After months of callous indecision, the mayor may have finally settled on a reasonable plan
Friday, Mar 15, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Can you imagine the outrage if a Chicago landlord was callously dithering about whether to mass-evict 5,600 tenants, many of them children, some of them in quarantine? Progressive alderpersons/legislators/activists/unions/etc. would be freaking out of their minds. Well, that’s pretty much what’s been playing out in Chicago, only the dithering landlord is the city itself and the tenants are asylum-seeking migrants. And most (not all) of the progressives have remained unusually silent as a self-declared progressive mayor has cavalierly dangled a sword of Damocles over the heads of thousands of people, some of whom have been exposed to the measles virus. “Pressed by reporters, Johnson said [Wednesday] he did not know how many migrants were on the verge of being evicted from city shelters,” WTTW reported last night. “A spokesperson for Johnson said conversations were ongoing Thursday morning about whether the limits would be enforced.” This is what happens when a mayor tries to move on from a crisis before the crisis is actually over. Governments can’t just wish away reality. Sun-Times…
* However, it looks like the city may finally have a plan beyond mass, same-day eviction threats. They’re moving to much more manageable staggered evictions, which makes more sense. The “plan” they had would’ve unnecessarily flooded the landing zone. Tribune…
* Meanwhile, the Texas governor apparently hoodwinked that state’s taxpayers with a pie in the sky boast…
* More from Isabel… * Tribune | Cook County offers to chip in on food costs for migrants, approves delay to paid-leave mandate for schools, parks: If passed by the Cook County Board, the measure would not add to the county’s bottom line. Preckwinkle is asking county commissioners to reallocate money already set aside in an emergency fund for migrant health care in this year’s budget and instead use it to “reimburse the City of Chicago for food service or other new arrival operating costs throughout calendar year 2024,” according to the proposal. * WCIA | State agencies now quarantining Chicago migrants exposed to measles: Since Monday, the state has put up almost 100 family members from 26 households who have been exposed but not tested positive for the virus in the hotel. Families will quarantine for three weeks. The hotel is being used as a temporary quarantine shelter solely and is not open to the public. It has a capacity of up to 110 families. * ABC Chicago | Measles cases reported at CPS schools; migrants quarantined at hotel: State officials are moving families who have been exposed to measles from shelters to unnamed hotels, specifically pregnant women and babies who are not able to be vaccinated. Babies are recommended to get their first dose of the measles vaccine when they are 12 to 15 months old, according to the CDC. * Axios | What we know (and don’t) about Chicago’s measles outbreak: School-aged Pilsen shelter residents have been advised to stay out of school until the vaccination status of all fellow residents has been resolved. Over this week, every eligible Pilsen shelter resident has consented and received an MMR vaccination, Ige says. Officials are also now administering them to new arrivals at the landing zone. * WGN | Migrants at Chicago’s largest shelter call food ‘horrible’, rather buy their own meals as city spends millions: The residents who are choosing to skip the free food…and eat outside gave us pictures of the city provided meals, saying they may look fine but taste terrible. The city even switched vendors earlier this year hoping to address the issues – but trouble has come up again. * Sun-Times | Migrants improvise to re-create dishes that remind them of home: It’s always been Tomás Alvarado’s dream to own a restaurant. After crossing into the United States with his wife Carmen Ollarves, their 3-year-old daughter Grecia and Ollarves’ brother Luis, that dream is in reach now more than ever. Back in Venezuela, there were moments when the couple struggled to find food and make it last. … One dish, in particular, is a nod to the blending of cultures, thanks to the Italian colonial and migratory history in Venezuela: spaghetti with ground beef, plantains and garlic bread.
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- DuPage Saint - Friday, Mar 15, 24 @ 1:43 pm:
maybe he can just evict kids with measles he can say he is doing it to protect the people he lets stay /S
- Amalia - Friday, Mar 15, 24 @ 1:56 pm:
it’s puzzling how the top staffers in that Mayor’s Office cannot get it together.
- Michelle Flaherty - Friday, Mar 15, 24 @ 2:10 pm:
Imagine for a moment that in order to flee crushing economic and political repression you trekked thousands of miles across South and Central America to arrive at the US border only to put on a bus and shipped off to Chicago in the middle of winter where you arrived a total stranger and bounced around shelters until you were evicted by the city’s mayor just in time for an Irish throng to descend upon downtown and the river to turn green.
Welcome to Chicago.
It’d be like getting being blindfolded and dropped off in Pamplona — surprise — just as the bulls were released.
Have a good weekend everyone.
Try to look out for each other.
- Rich Miller - Friday, Mar 15, 24 @ 2:13 pm:
===it’s puzzling how the top staffers===
If we’ve learned anything since 2003 in this state, it’s not really the staffs’ fault.
- Jocko - Friday, Mar 15, 24 @ 2:25 pm:
Like Saint said, I think someone told MBJ that limited evictions is better than a citywide measles outbreak.
- Just Me 2 - Friday, Mar 15, 24 @ 2:27 pm:
It hasn’t surprised me one bit that the progressive groups aren’t stomping mad at all this nonsense. Maybe it was never about policy, it was always about power, like it always is, for everyone in politics.
- Anyone Remember - Friday, Mar 15, 24 @ 2:31 pm:
===Maybe it was never about policy, it was always about power, like it always is, for everyone in politics.===
Actually, is seems it isn’t about governing or power for power’s sake, but to “right wrongs” … and governing is getting in their way.
- Amalia - Friday, Mar 15, 24 @ 2:37 pm:
2003 in this state? I agree that the Mayor is all over the place. but given who is in upper management there, I expect more.
- ArchPundit - Friday, Mar 15, 24 @ 2:42 pm:
==If we’ve learned anything since 2003 in this state, it’s not really the staffs’ fault.
Amen. I’ve know talented and caring staffers in most of the administrations of chaos agents over the last 20+ years and yet, leadership matters and the Mayor doesn’t seem to understand that which is very disappointing to those of us who were excited to see him take office (but weren’t the true believers).
- Moe Berg - Friday, Mar 15, 24 @ 2:44 pm:
Remember when Mayor Johnson fired Dr. Allison Arwady, an expert in infectious diseases with degrees from Harvard, Yale and Columbia universities?
That background probably would have come in handy for anticipating and preventing a measles outbreak. Instead, we got the Johnson administration’s typical day late and a dollar short response.
Imagine a FOIA request might be rather illuminating with regard to the city’s negligence.
- Rich Miller - Friday, Mar 15, 24 @ 2:51 pm:
===but given who is in upper management there===
I’ve seen some very talented upper management totally undercut by goofy principals. C’mon. The history is beyond clear. Staff can only do so much.
- Amalia - Friday, Mar 15, 24 @ 3:08 pm:
well then let’s put the blame where it ultimately should be, Preckwinkle. She gave Johnson to Chicago.