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Freddrenna Lyle
PI Original
by Matthew Blake
1:17pm
Mon Aug 27, 2012

What To Make Of The Chicago Murder Rate

The homicide rate is probably the top political story in Chicago so far this year, with an approximately 30 percent citywide increase in murders between 2011 and 2012 and a succession of new pronouncements from Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy on how they are responding to the problem.

PI Original
by Matthew Blake
12:43pm
Wed Oct 5, 2011

Chicago Ward Races That Are Actually Competitive

The rise of political outsiders in Chicago's city council, like Nick Sposato (36th) and Amaya Pawar (47th), have disrupted the normally symbiotic relationship between ward committeeman and ward alderman. The result could be fiercely competitive committeeman races that actually disrupt long-ensconced political power. 

PI Original
by Aricka Flowers
7:31pm
Mon Apr 4, 2011

Lyle Battles Sawyer Legacy In The 6th (VIDEO)

With a crowded field and a challenger who is the son of a former Chicago mayor, 6th Ward Alderman Freddrenna Lyle was forced into a runoff by Roderick T. Sawyer. We spoke with both candidates and discussed the issues pertinent in the 6th Ward and the challenges the new city council will soon face.

Quick Hit
by Micah Maidenberg
11:35am
Wed Mar 23, 2011

Aldermanic Run-Off News And Notes

Including today, there are 14 days left until voters in 14 wards around Chicago cast ballots for the aldermanic candidates in run-off elections. Progress Illinois will have more updates from the races later this afternoon and in the coming days, but here's a morning round-up of recent election news.

Read more »

Quick Hit
by dradmin
7:02pm
Tue Mar 8, 2011

O'Hare Lease Postponed As Aldermen Think Back To The Meter Deal

Earlier this afternoon, the Chicago City Council Committee on Aviation did not vote on a major lease the Daley administration has negotiated with the firm Westfield Concessions Management to redevelop O'Hare Airport's Terminal 5 and expand the number of retail outlets there from 15 to 26. Aviation committee head Ald. Patrick Levar (45th Ward) gaveled the meeting to a close today after more than two hours of testimony about the transaction left several members of the committee -- the overwhelmingly negative public response to the 75-year parking meter privatization still fresh in their mind -- wanting more information. Ald. Freddrenna Lyle (6th Ward) told a Daley administration staffer not long after the meeting began that City Council members have to go before the public and be heralded for their economic development strategies or be "lambasted day after day after day like we were with the parking meter deal. So you might get an idea why people are gun shy."

All international flights arrive to O'Hare's Terminal 5. Since 1993, a firm called Chicago Aviation Partners (CAP) has operated the concessions there. Two years ago, the city asked for bids for redeveloping the area, and Westfield, CAP, and Delaware North Companies responded. Last summer the city picked Westfield and negotiated the proposed lease. Under the deal's terms, Westfield would pay the city a minimum annual guaranteed fee of $3 per "enplaned" passenger at Terminal 5. But that fee would kick in only once at least 1.7 million passengers pass through the area; if less than 1.7 million flyers enplaned there, the city will get 16 percent of gross reciepts of the concession sales. Last year 1.57 million passengers enplaned at Terminal 5, according to research carried out by UNITE HERE Local 1, which represents some concessions workers at the city's airports. The firm will also spend more than $26 million to rehabilitate the area.

Aldermen and representatives from CAP took issue with these and various other aspects of the lease. Ald. William Cochran (20th Ward) pointed out there was nothing in the lease to adjust the $3 per passenger for inflation. Ald. Ray Suarez (31st Ward) stated that the current workforce at Terminal 5 is only guaranteed an interview during a concessionaire switch-over -- not a job -- and said he preferred a shorter lease. Ald. Mike Zalewski (23rd Ward) worried at one point about approving a major deal and sending it to City Council with less than 24 hours before the council's next meeting. Mark Pullman, the executive director of CAP, was withering in his criticism, calling the deal the "parking meter deal of airports." His firm, he said, wasn't specifically told why its bid was rejected; his attorney said their bid guaranteed the city more than $11 million in revenues annually. (Presently the city gets a minimum of $2.8 million from CAP, a Department of Aviation attorney said early in the hearing, a number that Pullman acknowledged was a sub-market rate "in the extreme.")

In all, the Local 1 analysis estimates the Westfield deal could cost the city between $82 million and $145 million and shift risk onto the city. Levar, chair of the aviation committee, said he wouldn't call another hearing on the matter for at least 30 days.

Quick Hit
by Aricka Flowers
7:33pm
Tue Feb 22, 2011

6th Ward Residents Hitting Polling Places To Combat Community Problems

Like the rest of Chicagoans, residents in the 6th Ward have been hitting the polls slowly but surely, with about 160 voters visiting the St. Columbus polling place on 71st St. by around 3:00 p.m. The race for incumbent Freddrenna Lyle's city council seat is a crowded one with six candidates on the ballot, but area residents seemed to be out in support of either Lyle or Roderick T. Sawyer, son of former Chicago mayor Eugene Sawyer. Check out what a few residents had to say about who they picked for alderman and why:  

Residents of the ward that Progress Illinois spoke to said violence and loitering were some of the main problems plaguing the area, motivating them to brave the chilly weather to cast their votes. Both candidates say the issue of crime can be best addressed if a new superintendent of police were installed to replace Jody Weis.

But that may be one of just a few instances in which they agree. The front-runners for the 6th Ward city council seat differ on several issues, according to a candidate questionnaire issued by TheSixthWard blog. When it comes to tax increment finance districts, Lyle is in support of using tax increment financing (TIF) funds for economic development in the area. Meanwhile, Sawyer says the ward has become too reliant on TIFs and would like to impose a moratorium on the creation of new districts if elected alderman. Sawyer is also in support of bringing video gambling to the area, while Lyle is not. 

Quick Hit
by Angela Caputo
1:47pm
Wed Mar 10, 2010

"We Won't Be Denied" (UPDATED)

Turns out Chicago Ald. Freddrenna Lyle (6th Ward) will carry the torch on creating a living-wage law that would require stores with 50 or more employees to pay those workers $11.03 an hour if they benefit from tax increment financing (TIF) or other public subsidies. When Ald. Ed Burke (14th Ward) first floated the legislation (in response to opposition over Wal-Mart's proposed expansion), we noted how it represented a new twist on TIF reform. To her credit, Lyle is expanding the population who would benefit from the higher wages even further. In an ordinance introduced today, she proposes that those providing contracted services -- like cleaning or landscaping -- benefit from the living wage law as well.  The bill is headed to the Burke's Finance Committee next. (See update below.)

"We've come too far to go back now," said Rev. Booker Vance of the Good Jobs Chicago Coalition  at a City Hall press conference today. "We won't be denied." Watch:

UPDATE (4:18 pm): According to folks with the Good Jobs Chicago Coalition, Ald. Lyle did not introduce the living wage bill today. There seems to have been some miscommuncation between the alderman and the organizers. We will provide further detail when it becomes available.