Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Wal-Mart to open Chatham Supercenter: 2nd of 3 planned stores in Chicago has been subject of 7-year battle with unions, other opponents












Wal-Mart Stores Inc. opened its long-anticipated Supercenter in Chatham on Wednesday, January 25th, the culmination of a seven-year battle to establish a store on the former steel company site.

The 157,000-square-foot store is the Bentonville, Ark.-based discount chain's second Supercenter in the city. A Supercenter is a general merchandise store that also sells a full line of groceries, including fresh produce, and has a meat counter and a bakery.

The world's largest retailer opened its first Chicago store in the Austin neighborhood in September 2006. Four years later, Wal-Mart remade the 142,000-square-foot general merchandise store into a Supercenter.

A third Supercenter is slated to open next year at a shuttered steel mill site in Pullman on the Far South Side.

As the nation's largest grocer, Wal-Mart faced opposition from organized labor when it first attempted to set up shop in Chicago. Unions representing workers at traditional supermarkets, including Jewel and Dominick's, campaigned to keep the nonunion retail powerhouse from entering the city, relying on zoning laws and political influence with aldermen to stymie Wal-Mart's urban expansion.

The tide changed in the wake of the recession, when a weakened economy and high unemployment bolstered Wal-Mart's case for rolling out city stores and bringing in sales tax revenue and jobs.

In the past year, Wal-Mart has refocused its urban strategy on smaller grocery and convenience stores operating under the banners Neighborhood Market and Wal-Mart Express. In July, the nation's first Wal-Mart Express, a 10,000-square-foot convenience store, opened in Chatham, on the outskirts of the Chatham Market shopping center housing Wal-Mart's new Supercenter.




Monday, January 23, 2012

Emanuel announces plan to reopen libraries on Mondays





Story Image

Mayor Rahm Emanuel




Chicago’s branch libraries will reopen on Mondays, thanks to a political end-run engineered by Mayor Rahm Emanuel.



The mayor has accused the union representing library employees of blocking a scheduling change that would have averted the all-day Monday closing because they’re using libraries as a “bargaining chip” to “achieve something else.”



But, he’s not about to sit around and wait for the stalemate with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Council 31 to end.



On Saturday, the mayor announced that branch libraries will re-open on Monday afternoons — just as he had planned before the union balked at a schedule that included two half-days-a-week so libraries could open late on Monday and Friday.



Starting Feb. 6, the libraries will be staffed on Monday afternoons during the school year with the help of 90 union positions: approximately 45 reinstated union members, 32 who are being called back after being laid off, and 13 who will return to full-time status after being bumped to part-time; about 25 reassigned staffers from the Harold Washington Library and an estimated 20 new part-time library associates. A “re-balancing” of an unspecified number of other staffers will bolster the arrangement, said Library Commissioner Mary Dempsey, who said she was “thrilled” about it at a news conference where Emanuel announced the plan at the West Pullman Library, 830 W. 119th St..



Mayoral press secretary Sarah Hamilton said reopening the libraries on Mondays was a difficult task.



“It was not easy to do this. We had to take some difficult steps. But the bottom line is libraries will be open six-days-a-week and our kids will have a place to go during the school year. It’s the right thing to do for the city,” Hamilton said.



The end-run allows the mayor to declare victory — for the time being at least — in his latest skirmish with organized labor.



The only question is whether AFSCME will pay the price at the bargaining table when its union contract expires on June 30.



That’s a distinct possibility, judging from the heated rhetoric on both sides.



Earlier this month, Emanuel lambasted the union for standing in the way of a solution less painful to library patrons than the all-day Monday closing that infuriated Chicago aldermen.



“I’m as upset as the aldermen are. … I didn’t support this and I don’t want it. ... I don’t think it’s the right thing to do. That’s why I came up with an alternative idea. But the alternative idea requires a `yes’ from the other side,” Emanuel said.



“I expect labor to be a partner in better managing the time because it’s about the people we serve in communities — not about them. ... They’re trying to talk about a host of other subjects. I want to solve the library problem. ... What it needs is a partner who’s ready to see that’s the goal and not try to use the libraries as a bargaining chip for something else.”



At the Saturday news conference, Emanuel clearly was talking about the union when he said: ‘Don’t try to achieve other objectives through the back door of the librairies.”



“We have tough times,” he added. “I can’t wish those tough times away.”



