With an Olympic development bonanza now out of the picture, there's been plenty of speculation over Mayor Daley's next move for boosting the city's sagging economy. Credit remains tight and the housing market is still deeply distressed. But there are tools sitting in the Daley woodshed that could help ameliorate this problem; As we've pointed out before, the mayor is sitting on a $1.3 billion tax increment financing (TIF) surplus that could go a long way toward rejuvenating crumbling neighborhoods. The question is what will it take to get the mayor to finally dip into his honey pot?
Today, the Sweet Home Chicago Coalition ratcheted up the pressure on the mayor to begin spending in the communities that need it most. "Instead of waiting on the federal government to send us a stimulus package, we need to start our own stimulus," Ald. Walter Burnett (27th Ward) told members of the coalition early this afternoon as they rallied outside of a series of TIF-funded projects that transformed vacant Humboldt Park lots into thriving (and affordable) apartment buildings. Burnett and colleague Ald. Manny Flores (1st Ward) are currently crafting an ordinance that would require the city to commit 20 percent of all TIF revenues toward affordable housing. Today, proponents of the plan built a symbolic yellow brick road paved with the TIF surpluses. Check out our slide show:






