Tabares and Lopez at a Southwest Side event last year.  --File photo

Tabares and Lopez at a Southwest Side event last year. --File photo

Mayoral race comes to Archer

Spread the love

Neighbors cheer as Lopez slams Lightfoot on crime 

By Tim Hadac

Southwest Side civic and business leaders last Saturday got an early glimpse of the 2023 mayoral race, as 15th Ward Ald. Raymond Lopez made a campaign stop on Archer Avenue.

CRRNH TabaresLopez 062922

Twenty-third Ward Ald. Silvana Tabares talks with mayoral candidate and 15th Ward Ald. Raymond Lopez, moments before they addressed a friendly audience at the Rhine VFW Post 2729. –Photo by Joan Hadac

Lopez was the guest of honor at a “meet and greet” held at the Rhine VFW Post 2729. The event was organized by 23rd Ward Ald. Silvana Tabares, who introduced Lopez as her “friend and ally.”

“When you see what the mayor has done to the city and you see what the City Council has allowed her to do…the city’s heading in the wrong direction,” Lopez told the audience of several dozen leaders. “And what I hear from residents is that public safety and economic development are the most important issues here in the 23rd Ward.”

Lopez is a son of the Southwest Side. He attended the old St. Camillus School and then went on to St. Laurence High School.

His remarks last week were heavy on the issues of crime and economic development. With the audience including business owners and off-duty police officers and firefighters, Lopez’s opinions were met with applause a number of times.

He criticized Mayor Lori Lightfoot for what he called “despising the police.”

“Police officers, firefighters—those are the heroes. Not gangbangers,” he said. “Police officers and firefighters deserve to be supported, deserve to be recognized.

“Right now, we’re backwards,” Lopez continued. “Right now we’re promoting criminality, we’re making excuses for gang members, we’re making excuses for everything that’s wrong instead of saying, ‘Enough.’ It’s simple. Bad people belong in jail. Good people need to be supported, and communities need to be allowed to thrive.”

The alderman said that if elected, he would immediately fire CPD Supt. David Brown.

“But not just David Brown,” he added which generated another round of applause. “There’s a whole list of inadequate leadership [in CPD], mostly merit based, who have never done a day’s worth of work out on the streets, making decisions for the 10,000 other guys and gals who have to go out there and fight crime on a daily basis. They’ve got to go, too. Because we can’t just replace one goof with another. We have to do a clean sweep of leadership and we have to focus on promoting officers based on performance and not on merit.

“Simply because I know you, went drinking with you or I don’t like you shouldn’t be the determination on whether or not you become a sergeant, lieutenant or beyond,” he added.

CRRNH ColerAndLopez 062922

Lopez (right) also worked a supportive crowd at St. Daniel the Prophet Parish’s Summerfest, where he spoke with homeowners, as well as prominent local business leaders like Dr. Joseph Coler, D.C. –Supplied photo

In response to a question, he briefly criticized Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx, but steered the discussion back to Lightfoot.

Lopez likened Lightfoot’s rules to putting handcuffs on police officers.

“We know that right now the police department says that if I commit a crime and take off running, you can’t chase me on foot,” he said. “If I hop in my car, you can’t chase me in your car. All that does is tell criminals that you’re not going to get me. I can do what I want.

“It shows when you have a city where you have a 95 percent of not being arrested when you kill someone,” the alderman continued. “You have an 83 percent chance of not getting arrested if you commit petty crimes. Criminals know this. It has a reverberating effect from Archer Avenue to Avondale. All criminals know this. So the focus has to be from the City of Chicago’s perspective and as mayor my perspective to be able to enforce laws, allow my police to go after those magnets of violence and those individuals no amount of programs will ever change and to start arresting people and putting them where they belong.”

The alderman also said he would provide property tax relief for homeowners by eliminating the current system that automatically raises property taxes (by pegging taxes to inflation). He said aldermen should be required to go on record and vote any time a tax increase is proposed.

He also pledged to make it considerably easier to start a business in Chicago, as well as maintain a business, by eliminating the red tape many in the business community have complained about repeatedly.

Businesses, including and perhaps especially small businesses—the mom and pops—are an important part of this city’s backbone,” he said. “They pay taxes, they create jobs, they are a key part of prosperity, of the quality of life in Chicago. We need to support them in all ways possible.”

