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Tag: Jerry Reinsdorf

  • Today in Chicago History: Holy cow! After 11 years with White Sox, broadcaster Harry Caray moves to Cubs.

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    Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Nov. 16, according to the Tribune’s archives.

    Is an important event missing from this date? Email us.

    Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)

    • High temperature: 73 degrees (1952)
    • Low temperature: 6 degrees (1959)
    • Precipitation: 1.2 inches (1928)
    • Snowfall: 0.9 inches (1920)
    Sea lions arrived at Lincoln Park Zoo by train in July 1889. Nineteen of the 21 animals shipped to Chicago from Santa Barbara, California, survived. (Chicago Tribune)

    1903: “Big Ben” escaped to Lake Michigan. The 600-pound male sea lion, who arrived at Lincoln Park Zoo from California a year earlier, scaled the 3-foot iron fence around his enclosure and headed 200 yards into the lake. Worried a hunter might shoot the animal, keeper Cyrus DeVry offered a $25 reward for Big Ben’s safe return. The animal was spotted at many different locations, including 2 miles off south Chicago, where he tried to board the dredge tug Mentor. The final sighting was April 25, 1904, when the sea lion’s body was discovered 15 miles south of St. Joseph, Michigan.

    Mick Jagger, left, sings while guitarist Mick Taylor, center, and Keith Richards, right, show just how completely contrasting two different techniques can make a single instrument sound during their performance on Nov. 16, 1969 at the International Amphitheatre. (Dave Nystrom/Chicago Tribune)
    Rolling Stones’ Mick Jagger, from left, Mick Taylor and Keith Richards on Nov. 16, 1969, at the International Amphitheatre in Chicago. Editors note: this historic print shows age damage. (Dave Nystrom/Chicago Tribune)

    1969: The Rolling Stones played the International Amphitheatre as part of the band’s first United States tour in three years (a day before the band played two shows at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign). Three weeks later, the tour would end in tragedy at the Altamont Speedway in California, with an audience member being stabbed and beaten to death by Hells Angels members who had been hired by the Stones to provide security.

    The Rolling Stones in Chicago: A timeline of the band’s 55-year fascination with the city’s blues

    But in Chicago, the Stones were in prime form, with their hero, Chuck Berry, as one of the opening acts. The band lineup for this tour included guitarist Mick Taylor for the first time, as a replacement for Brian Jones, who died a few months earlier.

    Harry Caray puts on a Chicago Cubs hat at a press conference on Nov. 16, 1981, after he signed a two-year contract to broadcast Cubs games. (Walter Kale/Chicago Tribune)
    Harry Caray puts on a Chicago Cubs hat at a news conference on Nov. 16, 1981, after he signed a two-year contract to broadcast Cubs games. (Walter Kale/Chicago Tribune)

    1981: Broadcaster Harry Caray brought his antics to the North Side after 11 years as the voice of the Chicago White Sox. Caray signed a two-year contract with WGN radio and television to announce Chicago Cubs games.

    “After several weeks of talking and negotiating, we made him an offer about two weeks ago,” said Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf. “The money was acceptable to him, but he said he wanted to think about it. That was the first time we had any indication he was anything but anxious to come back.”

    Caray remained with the Cubs until his death on Feb. 18, 1998.

    Ald. William Henry, 24th, with his car near Independence Square Fountain in Chicago on Aug. 18, 1988. (Chris Walker/Chicago Tribune)
    Ald. William Henry, 24th, with his car near Independence Square Fountain in Chicago on Aug. 18, 1988. (Chris Walker/Chicago Tribune)

    1990: Chicago Ald. William Henry — known at City Hall as “Wild Bill” — was indicted on charges he extorted cash and luxury cars from a car rental firm, took bribes from a West Side janitorial company and put “ghost workers” on the city payroll in exchange for kickbacks.

    The Dishonor Roll: Chicago officials

    The West Side politician pleaded not guilty and told reporters that his indictment was a ”smear campaign.” Henry died in 1992, halting the case against him.

    Travelers walk through a grandly decorated terminal at Chicago O'Hare International Airport on Dec. 3, 2024, in Chicago. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
    Travelers walk through a grandly decorated terminal at Chicago O’Hare International Airport on Dec. 3, 2024, in Chicago. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)

    Also in 1990: “Home Alone” premiered. The Tribune gave the modern Christmas classic, which was shot in 62 days in the city and suburbs, three stars.

    Want to drive past the ‘Home Alone’ house? Or the church? A tour of 12 filming locations around Chicago.

    The film was written and produced by John Hughes (“Sixteen Candles,” “Planes, Trains and Automobiles,” “The Breakfast Club” and more), who was by then deep into his oeuvre of using Chicago-area sites to illuminate his scripts. This one arrived after “Uncle Buck” (which was also shot here) and “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation” (which wasn’t) but before “Dutch” and “Curly Sue.”

    Vintage Chicago Tribune: Revisiting ‘Home Alone’ sites with the film’s location manager

    Want more vintage Chicago?

    Subscribe to the free Vintage Chicago Tribune newsletter, join our Chicagoland history Facebook group, stay current with Today in Chicago History and follow us on Instagram for more from Chicago’s past.