Henry Bayer, executive director of AFSCME Council 31, countered by saying the city has dragged its feet on setting up meetings with the union.



“Because the city has not communicated with our union in more than a week, we know none of the details of this plan,” he said in a prepared statement.



“Recalling some employees to work and restoring some library hours appears to be a step in the right direction, and a sign that the mayor is starting to appreciate the importance of libraries.”



“Today’s plan seems to leave branch libraries closed most Monday mornings and more than 100 library employees still out of work. We urge the mayor to work with the union to finish the job for the people of Chicago, a world-class city that deserves libraries fully open and fully staffed.”



Bayer accused the mayor of “looking for scapegoats rather than solutions” to the library controversy to “hide the fact that libraries aren’t a big priority for this administration.”



He noted that the mayor “wanted to cut the libraries even more” before an aldermanic outcry forced him to soften the blow.



Bayer also denounced a pair of powerful aldermen as “handmaidens of the mayor” for suggesting that library employees forfeit their 3.5 percent pay raise for 2012 to generate the $1.6 million needed to keep libraries open six days a week.



If Emanuel can ask corporate donors to help bankroll the $60 million NATO and G-8 Summits, Bayer said, he can ask those same businesses to cough up $3 million to keep Chicago public libraries open on Mondays.



BY FRAN SPIELMAN Chicago Sun-Times City Hall Reporter fspielman@suntimes.com

Friday, January 20, 2012

1 shot overnight in South Chatham





A person in the Chesterfield neighborhood was shot late Thursday and early Friday, including a 47-year-old man injured as he struggled with an armed robber in South Chatham, police said.

That man was walking on the 600 block of East 89th Street about 3:30 a.m. when two younger men, between 18 and 20, approached him from behind and announced a robbery, police said.


They were after the man’s jewelry, police said.

The older man struggled with the armed robber and was shot in the thigh, and the two fled east on 89th Street, police said.

The victim was taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center in good condition, police said.

Autopsy: Woman's death caused in part from traffic crash injuries






A South Side woman with multiple health issues has died after a traffic crash in the Chatham neighborhood last November, authorities said today.

Kim Ware, 41, of the 5700 block of South Indiana Avenue, was pronounced dead at 3:05 p.m. Wednesday at the University of Chicago Hospitals, according to the Cook County Medical Examiner’s office.



An autopsy Thursday determined Ware died mainly of sepsis, and partially of multiple injuries from the motor vehicle accident, according to the medical examiner’s office.

Ware’s death was also caused by deep vein thrombosis, a skin infection and lupus, according to the medical examiner’s office.

Her death was ruled an accident.

The wreck occurred Nov. 30 in the 0-100 block of East 80th Street, according to police News Affairs Officer Veejay Zala.

Further details on the crash were not immediately available.

Police News Affairs Officer Robert Perez said a death investigation is under way.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Chicago program turns vacant condo buildings into affordable rentals

The city has taken steps to turn condo units into apartments by selling the entire buildings to investors and developers who will rehab them.













(E. Jason Wambsgans, Chicago Tribune / December 22, 2011)






As the housing market enters a new year of watching and waiting for stability to return, there is also some action afoot: Efforts are expected to take shape to tackle the vast swath of empty homes and fill them with residents — and in many cases, renters.

Much of the worry for housing in 2012 concerns unemployment levels and elevated mortgage delinquency rates. The number of homes entering the foreclosure process is also on the uptick as servicers pick up the pace following a slowdown caused by questions about industry practices. During the third quarter of 2011, the number of homes that entered the foreclosure process was 21 percent higher than in the second quarter, and there are an estimated 3 million homes whose mortgages are seriously delinquent, are in foreclosure or have been repossessed and are bank-owned.

On a national level, the Treasury Department, the Federal Housing Finance Agency and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development issued a call months ago for ideas for how to turn single-family foreclosed homes owned by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration into rental properties.

On Wednesday in a white paper on the housing market that was delivered to Congress, the Federal Reserve said many bank-owned foreclosures "appear to be viable rental properties."

Within the city of Chicago, armed with an almost 2-year-old law, those efforts have moved beyond pen and paper. In such neighborhoods as West Woodlawn, Austin and Rogers Park, areas where condominium foreclosures have left entire buildings empty and created eyesores, the city has taken steps to turn condo units into apartments by selling entire buildings to investors and developers who will rehab them for rental.

