Kimberly Foxx & WVON Radio Honored at the 4th Annual L.E.G.A.C.Y. Awards Gala Celebrating African-American Business Leaders & Recognizing Young Entrepreneurs Closing Out Black History Month
WDB Marketing returns with its fourth annual L.E.G.A.C.Y. Awards Gala to recognize the importance of African American entrepreneurship in America by highlighting business owners and leaders in the city of Chicago. Announcing the 2020 Honorees, an extraordinary group of leaders making a high-impact in politics, education, humanitarianism and overall African-American entrepreneurship to be honored. WDB Marketing celebrating their 14th anniversary will honor recipients on Saturday, February 29, 2020, from 6 pm – 10 pm at Malcolm X College, 1900 W. Jackson Blvd.
“This event is important because it connects entrepreneurs at all stages of their business in one room for a night of networking and celebration. We inspire those that are just starting their journey and compel those who have already succeeded in helping the next generation of entrepreneurs.” Keeana Barber, founder, and CEO of WDB Marketing shares. “The L.E.G.A.C.Y. Awards Gala is not accomplished by just one person. We have a team of entrepreneurs in the community that work to make it a success. The people that we honor have been trailblazers and when you can see a pathway, it makes it that much closer to reality for the next generation.”
The evening will honor Kim Foxx (Cook County State’s Attorney), Olivier Kamazi (Africa Global Chamber of Commerce), Thomas Crosby (Insurance Exchange), Andrea Zopp (CEO of World Business Chicago), Chris James (Hero Foundation), Eric Williams (Silver Room), LaShaun Jackson and Omar Moore (CIRCLE Foundation) and WVON 1690AM (iHeart) radio station for the overall legacy award. A.C. Green, Chicago radio personality will host the event as Master of Ceremonies.
One young business owner will be honored with The Young Entrepreneur Award. Each year the award is given to a business owner 25 years-old or younger. The three finalists for this year’s award include Ava Dosey, the 12-year-old owner of Ava’s Pet Palace, Caleb Dunson, 17-year-old Executive Director of the Youth Entrepreneur League and Jeremy Frierson, 23-year-old Image and Brand consultant – Frierson Agency LLC. Finalists will present their business to a panel like the television show “Shark Tank” during the event. The winner will receive over $5000 in prizes and professional services and new this year a trip to Africa for the US Africa Youth Entrepreneur Summit in Ghana, Africa.
The L.E.G.A.C.Y. Awards Gala attracts a wide variety of businesses, including small mom and pops, local non-for-profits, emerging enterprises, and national corporations to connect hundreds of start-ups and seasoned businesses for the purpose of networking to collaborate on projects, inspire new entrepreneurs and provide mentorship. For one night in one location, over 600 established black-owned businesses will be toasted and celebrated for their extraordinary work in the business community and a dozen restaurants featured in the restaurant showcase. The notable event continues to show a real commitment to promoting the message that black businesses do matter to the communities they serve.
World Business Chicago returns as a major sponsor making the event their official Black History Month Celebration. Additional confirmed sponsors are Tito’s Handmade Vodka and African Global Chamber of Commerce.
Early Bird Tickets are available for purchase at www.LegacyAwardsGala.com. Early Bird General Admission Tickets are $50, and Early Bird VIP Tickets are $75. Members and supporters of the entrepreneurship movement are encouraged to join the social media conversation by using hashtags #LegacyBuilder #LegacyAwards2020.
Rocky is a two-year-old, 78-pound, adorable and playful Bull Mastiff-mix looking for a loving guardian.
Rocky lost his home when his human moved where he could not keep him. He shared a home with two other dogs, a chihuahua/bichon-mix and a shepherd/chow-mix, so he could live with another dog if properly introduced.
Rocky loves to play fetch with tennis balls and is wonderful with every human he’s ever met.
Rocky is healthy, up-to-date on rabies, distemper and bordetella vaccines, neutered and microchipped. His adoption fee of $150 benefits rescue.
If you are interested in meeting and adopting Rocky, please [email protected] for an adoption application.
