Revenue-raising ideas trotted out by a coalition of progressive groups and a handful of like-minded aldermen during a Sept. 10 news conference landed with a thud.
"But...there are signs that the conga line of capitalists looking to pour money into downtown real estate is thinning. Office building capital flows here dropped 87 percent in the first six months of the year compared to last year, according to one study. Similar research projects that in terms of all commercial transactions, Chicago still will rank fifth nationally for investment in the last half of the year, but finds the dollar total is slipping, down 57 percent in the first half, even as another report finds a 13.7 percent gain in investment for North America as a whole last year.
"What's chilling that investment? There are too many factors to narrow it down to just one, but wariness over Chicago's frail financial health and the new regime's prescriptions for healing it are certainly part of the mix.