
Chicago taxpayers to pay $1.3M for unbuilt migrant camp
Illinois taxpayers will be forced to fork over a whopping $1.3 million for an unfinished migrant encampment, despite assurances from officials that the state wouldn't foot the bill. In an effort to curb the influx of migrants in Chicago, work on the shelter started before it had a full environmental review.
After reports revealed hazardous levels of toxins in the soil at the Brighton Park site, the project was abruptly halted in December 2023. Now, taxpayers are responsible for the $1.3 million cost of the unfinished project, according to the Chicago Tribune.
Before construction even began, Illinois Governor JB Pritzker (pictured) stated that the private contractor hired to build the shelter, GardaWorld, was 'willing to take liability' if the site was found to be unusable. 'The understanding with GardaWorld is that they will do other work with us,' Pritzker said in December 2023. 'And they knew, as they were building this shelter, before the environmental report came in, that it was possible that the environmental report wouldn't allow the building - the completion, rather - of the shelter. And so they understood that, and they were willing to take that liability on through the state's contract.'
Officials with Pritzker's office also said the company had agreed not to charge the state if the land was deemed unsafe. However, a spokesperson for the governor has since confirmed that the state will pay GardaWorld for work already performed. 'GardaWorld sought payment based on its claim that it performed a substantial amount of work at the State's request,' Pritzker spokesperson Alex Gough told WGN. 'The State negotiated and settled that claim in the Court of Claims.'
According to Court of Claims records, the Department of Human Services and GardaWorld agreed the company was owed the huge sum 'for services rendered at the 38th Street and California Avenue site' during the state budget year ending June 30, 2024. The settlement states the funds will serve as 'full payment and satisfaction of all claims' related to the site.
The payment is scheduled for the next state budget year beginning July 1, pending Pritzker's expected signature on the spending plan, the Chicago Tribune reported. No explanation as to why the state agreed to pay - even as it was under no legal obligation to do so - has been offered.
Unfortunately for taxpayers, the settlement isn't the only cost for the unused site. The city spent an additional $1.7 million on environmental cleanup and a settlement with the property's owner, which according to the mayor's office will provide a 'lasting community benefit.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
36 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
ESPN's Mina Kimes bizarrely claims LA protests are being 'mischaracterized' by the media
ESPN NFL analyst Mina Kimes offered a critique of modern American media in the context of the anti-ICE protests which have swept Los Angeles this week. Kimes, who has been with ESPN since 2014, lives in Los Angeles and has been near those who have been using their voice to express their anger with the Trump administration's roving law enforcement rounding up hundreds of people across the nation. In a post on social media, Kimes says that the media's portrayal of what is happening on the ground is 'mischaracterized' and offered the opinion that modern media may not be the best way to deliver truth to the country. 'The disparity btwn what's actually happening in Los Angeles and the way it's being mischaracterized is one of the biggest stress tests of modern media in recent memory,' Kimes wrote on Bluesky. 'Botted socials, AI, old clips, declining literacy—it's like seeing a broken emergency response system hit by a storm.' When one user on the app replied to her tweet saying that Kimes 'clearly [hasn't] been in LA', the reporter replied, 'I live here lol'. Kimes, who lives in LA, says the scope of the protests are being 'mischaracterized' by media Kimes' fears appear to follow a trend of reports, images, and other forms of media being tied to these protests which either are outdated or outright false. Senator Ted Cruz and California governor Gavin Newsom argued on X earlier this week about video of police vehicles set on fire, which Newsom's media office clarified came from 2020. The BBC's Verify team debunked a TikTok livestream which was hosted by a fake National Guardsman saying he was preparing to go around 'gassing' protestors. Other posts showed footage of Marines driving 'into Los Angeles', when in reality, it was video of them driving to their base in San Diego County. There are reporters on the ground who are providing accurate updates in real time - with some even being shot by police. Kimes has been vocal online about her political leanings in the past, and considering she lives in the very city being affected, it's not shocking that she'd provide her perspective on this issue.


