Current:Home > InvestChicago, HUD Settle Environmental Racism Case as Lori Lightfoot Leaves Office -TrueNorth Capital Hub
Chicago, HUD Settle Environmental Racism Case as Lori Lightfoot Leaves Office
View
Date:2025-04-13 02:05:28
This article is published in partnership with the Chicago Sun-Times.
In one of her last acts before leaving office, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot backed down from her previous tough stance and agreed to a deal Friday to settle an investigation by the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development that found City Hall effectively has engaged for years in environmental racism.
Under the three-year, binding agreement with the Biden administration, Lightfoot pledged City Hall will reform its planning, zoning and land-use practices.
That follows a HUD investigation that determined the city of Chicago discriminates against its residents by helping arrange for polluting businesses to move to low-income communities of color such as the Southeast Side, sometimes from wealthier, heavily white communities including Lincoln Park.
The “voluntary compliance agreement” is the result of a civil rights complaint over a Southeast Side scrap-metal operation. That complaint by community groups led to the HUD investigation.
Last year, HUD investigators accused the city of intentionally steering polluters to neighborhoods already overburdened with pollution and threatened to withhold tens of millions of dollars a year in federal funding if the city doesn’t change its practices.
City departments—including those involved with planning and zoning, development, transportation, buildings and housing—will be required to produce an “environmental justice action plan” by Sept. 1 outlining how city hall will take steps to protect neighborhoods from “burdens associated with intensive industrial and transportation uses.”
Environmental justice is broadly defined as protecting low-income communities suffering from poor air quality and other health hazards associated with being inundated with a disproportionate level of pollution. It recognizes that these areas historically have felt the brunt of dirty industry.
Lightfoot, who had revealed some of the details in an executive order Wednesday, also pledged that the city will complete a citywide assessment of environmental and health impacts on neighborhoods that already have poor air quality and other pollution and that the findings from the research will be used to craft reforms.
The aim of that assessment is to “describe how environmental burdens, health conditions and social stressors vary across Chicago and identify neighborhoods that experience the greatest cumulative impacts” from pollution, according to the agreement.
The pact also requires the city to engage with people in affected communities with a goal of introducing an ordinance that will have to be approved by Chicago City Council.
“Chicago is listening to the long-standing concerns voiced by environmental justice organizations and community members who have described how intensive industrial operations and commercial transportation affect their neighborhoods, health and quality of life,” Lightfoot said in a written statement related to her executive order.
HUD will monitor progress made by the city, and it will be up to incoming Mayor Brandon Johnson to see that the efforts continue to address the promised reforms.
“I will always be steadfast in my commitment to advancing environmental justice and improving the health of our residents and communities,” Johnson said earlier this week.
Central to a complaint from three South Side organizations in 2020 was the planned relocation of the General Iron car- and metal-shredding operation from Lincoln Park to East 116th Street along the Calumet River.
The organizations complaining to HUD said neighborhood residents’ civil rights were being violated by the move, which shifted a polluting nuisance in a mostly white, affluent neighborhood to a predominantly Latino community surrounded by majority-Black neighborhoods.
Lightfoot’s administration reached a deal with General Iron and new owner Reserve Management Group that laid out a timeline for shutting down the scrap-metal business and relocating it but didn’t insist on any benefits from the company for the Southeast Side community in that agreement. She ultimately denied the permit for the business, which Reserve Management is appealing.
In the future, planning and zoning decisions will take into account potential pollution to overburdened communities, and an environmental justice project manager will oversee that process, under the agreement with HUD.
Members of groups that filed the complaint with HUD lauded the pact.
Cheryl Johnson, executive director of People for Community Recovery, called the agreement “a new roadmap to fight back against environmental racism.”
“We’re taking our neighborhoods back from polluters,” said Olga Bautista, executive director of the Southeast Environmental Task Force.
HUD has reached similar agreements with other cities over discriminatory practices, though many for different reasons.
HUD still has an ongoing but separate civil rights investigation related to the power that Chicago City Council members wield to prevent low-income housing in their wards.
veryGood! (21235)
Related
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Sue Johanson, Sunday Night Sex Show Host, Dead at 93
- Charlie Sheen and Denise Richards’ Daughter Sami Shares Her Riskiest OnlyFans Photo Yet in Sheer Top
- There are even more 2020 election defamation suits beyond the Fox-Dominion case
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Forecasters Tap High-Tech Tools as US Warns of Another Unusually Active Hurricane Season
- Behold the tax free bagel: A New York classic gets a tax day makeover
- Who bears the burden, and how much, when religious employees refuse Sabbath work?
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Meet the 'financial hype woman' who wants you to talk about money
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- A Black Woman Fought for Her Community, and Her Life, Amidst Polluting Landfills and Vast ‘Borrow Pits’ Mined for Sand and Clay
- Precision agriculture technology helps farmers - but they need help
- Global Warming Drove a Deadly Burst of Indian Ocean Tropical Storms
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Nuclear Fusion: Why the Race to Harness the Power of the Sun Just Sped Up
- Amy Schumer Crashes Joy Ride Cast's Press Junket in the Most Epic Way
- Why it's so hard to mass produce houses in factories
Recommendation
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
EPA Opens Civil Rights Investigation Into Louisiana’s ‘Cancer Alley’
DeSantis seeks to control Disney with state oversight powers
10 Trendy Amazon Jewelry Finds You'll Want to Wear All the Time
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Latest IPCC Report Marks Progress on Climate Justice
How One Native American Tribe is Battling for Control Over Flaring
Ted Lasso’s Brendan Hunt Is Engaged to Shannon Nelson