Rachel Strohm

1232 days ago

Chicago's main answer to the neighborhood’s decline was to demolish scores of blighted buildings in a bid to improve public safety. But those aggressive clearance efforts left Madison Street with fewer storefronts for potential entrepreneurs and a glut of empty lots. And in the resulting vacuum, vacant properties became commodities for speculators with little connection to the neighborhood and, in many cases, little interest in developing it.

Disinvested: How Government and Private Industry Let the Main Street of a Black Neighborhood Crumble

propublica.org

A half-century after Chicago’s uprisings in 1968, a once-thriving retail strip in East Garfield Park still suffers from broken promises, bad policy and neglect. ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power.