He is currently living in the Garfield Ridge/Midway area of Chicago.
401 S. Lincoln St. in Hinsdale: $1,999,999 | Listed on Sept. 19, 2019
This 5,700-square-foot Hinsdale home has five bedrooms and 5.5 bathrooms. The three-story stone home includes an open floor plan, Circa lighting and Restoration Hardware finishes. Interior features include millwork, a first-floor master suite with a fireplace overlooking a private courtyard and stone patio, a two-story family room, five fireplaces, and a first-floor den.
Agent: Ginny Stewart of Jameson Sotheby’s International Realty, 630-738-0077
If you haven’t bought a car for a while, some of the more new-fangled technology and “autonomous” assist features may be new to you. These are features that help drivers do a better job of driving, without actually doing the driving.
Lane Keep Assist (LKA) may go by a few different names (Lane Trace Assist, for example), and some automakers have copyrighted names for systems that include this feature (like Nissan’s “ProPilot Assist”). But the goal is pretty self evident: To keep a driver in his lane.
Some vehicles will only offer an audible warning, but most automakers who are adding this feature offer some kind of actual physical intervention. It could be the application of brakes on the left side if you get too close to the left lane marker. Or, more aggressively, some automakers apply steering assist.
How does the feature work? Through the use of cameras. It could just be the front camera, but a lot of vehicles now have cameras on the side mirrors — not only for this function but also for around-view back-up cameras.
If you turn on your blinker to change lanes, LKA is deactivated because the car knows your intention to cross the lane marker.
Where systems like this often fail, however, is in construction zones where new lane lines are painted over old lane lines. I’ve had several instances of LKA trying to nudge me in the wrong lane. So, while systems like this are helpful for a momentary lack of concentration (like your mom sitting in the passenger seat and point at something in a different direction), they are not a substitute for actual driving.
I have to admit, the first time I was in a vehicle with the steer assist, it freaked me out. It was kind of like a hacker was taking over and pushing me in a direction I couldn’t control — but most systems are more mellow. You’ll feel a nudge of the wheel if the car doesn’t agree with the line you’re taking in the lane, but you can easily override the nudge.
However, if you’ve never experienced this, it’s still a creepy feeling.
Luckily, if you don’t want the assist, there are usually buttons to turn this feature on and off. In some cases you may have to page through system settings on the info screen to turn it off, but I haven’t found a vehicle yet where “off” isn’t an option.
As an FYI, a really great resource for safety features on vehicles is “My Car Does What?” It’ll show you images and icons as well as describe what the feature does.
The one guy we know will be in the mix is David Bote. He’s gotten off to a good start this spring and no doubt understands he has an opportunity for a larger role this season than he has in year’s past. He does have an option remaining, but barring an unexpected circumstance Bote is a roster lock throughout the season.
Signed to a Minor League deal last month, Jason Kipnis has looked like himself so far this spring. Which means he is providing steady plate discipline and should offer above average power for a second baseman. His range looks fine. He is three years removed from being an impact player, and is fairly useless versus left-handed pitching, but as a veteran platoon bat the Cubs can do worse. Fans should keep their expectations in check, as his name exceeds his ability at this point, but he should be more consistent than any of the players the Cubs ran out at second in 2019.
Nico Hoerner (Photo by Stephanie Lynn)
We haven’t seen David Bote get reps at shorstop so far, but that doesn’t mean it won’t happen. As of right now Nico Hoerner is getting more reps there then he is at second. That could be good or bad for his chances to make the Opening Day roster, depending on your viewpoint. On one end, if the Cubs aren’t readying another viable option to cover shortstop, it means they view Hoerner as capable of filling that role. On the other, they won’t bring Nico north just to function as a backup shorstop on the roster. He needs regular playing time. If he can’t force his way into the second base competition then he’ll open the year in Iowa.
My guess is we will either see Bote taking some reps at short as the spring progresses, or Hoerner taking additional reps at second and/or in center to prepare him for a larger role in Chicago.
