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We are living in a blast zone. We demand rail safety in Chicago.

Dear Alderman Cardenas and Office of Emergency Management:

Workers, citizens, and public officials in our state, as elsewhere in North America, have become increasingly concerned about the new risks of crude oil by rail [CBR] cargoes, the transportation of which is rapidly growing in Illinois.  This has become even more urgent with the news at the beginning of the year that the industry itself estimates around 10 oil train accidents in this country every year.  And we now know that over 40 oil trains pass through Chicagoland every week and that Chicago is a hub for rail traffic in the country.  If an accident like this occurred in Chicago, the results would be devastating.  Are we prepared for this occurrence?

What we are dealing with is a railroad industry that for too long has been a largely self-governing and self-regulating entity.  Outside observers have pointed out problems with this industry and its regulators, specifically:

  • Too few government inspectors. The railroad agency has only 76 track inspectors, assisted by a few dozen state inspectors, to oversee the operations of some 780 railroad companies that manage 140,000 miles of track, plus railroad bridges. By its own estimate the agency can inspect less than 1 percent of the railroad activities under its oversight each year.
  • Little oversight of railroad bridges. The FRA has set no engineering standards for railroad bridges, relying almost entirely on individual railroads to inspect, maintain and repair their own bridges and trestles, some of them built more than a century ago. The agency doesn’t keep an inventory or even a count of the bridges, estimated to number between 70,000 and 100,000.
  • Secrecy. State and local governments can’t independently assess the condition of local rail infrastructure because their inspectors don’t have access to the railroads’ design and maintenance records, or to the tracks, trestles and bridges themselves. The railroads consider such information proprietary; the tracks and bridges are their private property and disclosure of those materials is voluntary.​
  • Meager penalties. Fines are low, on the theory that the cost and consequences of an accident are sufficient incentive for railroads to properly maintain their tracks and bridges. In 2013, the FRA issued $13.9 million in fines to an industry whose top-seven revenue gainers alone took in nearly $84 billion.

According to Federal track safety standards, 19 out of 24 crossties can be defective and the track still considered safe.1

Not only is the transport of oil and crude oil by train unsafe, it is an industry that should be heavily discouraged.  The industry’s consistent claim is that our country needs tar sands oil and fracked gas with an ever-increasing demand and that securing the resources from Alberta, Canada and North Dakota is imperative for the energy security of our country.  This mindset allows such atrocities as the use of eminent domain by corporations, leaving large tracts of poisoned wasteland in the aftermath of fracking and tar sand extraction activities, rubber stamped approvals of pipelines and rail cars over countless miles of rivers, lakes, aquifers, wetlands, farmlands, and communities without proper worst-case analysis, and the constant postponement of advancement in the energy sector towards truly sustainable solutions.

It is true that in the present time there is a large demand for oil.  However, that is because the current infrastructure and public consumables are all based on oil.  If oil became scarcer or more costly, the infrastructure would naturally change to adapt, and other solutions such as electric cars, wind power, and alternative means of production would naturally fall into place through normal, unaltered market mechanisms and the necessary help of a participating, knowledgeable government helped by the people it governs.  It is widely known that 97% of climate scientists agree that climate warming is driven by carbon and methane emissions that are man-made, and it is also plain to see that this is directly caused mainly by our fossil fuel based economy. 2

The government must step in immediately and begin the conversion to clean energy.  Many scientists agree that there are few years left to start on this conversion before we are in danger of reaching a global tipping point due to the changing climate.  Some effects are already occurring: affecting crop yields and drastically affecting food production,3 larger number of wildfires and hurricanes, rising sea levels, and “changes in

1 Marcus Stern and Sebastian Jones.  “Boom: North America’s Explosive Oil-by-Rail Problem.”  Web: http://books.insideclimatenews.org/boom.