The program is the result of amendments to the state's Condominium Property Act that took effect in January 2010. The changes allow a municipality to petition a Circuit Court to allow a receiver to sell the distressed building as a whole. Owners of the units, which typically are lenders, receive a fractional share of the proceeds from a sale after liens are erased. After taking bids, a judge decides who the buyer of the building should be, a decision based not just on price but on the buyer's financial resources, track record and building plans.

"It doesn't help anyone, if we put all these resources in, if it's going to wind up right back in court for drug activity or bad porches," said Greg Janes, senior counsel in the city's Law Department.

To date, about 150 Chicago condo buildings, from six-flats to a 36-unit building, are somewhere in the process of being converted into apartment buildings. Community Investment Corp., a nonprofit mortgage lender in Chicago that acts as the court-appointed receiver for the bulk of the properties, estimates that it has found more than 250 buildings so far that are salvageable and may qualify.

Some, but not all, are in the nine neighborhoods — Humboldt Park, Chatham, Chicago Lawn, West Woodlawn, Auburn Gresham, West Pullman, Belmont Cragin, Englewood, and Grand Boulevard — identified by the city in August as micromarkets where foreclosures have decimated the community and a drastic solution is needed.

Many of the buildings are in their present state because of fraudulent mortgage activity. Others had legitimate developers who were financially stretched too thin and couldn't complete their rehabs, or who fell victim to the housing crisis and weren't able to sell all the units in a building.

"We're trying to make use of these buildings instead of losing them," said John "Jack" Markowski, president of Community Investment Corp. "All we want to do is put the property back together and restore it back to the rental housing stock of the city."

Additional apartments, particularly affordable rentals, are needed. A report issued by DePaul University's Institute for Housing Studies found that almost 483,000 renters needed affordable housing in 2009, but only 303,000 rental units were considered affordable.

Private-sector investors have been picking up foreclosure bargains and readying them for sale or rental for the past two years, and now the nation is seeing more policymakers get engaged in the process, said Zillow chief economist Stan Humphries.

"This is a very positive dynamic in the marketplace that heals the market," he said. "It comes down to supply and demand. Right now we have a lot of supply on the purchase side and not a lot of demand. From an economic standpoint, it seems that you'd want to move some housing inventory from the purchase side to the rental side of the ledger."

In their current state, there almost certainly would be no interest in the 36 condos in a U-shaped brick building near 62nd Street and Martin Luther King Drive in Chicago's West Woodlawn neighborhood, to date the largest building in the program.

Plywood covers most of the windows, and large steel security doors open to entryways and mailboxes that still have names on them. Individual units, while missing the furnaces, copper plumbing and fixtures that typically disappear during foreclosure, nevertheless show some signs of promise. Given the state of the for-purchase market though, a condo developer would be hard pressed to wade through the process of tracing ownership and purchasing all the units individually and then rehabbing the building for sale.

Converting the building to apartments, and securing funding through the Community Investment Corp., is considered one of the few realistic options, and that is a discussion that the city has had repeatedly with lenders.

'"There was some initial reluctance by banks simply because this was a new program, a new statute," Janes said. "But we've explained to banks that their asset isn't worth what they think it is. The only way for that asset to be worth anything is if it's deconverted and sold as one building rather than 12 individual condos."

Markowski has high hopes for the effort.

"It's created a whole different scenario," he said. "Instead of asking people to donate property, you have this urgency of the city asking to deconvert. This nudges (the bank) along."

The city and Community Investment Corp. are trying to identify a building, move it through the process and put it on the market for sale within a year, a goal that isn't yet met consistently.

Still, the first building sales should occur this spring, after which those neighborhoods will see the arrival of contractors and, eventually, new residents.

"We are in the early stages of a complete beginning-to-end success story," Janes said.

What will define success? "When they're occupied," Janes said.

New Library Hours

The Whitney Young branch of the Chicago Public Library at 7901 South Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Drive now has new hours effective immediately:

Sunday-Monday: CLOSED

Tuesday: 12:00 PM - 8:00 PM

Wednesday: 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM

Thursday: 12:00 PM - 8:00 PM

Friday-Saturday: 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Chatham Food Market is the Place to Be for the MLK Holiday Weekend!!!

Make sure you stock up on fresh produce for the upcoming Dr. Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday weekend with great grocery shopping at Chatham Food Market, 327 East 79Th Street in the heart of the Chatham retail strip! http://www.chathamfoods.com/
http://www.chathamfoods.com/our-ad.html