February 2007 Archives

UNC ENews - The Truth About Wilson Yard

| 7 Comments | No TrackBacks

UNC E-News, February 17, 2007

Wilson Yard--Good Urban Planning? Or Urban Nightmare?
*******************************************************************

In the past two decades since Helen Shiller became the 46th ward alderman, she's been called many things...  A smart urban planner is not one of them.

The Wilson Yard TIF project, located on one of the most desolate stretches of Broadway, has amplified how Helen Shiller keeps the 46th ward retail streets dark, empty and dangerous, while every ward bordering the 46th has developed thriving retail areas.

With the aldermanic election right around the corner, Helen Shiller has pulled out her campaign check book to bamboozle voters with a glossy Wilson Yard mailing that promises to beguile residents hungry for some decent retail shopping within the ward.  The rendering shows an appealing tree-lined street with lots of brightly-lit store fronts, a Target store, plus an Aldi's with welcoming windows for shoppers.

What's really going into Wilson Yard?  Not much right now besides the low income housing and Aldi's.  No movie theaters.  No small retailers have signed leases. And now it is extremely questionable whether Target will ever be a part of the development.

If the new Aldi's, which is currently under construction, is a sample of what's to come, the plan is in serious trouble and will only further depress the 46th ward's retail corridor.  The glossy Wilson Yard rendering shows Aldi's with windows all along Broadway. What has actually been built is a solid 100-foot concrete and brick wall that closes off the interior of the store from Broadway, thus perpetuating the stark street environment that will be unwelcoming, forbidding and unsafe.

Compare this actual photo of the new Aldi fronting Broadway to the glossy campaign material sent to you by Helen Shiller.  You will never know the truth about Wilson Yard if you continue to buy what Alderman Shiller has been selling you...

Once promised to be a "thriving mixed-use, mixed-income development", Wilson Yard has fallen prey to Helen Shiller's personal agenda. First to fall was the mixed-income housing that suddenly became 100% subsidized housing for extremely low to very low income residents.  Helen Shiller has once again double-crossed low-income residents who were told they would be able to purchase their housing units after 15 years, thus giving them the chance to actually own their homes.  Click here to see the entire Illinois Housing Development Authority's Low Income Housing classification of Wilson Yard housing.

The housing is the largest portion of Wilson Yard. The rendering below, created by the developer, shows how massive this building will be along Montrose and Broadway.  This prominent corner, that should be gateway for vibrant retail, falls prey to Shiller's misguided planning.  Click the image below to see the full sized rendering.

Helen Shiller was also deceptive when she told residents that Wilson Yard would have a movie theater complex as a key component.  In reality, the theaters were never viable in the plan presented to the public.  Soon after the community meeting, the theaters were quietly killed in a backroom deal and the community was never informed.  Helen Shiller's response: "It's no big deal." Dave Roeder, Sun-Times reporter, covered a community meeting where hundreds of outraged community residents showed up expecting a long-overdue Wilson Yard update.  Helen Shiller and developer Peter Holsten ignored the community and blew the meeting off. Click here to read the entire Sun-Times article

And Target? According to Shiller and Holsten, Target is coming for sure, yet they have refused to produce any written documentation verifying this.  The date for Target's ground-breaking mysteriously keeps moving to the next year. Several residents and a reporter have made inquiries through various Target contacts; all have been told there is no Target in the building plans for the near future.

"The (Wilson Yard) development is a future slum for Uptown. The current design is deadly for neighborhood safety and building a vibrant retail area." 

A reknowned ULI (Urban Land Institute) planner reviewed the plan.  His critique clearly states, "The (Wilson Yard) development is a future slum for Uptown.  The current design is deadly for neighborhood safety and building a vibrant retail area. There is no active street frontage and without it, the street becomes a place for crime."

The poor planning doesn't stop there.  The soil in Wilson Yard is contaminated and requires a clean-up plan that has not been properly addressed by the developer since their initial Wilson Yard Site evaluation report was denied by the EPA in 2004.  Building cannot proceed without addressing the required toxic cleanup to assure residents'  and shoppers' health.

A savvy 46th ward resident obtained documents sent by the EPA chastising the City's Department of the Environment for their sloppy work on submitting required Wilson Yard Environmental Site Evaluation report.  Apparently the Wilson Yard site has lots of hazardous chemicals, like arsenic and lead, and how these toxins are going to be sampled and cleaned-up has yet to be defined. The EPA denied the 2004 evaluation and clean-up report submitted.  If you'd  like to read more on the toxic clean-up reports, click here and here.

