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Filtering by Tag: Chicago

"Chicago Alfresco" Initiative Announced

Scott Kane

Today the City of Chicago announced a new initiative called “Chicago Alfresco” which expands the city’s prior “outdoor dining program” and aims to increase “outdoor dining area and the opportunity for businesses and community organizations to design creative long-term outdoor spaces.” Importantly, the program includes grants of up to $25,000 for local community organizations to “creat[e] longer-term active community spaces that support outdoor dining or highlight community-focused placemaking, support community identity, and provide opportunities for public enjoyment.” The City’s examples of appropriate projects include “activating” (a) existing public plazas with furnishings for outdoor dining; and (b) street, curb, and alley space for dining and community gathering spaces.

First round of approvals are set for April 30, 2021. Also, there is a webinar (registration required) is set for March 26 at 3 p.m. to answer questions.

To me, this is a welcome bit of good news for Chicago. These efforts certainly would have been welcome in advance of the pandemic but to combine two lazy clichés into one mega-lazy-cliché-pun “with 2020 in our hindsight, this is better late than never.” Here’s hoping that, in addition to beautiful our City’s public spaces, this initiative helps the many hospitality, restaurant, and bar businesses so grievously injured by the pandemic get started on a recovery in anticipation of Summer 2021.

Regards,

SK

Mayor Lightfoot Announces $330 Million Commitment for Affordable Housing in Chicago

Scott Kane

The City of Chicago announced a $330 million lending commitment to acquire and rehabilitate 7,000 housing units on the city’s south and west sides. This commitment was joined by the Community Investment Corporation (CIC) and 40 banks. Mayor Lightfoot’s press release on the topic is copied below:

CHICAGO – Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot and Department of Housing (DOH) Commissioner Marisa Novara joined the Community Investment Corporation (CIC) today to announce a $330 million lending commitment from 40 banks for the acquisition and rehabilitation of 7,000 units of affordable rental housing on Chicago’s South and West Sides. This commitment by CIC and its investor banks is expected to finance affordable rental units in up to 400 buildings over the next five years. CIC will align their commitment with the Mayor’s INVEST South/West initiative to attract further private and philanthropic investment for equitable development and increased opportunities in neighborhoods that have experienced disinvestment for decades. 

"As we continue to weather the storm of COVID-19, it's our responsibility to make sure that our residents, especially those on our South and West Sides, have a place to call home and find shelter," said Mayor Lightfoot. "Partnerships with and investments from organizations like CIC and its investor banks are just what we need to ensure our communities have access to the safe, affordable housing they need now more than ever. Securing these funds and the projects they enrich will ultimately build on our ongoing neighborhood improvement initiatives such as INVEST South/West, protect the residential infrastructure of our communities, and restore the vibrancy of our economy at the local level." 

The announcement was made at a CIC-financed courtyard building in the City’s South Shore neighborhood, a community where CIC has financed over $60 million to preserve 1,800 units over the past 10 years. The building is owned and operated by Anthony Oliver, who also owns 150 affordable rental units on Chicago’s South and West Sides, and represents the type of CIC borrower – local business people – who provides the vast majority of affordable housing in Chicago and throughout the country. 

“This $330 million commitment to CIC represents a major effort to counter the historic disinvestment in many Chicago communities,” said CIC Chicago President Jack Markowski. “It will preserve our affordable housing stock, invest in communities that are most in need, and build and strengthen the local businesses who own and operate the buildings.” 

Since 1984, CIC has provided $1.5 billion to rehab and preserve 63,000 units of affordable housing throughout Chicago. This new investment will not only create and preserve affordable rental opportunities but also increase access to credit for entrepreneurs and small business owners who are committed to neighborhood development on the South and West Sides.  

“CIC has a deep knowledge of our neighborhoods and consistently supports the City’s small, community-based developers who are essential in creating and preserving affordable rental housing that our city desperately needs,” said DOH Commissioner Marisa Novara. “The majority of CIC’s borrowers are women and people of color, so when they invest in local entrepreneurs, not only do they produce affordable housing, they also build wealth for populations long denied that opportunity.” 

