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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Emmanuel Camarillo

South Shore residents blast plan to turn former school into shelter for migrants: ‘We don’t want them in this building’

Angry residents shout at city officials at a community meeting Thursday. The officials had come to discuss plans to house asylum-seekers at shuttered South Shore High School. (Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times)

In a chaotic meeting Thursday, South Shore residents demanded city officials house immigrants arriving in Chicago on the North Side rather than at a shuttered local school, saying the resources being spent to help them should instead be invested on the South Side. 

Officials were prepared to deliver a presentation on the shelter plan at the meeting, which was held at South Shore International College Prep, but as it was set to begin, they were drowned out by audience members yelling, “We don’t care” and “We don’t want them here.”

Others yelled, “Send them back” and “Close the border.” Someone in the crowd held up a sign that read, “Build the wall 2024.” 

Those in the audience who wanted to hear the city’s plan implored the crowd to settle down and be respectful. At one point, a person was taken into custody by police and then quickly released after tearing up the “build the wall” sign and getting into an altercation with the person who brought it. 

A man holds a sign reading Build the Wall 2024 at the community meeting. Someone confronted the person holding the sign, tore it up and was briefly detained. Residents say they are concerned about security around the school once the asylum-seekers are in place. (Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times)

South Shore International College Prep is around the corner from the shuttered South Shore High School at 7627 S. Constance Ave., which officials plan to turn into a respite shelter for immigrants.

The school would serve as temporary housing for them while more permanent shelter is readied. Officials said 250 to 500 immigrants would be housed at the school at one time. 

Residents at the meeting said they were concerned about safety around the school once the immigrants were in place. “What are they going to do during the day when I’m at work?” asked one resident. Another asked, “Have they been background checked?” Some asked about trash buildup around the school and wanted to know if the migrants were vaccinated. 

Tina Skahill, executive director of the Chicago Police Department’s Office of Constitutional Policing and Reform, said the department plans to have officers patrol the location around the clock and will increase camera surveillance. 

Terry Hardy from Ride For Change Ride for Hope Foundation, speaking Thursday afternoon outside the former South Shore High School. (Natalie Garcia/For the Sun-Times)

Representatives from the mayor’s office, Office of Emergency Management and Communications and Department of Family and Support Services were also at the meeting.

Hours earlier at a news conference outside the shuttered high school, several residents who later attended the evening meeting demanded the city allocate more resources to the neighborhood before “dumping” migrants on their doorstep.

Residents said Black neighborhoods like South Shore could use the money being spent to house the immigrants to tackle chronic issues like homelessness and gun violence. They said asylum-seekers should instead be placed in more affluent areas of the city. 

“We don’t want them in this building. You can house the migrants on the North Side — try Lincoln Park,” said Natasha Dunn, community organizer and South Shore resident. “They’ve got so many developments over there. People aren’t even living in those tall buildings. They have access to resources. On their main streets they have jobs. We have no jobs in our community, and we have been fighting for jobs for decades. So please tell me how is this fair?”

Rosita Chatonda, also a South Shore resident, said the city should hand over the building to the community so they can use it to improve the quality of life for young people in the area.

George Blakemore, who lives in South Shore, outside the shuttered South Shore High School. Residents say previous City Hall administrations had promised to use the school as a business incubator, hydroponic grow or an art school for children. (Natalie Garcia/For the Sun-Times)

She said local community leaders had talked with previous mayoral administrations about their plans for the building, which included turning it into an art school for children, an incubator for entrepreneurs or a hydroponic grower. 

“We have the right to have access to this building as it was promised, as a community hub,” Chatonda said. “This is why children out here are struggling with violence, because they have no support. We cannot give this building up. We empathize with those who’ve come here, but we have to look out for ourselves.”

The residents said that if the asylum-seekers do move into the school, they hope Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson removes them from the building.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s office was also criticized by Woodlawn residents earlier this year when a shuttered school in that community was converted into a shelter for immigrants. A couple of people attempted to block the buses transporting the migrants to the school when it opened. 

Terry Hardy, a graduate of South Shore High School, said he wouldn’t be surprised if residents once again attempt to block buses. 

“That could happen,” Hardy said. “It’s not what we want, but if that’s what we need to do, we may be moving in that direction.”

About a week earlier, officials at a City Council committee meeting said the city was out of money, space and time to handle the flow of asylum-seekers into Chicago since August.

Many have had to spend several nights on the floors of police stations as they wait for shelter beds.

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