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Olympics Loss Puts Daley On Defensive And Chicago Plans In Limbo

DEANNA BELLANDI   10/ 3/09 08:27 PM ET   AP

Olympics

CHICAGO — Chicago's dream of an Olympics-sized stimulus was dashed when the 2016 Summer Games were awarded to Rio de Janeiro, and the loss amounts to more than a bruised ego for the nation's third-largest city.

Officials can no longer trumpet the $13.7 billion citywide economic impact local Olympics organizers estimated would come of games-related jobs, construction, tourism and transportation. They'll also have no excuse for distraction in a city grappling with a mounting deficit and violence that has led to dozens of deaths of city teens each year.

The loss marked a stunning defeat for Mayor Richard M. Daley, who spent three years working to sell Chicago residents on the games, often highlighting job creation and a financial influx that would help the city emerge from a recessional slump.

"I just know so many construction workers who thought their next seven years were going to be full of work," said Jane Zefran, 63, a semi-retired Chicago resident. "Now, heavens only knows what will happen. It's such a shame."

Fresh off a plane Saturday from the International Olympic Committee meeting in Copenhagen, Daley said people shouldn't be disheartened about Chicago's future because the city lost the 2016 Summer Games.

"We have a great city," he said. "These are great people. We have a future just as bright as anyone else."

People around town seem doubtful the loss will scar Daley as he mulls whether to seek a seventh term in 2011 – at which point he will have 22 years in office and become Chicago's longest-serving mayor.

"I don't think he will be looked at like a loser," said Angela Byrd, 40, a teacher's assistant from Chicago.

Still, a recent Chicago Tribune/WGN poll showed Daley's approval rating had sunk to 35 percent in part because of skepticism over the Olympics and an unpopular deal to lease city parking meters to a private contractor. And the mayor was in Copenhagen as an unwelcome spotlight again shone on his city after a 16-year-old honors student was beaten to death while walking to a bus stop after school.

Back at home, one of the first big issues the mayor will have to deal with comes Wednesday, when U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and Education Secretary Arne Duncan meet with school officials, students and residents to talk about chronic school violence.

Daley is likely to be asked yet again what can be done to address the issue.

As for jobs, at least some of the anticipated construction still should materialize because the city has pledged to move forward with redeveloping the site that would have been the Olympic Village. The plan calls for transforming the site of a shuttered South Side hospital complex into a mixed-use, mixed-income neighborhood. City contracts already are out for some demolition work and the city plans to sell the land to private developers.

But without the games, many improvements to infrastructure, like public transportation, won't see the speed-up of federal assistance the city expected if were it chosen.

"Unfortunately, not having the bid means that many of those projects will take much longer to complete, but they are still on the table and we will move forward," said Chicago Alderman Brendan Reilly.

Advocates hoped the Olympics would provide the leverage needed in lobbying for funds to overhaul aging transportation systems that support trains on old tracks and crowded roads that need work.

"It doesn't diminish the need to figure out how to fund this stuff, but it is disappointing," said Barry Matchett of the Chicago-based advocacy group Environmental Law & Policy Center.

The Chicago Transit Authority's elevated subway system is perhaps the most troubled. Some of the worst track has been recently fixed, partly drawing on federal stimulus funds. But some stretches of the more than 240 mile-network remain so shoddy that trains meant to travel more than 50 mph must slow to the pace of a horse at trot.

Chicago's Metra commuter trains are better off, but hardly trouble free. The International Olympic Committee's evaluation report had singled out Metra, saying it would be hard-pressed to handle what would be more than double the peak commuter traffic during the games.

Alderman Tom Tunney said the city must move on quickly and refocus efforts on other growth areas like green technology, manufacturing and its reputation as the country's freight rail hub.

"In this economy there is no time for sulking. No, no, no, no, no," he said.

___

Associated Press Writer Michael Tarm contributed to this story.

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CHICAGO — Chicago's dream of an Olympics-sized stimulus was dashed when the 2016 Summer Games were awarded to Rio de Janeiro, and the loss amounts to more than a bruised ego for the nation's thi...
CHICAGO — Chicago's dream of an Olympics-sized stimulus was dashed when the 2016 Summer Games were awarded to Rio de Janeiro, and the loss amounts to more than a bruised ego for the nation's thi...
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08:21 PM on 10/05/2009
Richard the Bozo King of Wise Guy Chicago needs to go. Please, let's
make this his last term
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
08:52 PM on 10/04/2009
Twenty-two years in office? That sounds more like a king! And knowing that Daley's daddy sent the police after protesters at the Democratic Convention in 1968, there should be plenty of reasons to boot Daley Jr. out next election.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
crookedcountyillinois
Professional Illinois Government "Watchdog" and No
06:27 PM on 10/04/2009
This article is bizarre.

Deanna Bellandi appears to be giving Daley an awful lot of credit as a legitimate politician with the legitimate political problems one might expect after such an ordeal. And I find it awfully hard to pretend that Daley isn't completely emerged in the largest entourage of government corruption that may have ever existed anywhere in the United States; even for only two minutes reading Bellandi's write-up.
05:45 PM on 10/04/2009
Michael Reese site:
I am concerned that in an effort to show something happening, the city will let very sub-optimal development take place on that land. It will be a number of years before significant demand comes back and there are parts of the Reese complex that are architecturally significant and must be preserved. Demolishing everything and quickly constructing some cookie-cutter complex that doesn't make proper use of the land/neigborhood would only be a continuation of failure and show Daley's desperation to give jobs to construction workers at the long-term detriment to the city.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MrPragmatic
05:54 PM on 10/04/2009
Then do something about it. If you live in that neighborhood contact the alderman. Or start (or join) a watchdog group on development.
06:27 PM on 10/04/2009
1) Why do you assume I am not involved?
2) I am currently in California so it would be difficult.

But I encourage you and others to get actively involved. Not only for that site, but elsewhere. Time and again visitors to the city laud the architecture. And if you preserve the old architecture and construct noteworthy new architecture that lives in harmony with the old, it can be the one hard-to-replicate constant that will continually distinguish that area from others. You really, really don't want to lose it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MrPragmatic
05:42 PM on 10/04/2009
The Olympic loss was nothing more than revenge of the nerds who intellectualize everything to death and forget that some things in life are not quantifiable by stats and numbers. How many Chicago teens would have been inspired by the games and the spirit in which they are played. If folks wait until Chicago (or any other city) is perfect before entertaining big ideas then we will all wait a long time as in never.
08:48 PM on 10/04/2009
Ah yes, the magic of the Olympics......does anybody buy that cornball line anymore?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MrPragmatic
11:05 PM on 10/04/2009
As I said, revenge of the nerds.
11:21 AM on 10/04/2009
The silver lining for Chicago is that now DaMayor can use all the money he has socked away to pay for the Olympics to solve some of Chicago's many pressing problems.

The first and highest priority has to be to get the very serious crime problem which is destroying many poor neighborhoods under control. This means, first of all, hiring additional policemen. The Chicago police are stretched much too thin to do the job effectively. And better policemen, who are educated and understand that to be effective the police has to win the support of the law abiding members of the community because there can never be enough policemen to watch everybody and everything, so in order to be effective, the law abiding member of the community have to be able to trust and respect them and be willing to act as their eyes and ears.
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stepintothelight
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
02:37 PM on 10/04/2009
Did you ever think how it would help if they had Jobs ... education ... or just something constructive to do?
05:39 PM on 10/04/2009
There is no money 'socked away.' The money would have come from federal funds, and revenue related to the Games themselves.
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unionave
Old Codger
11:21 AM on 10/04/2009
As Bill O's book points out Daley and his police focus on only certain parts of Chicago . In other parts of Chicago police presence is almost nonexistant which the recent catastrophe shows . The Chicago news papers reports on certain areas of the city are embellished making situations seem as bizarre as possible . So any one reading a Chicago paper will conclude the city is a war zone with things totally out of control and police using certain people as target practice and are promoted on the number of arrests . In the court system a non-white person often faces an all white jury even if the jury pool is as much as 80% non-white . Daley made the statement while campaigning for his first attempt at becoming mayor "what Chicago needs is a white mayor" which he later denied , but it was recorded . His machine controls the voting and he has wasted an unbelievable amount of tax payer money and ran the city deep in debt . The Olympics would have crushed the tax payers of Chicago .
06:32 PM on 10/04/2009
This is true. During the boom years of the 90s, Daley spent money like a fool, and now, during tough times, we are broke. And I do recall Daley making the "White Mayor" comment myself. He tried to pass it off, saying that he said "Wet Mayor". This guy has been lying to us for years!
06:52 PM on 10/04/2009
Not here to defend Daley or any politician, but it is worth noting that times are tough everywhere. Note the article about California linked from HuffPost for instance.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/oct/04/california-failing-state-debt

I do agree that the chitown media really exploits events much more than elsewhere I have seen. The top story is always anything they can twist into some horrific story with on-site reporting of anyone who will give them a good quote. Elsewhere they tend to place stories in proper perspective and without such exploitation.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mahi Joe
Think critically...not blindly conform
10:57 AM on 10/04/2009
Who actually owns the land that was to be used for the Olympics?
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unionave
Old Codger
11:25 AM on 10/04/2009
A place called Washington Park owned by the city of Chicago .
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
11:49 AM on 10/04/2009
I thought Valerie Jarrett bought up much of the real estate. Not true?
08:57 AM on 10/04/2009
The best news is coming for Chicago. Daley, obviously, will now reallocate the billions of dollars slated for the Olympics, and the people that need help, desperately, will be able to tap into their taxpayer dollars. Right?
05:48 PM on 10/04/2009
There is no money allocated. There seems to be a serious misconception about this. The money that would have been used was to come from federal funds and Games-related revenue.
05:53 AM on 10/04/2009
Why do the people in Chicago keep re-electing this guy? Tell me, please. Philadelphia finally got wise, put in a real winner, Michael Nutter. What's with you in Chicago?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mahi Joe
Think critically...not blindly conform
08:02 AM on 10/04/2009
Seriously, Chicago has not found a "Michael Nutter" to run against Daley. The minute we get a viable candidate to run against Boss Daley his reign will be over.
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unionave
Old Codger
11:33 AM on 10/04/2009
Daley controls who runs against him in Chicago . J.J. jr had a chace but got mired in the governor's mess .
05:05 AM on 10/04/2009
The city has been poorly managed for a long time. Maybe they need a new mayor.
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stepintothelight
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
02:38 PM on 10/04/2009
More like a Regime change!!!
04:29 AM on 10/04/2009
From what I've seen, the biggest black eye is on the cavier conservatives getting caught cheering behind closed doors when the US lost its Olympic bid. There are a couple of conservative blogs that have scrubbed their threads about it and are trying to act like it never happened.
05:54 AM on 10/04/2009
You're posting the same thing all over, give it up, no one is listening.
02:19 AM on 10/04/2009
Daley's Waterloo?
02:02 AM on 10/04/2009
I love Chicago. But it's not like there isn't plenty of work that needs to be done there. Why not become a model of civility, liveability, nonviolence in all of its neighborhoods and proactive progress.
12:41 AM on 10/04/2009
Sorry Daly

All he opportunity to make lot of money is gone

Ha Ha Ha

I hope your crones did not receive any advanced kickbacks.. They need to refund it now

Ha Ha Ha