Local News

Peggy Zabicki

New year, old challenges

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Peggy Zabicki Your correspondent in West Lawn 3633 W. 60th Place •  (773) 504-9327 It’s a new year and a time for new beginnings. Many of us will be starting a new diet program. I plan to do this as soon as I’m done eating the remaining Christmas candy and cookies at my house. Wish me luck!…

Kathy Headley

Two ladies gone, but not forgotten

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Kathy Headley Your correspondent in Chicago Lawn and Marquette Manor 6610 S. Francisco • (773) 776-7778 Guessing you have already read the sad news about the passing of Mary Ellen St. Aubin. For those of you that didn’t know, she grew up right here in Chicago Lawn, on 63rd and Richmond, and…

Mary Fabis (right) shows her award from Anita Cummings. --Greater Southwest News-Herald photo by Dermot Connolly

Honored for service to business

Spread the love

Spread the loveFabis earns UBAM award  By Dermot Connolly The United Business Association of Midway recently honored founding member Mary Fabis with a Lifetime Membership Award for Outstanding Service for her 35 years of work with the business organization she continues to serve as a board member. Fabis, now 92, has owned and operated Archer…

With a long and colorful life, Mary Ellen St. Aubin had no shortage of good memories. --Supplied photo

She was a ‘Munchkin by marriage’

Spread the love

Spread the loveMary Ellen St. Aubin dies at age 101 By Joan Hadac Mary Ellen St. Aubin once said that if her life could be summed up in a movie title, it might be It’s a Wonderful Life. That life came to a conclusion late last month. Mrs. St. Aubin was 101 years old. “I’ve…

GSWNHFireAndIce_010722

Fire and ice

Spread the love

Spread the love December was unseasonably dry and warm, but it was cold enough late in the month to form icicles on a Bedford Park Fire Department truck– even after it returned from a blaze that gutted a warehouse in the 6500 block of South Lavergne, just steps south of Clearing. The weather forecast for…

GSWNH_OverwhelmedFedExBox_010722

‘They made us look like fools’

Spread the love

Spread the loveParents furious over one-two stumble by CPS By Tim Hadac As Chicago Public Schools were set to re-open earlier this week, parents of CPS students were still fuming over what most seemed to see as a two-part stumble by district administrators. “We did exactly what they asked of us, and they made us…

SRP-IMAGE-Logo

St. Rita takes 5th at Hinsdale Central Holiday Classic

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Steve Millar  Correspondent St. Rita’s youth was evident in some mistakes the Mustangs made down the stretch in the fifth-place game of the Hinsdale Central Holiday Classic. But the Mustangs’ talent won out in the end. Sophomore guard Jaedin Reyna went coast-to-coast and scored on a drive to the basket with 2.5…

Lyons Township’s Tavari Johnson was an all-tournament player as he helped his team to a second-place finish in the Jack Tosh Tournament. Photo by Jeff Vorva

Lions take 2nd at Tosh Holiday Classic

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Correspondent Glenbard West won the Jack Tosh Holiday Classic. That made sense. The Hilltoppers are ranked No. 1 in most state and Chicago-area polls. But not much else about this tournament made a lot of sense, especially when it came some of the seven area teams involved or, in two…

Abbey Murphy, a Mother McAuley grad and University of Minnesota hockey player, was named to the Olympic team. University of Minnesota photo

Murphy joins Schofield on U.S. women’s hockey team

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Correspondent Abbey Murphy lists Kendall Coyne Schofield as her sports role model. Now, she will be a teammate of Schofield on the biggest stage for women’s hockey. Team USA Hockey announced its Olympic roster over the weekend and two-time medal winner Schofield, a native of Palos Heights and a Sandburg…

A fast-food restaurant worker affixes a Fight for $15 sign to a window at a McDonald’s in the city. --Photo courtesy of FightFor15.org

New laws taking effect

Spread the love

Spread the loveStatewide jump in minimum wage ‘just a start’  By Bob Bong and Peter Hancock Capitol News Illinois   Minimum-wage workers across Illinois will see a boost in their hourly pay to $12 per hour starting Jan. 1, while tenants in affordable housing units will be allowed to keep pets. Those are just some…

