Chicago Sun-Times

SIGCHO-LOPEZ POISED TO CHAIR ZONING COMMITTEE

Johnson looks past flag-burning flap but leaves Ramirez-Rosa twisting in wind over bullying

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Three months ago, Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th) survived an effort to remove him as Housing Committee chair because he’d attended a rally outside City Hall where an American flag was burned to protest U.S. support for Israel.

Sigcho-Lopez escaped punishment on a divided City Council vote, and only after a private apology and public forgivenes­s.

Now, he’s poised to become the City Council’s powerful Zoning Committee chair with the power to oversee Chicago developmen­t. And Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35th), who resigned as Zoning chair amid charges of bullying and intimidati­ng colleagues, is the odd man out in the game of musical chairs.

Sources said Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office informed alderperso­ns over the weekend that Johnson plans to fill the long-vacant zoning chair with Sigcho-Lopez and fill the Housing Committee chairmansh­ip that Sigcho-Lopez is vacating with Vice Mayor Walter Burnett (27th). Emma Mitts (37th), chair of the Committee on Contractin­g Oversight and Equity, will stay where she is under the mayor’s plan.

“If the mayor believes I can serve well in this position, then I will do my best to serve the people of Chicago with integrity, honesty and fairness,” Sigcho-Lopez, a member of the Council’s Progressiv­e Reform Caucus, told the Sun-Times.

But his potential selection has some in the business community,

and their Council allies, more than a little concerned.

Mitts told the Sun-Times in May that she had accepted Johnson’s offer to chair the Housing Committee, only to be told by senior mayoral adviser Jason Lee that the job had been promised to Ramirez-Rosa. At the time, Mitts said the doublecros­s left her “very stunned” and wondering who’s running the show.

“There’s no doubt about that — I’ve been bamboozled,” Mitts said.

On Monday, she was more accepting of the outcome — which at least did not involve her being pushed aside for Ramirez-Rosa.

“I’m OK with it,” she told the Sun-Times.

Johnson had responded to Mitts’ rare public outburst in May by insisting

he had not “made any commitment to anyone” about committee chairmansh­ips, while laying the groundwork to restore RamirezRos­a to his Council leadership team.

“Ald. Ramirez-Rosa is a leader. He’s one of my strongest allies. What he has done in City Council over the course of his time is remarkable,” Johnson said then.

But Johnson continued to face behind-the-scenes backlash to restoring Ramirez-Rosa to a leadership post.

And Mitts, for her part, had said she would oppose any effort to restore Ramirez-Rosa to Council leadership. Ramirez-Rosa had to apologize to Mitts in November for stepping over the line in a desperate attempt to prevent the Council

from approving a non-binding referendum that would have allowed voters to weigh in on whether Chicago should remain a sanctuary city. Johnson cast the tie-breaking vote that spared Ramirez-Rosa from censure.

Ramirez-Rosa apologized on the Council floor. Mitts admonished him but accepted the apology and a hug, then voted against censure. She has since had several private meetings with Ramirez-Rosa at Johnson’s request.

Ramirez-Rosa declined to comment on Monday, and Lee did not return phone calls or text messages.

Johnson’s decision to put SigchoLope­z, a progressiv­e firebrand at the center of a flag-burning controvers­y, in charge of the Zoning Committee is certain to face a backlash from a developmen­t community that craves stability.

Jack Lavin, president of the Chicagolan­d Chamber of Commerce, said picking Sigcho-Lopez would send a “negative signal to a business community.”

While his group supports “balance with environmen­tal regulation­s,” he said, “We need to set the rules, follow them and not move the goalposts. If we do that, then businesses can make their decisions on investment­s.”

Businesses want clarity, Lavin said.

“Part of the concern is that we have environmen­tal regulation­s. There’s rules on the books, but it seems like many of the community and environmen­tal groups keep moving the goalposts. And given Ald. Sigcho-Lopez’s background, will he follow the rules put in place by the Illinois EPA, or will he move the goalposts?”

Downtown Ald. Bill Conway (34th) was similarly opposed. He called Sigcho-Lopez the wrong choice — a “divisive person” at a time when “we’re trying to take the temperatur­e down” politicall­y.

“Someone who stood with the group that was trying to disrupt the DNC and incite violence is somebody who is a divisive person,” Conway said. The zoning chair must show “predictabi­lity and ... a collaborat­ive approach,” Conway said. “Byron is neither of those things. We have a massive housing shortage in Chicago, and we need somebody who is able to provide a predictive process so we can motivate investment in all areas of this city.”

Ald. Scott Waguespack (32nd) said he, too, has “heard from several developers who are very concerned” about Sigcho-Lopez as Zoning chair.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th) is currently chair of the City Council’s Housing Committee.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th) is currently chair of the City Council’s Housing Committee.
 ?? ?? Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa
Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa

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