Community Investment Corporation (CIC) is the leading source of financing for the acquisition, rehabilitation, and preservation of affordable rental housing in the Chicago area. The roster of CIC’s 40 investors includes 31 banks that are renewing their support for CIC as well as nine banks making investments for the first time. For more information about CIC and its affordable housing programs, visit www.cicchicago.com

This announcement is part of Mayor Lightfoot’s commitment to bring equitable investment, resources and much-needed development in many of the city’s underserved neighborhoods. Last week, the Department of Planning and Development (DPD) announced a Request for Proposals (RFP) for the redevelopment of key, underutilized properties in three INVEST South/West neighborhoods: Auburn Gresham, Austin and Englewood. The projects will revitalize their respective neighborhoods with quality-of-life amenities, job and mixed-income housing projects that leverage local transit and advance long-established community goals. For more information about the RFPs and to submit a proposal visit, Chicago.gov/investsw

New Waves of Copyright Troll Lawsuits Hit Northern Illinois: HB Productions, Inc. and Strike 3 Holdings LLC

Scott Kane

A new wave of copyright troll litigation has been filed in the Northern District of Illinois (a federal court covering northern Illinois). These copyright troll lawsuits allege - often without any good faith basis in fact or law - that large groups of individual has used the BitTorrent protocol to download their protected work - normally failed films or pornography - and abuse the civil justice system to subpoena personal information about the defendants and extort the same for money.

Cameron & Kane LLC’s Scott Kane has been identified by the Electronic Freedom Frontier as a Defense Resource for defendants in these cases. If you have questions or need legal representation in these suits, contact Cameron & Kane LLC today. (872) 588-0727 / info@cameronandkane.com

Circuit Court of Cook County "Pauses" Most Legal Proceedings, Eviction Enforcement, and Final Relief in Foreclosures

Scott Kane

*** THE FOLLOWING IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE NOR SHOULD YOU RELY UPON IT AS THE SAME ***

On March 13, 2020, Chief Judge Timothy C. Evans of the Circuit Court of Cook County issued General Administrative Order 2020-0001 (“Order”). The Order, seeking to help mitigate the spread of the Coronavirus / COVID-19, essentially “paused” the vast majority of legal matters before the Court and rescheduled them for continuation in thirty days.

The Order also ordered:

  • The Sheriff of Cook County to “cease execution of eviction orders relating to residential real estate effective March 14, 2020 [… for …] 30 days.” This means that no residential tenant within Cook County will be forcibly removed from the property they occupy by the Sheriff for that time period.

  • The Chancery Division of the Circuit Court of Cook County to effectuate a “moratorium on final judgments and executions of judgments in mortgage foreclosure proceedings. This means that there will be a temporary pause on the final stages of foreclosure lawsuits.

  • A suspension on Grand Jury empanelings until May 1, 2020 and an extension of any currently empaneled Grand Juries to cover the gap.

Please note that the foregoing explicitly does not relieve parties of their general legal duties vis a vis rent, mortgage payment, or jury service.

We, at Cameron & Kane LLC, are sincerely pleased to hear of our primary court’s leadership taking proactive health and safety measures in these trying times. We have incorporated this “pause” into our practice and are working diligently to ensure our clients’ matters before the Circuit Court of Cook County continue to be zealously advocated for.

*** AGAIN, PLEASE NOTE THIS IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE NOR IS THIS FIRM ADVISING YOU TO TAKE OR FOREBEAR FROM ANY COURSE OF ACTION ***

Cook County Political Ethics in 2020 and the Possibility of Reform

Scott Kane

On January 16, 2020, on behalf of my client, Coco Soodek, I filed a formal Request for Investigation with the Cook County Board of Ethics regarding Board of Review Commission Michael Cabonargi’s past, present, and ongoing violations of the Cook County Ethics Ordinance’s limitations on campaign contributions. While my client’s request is quite lengthy, I will try to briefly summarize its contents.

The Ethics Ordinance establishes strict contribution limits for anyone who “does business with the County […] is a person required to register as a lobbyist […] or who has sought official action by the County […] [t]o any candidate for County office or elected County official during a single candidacy.” This limitation was explicitly designed to combat “conflict of interest” and “impropriety” concerns raised by the Cook County Board of Review’s commissioners accepting campaign contributions from attorneys who appear before the Board of Review seeking property tax reductions for their clients.

Michael Cabonargi is one such Commissioner at the Board of Review and has been cited for violation of the Ethics Ordinance by the Cook County Board of Ethics at least 126 times and ordered to refund approximately $68,950 in such excess donations. Since these citations, Cabonargi has: (a) Redirected approximately $38,550 of these violative contributions into the a political party committee which is under the direct control of Cabonargi’s fundraisers and operates in his interests; (b) Accepted approximately $76,463 in additional donations that violate the Ethics Ordinance into both his primary and “redirect” committee; and (c) Simply failed to refund approximately $5,200 of the identified violative contributions.

That’s $120,213 in additional campaign contribution violations from Cabonargi after already being caught 126 times. Not a good look.

My client and I believed the foregoing violations of the Ethics Ordinance to be a major injury to the public trust and a basis for investigation, fines, and other remedies from the Board of Ethics. We conducted a press conference at the Board of Review the day after filing and seemed to have some support in the press. My client’s Request for Investigation was reported on by (a) The Chicago Tribune multiple times (January 17, 2020 // March 5, 2020); (b) local radio; and (c) my friend, colleague, and Cabonargi opponent, Jacob Meister.

So, what happened?

Well, three days after my client’s press conference, Cook County President, and huge Michael Cabonargi fan, Toni Preckwinkle fired Peggy Daley – chair of the Board of Ethics and outspoken advocate for ethics reform – without notice or a clear stated reason. President Preckwinkle’s suspected motivations for this firing ranged from Mrs. Daley’s proposed strengthening of the Ethics Ordinance, to her contributions to Mayor Lightfoot’s campaign, or my client’s pending request for Investigation in Cabonargi. While the truth will never be known, all of the most obvious reasons reflect very poorly on President Preckwinkle.

That same week, I spoke at a meeting of the Board of Ethics on behalf of my client. During that meeting, I implored them to open an investigation into Cabonargi for the reasons outlined in our request. I also learned two important things. First, N. Keith Chambers, President Preckwinkle’s appointed Executive Director of the Board of Ethics, had halted audits into violations of the Ethics Ordinance for some time, leaving the board, in essence, without the means to carry out its investigatory duties. Second, Michael Grossman – another member of the Board of Ethics – was so disgusted with President Preckwinkle’s dismissal of Mrs. Daley, that he resigned through one of the most scathing letters I’ve ever read. The letter ended with “you are free to fill my vacancy with someone more likely to do your bidding.” I highly recommend you give it a read.

Having submitted the Request for Investigation, I prepared for the Executive Director’s response. You see, by law, the Executive Director is required to determine whether there is “reasonable cause” to conduct an investigation within thirty (30) days after a request is made. Cook County Board of Ethics, Rules and Regulations: Section 5.2 (“Review of Complainant Requests for Investigations”). If they think there is, the Executive Director brings the issue to Board of Ethics to act on or starts an investigation themselves. Id., Sections 5.3-5.4. If they consider the request “incomplete or frivolous,” they are required to “promptly notify the complainant of the reason for such rejection” and give notice of the same to the Board of Ethics. Id., Section 5.2. The system is set up to ensure that complaints are either acted on or given transparent public reasons for rejection. The goal, so far as I see it, is to avoid the citizenry’s concerns simply disappearing into a bureaucratic black hole.

Having personally authored the twenty-one page Request for Investigation which provided evidence of over $120,000 in Ethics Ordinance violations by a sitting County official as supported by twenty-four separate exhibits, I felt fairly comfortable that my client’s request was not “incomplete or frivolous.” So, patiently, I waited.

And waited. And waited.

Ultimately, Executive Director Chambers simply did not issue a response. When I appeared at the Board of Ethics’ next meeting and brought this to his attention he avoided any substantive comment on the topic other than stating that investigations are confidential matters – despite that clearly not being responsive to my comments or his duties. My client, who also attended, rather bluntly commented that it appeared Executive Director Chambers was simply “slow-walking” their response to protect Cabonargi at the behest of President Preckwinkle in advance of the upcoming March 17, 2020 Democratic Primary. As a man of propriety, I would never make such a comment. But my client did and, frankly, it made a lot of sense.

The three remaining members of the Board of Ethics – Juliet Sorensen, Thomas Szromba, and Von Matthews – were all very kind and attentive to our concerns. However, when I pressed them to take immediate action independent from the Executive Director as permitted by their rules, they essentially demurred on the topic. The possible reasons for this are many. As stated above, Executive Director Chambers had essentially dust-binned their audit powers necessary for such work. Further, two of the three boardmembrs had terms expiring within the next month. While I’m not a mind-reader, the feeling I got from the room was that President Preckwinkle’s unofficial policy of “ideally no ethics investigations at all but certainly none against my people” had won the day.

Now, one week away from the March 17, 2020 Democratic primary, you might expect me to feel disheartened about the whole thing. After all, the Board of Ethics has been crushed by President Preckwinkle’s official and unofficial actions and my client’s Request for Investigation seems to have gotten nowhere and gotten there … slowly.

Yet, I don’t feel disheartened at all. Self-government is rarely satisfying. It is a business of pragmatics and polity-wide compromise. If “personal glory, “self-fulfillment,” or “always getting what I want” are preconditions to your civic engagement, you are sure to run out of steam quickly.