Centerfield
While we have yet to see Nico Hoerner get any run in center, we likewise have not seen Ian Happ play on the dirt this spring. He’s been exclusively playing outfield so far. Again, it’s early and things can change quick, but I do think this provides an indication for the Cubs intentions. They see Happ as the primary guy in center.
Happ’s approach has been there, as he is laying off pitches up in the zone. He did misplay a ball in center yesterday, but he looks far more comfortable as an outfielder than he did back in 2018. I did see progress with his jumps and routes in Iowa last season, and he is still one of the fastest players on the team.
He’s one of the few former 1st rounders of this group with untapped potential. The tools are there, and are beginning to be refined.
Albert Almora
Happ isn’t the only bounce back candidate the Cubs are relying on. Albert Almora has a new swing, and so far, has done an admirable job laying off pitches outside the zone. He’s also going the other way and making frequent, hard contact. Almora does have another MiLB option year remaining, so he needs to keep up with his turnaround, but it is difficult to project him on the outside looking in the way Descalso is, despite each coming off similar trainwreck seasons.
I doubt he ever grows into a patient hitter, but If Almora’s limits himself to swinging at strikes he can still be a league average offensive contributor in a platoon or semi-regular role, which you gladly accept alongside his above average defensive work.
Almora has admitted to losing his confidence in 2019, and while he refused to point to the foul ball incident in Houston last year as a contributor to his struggles, it is easy to see how devastated he was, and how that could further shake someone in a fragile mental state.
It is difficult to remember given how poorly he played as the season progressed, but Almora did get off to a decent start last year. Midway through that fateful series in Houston his OPS stood at .762 (.266/.307/.455). Over his final 80 games? He’d post just a .560 OPS (.211/.241/.319).
The centerfield platoon we expected in 2018 (and for years to come) may just be back on track.
Bench
Victor Caratini forms one of the top offensive catcher tandems in the league alongside Willson Contreras. There is no real competition for his job. He’s a solid pitch framer and game caller. This is the one area where the Cubs have a starting caliber backup as depth.
A serious knee injury kept Steven Souza, Jr. out of action in 2019. I haven’t seen a ton of him in the outfield yet, but from what little I have, he seems to be moving fine. He doesn’t help with the Cubs need for contact hitting, but he’s got legit power, and if fully healthy (which appears to be the case), he is a potential steal on his $1M deal. If the Cubs are smart, Jason Heyward does not make a start against a left-handed pitcher this season. Souza should form a straight platoon with him in right, while also providing Kyle Schwarber the occasional rest in left.
With Jason Kipnis showing he still has some juice remaining, it could put Daniel Descalso on the outside looking in. The veteran does not appear to be in the running for regular reps at second base, and his defensive versatility is no longer what it once was. I can’t see the Cubs carrying two left-hand hitting bats who are primarily viable only at second base at this point in their career.
The Cubs could release Descalso, or perhaps he agrees to go to Iowa rather than choose free agency, as I doubt he’d be picked up off waivers. If he exercised his right to free agency I can’t see there would be much of a market for his services coming off the season he had in 2019, even at league minimum he could find it difficult to find a team willing to give him a 40-man spot.
Trent Giambrone (Photo by Stephanie Lynn)
Both Robel Garcia and Trent Giambrone offer similar depth at second base, but also provide the ability to move around the infield and outfield. There is a lot of overlap between the two players. Giambrone offers more speed, while Garcia offers more pop and switch hitting ability, but it is doubtful the club would carry both on the 40-man. They are older prospects who can’t be your primary utility man because they shouldn’t play shortstop. That means they have to hit. Unless one of them hits enough to earn a platoon role in the Majors they are looking at a role as a AAA shuttle player.
Last spring it appeared Giambrone would be first in line for any open 40-man spots that cropped up, but his struggles coincided with Garcia’s surprising breakout, and he allowed Garcia to snag the roster opportunity from him. Garcia is now in the driver’s seat. If he continues to falter against offspeed pitches it could open the door for Giambrone to take his spot during the course of the year.
