Friday, August 14, 2015

Critics are calling this racist. I say it is well said.


In Chicago, wishing for a Hurricane Katrina
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Kristen McQueary
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
kmcqueary@chicagotribune.com
AUGUST 13, 2015, 3:22 PM
Envy isn't a rational response to the upcoming 10-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.
But with Aug. 29 fast approaching and New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu making media rounds, including at the Tribune Editorial Board, I find myself wishing for a storm in Chicago — an unpredictable, haughty, devastating swirl of fury. A dramatic levee break. Geysers bursting through manhole covers. A sleeping city, forced onto the rooftops.
That's what it took to hit the reset button in New Orleans. Chaos. Tragedy. Heartbreak.
Residents overthrew a corrupt government. A new mayor slashed the city budget, forced unpaid furloughs, cut positions, detonated labor contracts. New Orleans' City Hall got leaner and more efficient. Dilapidated buildings were torn down. Public housing got rebuilt. Governments were consolidated.
An underperforming public school system saw a complete
makeover. A new schools chief, Paul Vallas, designed a school system with the flexibility of an entrepreneur. No restrictive mandates from the city or the state. No demands from teacher unions to abide. Instead, he created the nation's first free-market education system.
Hurricane Katrina gave a great American city a rebirth.
And after careful study of the levees, it turns out the devastation was not born of natural disaster. It was man- made.
The same could be said of Chicago.
This weekend is the Chicago Air & Water Show. Thousands of people will stream to Chicago's lakefront to marvel at the city and its offerings. All five senses, satiated. Visitors will clamp their palms on their ears to tame the vibration. They will gasp at the stunning skyline. They will taste the sand-swept breeze. They will feel the sun's touch. They will smell the engine fuel.
They will delight.
Chicago is so good at hiding its rot.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/commentary/ct-chicago-katrina-financial-disaster-landrieu-new-orleans-mcqueary-emanuel-pers-20150813-column.html 1/3
8/13/2015 In Chicago, wishing for a Hurricane Katrina - Chicago Tribune
Beneath the pretty surface, Chicago faces financial challenges that threaten its future. Decades of overspending and borrowing — practices that continue even as the city and its school system face consistent downgrades in the bond market — tear at its very stability. It is the gravest issue. More than crime. More than education. More than poverty.
You'd never know it by the casual approach of government, both at City Hall and Chicago Public Schools, toward spiraling debt, and our elected officials' continued practice of the risks that got us here.
Forrest Claypool just took over CPS. You can hardly blame him for the ruinous, junk-bond status of the district's finances. Yet he defends the latest CPS budget, which relies on borrowing against borrowing and a bailout from dead-broke Springfield, to appear balanced on paper. He admits it's a budget to buy time. As if we have it.
Lately, every time public officials talk about their budget solutions, it feels like a scene from "Glengarry Glen Ross." Desperate, sweaty and deceitful.
At City Hall, nothing much has changed under four years of Mayor Rahm Emanuel. The candidate in 2011 who promised to make tough decisions on city finances has followed many of the risky practices of his predecessor. The city continues to pass budgets that are unbalanced and rely on borrowing, temporary revenue sources, gimmicky fee hikes and tax increment finance sweeps.
The city borrowed $900 million last year. Another $1.1 billion in June. Emanuel is planning on borrowing yet another $500 million currently. All of the borrowing kicks the can down the road, costs taxpayers hundreds of millions more in interest payments and jeopardizes other worthy programs, under the guise of what? Protecting middle-class taxpayers from a big hit? No, they're lining us up for a firing squad.
In June, just a month after new City Council members took their seats, only one freshman voted against the borrowing. One.
Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, 35th, said he could not in good conscience vote for more borrowing when the city has no long-term plan to correct its financial spiral. Every other candidate who campaigned on not being a rubber stamp to Emanuel, on taking a hard look at the city's books, on refusing to vote on something shoved under their noses at the last minute — they went right along with the mayor's borrowing plan. There was not even debate on the council floor.
Only two incumbents voted against the June borrowing: Ald. Scott Waguespack, 32nd, and Ald. John Arena, 45th.
So if you think somehow new leadership is going to right the ship, you might want to get your head checked. There is no sense of urgency about the city's or the schools' perpetual abyss. Not under Emanuel. Not with a new City Council. Not with a new board at CPS.
That's why I find myself praying for a real storm. It's why I can relate, metaphorically, to the residents of New Orleans climbing onto their rooftops and begging for help and waving their arms and lurching toward rescue helicopters.
Except here, no one responds to the SOS messages painted boldly in the sky. Instead, they double down on their own man-made disaster.
Kristen McQueary is a member of the Tribune Editorial Board.
Copyright © 2015, Chicago Tribune
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/commentary/ct-chicago-katrina-financial-disaster-landrieu-new-orleans-mcqueary-emanuel-pers-20150813-column.html 2/3

8/13/2015 In Chicago, wishing for a Hurricane Katrina - Chicago Tribune
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/commentary/ct-chicago-katrina-financial-disaster-landrieu-new-orleans-mcqueary-emanuel-pers-20150813-column.html 3/3 

6 comments:

  1. Anonymous8/14/2015

    You know all this is fine and well but my question is where were all these goo-goos when all these social entitlement programs, school lunches, busing, condoms for gays, free needles for heroin addicts, and on and on. Where were the objections? These reporters follow city hall and the goings on in Springfield, where were the objections? So after the city decided to use the pension funds as their personal piggy bank to bring home some bacon for their constituents, and forgot for 30 plus years to honor their IOU's, we see hand wringing and finger pointing on the part of the media. Well, they do their part, the write and produce the stories about those greedy government employees, thinking their entitled to something for their 20 and 30 plus years of 8.5% of their pay being deducted. Just wondering.

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  2. Anonymous8/14/2015

    She is backpedaling like a coward liberal hack. Trump would have doubled down if confronted. It must be nice for a professional journalist to have the power to let readers know that what you got paid to write is not what is in your heart.

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  3. Anonymous8/14/2015

    Now Rahm will own her

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  4. Anonymous8/15/2015

    It is incredible the amount of borrowing that the city and Bd of Ed is doing. Our leaders are playing a game of kick the can.

    These loans will have to be paid back in 5, 10 or 20 years or else bankruptcy will be the only viable option. Rather than cut spending they have chosen to continue being irresponsible.

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  5. Anonymous8/17/2015

    The Chicago Tribune is a disgusting rag, and they have no credibility. Especially the editorial board. ..do any of them even live in Chicago?

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  6. Anonymous8/25/2015

    When is the Chicago Tribune going to do some investigative reporting on their misdeeds and questionable practices. Their CEO sexually harassed a waitress. Tribune media gets sued all of the time, loses, then hides their lawsuits from the Internet. John Kass tried to smear some cop and got him charged criminally only that guy beat the case. Eric Zorn painted some other black guy as a criminal and.that guy ended up incarcerated released from prison and is now suing for 40 million.
    Tribune sued by its investors for bilking them When is the tribune going to come clean?

    ReplyDelete