Neighbors

Just weeks before Republican National Convention, Illinois GOP chair announces resignation

Just weeks before Republican National Convention, Illinois GOP chair announces resignation

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com Halfway through the 2024 election cycle and just a few weeks away from the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Illinois GOP Chair Don Tracy on Wednesday announced his resignation as head of the state Republican Party. Tracy, who’d held the job since February 2021, explained his resignation in…

As Illinois session ends, lawmakers’ attempt to reinstate wetland protections fails

As Illinois session ends, lawmakers’ attempt to reinstate wetland protections fails

by JENNIFER BAMBERG Investigate Midwest jennifer.bamberg@investigatemidwest.org In 2006, 19-year-old Jessica Whinston inherited 20 acres of land that her grandparents once farmed in Quincy, Illinois. The land had sat dormant since the 1980s and was overgrown, but Whinston and her husband Bradley worked to turn it into a productive farm. The couple were eventually able to…

Elections board dismisses illegal campaign coordination complaint, declines to clarify law

Elections board dismisses illegal campaign coordination complaint, declines to clarify law

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com CHICAGO – State elections officials on Tuesday indicated they were unlikely to step in to clarify what constitutes illegal campaign coordination after voting to dismiss a complaint alleging such coordination in the 2022 campaign for governor. At their monthly meeting in Chicago, Illinois State Board of Elections members…

Illinois’ ban on ‘bump stocks’ remains in place despite U.S. Supreme Court decision

Illinois’ ban on ‘bump stocks’ remains in place despite U.S. Supreme Court decision

By PETER HANCOCK Capitol News Illinois phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – An Illinois law banning the sale and use of “bump stocks” and other devices that increase the firing power of semiautomatic weapons remains in place, at least for now, despite a U.S. Supreme Court decision Friday striking down a federal ban on such items. “Illinois law…

Lawmakers pass on oversight vote for Pritzker’s prison closure, rebuild plan

Lawmakers pass on oversight vote for Pritzker’s prison closure, rebuild plan

By HANNAH MEISEL & DILPREET RAJU Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – For the last two decades, each time a governor has moved to close a large state-run facility like a prison or mental health center, a legislative oversight panel has voted on the plan. That changed on Friday – at least for now –…

‘We don’t really know what we’re voting on,’ top Dem says of Pritzker’s prison plan

‘We don’t really know what we’re voting on,’ top Dem says of Pritzker’s prison plan

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com LINCOLN – On the eve of a scheduled vote to advise Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration on plans to close and rebuild a pair of dilapidated state prisons, hundreds filed into a junior high school gymnasium Thursday evening clad in matching green T-shirts. Printed on the shirts was a…

Illinois child tax credit: who gets it, how much is it?

Illinois child tax credit: who gets it, how much is it?

By ANDREW ADAMS Capitol News Illinois aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com In the final hours of their spring legislative session, Illinois lawmakers approved a tax credit of up to about $300 for families with young children.  The credit is available to Illinoisans with children under age 12 who qualify for the federal Earned Income Tax Credit, or EITC. Although…

Members of House speaker’s staff sue over ongoing unionization conflict

Members of House speaker’s staff sue over ongoing unionization conflict

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Members of a would-be union representing staffers in House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch’s office filed suit against their boss on Friday, asking a Cook County judge to force recognition of the union. The Illinois Legislative Staff Association, which formed in the fall of 2022, claims Welch’s…

Elections board urged to dismiss complaint that Bailey illegally coordinated in 2022 campaign

Elections board urged to dismiss complaint that Bailey illegally coordinated in 2022 campaign

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com A hearing officer is recommending the Illinois State Board of Elections dismiss a complaint that alleged conservative radio host and political operative Dan Proft illegally coordinated with former Republican state Sen. Darren Bailey during his 2022 campaign for governor. Proft, a one-time gubernatorial candidate himself, is behind an…

Communities, commission push Pritzker admin for more prison plan details

Communities, commission push Pritzker admin for more prison plan details

By DILPREET RAJU Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com Jimmy Soto spent more than 42 years wrongfully imprisoned in Illinois Department of Corrections facilities. In 2020, he was moved to the “F-House” at Stateville Correctional Center in Joliet, a condemned unit, not because he was being punished, but because it was where the facility was housing individuals…