PJ Higgins (Photo by Stephanie Lynn)
The competition for Garcia’s position as the primary shuttle player from Des Moines extends beyond Giambrone though. Thanks to improved size and strength over the past two years, P.J. Higgins now offers enough offense to pair with his solid defensive versatility to be considered a viable candidate. Not only can Higgins provide the Cubs with a third catching option, but he is a solid corner infielder, who can even take a few innings at second base if the need arises. He’ll never hit for power, but he works counts and puts the ball in play.
Another player who offers a unique element is outfielder Ian Miller. Not only does he have good range at all three spots defensively, but is the type of base-stealing threat the Cubs have lacked for years.
David Ross name checked Miller during the broadcast when prompted about potential 26th man candidates.
Last, but not least, the veteran catcher. Josh Phegley doesn’t offer much besides experience and a bit of pop at the plate, but we know how this goes, and how teams operate in regards to the catching position. I don’t actually believe the Cubs will open the year with three catchers on the roster. It isn’t necessary if Contreras and Caratini are both healthy. There are plenty of off days built into the schedule the first month of the season. But come June, or if one gets nicked up before then, Phegley will be right there with Higgins as a potential option.
If the Cubs need a shortstop, and don’t feel Hoerner or Zack Short are ready, they’ve got Hernan Perez as an option. In my opinion this should be a “break glass in case of emergency only” scenario, as Perez was never very good in his prime and is coming off three replacement level or worse seasons for Milwaukee. But just like with Phegley, we know how MLB teams operate. They tend to be conservative at the two most important defensive positions and usually turn to the player with no ceiling (but a known floor) rather than rolling the dice on a young player.
My hope is, that with two young shortstops already on the 40-man the team won’t waste time, and potentially lose another player to make room on the roster, on a dead end option.
Sierra Nevada Corporation, SNC, invited media to tour the lunar gateway prototype they built in response to NASA’s call for Gateway habitat proposals in support of the Artemis program. Called the Large Inflatable Fabric Environment, or LIFE, a crew of astronauts can work and live in the habitat for long duration missions to the Moon or Mars.
I’m a tiny bit obsessed with space. I’m told it’s an acceptable obsession because I take what I learn and share it with others. If I’m not writing about space, among other things, I’m busy doing science with one of the many student orgs I volunteer with or, advocating to bring more STEM programs to underrepresented students. I miss working in a lab, so invite me out to see yours!
Chicago Public Schools finally replaces Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day
My maternal grandfather Dominick Colella came over from Italy when he was 12 years old. At that time our country was far more welcoming to immigrants and his family was allowed to come here for a better life. I always looked up to my grandfather. He was a story teller, a hard worker, and someone who cared about people. I looked up to him so much that I named my first born child after him.
It’s important to find honorable people that inspire us and that we can look up to. As someone with Italian ancestry let me just reiterate what many have been saying for generations…Christopher Columbus is not it.
Growing up I always heard the tired regurgitated lines of “…in 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue and discovered America…”. It wasn’t until college that I learned that when Columbus came to America he raped, enslaved, murdered, and tortured indigenous Arawak people. Columbus never deserved a holiday. The recent step by Chicago Public Schools to replace Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day is one Native Americans and other activists have been fighting for for years.
Chicago Alderman Nicholas Sposato (38th Ward) and Alderman Anthony Napolitano (41st Ward) are extremely opposed to replacing Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day. But let’s be clear, Alderman Sposato and Alderman Napolitano don’t really care about celebrating Columbus or not, they are threatened by the idea of anyone trying to challenge their problematic white history. They are fragile white people, both of them are textbook examples of white fragility. For these Alderman who are clearly unaware of what white fragility is, “it is a state in which even a minimum amount of racial stress becomes intolerable, triggering a range of defensive moves”. For example, Alderman Sposato saying he will bring an “army of Italians” to the next Board of Education meeting and the fact that he even tries to compare Columbus and Dr. King.
As a white person, as someone who has half Italian ethnicity, I’m embarrassed by their actions and their resistance to replacing Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day.