    Have an idea for Vintage Chicago Tribune? Share it with Kori Rumore and Marianne Mather at krumore@chicagotribune.com and mmather@chicagotribune.com

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    Kori Rumore

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  • Report: Reinsdorf seeks $1 billion in help for new Sox park

    Report: Reinsdorf seeks $1 billion in help for new Sox park

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    *Video above is from a WGN story on new renderings of the White Sox proposed new stadium before this article was published.

    CHICAGO — A new report Friday revealed that not only will Chicago White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf pursue roughly a billion dollars in funding from the City of Chicago and State of Illinois for a new baseball stadium in “The 78,” he’s confident the team will get it.

    According to Crain’s Chicago Business, Reinsdorf and Related Midwest President Curt Bailey, the developer behind The 78 site where the stadium would be built, have had meetings with a number of elected officials and leaders in the Chicago business and labor world to gauge interest before meeting with Governor JB Pritzker to propose a deal, which Crains said is bullish on being able to sell the argument stadium subsidies will bring billions in private investment, while also being structured so that no new or increased taxes are required.

    Crains said the stadium itself would be subsidized through a $500 million city TIF district that already covers the site, but the White Sox and Related Midwest have stressed the importance of additional private investment — mixed-use buildings that would feature affordable housing, bars, restaurants and shops, as well as an underground parking garage and parks, hence the intended ask of nearly $1 billion in total public funds from the state, which includes the $500 million TIF subsidy from the city.

    While the combined ask from the state and city is nearly half of the White Sox’s current valuation ($2.05 billion in 2023, according to Forbes), Crains said the proposed deal would also get Chicago off the hook for being the guarantor of the current debt arrangement between them and the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority (ISFA) to pay for the remaining balance on the Chicago Bears’ 2003 renovation of Soldier Field.

    The ISFA is a government entity created by the Illinois state legislature in 1987 for the purpose of constructing and renovating sports stadiums for professional sports teams in Illinois. As a part of business dealings since, the ISFA became the owner and developer of the White Sox’s current stadium, Guaranteed Rate Field, and financier of the Chicago Lakefront Development Project, which included the 2003 renovation of Soldier Field.

    The ISFA issued $150 million in bonds in 1989 to build Guaranteed Rate Field and later issued $399 million in bonds to pay for the aforementioned renovations to Soldier Field.

    To pay for the new Sox Stadium planned in The 78, Crains said Reinsdorf is seeking to lay claim to the revenue from a 2% hotel occupancy tax, which is currently used to pay for the ISFA’s annual debt service, for decades after when all outstanding bonds are currently meant to be paid off in 2034.

    Extending the ISFA bonds over 30 years while adding a new line of revenue back to the debt, Crains said, would provide the upfront capital to begin work on the stadium in The 78.

    Crains said Reinsdorf is also seeking to create a tax overlay district surrounding the proposed stadium in order to capture the state’s portion of sales taxes generated around it, which is estimated at around $400 million over an undisclosed period, which would be set aside to subsidize the stadium and back the news bonds created by the deal.

    With the sales tax revenue included in said deal, that would allow the ISFA to borrow more money, according to Crains, which a source told them would get to roughly $1.2 billion in assistance sought by Reinsdorf to build the ballpark and retire the current ISFA debt.

    This is all dependent on state approval though.

    “While Related Midwest and the Chicago White Sox have assured us the existing Chicago hotel tax that funds sports facilities, along with other revenue sources, would be sufficient to fund the ballpark, our priority is protecting the hospitality and visitor industry,” said Michael Jacobson, president of the Illinois Hotel and Lodging Association, in a statement provided to Crains.

    Does this put the Bears in a pickle?

    Crains said another interesting factor is that the deal could oust the Bears from tapping into the ISFA to pay for a new stadium, if they continue to pursue staying along the lakefront in the city.

    Crains said a source familiar with both teams and their stadium plans told them the two are not working together to find stadium deals, but are in competition for Illinois’ limited amount of public dollars dedicated to new stadiums.

    Since the ISFA issued the $399 million in bonds for the Soldier Field renovations, Crains said $384 million in principal still remains outstanding, meaning the ISFA has — for the most part — only made interest payments the last two decades and faces a tricky road toward repaying the debt on those bonds.

    The ISFA’s main stream of revenue comes from the previously mentioned 2% hotel occupancy tax and annual $5 million payments from the city and state.

    With hotel tax revenue seeing a steep decline over the last three years — due to the global pandemic and subsequent recovery efforts not reaching pre-pandemic levels — the state has provided advanced payments to the ISFA to cover annual debt service, which the ISFA then repaid from its tax revenue later on, if possible.

    Over the last three years when that process didn’t cover the repayments needed, the difference was taken from Chicago’s share of state income taxes.

    Add in the fact that, according to Crains, Chicago could be on the hook for increasingly large payments to compensate for the debt service shortfall — subsequent refinancing is set at $55 million this year, with it set to rise to $90 million by 2033 — it could likely become increasingly hard to find funds for Soldier Field maintenance and improvements because no matter whether the Bears stay at Soldier Field, move to Arlington Heights, or build a new stadium along the Chicago lakefront, the ISFA will still be on the hook for the debt service.

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    Eli Ong

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