State rep. says she will block $50 million for a new Near South Side school until critical voices are heard

Rep. Theresa Mah says opposition is ignored. Top CPS leaders last year warned the new school would undermine historically Black schools.

WBEZ
State Rep. Theresa Mah says she will move to withhold 50 million dollars in state funding for a proposed Near South Side high school school because she says the school district has failed to do authentic community engagement around the controversial school. Ashlee Rezin / Chicago Sun-Times
WBEZ
State Rep. Theresa Mah says she will move to withhold 50 million dollars in state funding for a proposed Near South Side high school school because she says the school district has failed to do authentic community engagement around the controversial school. Ashlee Rezin / Chicago Sun-Times

State rep. says she will block $50 million for a new Near South Side school until critical voices are heard

Rep. Theresa Mah says opposition is ignored. Top CPS leaders last year warned the new school would undermine historically Black schools.

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State Rep. Theresa Mah, who has long backed the construction of a Near South Side high school, says she will block $50 million in state funding from the project until Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Chicago Public Schools officials take community concerns more seriously.

City officials nonetheless say they are moving forward with key votes Wednesday to advance the proposal and are still counting on state funding coming through.

Mah, a Chicago Democrat, said she wants to see authentic community engagement and a stronger “good faith” effort to find an alternative site before she considers backing the district’s plan again. The school is currently slated for former public housing land at 24th and State streets.

Her move came hours after the Chicago Sun-Times and WBEZ reported that senior CPS officials warned leaders last year that a new Near South high school could undermine nearby Black schools and ultimately harm Black students — a vastly different story than Lightfoot and district officials have told publicly.

“Pushing forward on a project that’s controversial, that nobody’s happy with, that’s pretty nakedly about the mayor getting an election year win and using resources that she thinks are available to create that win, is just offensive,” Mah said.

“Each time anybody expresses any opposition, it gets completely ignored.”

The state lawmaker had been among the strongest backers of the idea to build a new high school, spearheading a proposal in the General Assembly two years ago to secure $50 million in state funding. Her success in securing capital funding revitalized the hopes of Chinatown residents who for years had fought for a neighborhood school. Her district includes Chinatown.

But she has opposed the city’s proposed site on part of the former Harold Ickes Homes public housing complex south of Chinatown, standing with housing residents and advocates who have accused the city of breaking its promises for new housing there. The Chicago Housing Authority says it intends to build the public housing units promised for the community but in a denser area nearby.

Mah accused CPS of holding disingenuous community meetings in which no input was actually taken.

“It’s all just to check a box,” Mah said. “It’s all for show because they have this idea in mind, they want to push forward and they’re making up the support for it.”

As the sponsor of the $50 million in state funding, Mah said she would request Gov. JB Pritzker’s office to block the release of the funds to CPS. And she plans to remove the funding from next year’s state capital budget. Mah said she has a commitment from Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch to support her decision.

City Hall and CPS officials wouldn’t comment on Mah’s move, only saying, “the state approved $50 million for a new school in this area and we are confident that our ongoing review and engagement efforts will support plans for a proposed high school.”

“Chicago Public Schools remains committed to building a high school that will serve a diverse student population from the South Loop, Chinatown, Bridgeport, and Bronzeville communities and will continue to engage with all Chicago residents, particularly those families who live in the neighborhoods this school aims to serve,” officials said in a statement.

CPS spokeswoman Sylvia Barragan said the district has held more than 30 community meetings since May and engaged with “hundreds of individuals.”

Mah had wanted CPS to pull three agenda items related to the proposed new school from Wednesday’s Board of Education meeting. The school board is slated to take key votes to move the project forward, one authorizing the $10.3 million purchase of land at 23rd and Wabash from a private company, J & J Motor Service, Inc. The district planned to use its own capital funding for the purchase.

CPS says appraisers at Zimmerman Real Estate Associates valued the J & J Motor Services land at $10.275 million, though district officials would not did not immediately make a copy of that appraisal available. Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi’s office set its estimated market value of those same parcels of land at $1.3 million. Kaegi’s office could not immediately explain the discrepancy.

The second is an agreement with the Chicago Housing Authority to swap the land at 23rd and Wabash for a 95-year lease on the CHA parcel at 24th and State where CPS wants to build the new school.

Board members also plan to vote on giving the city’s Public Building Commission an additional $5 million from CPS’ capital budget for “formulation services: planning, pre-design, and design services.”

Ald. Pat Dowell (3rd), who wrote an op-ed essay this week in favor of the new high school currently planned in her ward, declined to comment.

Nader Issa and Lauren FitzPatrick report for the Chicago Sun-Times. Sarah Karp is an education reporter for WBEZ. Follow her on Twitter @WBEZeducation and @sskedreporter.