Reuters
39 minutes ago
- Reuters
Aircraft startup JetZero to invest $4.7 bln over a decade in North Carolina HQ
June 12 (Reuters) - U.S. aircraft startup JetZero, which has secured investments from United Airlines and Alaska Airlines, will invest $4.7 billion over a decade on a production facility and headquarters in North Carolina, the state said on Thursday. The deal contains more than $1.1 billion in state performance incentives that would be paid over nearly 40 years and are contingent on JetZero creating over 14,000 jobs between 2027 and 2036, a state representative said. The company will manufacture its 250-seater Z4 blended wing bodied aircraft at an airport site in Greensboro, the state and company said in statements. JetZero would also benefit from an additional $450 million in infrastructure improvements to the airport facilities, along with city and county incentives, the representative said. JetZero, which has a conditional order for up to 100 fuel efficient airplanes from United, and options for another 100, is the latest startup to reach a deal for a factory at Piedmont Triad International Airport, with supersonic jet maker Boom recently opening a facility at the site. Aerospace companies are growing their footprint in the U.S. south, fueled by strong demand for aircraft and parts and comparatively lower costs than traditional U.S manufacturing hubs, although recruiting experienced labor remains a challenge. Several startup aviation firms are seeking to revolutionize travel by developing planes that emit fewer emissions to help airlines meet industry net zero targets, along with battery-powered aircraft that can take off and land vertically. But entry barriers remain high in an industry that is capital intensive, with some startups struggling in recent years.


Telegraph
39 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Trump's border tsar: We'll flood liberal cities with ICE raids
Donald Trump's border tsar says he will 'flood the zone' with arrest squads in liberal sanctuary cities as he punches back against protests that have rocked Los Angeles for days. In an interview with The Telegraph, Tom Homan said the protesters will do nothing to slow the pace of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detentions. 'If they think they're going to shut ICE operations down, they're wrong,' he said, after returning to Washington DC from California, where he had seen the protests up close. 'What they're going to see is an increase in ICE operations especially in sanctuary cities.' Last week the Department of Homeland Security issued a list of 500 cities, counties and states it said obstructed the Trump administration's deportation plan by protecting illegal immigrants. Mr Homan said he already had teams operating across places including New York and Chicago, where local law enforcement did not share immigration status of people in detention. 'We're going to send massive teams, we are going to flood the zone,' he said. 'If we can't arrest the bad guy in jail we'll arrest them in the neighbourhood. If we can't find them there we'll arrest them at a workplace. 'So sanctuary cities are gonna get exactly what they don't want – more agents in the neighbourhood, more work site enforcement operations.' Mr Homan, a former police officer who has also served as acting head of ICE, is the public face of Mr Trump's operation to deport as many as a million people in a year. So far, he said, the number was at about 140,000. But with fewer people crossing the southern border the pace of detentions has slowed since the Trump administration took power. The result has been a broader operation to find migrants wherever they might be. Immigration officers, backed by FBI agents, raided several sites around Los Angeles on Friday triggering protests that grew into riots at the weekend. Mr Trump responded by sending in 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines. Since then protests have spread around the country offering Democratic politicians their first real chance to unite against Mr Trump. Gavin Newsom, the Democratic governor of California, accused the administration of drawing a 'military dragnet' across the nation's second biggest city. However, Mr Homan said media coverage had missed a key point about the raids. 'It wasn't an immigration raid, it was a criminal investigation,' he said. The operation was investigating money laundering, tax evasion and customs fraud at a business, he said. 'The big overarching investigation is looking at whether some of this money is making it to Mexico and Columbia to fund cartel activities,' he said. Relatives and protesters arrived as news of the raids spread. Some tried to confront the federal agents wearing camouflage. One person fell to the ground in front of a vehicle as he attempted to stop its progress. Mr Homan said the FBI and ICE were investigating several organisations he believed supplied bricks and gas masks to protesters. 'So we know there's a couple organisations that are behind it that's under criminal investigation,' he said. 'I can't talk about it but we're going to prosecute them to the full extent of the law.' Online conspiracy theories have – without any evidence – suggested that George Soros, the Jewish donor to liberal causes, or Karen Bass, the city's mayor, were responsible for depositing pallets of bricks at strategic locations. Other commentators point out that one of the biggest flashpoints was beside a Home Depot store, which would have been stocked with building materials. Protests slowed on Tuesday and Wednesday, in part because of a curfew. Mr Homan said his officers had been placed at risk, night after night. 'I was there Friday night. I saw the federal building surrounded with close to 1000 people,' he said. 'I saw the threats. I saw the damage. 'I saw them trying to breach the federal building.' He said officers had been doxxed and assaulted for trying to do their job. Sending in the troops was not a piece of political theatre or an effort to create a crisis. 'Thank God President Trump deployed the National Guard when he did,' he added.