The Wilson Yard plan, ten years in the making, gobbling up millions of property tax-supplied TIF dollars, seems to have lost its way in the convoluted world of developer greed, personal political agendas, and just bad urban planning.

Get informed! 
Vote smart on February 27!

Learn more by visiting www.uncchicago.org

Vote Today - Use Early Voting Locations Near You

| No Comments | No TrackBacks

You Can Vote Today!

Voting has never been easier. Early voting lets you vote at ANY of 51 different locations throughout the city, including several on the north side around our ward, plus downtown.

Take advantage of Early Voting…

• Vote at any of 51 locations
• Early voting every day until Thursday, February 22…
• M-F 9am to 5pm
• Weekends  9am to noon

Voting locations near you:
• Truman College, 1145 W. Wilson
• Wells Park, 2333 W. Sunnyside
• Edgewater Library, 1210 Elmdale
• Downtown location, Election Board HQ, 69 W. Washington, lower level

Complete list of early voting locations Available here.

Photo I.D. required: Driver’s license or State issued I.D.

Alderman Helen Shiller has brazenly broken agreed upon rules for the 46th ward Aldermanic debate held last week by posting video of the debate on her campaign web site.  The specific rules of the debate called for no video taping or recording of the event, and no use of video or audio by the campaigns.

These rules were explicitly explained by the League's moderator just moments before the candidates' opening statements.  Everyone in the room seems to have heard and lived up to this agreement except for Helen Shiller.

You can read the League of Women Voters press release here.

UNC eNews for February 1, 2007

| No Comments | No TrackBacks

UNC E-News, February 1, 2007
46th Ward Crime & Safety
************************************
26 Days until the Aldermanic election

With the election so close, UNC will focus on the top community issues identified by 500 people from our recent survey:  Crime & Safety, Lack of retail, Wilson Yard.  Part 1...

Depending on who you listen to, the 46th ward is either the safest north side ward, or the most dangerous.  You decide. 

At last night's debate, Helen Shiller stated that the 23rd district's crime level is down.  And that's true.  What James Capplemen, the democratic candidate for alderman, pointed out, is the 23rd district includes Lakeview, Lincoln Park and Uptown.  When you spread the crime stats around, they don't look so bad.  What's really going on with crime in the 46th ward?

2006 was a dangerous year for Uptown.  There have been two murders, 2 major drug-ring busts with 27 people arrested.  One drug bust was at the Happy Wash Laundromat on Wilson, with moms and kids the front for the drug dealers, to read the Police Alert click here. The other took place at a CHA high-rise on Eastwood.  Multiple gang shootings, including one that sent a car crashing into a high-rise on Clarendon and Wilson, and so much gun-fire that several neighbors have moved after being caught in the cross-fire.

The current alderman's response to address all this violent crime?  Dead silence.  The picture of the police roll call shown above was held a few days after the last young male was murdered on December 2.  Where was Alderman Shiller?

Why has Helen Shiller refused to take a strong stand on crime in our community?  Seems that this question was asked by a tenacious Sun-Times Reporter, Ray Coffey, when he took a revealing look at aldermanic connections with the gangs in 1999.  To read Ray Coffey's article, click here.

If you'd like to learn more about crime in your immediate neighborhood, you have two on-line resources,  www.chicagocrime.org is one.  Take a look at the crimes listed below for Sheridan Road.  Watch the jump in the heart of the 46th ward, better known as Uptown.

Get informed! Vote Smart!

UNC
www.uncchicago.org

A freely browsable database of crimes reported in Chicago.
Browse by: Crime type Street Date Police district ZIP code Ward Location Route City map

Search:

Crimes by street / Sheridan Rd.

If a block isn't listed here, it hasn't had any reported crimes in the currently available date range.