2 Lindsay Abrams. “WSJ’s shameful climate denial: The scientific consensus is not a myth”.  Salon.  Web: http://www.salon.com/2014/05/28/wsjs_shameful_climate_denial_the_scientific_consensus_is_not_a_myth/

3 Brad Plumer.  “Is there still time left to avoid 2⁰ C of global warming?  Yes, but barely.”  Nov 30, 2012 Washington Post.  Web: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2012/11/30/is-there-still-time-left-to-stop-global-warming-yes-but-only-barely and Brad Plumer.  “We’re on pace for 4⁰ C of global warming.  Here’s why that terrifies the World Bank.” Nov 19, 2012 Washington Post.  Web: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2012/11/19/were-on-pace-for-4c-of-global-warming-heres-why-the-world-bank-is-terrified.

ocean temperatures and acidity…could reach a threshold that would precipitate a crash in coral reef ecosystems….these are going to happen eventually if greenhouse gases,

the worst-case tipping point scenarios, but that window of opportunity will only be open for another few years if we continue to change climate at the rate we have been.”4

By allowing the rail industry to continue this unsafe practice, we are at great risk of major catastrophe to the people of Chicago as well as continuing the illusion of profitability in this anachronistic industry.  We wish to find ways to bring this practice under control; to make it safer at least and to cause less harm and damage to our people.

“The rail industry is concerned making crude oil route information public elevates security risks by making it easier for someone intent on causing harm,” said American Association of Railroads spokesman Ed Greenberg recently.

This justification for covering up potential catastrophes was refuted by Sidney Casperson, former Director, NJ Office of Counterterrorism, who said, “The terrorists already know what’s out there. They have been found with blueprints of our buildings, and a lot of information is available over the Internet or at a public library.  The only question is whether we will find a way to protect these targets before they find a way to attack them.”

Similarly, crude oil trains are easy for anyone of ill will to track down. The chemical contents of each tank car are identified with four prominently placed placards, yet few residents realize the new hazards passing through their community or know how to respond to a disaster. “

If you don’t share this information, how are people supposed to know what they are supposed to do when another Lac-Mégantic happens?” asked Denise Krepp, a former senior counsel to the congressional Homeland Security Committee, referring to the Bakken crude oil derailment in Quebec that killed 47 people.5

4 Robert Sanders. “Report warns of climate change ‘tipping points’ within our lifetime.” Dec 3, 2013 UC Berkeley News Center.  Web: http://newscenter.berkeley.edu/2013/12/03/report-warns-of-climate-change-tipping-points-within-our-lifetime.

5 The quotes in the preceding 4 paragraphs can be found in New Jersey Work Environment Council. “Danger in the Dark: How Gov. Christie Helps Oil, Chemical, and Railroad Companies Cover Up Potential Catastrophes.”  Web: www.njwec.org/PDF/Reports/FINAL_DangerintheDark_Report.pdf.

The New Jersey Work Environment Council (WEC) is a statewide, coalition of 70 labor, emergency response, community, and environmental organizations working for safe, secure jobs and a healthy, sustainable environment.  Since 1986, they have worked to ensure that workers and the public are protected from hazardous chemical exposures.  Members of WEC include affiliates of the International Association of Firefighters, United Food and Commercial Workers, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, United Steelworkers, Health Professionals and Allied Employees, NJ Sierra Club, Environment-NJ, Clean Water Action, and many other organizations.

We are aware of the guidance from the US Department of Transportation [DOT] Emergency Response Guidebook [Guide 127 and 128 on ethanol and crude oil, respectively] recommending a 1/2 mile evacuation zone if only one tank car of these flammables is involved in a fire.

Given the demonstrated risks of derailment releases involving crude oil unit trains, we have come to you to request that you promptly seek out the key railroad risk documents which we need to assess our risks and our level of public safety in Illinois.  These documents should be rightfully made available to the local governing bodies by the railroad companies who pass through our region.

We need to review this information on what the US DOT calls High Hazard Flammable Trains operating most frequently with “unit trains” averaging 100 rail cars each, as well as on “manifest trains” with 10-20 cars of these cargoes.

Fundamentally, we want to make sure we are prepared in the case of an emergency.