Teaching true history is necessary in our society. There are age appropriate ways to teach the truth about Columbus to children. Last year I had my high school students research what Columbus actually did and then create 1st grade age-appropriate yet historically accurate books. The students then took the books to a local elementary school and read the books to the 1st graders there. Many resources exist already to teach children of all ages what Columbus actually did. Many states and cities have stopped celebrating the holiday.
In time, nearly all people will realize that honoring a raping murder is not a good idea. It’s time that white people, especially Italian American white people, speak up. The name Columbus, should be said with the same disgust as the name Hitler, Mussolini, and every other person who has committed atrocities in history. The Columbus “holiday” needs to be erased from the fabric of our country.
It is now time for all of Chicago to celebrate Indigenous Peoples Day.
It is beyond time to honor the people who were here first.
I am in my 15th year of teaching and 13th of teaching high school Social Studies in Chicago Public Schools. I am a National Board Certified Teacher. I hold my Masters degree from UIC in Urban Education Policy.
My teaching has been featured in Lisa Delpit’s 2nd book “Multiplication is for White People”.
My writings have been featured on Huff Post, John Dewey Society Journal of School and Society, Alternet, The Chicago Reporter, Gapers Block, and the South Side Weekly.
I was featured in The Guardian, interviewed by the Sun Times, Politics Tonight on CLTV, CANTV, WTTW, as well BBC Radio, Alternet Radio, and WGN radio.
I am also a Louder Than A Bomb spoken word poetry coach.
My partner is also a CPS teacher and we have two children, who both attend CPS.
Could a path be opening for the ChicagoBears to trade for Las Vegas’ quarterback?
It wasn’t that long ago that Derek Carr was teasing Chicago Bears fans with his Instagram posts of him and Khalil Mack. The pictures were posted contemporaneously with news that the signal-callers days could be numbered in Las Vegas. Although Carr’s brother later revealed the quarterback was simply trolling fans, a real path for him to end up in the Windy City appears to be opening.
While it appears Jon Gruden is not enamored with Derek Carr and frankly hasn’t been since his arrival in Oakland, he also knows Carr is far and away the best option on his roster. Before he would be willing to make any kind of move, he’d have to have another viable option in place.
It’s also no secret that Gruden and the Raiders are also extremely interested in bringing free agent Tom Brady to Las Vegas. The team offers Brady close proximity to California, his home state, and it would give the Raiders a marquis name to help sell tickets in their first year in their new stadium. It also helps that they are reportedly willing to spend $30 million per year in order to make it happen.
That all sounds great, in theory, but many speculated that Brady would inevitably return to New England. However, Jeff Darlington of ESPN would be”stunned” if Brady did so.
RIP, my mentions.
I know you’ll hate me. I know you’ll tell me I’m an idiot. And I understand why it’s so hard for all of us — myself included — to start accepting this likelihood. Hey, there’s still a chance. But… the reality is… Brady is looking forward to free agency. https://t.co/jDooyna2Hc
Of course, Jeff could be wrong, or Brady could end up signing with another team looking to make a serious run at a Super Bowl and is only a quarterback away. While the Bears certainly fit that description, they probably don’t have the money, or the stomach to make a move like that. So other realistic options could include the Los Angeles Chargers, Indianapolis Colts, and perhaps even the Miami Dolphins or Tennessee Titans, depending on what they do with Ryan Tannehill.
In any event, this latest revelation that Brady is operating under the belief that he will enter free agency and play somewhere else next year at least opens up the real possibility of Las Vegas being an option for the future Hall of Famer. If that were to happen, the Raiders would be looking to unload Carr or potentially even release him if there are no suitors, and the Bears would be well-positioned to make a move at that time.
EDMONTON, AB – FEBRUARY 11: Dominik Kubalik #8 of the Chicago Blackhawks skates against the Edmonton Oilers at Rogers Place on February 11, 2020, in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Codie McLachlan/Getty Images)
The ChicagoBlackhawks were up against one of the best in the league and the rookie scored enough goals to lead them to victory.