2800 N 27 crimes
2900 N 13 crimes
3000 N 24 crimes
3100 N 21 crimes
3200 N 15 crimes
3900 N 55 crimes
4000 N 37 crimes
4100 N 21 crimes
4200 N 25 crimes
4300 N 9 crimes
4400 N 192 crimes
4500 N 155 crimes
4600 N 128 crimes
4700 N 61 crimes
4800 N 160 crimes
4900 N 32 crimes
5000 N 79 crimes
5100 N 47 crimes
5200 N 90 crimes
5300 N 34 crimes
5400 N 50 crimes
5500 N 28 crimes
5600 N 62 crimes
5700 N 75 crimes
5800 N 92 crimes
5900 N 24 crimes
6000 N 52 crimes
6100 N 17 crimes
6200 N 46 crimes
6300 N 35 crimes
6400 N 47 crimes
6500 N 34 crimes
6600 N 93 crimes
6700 N 47 crimes
6800 N 93 crimes
6900 N 31 crimes
7000 N 70 crimes
7100 N 53 crimes
7200 N 25 crimes
7300 N 27 crimes
7400 N 34 crimes
7500 N 40 crimes
7600 N 102 crimes
7700 N 53 crimes
7800 N 2 crimes
600 W 11 crimes
700 W 29 crimes
800 W 44 crimes
900 W 12 crimes
1000 W 9 crimes
1100 W 8 crimes

About this site RSS Developer services Search Press Donate Powered by Django

Sign Up for the UNC ENews Email Newsletter

| No Comments | No TrackBacks
Get the latest news about Uptown and the 46th ward delivered right to your email inbox.

Just fill in the form, and you'll automatically be added to our email database.

First Name:
Last Name:
E-mail Address:
Telephone:
Address:
City / Town:
State / Province:
ZIP / Postal Code:
Country:

Standing Up to Death Threats

| No Comments | No TrackBacks

Chicago Sun-Times
Standing up to death threats

By Raymond R. Coffey

Like any solid stand-up citizen, Willie Burrell could do, thank you very much, without death threats from gang-bangers and drug dealers.

Because he is an uncommonly courageous do-right kind of guy in his Uptown neighborhood in the 46th Ward, community activist Burrell finds his life on the line.

And Jovan Truss, 18, an alleged affiliate of the Harrison Gents street gang suspected of dealing drugs in Uptown, finds himself in jail under $ 400,000 bond and facing four felony counts of intimidation of a witness and harassment. Burrell is resident manager of a Chicago Housing Authority scattered-site subsidized housing property at 4700 N. Magnolia, a volunteer in his neighborhood CAPS (community policing) program and a well-known foe of rampant drug trafficking in Uptown.

As a CAPS volunteer, Burrell recently supplied Chicago police with valuable information on drug dealing in the building, where he has been a resident for 10 years, and at other neighborhood sites.

That led to three arrests earlier this month. And that led, in turn, to Truss, one of those arrested, returning two or three times to confront Burrell and allegedly threaten, "I'm going to kill you. You'll end up missing."

Police originally -- and properly so, out of concern for his safety -- did not want to identify Burrell, whom I have come to know in writing several columns about Uptown. But Burrell, with 22 community supporters, turned up for Truss' court appearance at which the felony charges were filed Wednesday, and I spoke to him by phone afterward.

He had no objection to being named here -- "Everyone knows who I am." And he wanted to talk about Uptown and the anti-drug battle he has waged for years.

Uptown has a large proportion of CHA scattered-site subsidized housing, and under federal law non-residents are barred from such property and residents are responsible for their visitors. But some of these properties, including his at 4700 N. Magnolia and the building next door at 4706, are overrun with drug dealers who, when arrested, Burrell said, get off by claiming to have "a godmother at 4706, an aunt at 1262 W. Lawrence, another aunt at 4650 N. Malden," etc.

"You check to see where they are hanging out," Burrell said, and invariably it turns out that these claimed relatives are precinct workers" for Ald. Helen Shiller's political organization. Truss, who lives in Oak Park and is accused of making the death threats, claims to have a relative at 4706 N. Magnolia, Burrell said. He doesn't.

Again, according to Burrell, the people who show up to get drug dealers off the hook are generally "political people" from Shiller's organization. "I fault these political people for keeping us under siege," Burrell said, "We've got to have lease violations prosecuted. . . . We need help to rid our community of this rampant drug plague."

Beyond the death threats against him, Burrell believes the drug problem in CHA properties in Uptown is an attempt to interfere with a federally funded Housing and Urban Development Department program that's intended "to empower subsidized housing residents to become self-sufficient."

Along with his job as president of the North East Scattered Site Resident Management Corp., Burrell is secretary of the Citywide Central Advisory Council. The program to shift management control to residents had been moving along toward the point where residents would soon get a federal contract to run their own ship, he said. But the drug problem has become so large and so confounding, with the residents feeling "really intimidated," that the program has come to a stop, Burrell said.

Burrell's personal protection, I'm assured, is getting special police attention, as it should. But the police alone cannot solve the problem. They need the help of more stand-up citizens like Burrell.