Advocates for affordable housing in Woodlawn erected about a dozen tents on a city-owned lot Thursday demanding Mayor Lori Lightfoot revise an ordinance to prevent people from being displaced by the incoming Obama Presidential Center.
The goal of taking over the vacant lot at 63rd Street and Blackstone Avenue was to show the faces of who still live in the neighborhood and call for access to quality housing at an affordable rate. Organizers held “teach-ins” for the community inside the tent city, played music, gave out free lunch and concluded with a march.
Ebonee Green, an organizer with BYP100 and the Obama CBA Coalition, said people shouldn’t forget that high-end development is still happening in Woodlawn despite the world seemingly shutting down due to the coronavirus.
“We know that on most of those empty lots there will be luxury development, but we want to make sure that when all of these beautiful luxury things come that we have a place here,” said Green, a longtime Woodlawn resident. “Right now, the mayor proposes a plan that does not protect all of us.”
Green said the CBA coalition is asking that 75% of city-owned vacant lots in Woodlawn be dedicated for the construction of affordable housing that will benefit the neighborhood’s longtime residents. A year ago, the group wanted all lots turned into affordable housing.
She also said proposed affordable housing must go beyond studio apartments and include housing units that can fit whole families.
“We are looking to protect families, so we want to make sure that written in the ordinance are two- and three-bedroom units,” Green said. “We don’t think that is too much, we don’t think we are asking for the world, but we’re asking for something to make sure that our people can stay here when this place becomes something that is almost unrecognizable.”
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For months Lightfoot has received pushback from organizers and more progressive city council members for introducing watered-down housing protections in Woodlawn instead of negotiating changes to the community benefits ordinance introduced last year.
Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th) arrived at the camp to show his support for those fighting for affordable housing. His ward is facing similar fights against housing displacement.
“We’re tired to see the city continue with plans without including those that are affected by the plan. We continue to see displacement in our communities. We continue to see homelessness. We continue to see the lack of affordable housing,” Sigcho-Lopez said.
“But more than anything else we continue to see an administration who’s not willing to sit at the table with the leaders of our community,”
Sigcho-Lopez said Lightfoot’s administration is “deaf” to the pleas for the community and demanded an improve community benefit agreement.
“The question to Mayor Lightfoot, is she willing to listen? Is she hearing us now?” he said. “Because we’re coming together, communities of color, black and brown, we’re coming together to demand of the city what is needed during these unprecedented time.”
26-Delivered
via Chicago Sun-Times
June 11, 2020 at 06:16PM