The Chicago Blackhawks haven’t had much to boast about this season. One thing that is an exception to that is the play of Dominik Kubalik. He had a hat trick in Thursday night’s game against the Tampa Bay Lightning to lead to a 5-2 victory. It was the first hat trick in Kubalik’s MHL career. He has had a fantastic season and this performance against one of the league’s best teams speaks to that.
Kubalik and the Blackhawks were put into that position to win thanks to the play of Corey Crawford. He was outstanding in the goal for Chicago once again. The team didn’t really do him any favors as they let the Lightning put 39 shots on goal and Crawford saved 37 of them. Crawford was brilliant and the rest of the team was able to capitalize on that.
It was the first time that Chicago had won in the Amalie Arena in 11 years. It also ends an eight-game losing streak to the Lightning overall. Things haven’t gone well against them since defeating them in the 2015 Stanley Cup Final. Finally, a couple of strong performances allowed them to get that big win. Tampa Bay is one of the elite teams in the league so this had to feel good for the players on the Blackhawks team.
Kubalik was already in the conversation for the Calder Trophy as the league’s top rookie. One of Quinn Hughes of the Vancouver Canucks or Cale Makar of the Colorado Avalanche is going to win it, but there is a pretty fun race for that final nomination. He now has 29 goals as a rookie which is just a remarkable number. There haven’t been that many rookies in Chicago Blackhawks history to reach the 30 goal plateau. He has been fun to watch this season.
Kubalik and the Blackhawks are back in action on Saturfay night when they visit an old friend. Joel Quenneville‘s Florida Panthers are in a serious playoff fight. They are right on the cusp but they need to play very well in almost every game for the rest of the season. It is going to be veryy tough for Chicago to play against them. The Panthers are a hungry team right now that will be bringing a desperate game.
On a quiet street in Oak Lawn, a brick split-level home with a built-in pool sat empty for years, mold growing in the flood-prone basement.
Federal lenders seized the house after the couple who owned it split up. They sold it to the Cook County Land Bank Authority, a government agency established for just such a circumstance: to find buyers for vacant houses, usually in struggling neighborhoods.
Two developers offered to buy and fix up the home, which an inspector had warned “is not a rehab for the faint of heart or a tight budget.” But the land bank turned down both developers.
Instead, it sold the home in 2018 — at a lower price than what the developers offered to pay — to Natasha Cornog, executive assistant to the land bank’s top boss, and her elderly mother on the condition that they live there. And so the Cornogs paid $150,000 for the home the land bank had bought for $141,786.
Land bank officials say the insider deal didn’t violate any rules at the time, though the county has since barred its employees from buying property from the agency.
But Cornog had another problem, a Chicago Sun-Times investigation found. She was taking homestead property tax exemptions on that house and also two more she owns, records show. The law allows you to take only one homestead exemption — on the home where you live.
Sun-Times reporters asked the Cook County assessor’s office about Cornog taking two more homestead exemptions than the law allows. That prompted her boss, Robert Rose, executive director of the land bank, to fire her Feb. 12 from her $79,148-a-year job as his assistant.
Those extra homestead exemptions cut Cornog’s property tax bills by more than $16,000 over the past 14 years. That’s money that the rest of Cook County’s property owners had to make up.
At the Sun-Times’ request, the assessor’s office determined that Cornog had been living prior to 2018 in a West Side home she co-owns with her mother and shouldn’t have received exemptions on her two other homes.
And there’s another property tax issue with the West Side house. The fired county employee’s mother, Delores Cornog, 81, has saved more than $23,000 in property taxes since 2006 as a result of taking a senior citizens assessment freeze.
But that’s a tax break you’re eligible for only if your household has a total income of less than $65,000. The daughter’s salary as a county employee exceeded that.
Citing privacy concerns, the assessor’s office won’t release the mother’s application for the tax break, which includes income information.
But that office says it is now investigating how the property tax freeze was obtained and also whether it will move to have any of those tax breaks repaid.
