Thursday, March 17, 2016

An Open Letter from Bishop Wayne Miller on the City's Plan for Lathrop Homes

Honoring Promises


March 16, 2016

“Alas for those who devise wickedness and evil deeds… They covet fields, and seize them; houses and take them away; they oppress householder and house, people and their inheritance.” Micah 2:1-2

Our city has been enveloped by a moral crisis. It is a beast with many heads, but the core issue is that TRUST between the people of Chicago and its elected leaders is broken. And the devastating impact of this broken trust has now escalated to the point that educational resources, access to social services, employment opportunity, public safety, and even confidence in law enforcement itself are all threatened.
And yet, despite this critical failure in the foundational trust fabric of community life, we are once again witnessing a city government breaking faith by converting the Lathrop Homes on the north side from low-income housing to “mixed income” housing with no reliable plan and no credible evidence of any commitment to provide alternative housing for the poor, who are being relentlessly displaced by this new development plan.
No matter what the arguments regarding theories of urban planning, the inescapable truth is that what has been happening at Lathrop represents a policy built on lies and broken promises over many years. Promises have been broken in our relationship with the federal government, which has been paying millions of dollars into the CHA, trusting that these dollars would be used for their intended purpose. They have not. Promises have been broken to the residents of Lathrop, who have left, either by eviction or persuasion, with an unfulfilled expectation of new housing that has never been built. Simultaneously, those residents have been barred from returning to the home left behind. Promises have been broken to all the taxpayers of the city who have trusted elected officials who seem to have forgotten that government exists to defend the well-being of the vulnerable, the broken, and the marginalized, against the crushing oppressive force of unrestrained wealth and unaccountable social privilege.
The one essential structure of all social, communal, or civic life is the capacity to make, to keep, and to honor promises. Without the honoring of promises there is no integrity. Without integrity there is no credibility. Without credibility, there can be no trust. And without trust, there is no community. This is no longer a matter of public policy. It is a matter of public morality.
It is therefore incumbent upon Christian leaders, not merely as a matter of civic responsibility, but as a matter of evangelical necessity, to speak and act in a way that places the Church clearly and unambiguously in communion with the God who always stands in solidarity with the poor and the vulnerable whose trust has been betrayed, even if doing so puts us at personal risk. My hope is that there is still time for civic leaders to recognize the destructive effect of these choices, to turn, and to choose a better path.

Bishop Wayne N. Miller
Metropolitan Chicago Synod, ELCA

Chicago, IL

Occupy Palm Sunday Schedule

Sunday, 12:30 pm: Bilingual Rally and Procession at 2029 W. Diversey (2800 N), courtyard between Hoyne & Leavitt (2200 W)

Sunday, 2:30 pm through Monday, 10:30 am: 24-hour Prayer Vigil, 2800 block of N. Clybourn. Individuals and groups are welcome to come and support the vigil at any time Sunday afternoon or evening, overnight, or early Monday morning.

Monday, 10:30 am: Press Conference, 2800 block of N. Clybourn

Everyone is welcome to join us for a pre-rally Palm Sunday worship service at 10:30 am on March 20. Location: Diversey-River Rock 'N Bowl, 2211 W. Diversey.

#OccupyPalmSunday 2016: Housing Justice for Lathrop Homes

In advance of the Logan Square Ecumenical Alliance's 5th annual #OccupyPalmSunday event this weekend at Lathrop Homes, we've put together this video connecting the dots between Jesus' entry into Jerusalem and our procession with palms into the community of boarded up homes at Lathrop.

Please watch, then share.


Thursday, November 12, 2015

LSEA Meets Tuesday November 17 6:30 pm at 2837 W. Armitage

The next general meeting of the LSEA will be:

Tuesday, November 17th at 6:30pm.  
2837 W. Armitage (new location for St. Luke’s Logan Square)

We’ll continue planning for the 3rd annual “Las Posadas” event (to be held on Sunday, December 13th at 1:30pm).

Please join us!


Related posts

Logan Square Ecumenical Alliance plans for October, November, and December (2014) will focus on our housing advocacy, culminating with posada events in December.

(See Looking Ahead: Posada Planning for December )














On the heels of a December 10, 2013, community meeting that brought over 400 people out to demand an immediate opening of unused units to people in need of housing, on Saturday a coalition of churches, community organizations, and residents associations will hold a holiday Posada -- a Latin American traditional re-enactment of the search by the parents of Jesus for hospitality -- that does double-duty dramatizing the plight of people left in the cold by Chicago housing policies.

(See POSADA 2013: Is there room at the inn at the CHA’s Lathrop Homes? on the Remedy for Violence website.)

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

IMPORTANT MEETING: LSNA Housing and Land Use Committee - June 9

Logan Square neighborhood in Chicago


The Housing Committee of LSNA (Logan Square Neighborhood Association) meets Tuesday, June 9, at 6:30 pm at the St. Sylvester Rectory, 2915 W. Palmer.

The agenda is likely to include:

* engaging LSNA members in our Bloomingdale corridor stability campaign this summer and beyond

* next steps toward a stronger local policy for affordable set-side units in new developments

* one next step in our Lathrop Homes campaign

* some ideas for growing our committee & increasing our effectiveness.

Please email us to confirm your participation! Thanks!

John McDermott
LSNA

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

LSEA Monthly Meeting - June 2015

Look at all the beautiful, justice-minded people
coming together via the Logan Square Ecumenical Alliance
to organize on behalf of the common good in our community in May!


Members of Kimball Avenue Church, Humboldt Park United Methodist, San Lucas UCC, and St. Luke's Logan Square came together in May for food, fellowship, and to continue the work of the Logan Square Ecumencial Alliance.

More to come in June!

NEXT MEETING: Tuesday, June 23, 2015 -- 6:30 p.m. -- at Nuestra SeƱora de las Americas (Logan Blvd. & Francisco).

Thursday, April 16, 2015

LSEA Joins #Fightfor15 on April 15 in Chicago

Following on our Palm Sunday action ("Palm Sunday 2015: "We Who Are Many Are One: From the Lord's Table to Every Table"), members of Logan Square Ecumenical Alliance joined with other ARISE Chicago participants and allied organizations to join in the #Fightfor15 march on April 15, 2015.

The protest in Chicago was one of hundreds of actions demanding fair wages for low-wage workers, held throughout the US and worldwide.

See "Thousands Shut Down The Loop In Largest Ever Fight For 15 Demonstration" in Chicagoist.

Here are some pictures of the day in Chicago:


Thousands mustered on the UIC quad on a perfect spring day.
Buses brought participants from neighborhoods throughout the city.


The Dignidad Statue


The ARISE Chicago contingent joins the march. (The top of the
Willis Tower -- near the march destination -- can be seen in the distance.)


The march on Jackson was massive and joyous.


It was exciting to see the #Fightfor15 signs against the backdrop of the
Chicago Board of Trade at LaSalle and Jackson - "headquarters" of the
Occupy Chicago protests several years ago.


Fittingly, the closing rally took place alongside the McDonald's in the
courtyard next to the Chicago Board of Trade at LaSalle and Jackson.