Specifically, we seek this information:

  1. The city and the various railroad’s own calculated Worst Case Scenarios for a potential crude oil train emergency in urban and sensitive environmental locales. Offsite Consequence Analyses are filed with US EPA by 13,000 fixed chemical facilities with the most dangerous chemicals.  What is the potential impact of a crude oil disaster in Chicago communities?
  1. Evidence of the levels of catastrophic insurance coverage the railroads who pass through this region have purchased relevant for potential serious releases in Chicago. For what level of potential disaster are the railroad covered and how much of this will fall on the communities?
  1. Your high hazard flammable train Comprehensive Emergency Response Plans, both generic and for specific typical locations in Chicago and surrounding areas. Is there any credible emergency response to crude oil train disasters except evacuation?
  1. The applicable railroads’ route analysis documentation and route selection results for Chicago, pursuant to 2007 Public Law 110-53 on urban hazmat safety and security routing, with the currently covered cargoes, especially chlorine and ammonia, as well as for the newly-recognized “key trains” of crude oil and ethanol. How have the railroads weighted the 27 federal routing factors and whatever interchange agreements these railroad companies has struck with others in to avoid high-risk areas?

As Alderman, we are asking that you do the following things:

  1. We understand that you could put pressure on the Mayor and the FRA to obtain the important railroad documents to complete the information requested above.
  2. We understand that as part of Emergency Preparedness and preparation of evacuation routes in the area that the Alderman can hold a meeting with the Fire Marshall.
  3. The Alderman can put pressure on US Reps and Sens from IL to pass S859, Marie Cantwell’s Crude by Rail Safety Act.
  4. The Alderman can put pressure on the Mayor to come together with the other mayors in the region for advocacy towards some of our goals (listed in the Appendix A).
  5. Can you work with our committee to draft a resolution to the City Council regarding these issues?
  6. Could you consider working for a taxation of each car that carries Ethanol or Crude Oil?  This would help with the budget crisis in Chicago.

Thank you for your attention to this matter.  We feel that your efforts to these points will only serve to benefit Chicago, the community, as well as the country as a whole, and to neglect these points would be irresponsible in the face of what our community is facing.  We would appreciate a prompt response to our inquiry.

Sincerely,

Bill Drew, The McKinley Park Progressive Alliance

Paul Berland, Chicagoland Oil by Rail

Bomb train routes bombtrain2 canadian 4 landscape-1438355190-fracking-web-lede Oil-train-chicago-460px Quebec

 

 

Appendix A

Priorities for Helping the Community

Our priorities for improving the safety of crude oil transport by train through Chicagoland:

1) Degasify (Stabilize) Bakken Oil and establish a National Stand for Vapor PSI – Bakken oil has a mandated PSI of less than 13.7 by the state of ND, and has been usually measured at 11-12,  the Texas Eagle Ford frack oil has a Vapor PSI of 8 lbs PSI, the West Texas oil comes in at 3-4 lbs PSI, the Gulf of Mexico oil is 3.33 lbs PSI, and the crude oil train that destroyed Lac Mégantic, Quebec was measured at 10 PSI– our National Vapor Standard should fall somewhere between 4-8, following the lead of Texas since they degasify their oil and their oil trains have not been exploding into huge fireballs, like the ones out of the Bakken.

2) Re-Route hazardous trains around the populous areas of Chicagoland.

3) Community Right To Know –  local Fire Marshall s / Emergency Responders should be notified of all hazardous cargo moving through their jurisdictions – communities have the right to know as well and also know what the emergency preparedness and evacuation plans involve.

4) Mandate that railroads have enough insurance to adequately cover disasters, (The cost is $2 Billion and rising for Lac Mégantic at this time – this amount must be the floor for coverage, with coverage increasing according to the risks of the type of cargo and the more populated routes).

2nd Tier Goals:

5) Mandate that the railroads fix their infrastructure, with adequate inspectors and inspections.

6) Maintain at least 2 engineer teams on every hazardous cargo / oil train.

7) Lessen the # of cars on a “Unit Train” to 30 – 70 to be able to control the fluid dynamics and brake easier.

8) Differential placards per different crude oil so that there are different numbers for Tar Sands Oil, Bakken Oil, Gulf of Mexico Oil, etc. – emergency responders need to know the differences and the risks inherent of each – so does the public.

