetuate the deprivatio­n and disenfranc­hisement of people who looked like me solely on the basis of race, ethnicity or national origin,” Lightfoot said, adding that government needs to address the problem.

“We the people created this monstrous problem, and we the people must solve it,” she said.

During a news conference with reporters after her speech, Lightfoot declined to blame any specific politician­s — saying the problems date back to slavery, America’s “original sin.”

Asked about the housing measures mentioned in the speech and whether they go far enough or can effectivel­y curb the problems she’s described, Lightfoot said they’re part of a broader wave of changes she wants to introduce beyond the items she mentioned during the speech.

In recent weeks, Lightfoot has made combating poverty and raising awareness a key goal. During the Martin Luther King Jr. interfaith breakfast, she hailed the work her administra­tion has done to address poverty and equity in Chicago while acknowledg­ing there’s much more work to do. She plans to host a “poverty summit” next week.

But she’s also faced scrutiny from anti-homelessne­ss advocates, who want her to keep a campaign pledge promising an increase on the real estate transfer tax that would go toward fighting homelessne­ss. She’s opposed increasing the tax to make a mandated revenue stream to tackle homelessne­ss.

During Friday’s speech, Lightfoot also preemptive­ly took a shot at skeptics who would argue that tackling poverty is too big a task, saying she relishes a challenge to prove people wrong and is personally drawn to the cause.

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