The assessor’s office says it also will ask Natasha Cornog to repay $5,911 as a result of four years of having taken improper exemptions on two homes she owns on the South Side.
Rose says Cornog had nothing to do with the land bank’s decision to acquire the Oak Lawn home at 8712 Austin Ave. He says the property had been vacant for five years and was advertised on the land bank’s website, so it was available to anyone. Rose says he has no records to show that, though.
The Cook County Board changed county rules in November 2018 to ban county employee and their immediate relatives from acquiring property directly from the land bank. That came after an October 2018 WBBM-TV report on Cornog’s insider deal.
Natasha Cornog hung up on a reporter. Her mother wouldn’t comment.
The Land Bank Authority is under investigation by Cook County’s inspector general’s office as the result of a Sun-Times report in November on another insider deal. That one allowed Chester Wilson, Ald. Carrie Austin’s chief of staff, to donate a decrepit building to the land bank, which wiped out more than $200,000 in unpaid taxes on the property, and then sold it Wilson’s business partner.
When the land bank sold Natasha Cornog the 2,276-square-foot house in Oak Lawn in August 2018, she already owned two other homes — at 78th Street and Sawyer Avenue and at 97th Street and Parnell Avenue — and a house in the 500 block of North Lawler Avenue that she and her mother listed as their residence for the Oak Lawn mortgage, state IDs and voter registrations.
Like many of the properties the land bank acquires, the Oak Lawn home was structurally sound. According to an inspector the agency hired, it could be fixed up, but that was a job for an “experienced rehabber . . . due to severe mold and water damage” in the flood-prone basement and roof and heating problems throughout the original structure and a spacious addition.
Unlike most of the land bank’s deals, the Oak Lawn house didn’t have unpaid property taxes that needed wiping out — that’s among the agency’s powers — to make it more attractive to buyers.
Days before the contract was finalized, developers were emailing about the property. Windy City Development sent an offer on Sept. 6, 2017, to pay $166,786, providing the name of someone it had lined up to buy and live in the rehabbed home.
“Mold remediation and renovation will be completed within 6 months,” Windy City Development wrote.
“That should be fine,” a land bank staffer responded.
On Sept. 8, 2017, though, the land bank backed out of the deal.
“The property at 8712 Austin, Oak Lawn, is being purchased for the [Cook County Land Bank Authority’s] Homebuyer Direct program and was not intended to be sent out for an investor purchase,” a land bank staffer wrote. “There was a miscommunication and I mistakenly sent out the property. The CCLBA considers the terms sheet null and void.”
The same day, another developer expressed interest, saying he, too, had a buyer lined up. “It is currently not listed on the website. Please advise how to apply for this property?” wrote Mike Joudeh, a rehabber with TBI Contractors.
Rose immediately responded: “We will be selling this house directly to an owner-occupant. This property [is] for our Homebuyer Direct Program.”
Despite what the land bank’s inspector had said about the work requiring “an experienced rehabber,” Rose wrote: “These houses require minimal work and allow homeowners the ability to customize their homes and build equity.”
The land bank didn’t announce the Homebuyer Direct Program until Sept 25, 2017 — more than two weeks later — though Rose says the program actually was started Aug. 1, 2017.
Records show Joudeh continued to ask about the property’s availability through December 2017.
Joudeh says he offered $20,000 more than what the land bank had paid.
The first developer also asked the land bank to reconsider, saying it had a homeowner lined up.
In January 2018, Natasha Cornog put down a $1,000 deposit on the Oak Lawn home and agreed to bring it up to code within 12 months of closing on the property. She used her county government email address to communicate about the deal, which her mother later joined.
The records the land bank released don’t show whether any repairs have been made or whether the house has been inspected since its sale, though Rose later provided photos he says show renovations and moved-in furniture as of November.
The files show his agency asked Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx to weigh in on the sale to Cornog, who’d been a county employee since 2014.
Foxx signed off on the deal on three conditions:
The terms and Cornog’s county employment had to be disclosed.
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