We request that you promptly seek out these key risk documents in an attempt to mitigate a highly potential upcoming disaster.  The agencies, fire services, and the public will need them to safeguard our safety, health, and environment.

Notes from the Front Lines of the 2015 Chicago Elections

The Elections in Chicago – A View From Chuy’s Base Area

Chicago hasn’t seen such electoral contention since the days of Dick and Jane – and Harold. Even in defeat, the Jesus “Chuy” Garcia challenge brought a familiar spirit back to the city by the lake. No one expected the immigrant from Durango to challenge the abrasive Rahm in a run off. Nor could we have  predicted the surprising synergy that would result from over a dozen insurgent ward campaigns and Chuy’s crusade. In the 12th ward on the Southwest side, we learned that politics is local.

alhambra2Following a spontaneous and wildly successful petition drive which netted 62,000 names in less than a month, passion in wards north, south and west threatened to ignite a city-wide blaze.

To our chagrin, the wind in our city could not propel enough burning embers across the Dan Ryan and the Eisenhower into the many vacant lots of Black Chicago.

In the posh areas of the new economy, condo dwellers stamped out the sparks with their tony boots. They rushed to the polls as if panicking in a lakefront fire drill.

Municipal employees and pensioners tried to nurture the flame out southwest and northwest. But suspicious property owners turned on their sprinklers in spite of distaste for mayor one percent.

Constant TV attack ads paid for with Rahm’s millions were the showers that fell harder on some neighborhoods than others.

Jesus “Chuy” Garcia awoke long dormant alliances. Young activists stepped forward and exchanged skills with veteran organizers.  Hundreds worked to create new mechanisms for electoral struggle. Aldermanic candidates emerged to give leadership to progressive ward organizations. Terms like “privatization”, “community policing”, “progressive taxation”, “participatory budgeting”, and “the neighborhoods” became familiar topics.

When the votes were all counted, we were not the kind of movement that could topple Rahm Emanuel’s coterie of global power brokers. We are a populace fragmented by the cunning of the one percent. We rose up to fight back. We lost. And yet we gained a lot.

rbt & chuy & paintingAt the risk of over simplification, the mayor’s tactic was to arouse suspicion of a Mexican American populist. To whites, the message was encoded in dog whistles: Chuy is a nice, but naïve, Mexican boy. His call for audits of city corruption was spun as an evasion of fiscal responsibility. At a more sinister level, the unspoken message called for unity to keep the burgeoning Latino community in its place – at the precarious margins of progress.

Chuy’s biggest strength is his unapologetic compassion and his defense of the undocumented. Fearful of dire warnings of municipal bankruptcy, many white voters sided with the one percent. In the minds of a beleaguered middle class, Rahm’s candidacy said “keep them in their place, scrambling at the bottom alongside the Blacks”.

And to African Americans, many of whom have been pushed even beyond the margin, there was not a deep enough reservoir of solidarity. Competition for jobs and economic opportunity between Blacks and Latinos has created a divide. The rivalry, often downplayed in polite discussion, is nonetheless real. It’s the most recent iteration of the age-old scenario – not unlike the divisions set up at the turn of the previous century when southern sharecroppers were imported as replacement workers in the stockyards.

Child at rallyMore than anything else, the race hinged on race.

Yet we gave them a scare, flexed some political muscle, won a handful of new aldermanic seats, learned a lot, increased our numbers, and projected an example for similar coalitions and struggles nationwide.

The key was a grass roots approach. Some purists missed this important dynamic. They stood on the sidelines calling Chuy a corporate neo-liberal in disguise. They predicted that Chuy would enact austerity budgets.  They feared that his campaign was not radical enough to energize those who have lost hope. They jumped on weaknesses in outreach to African American communities as a deal breaker. The campaign’s call for hiring of 1000 police officers was cited as an indication of treachery.

In the near southwest 12th ward, we didn’t really try to influence the citywide message. We did, however, work to bring Chuy’s populism alive in his base area.  We felt that, if everything fell into place, we might be able to replicate the minority-led Harold Washington inter-regnum of thirty years ago. But, more realistically, we were fighting for power at the ward level and to defend our people. As things stand, neo-liberal schemes define the political landscape. Rahm Emanuel personifies this perfidy along the predominantly Latino Archer corridor.  Transfer of wealth proceeds apace.

