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'Rotted' Historic Building In Old Town Triangle Could Be Seized By City

By Ted Cox | March 30, 2017 5:00pm | Updated on March 30, 2017 10:43pm
 With the steeple of St. Michael's Roman Catholic Church in the background, the building at 1720 N. Sedgwick Ave. stands in the rain Thursday with no roof , no tarp and open walls.
With the steeple of St. Michael's Roman Catholic Church in the background, the building at 1720 N. Sedgwick Ave. stands in the rain Thursday with no roof , no tarp and open walls.
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DNAinfo/Ted Cox

OLD TOWN TRIANGLE — The city has moved to seize control of a historic landmark district building that it says has been left to rot at 1720 N. Sedgwick Ave.

"We believe that this owner is allowing the building to deteriorate so he can obtain a demolition permit," said Ald. Michele Smith (43rd), after she joined in a city complaint against owner Joseph Younes in housing court on Thursday.

Associate Judge Patrice Ball-Reed agreed, granting the city the right to appoint a temporary receiver to secure the building and get a report done on its structural integrity.

Younes, however, took issue with the charge that he's out to raze the house. "We did not want to demolish this building from the start," he said. "We wanted to save it."

Younes insisted he and his contractor got stuck in a bind between needing to make immediate repairs and the involved process of getting permission for those repairs from the Commission on Chicago Landmarks for a building in the Old Town Triangle Historic District.

The city filed a complaint against Younes after inspectors recently issued a stop-work order on the building, charging that the work had exceeded a permit allowing the foundation to be shored up.

 The city recently slapped a stop-work order on the building for exceeding work allowed in a permit  to fix the foundation.
The city recently slapped a stop-work order on the building for exceeding work allowed in a permit to fix the foundation.
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DNAinfo/Ted Cox

Younes said that, while doing the foundation work, he and the contractor made a snap decision to replace a key structural beam and remove the roof to ease stress on the walls.

"My contractor said if it was allowed to remain in that condition, it could fall down at any time and injure pedestrians and passersby," Younes said. "So we made a judgment call at that moment in time, and said this stuff has got to come down."

The judge ruled that was in violation of city permit processes in the landmark district.

Smith added that, as of Thursday, amid heavy spring rains, the house still had no roof and missing walls, with no tarp or other form of protection.

"There's a serious danger of this building in a landmark district simply deteriorating because it hasn't been properly cared for during the rehabilitation process," Smith said. "We want to send a message to anyone who possesses properties and is not maintaining them that we'll do everything in our legal power to make sure the Old Town Triangle is preserved."

According to Smith, Younes could never get agreements with the Buildings Department and the Landmarks Commission "because he seemed to be dragging his feet all the time."

"Now we have this guy we think is willingly letting it deteriorate," she added. "We're not going to let that happen."

Jordan Matyas, who represented the Old Town Triangle Association at Thursday's court hearing, said Younes was being disingenuous in saying he didn't intend to level the site. "He's told me twice that he always wanted to demolish it," Matyas said, and he told the judge that he intended to pursue a demolition permit as well. "So we have some mixed signals from the owner, but his actions speak clearly about his intent for the building."

Younes, however, said he was in a bind with the city where he's damned if he does something, and damned if he doesn't. He added that it was Smith who failed to act when, after he bought the building for $833,000, it took him years to evict the previous owner, a "hoarder" who allowed the place to fall into disrepair and become infested with rats. Younes said if he'd been granted power over the property sooner, he might have been able to do more to save it.

"The building was built in the late 1800s," he said. "This building rotted itself."

According to Younes, all the architects he's consulted have said the building cannot be salvaged, contrary to the city's position.

"What they want is for a structural engineer to say the building is structurally sound. And nobody wants to sign off on it. The building is too old," Younes said. "Up to now, we can't find anyone who's willing to sign off. If they can find someone who's willing to sign off and tell us how to do it, we'll be ecstatic."

Of course, city attorney Greg Janes argued in court Thursday that's exactly what Younes wants, to be told it's permissible to demolish the building.

Both sides will be back in court for renewed arguments at a follow-up hearing set for April 27, and before that it's expected to be on the agenda for the next meeting of the Commission on Chicago Landmarks on April 6.

Police Hiring Process Discriminates Against Blacks, Latinos: Ald. Beale

By Heather Cherone | November 2, 2017 3:34pm | Updated on November 2, 2017 3:42pm
 The process the Chicago Police Department is using to hire more than 1,000 new officer by the end of 2018 
The process the Chicago Police Department is using to hire more than 1,000 new officer by the end of 2018 "systematically" discriminates against Black and Latino Chicagoans, Ald. Anthony Beale (9th) said Thursday.
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DNAinfo/Heather Cherone

CITY HALL — Of the 804 new Chicago Police officers hired in 2017, 41 percent are white, according to data provided to aldermen Thursday. Some 35 percent are Hispanic, 17 percent are black and 7 percent are Asian.

That's evidence, says Ald. Anthony Beale (9th), that process the department is using to hire more than 1,000 new officers by the end of 2018 "systematically discriminates" against black and Latino Chicagoans.

"If we don't hurry up and change this process, we are going to have a problem," Beale said.

The Police Department's 2018 budget includes $65 million to fund the second and final phase of an effort to hire nearly 1,000 officers to stop a surge in violence that swept the South and West sides starting in 2016 — a goal Supt. Eddie Johnson said he would achieve.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel vowed to ensure that those new officers reflected the city's multicultural makeup, and his office repeatedly trumpeted the fact that 76 percent of the 14,200 people who applied to the police department earlier this month were black, Latino or Asian.

Commenting on the racial data revealed Thursday, "That does not make sense,"  adding, "The test discriminates systematically against minorities."

Many African Americans fail to make it through the hiring process because they have poor credit ratings, often times because they have failed to make a payment on a student loan, Beale said. That creates a vicious circle where people can't get a job, and fall behind on their bills — and then can't get a job because of the missed payments.

"This has been burning my ass for years," Beale said.

Overall, the department is 48 percent white, with black and Latino officers each making up 24 percent of the department, according to CPD data. Asian officers make up 4 percent, according to the data.

The overall city makeup in 2016 was 32.6 percent white, 29.7 percent Hispanic, 29.3 percent black and 6.3 percent Asian, according to the U.S. Census.

Ald. Tom Tunney (44th) urged the department to redouble its efforts to recruit Asian officers, especially those who belong to the Muslim faith in order to serve a growing community in his North Side ward.

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