So, here’s how I look at it. Since filing our complaint, the Chicago Tribune has speculated that Cabonargi’s endorsement by the President Preckwinkle’s party apparatus may be a liability at the polls and endorsed another candidate, citing Cabonargi’s unethical behavior. The last act of Mrs. Daley while on the Boar of Ethics was to propose sweeping reforms to the Ethics Ordinance to include several new matter including, most importantly, a prohibition on sexual harassment. In the last three days, Crain’s Chicago has published two articles eviscerating Cabonargi for his preferential treatment of donors who appear before his office and shifting the tax burden onto the rest of us; i.e. exactly the conduct my client was concerned about (March 6, 2020 // March 9, 2020). Most importantly, there is an election in exactly one week and the consensus is that, despite Cabonargi’s contribution violations and being the preferred son of the party, the Clerk’s race is “wide open.”

This time last year, an important government office within the Court I practice in everyday was the presumed property of a nakedly corrupt man as further patronage fodder for his masters within the machine. However, as stated above, in the last three months, much attention has been drawn to his many ethical short comings. Even if he prevails, I am confident he will tread slightly lighter knowing that the simple con underlying his past political successes has been laid bare for all to see. Moreover, he may lose and a better candidate may prevail. This is an election in Cook County and stranger things have happened. That I have helped contribute to this in some small way is enough for me.

Regards,

Scott Kane

Cameron & Kane, LLC quoted in Crain's Article on Bow Truss Bankruptcy

Scott Kane

Crain's Chicago recently published a story titled "Bow Truss owner Tadros files for bankruptcy" which reported on Cameron & Kane, LLC's wage theft representation of former employees of Bow Truss. Excerpts and a quotation from firm partner, Scott Kane, can be found below.

"[Cameron and Kane LLC's] wage-theft lawsuit remains active in federal court, with a status hearing set for March 14. Two of Tadros' prior attorneys withdrew from the case, citing his failure to pay their fees, according to court documents.

Scott Kane, an attorney who filed the lawsuit on behalf of 10 former Bow Truss employees, said via email: "After a year of slogging through three different defense counsels, two bankruptcy proceedings, and numerous missed litigation deadlines, we remain steadfast and resolutely committed" to the effort. "We took this case knowing it was going to be a grind from day one."

The other bankruptcy proceeding Kane references was an involuntary bankruptcy petition filed by Michelle Spooner, Tadros' ex-wife, in February 2017."

Cameron & Kane, LLC Quoted in Chicago Sun-Times re: Kaegi Representation

Scott Kane

The Chicago Sun-Times published a story titled "Company tied to Joe Berrios sets up bogus website in primary challenger’s name" which reported on Cameron & Kane, LLC's work for Cook County Assessor challenger, Fritz Kaegi. Excerpts and a quotation from the story are below.

"Soon after announcing he would take on Berrios for the Democratic nomination for county assessor, challenger Fritz Kaegi says he noticed someone had set up websites purporting to represent him and his rage-against-the-machine campaign. But Kaegi says he had nothing to do with the new FritzKaegi.org website. [...]

So Kaegi hired [Cameron & Kane, LLC] who filed suit in Cook County Circuit Court to find out who was essentially impersonating him online. [...]

“We were trying to find out who is falsely insinuating a connection to the campaign,” attorney Scott Kane said. [...]

Galvin failed to show up for a deposition, Kaegi’s lawyers say. On Thursday, they asked a judge to order him to appear and answer their questions on Feb. 14."

Cameron & Kane, LLC File Defamation Lawsuit Against Joe Berrios on Behalf of Fritz Kaegi

Scott Kane

Yesterday, on behalf of our client Frederick "Fritz" Kaegi, Cameron & Kane, LLC filed a defamation lawsuit against Cook County Assessor and Democratic Party Chairman Joseph Berrios as well as Berrios’ committee for reelection. The lawsuit arises from a series of radio and television political advertisements published by Berrios’ committee which state, among other things, that (a) Kaegi, in his capacity as an investment fund’s manager, personally invested in private for-profit prison companies; and (b) Kaegi personally profited from said investments.

Cameron & Kane, LLC’s lawsuit alleges not only that these statements are false, but also that the Berrios’ committee either knew the statements to be false or acted with reckless disregard of their falsity. In support, the lawsuit’s complaint attaches a host of publicly available documents from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission the fund’s investments and an affidavit from Kaegi himself, both of which show that the fund never invested in private for-profit prison companies during Kaegi’s tenure.

CBS Chicago reported on the lawsuit the same night it was filed. Politifact also ran an article on the advertisements, rating them “mostly false.”

The lawsuit was filed in the Circuit Court of Cook County's Law Division and its case number is 2018-L-000223.