The elevation of Commissioner Garcia as our standard bearer at first seemed accidental – driven, as it was, by Karen Lewis’ brain tumor and County Board President Toni Preckwinkle’s refusal to accept the challenge.

Chuy at Hoyne Park2But it is not random chance that reform’s most credible and trustworthy candidate arose from the Latino political movement.  Commissioner Garcia has been steady in opposition to each successive re-incarnation of machine politics. He got his start as a pioneer for Chicano empowerment in the late seventies. The ward organization, which he helped form in Little Village, is the only opposition precinct apparatus which has stayed intact over this span. The man has displayed courage several times in his career – from his willingness to stand in for his assassinated compadre, Rudy Lozano, to his recent acceptance of the torch from Ms. Lewis, the outspoken leader of the teacher’s union.

Chuy’s campaign meme was that Rahm takes from the neighborhoods and rewards the rich. The gleaming center versus decaying ghettos and barrios was a fundamental metaphor.  Specifics in regards to safety, education, revenue generation, and services were plentiful.  Problems with the mix of issues, the way they were broadcast, difficulties in creating a citywide campaign, and missed alliances do not alter the key point – Chuy was articulating a broad populist message.

With regard to Chuy’s strongest base of support, critics on the left should own up to their own blind spot. He unapologetically spoke for a large, multi-class base in a Latino community that is marginalized and becoming more so. It is almost too obvious to state that Latinos are overwhelmingly members of the working class. The dynamism of the Latino fabric in Chicago is hard to ignore.

Correctly and in keeping with his longstanding approach, Chuy subsumed his Chicano politics within a call for class justice. Unions were his financial bedrock. Class was a unifying blanket. Good government was a broad appeal. But the speakers of Spanish, the people whose names end in “ez” and “ño”, the Latinos of Chicago, were his reliable electoral base.

Bro JituIn our work in McKinley Park, we were struck by the Latino solidarity. Every precinct produced vote percentages coinciding almost exactly with the percent of Latino voters. Of course there are small remnants of the discredited Hispanic Democratic Organization (HDO). In my own precinct, there are four reliable Rahm votes in the household of machine-backed, State Senator, Tony Muñoz. And, of course, we know white and Chinese voters who went with Chuy. But the general pattern holds.

Significantly the Latino community in Chicago supports a relatively vibrant commercial class. Their interest is strongly with the economic well-being and the secure residency status of all Spanish speakers. They along with Latino professionals – both public and private — were totally on board. It was never hard to solicit botanas and comidas for Garcia events. Rahm Emanuel photo ops with Latino elected officials, who called themselves the Rahmtinos, elicited derision in all Southwest side barrios.  Luis Gutierrez’ popularity took a major hit because he offered up his game cock attack style in defense of his new found ally.

In the run off, Latino turnout, while elevated and enthusiastic, did not cascade to the mighty levels that we experienced with African Americans voting for Harold Washington or Barak Obama. Social and historical reasons prevail. A huge cohort of noncitizens intermingles with many who are not registered or feel culturally and linguistically alienated.

Similarly, the hoped for re-unification of the Black-Brown alliance of the 1980s, was not spectacular. Emanuel’s money produced saturation attack ads, street level pay offs, misleading promises, and appeals to racial divisions by proxy publicists.  Some lingering loyalty to Rahm as an emissary from President Obama depressed the African American turnout significantly. Rahm pulled down majorities in the mid-50s to mid-60s in African American precincts.

calmeca meetingLong known as a united voting bloc, African Americans were divided and confused. Could the Garcia campaign have said the magic words and repaired a historic divide? Weaknesses in the commissioner’s campaign were a reflection of something broader. He could not create on-the-ground leadership and proof of good faith for such an alliance in a matter of weeks. Stubborn realities of segregation, alternating tactics of favoritism and neglect, gerrymandering, and economic competition have chilled the dialogue among the two communities.

Chuy’s history is replete with efforts to reach out and champion the Black agenda. He was a swing vote for Harold Washington in council wars.  He has stood against discriminatory landlords and segregated high school boundaries. More so than any current elected official in Chicago, he has worked to create working multi-ethnic and multi-issue coalitions. In the Illinois Senate, he was a member of the Black caucus. In contrast, the incumbent one percenter used guile to fashion relatively cheap and insignificant gestures as a lifeline to African Americans.

Several African American leaders and activists were prominent and instrumental. For every compromised clergyman there was a Jesse Jackson. For each Bobby Rush there was a Danny Davis. For every charter hustler there was an education activist like Kenwood’s Jitu Brown.

mighty four

Rahm’s ability to line up elected officials was mirrored in his coercion of organized labor. He is the shrewd bargainer who put together a congressional majority for Bill Clinton. He found the least expensive specific promise to give each interest group. For the trades, it was promises of cranes in the sky thanks to diversion of Tax Increment Financing to downtown projects. Chuy  attracted many union members based on his critique of the shiny, global downtown which sucks up our taxes. But the trades leaders, thinking of the dues bonanza, pumped out yard signs and endorsements.

A fractious but vocal conglomeration of municipal retirees and current city employees hurled  vitriol at Rahm on their Facebook page, City Worker Past and Present.  Many of the leaders were staunch unionists led by militant Italian-American precinct activists, stewards, and retired streets and san supervisors. Their gripes stemmed from the days when Mayor Daley’s Hispanic Democratic Organization came in to hop scotch incompetently over seniority on the job. This group broke heavily for Chuy because of his comments respecting established pension agreements.

Paradoxically unions representing public employees where split.  Leading the Chuy fraction was the Chicago Teacher’s union which drafted 8 of its own members for aldermanic challenges. They were at the core of a United Working Families network which was solidly pro-Chuy. The Chicago landscape was so contentious that a second network, Reclaim Chicago was also in the field. They were spearheaded by National Nursed United. Though they did not initially come out for Chuy, this second electoral mechanism assisted a dozen ward efforts and was part of the Garcia coalition in the run off.

The public sector unions that bowed to Emanuel generated the most controversy.  They were by no means alone in Rahm’s labor camp. Teamsters, plumbers, carpenters, laborers, and a dozen other councils felt their narrow best interests would lie with Rahm’s gleaming “world class city”. The split in the Service Employees International Union rocked headlines. The 28,000 member Local 73 donated and endorsed Emanuel’s re-election. Half of the members of Local 73 are city employees. Clearly the leadership feared Rahm’s vindictiveness. As he did with dozens of other sub-sectors of the electorate, Rahm made hushed promises for future considerations.

In the 12th ward, Pete DeMay’s aldermanic campaign intermingled with Chuy’s mayoral crusade.  Like Chuy, Pete stepped forward when no one else was willing. He entered a one-on-one bout with machine regular, George Cardenas.

Pete was an anomaly – a white guy with credibility as a United Autoworkers organizer, fluent in Spanish and with organizing experience in Puerto Rico, Mexico, and Tennessee. He was a hard-working and combative campaigner. He united with an existing core of activists in the McKinley Park neighborhood and attracted an expanded following.  His platform centered on education, end to regressive revenue measures, as well as more equitable public safety and ward services.

It is here, at the deepest level of political activity, that the elections of 2015 are interesting and instructive.  In the precincts, we mixed the battle for local accountability with the broader, city-wide effort. We went toe to toe against a well-funded, entrenched machine. We stood upright in the middle of the ring. We were surprised to see a Latino cheering section for the güero against a man who has a surname evocative of Mexican radicalism.  So effective was the challenge, that Cardenas appealed to a home town referee – Rahm’s Chicago Board of Elections. Ruling on preposterous legal pretexts, the board declared a technical knockout. Pete was stricken from the ballot. We were down for the count before we could finish the first round.

We’ll never know if Pete’s aggressive campaign could have ridden Chuy’s coat tails to victory against a Latino apologist for neo-liberalism. His spunk and organization touched a nerve. Even without his name on the ballot, we netted an unprecedented 20 to 25 percent write-in count in the municipal general election.

The use of legal shenanigans to derail Pete’s challenge was as obvious as it was odious. The required number of nominating signatures was 473. We collected over 2100. Of these, 1400 were invalidated in challenges. The majority were stricken based on overly precise requirements that the signatures match exactly with their original applications. One hundred and fifty names were ruled “out of district” by a computer program that was obviously flawed. Each in-district address that was rejected was clearly within the boundaries.

Then, with a remaining cushion of 300 above the needed level, Cardenas’ election lawyer submitted witnesses and affidavits supposedly proving a pattern of fraud. The alderman’s staff had gone around the ward during work hours to badger signers into recanting their names on Pete’s petitions. On the basis of 47 coerced affidavits and 3 suspect witnesses, the hearing examiner declared all sheets turned in by Pete himself to be inadmissible. Our signature total fell to 407 and we were off the ballot.

Activists and constituents understood the cynical use of a municipal board to protect a favorite of Mayor Emanuel. The elections commissioner is a lawyer who has received over $200 million in municipal fees for billable hours in recent years. We made common cause with other campaigns who had suffered similarly egregious rulings. We rallied voters who saw these maneuvers as a sign of weakness by the incumbent and an affront to democracy. The commitment of the core tightened and the drive for write-in votes picked up steam.

out of dist jpegChuy had surpassed all expectations and held Rahm to only 45%. With none of the five candidates receiving more than half, the mood at our 12th ward election night gathering was mixed. We had brought home landslide numbers in all our precincts for Chuy. We knew that write-in votes were accumulating in astonishing numbers but Pete’s defeat was seen as unavoidable. The obstacles were too great.

Looking around the banquet room, the majority of Pete’s active campaigners where Latinos. They were union members. They were young people gaining their first taste of politics. They were from each section of a gerrymandered district. We all saw this cause as inseparable from the city wide crusade to “Take Back Chicago”.

Precincts were the critical unit of geography. The goal was to staff each precinct with people who live there. Typically in our southwest campaigns, the stability of such teams has been uneven. Most often – especially when the turf is larger than a ward — volunteers show up for canvassing.  They are handed walk sheets based solely on the areas that have not yet been covered. In Pete’s campaign – because we had the added dynamism of working in concert with the Chuy mobilization – we had such a large base of volunteers that we were able to approximate the old style machine structure.

Democratic ward armies of the past have been based on captain and patronage loyalists. These teams are in decline nowadays because of a shift from hiring clout to sub-contracting and privatizing. Our home grown teams were able to match up favorably with the diehards.  We held precinct meetings, put out specific flyers by neighborhood, and were able to allocate crews of watchers, passers, and runners at every polling place. Just as our ward was a battle ground in the mayoral, the precincts were key for Pete’s challenge.

To grab and hold some power even at the ward level, this must be a continuing emphasis. We forged cooperation by local people of good will – from recreation and cultural leaders, to teachers and librarians, to retired and current union people, to the youth and the unemployed. Links to citywide issues and to the concerns of other neighborhoods are a priority. Of particular importance will be creating unity with African American communities.

Here in the Latino southwest side, the progressives fought five aldermanic battles in addition to the overarching Garcia effort. Though they were not arrayed as an official slate, there was an informal alliance which benefited each local race and contributed to Chuy’s organizing. The various teams picked up tips from each other. Those which didn’t survive the first round joined in to help out those still in the field and to work side by side in the mayoral. Marching bands from two of our high schools led parades to early voting.

Garcia won overwhelming majorities in his home base, an area that becomes more heavily Latino with each real estate closing. At the same time the Southwest side is home to three powerful political families, the Daleys, the Burkes, and the Madigans. These clever hustlers ran the table on us. Our standard bearer and our four progressives could not compete with the many and varied electoral tricks that money could buy. We battled operatives with stacks of pre-filled out ballots, shadow candidates, outright lies on mailings, naked vote buying, impossible legal hurdles.

It was a bitter wake up and an education for our activists. The challenge is to broaden and deepen the understanding. We are working to create stable political organizations to hasten the final hurrah for the old guard.

alhambra2