What’s New

Thanks for the Best of Chicago nominations!Chicago Readeron December 9, 2022 at 6:11 pm

Make your nominations on the ballot below!

Up until the nominating period ends at noon on Friday, December 9th, you can return to your ballot here at chicagoreader.com/best to nominate in additional categories or change your nominations.

Voting on the most nominated finalists will begin on January 18, 2023.

Best of Chicago is presented by

Read More

Thanks for the Best of Chicago nominations!Chicago Readeron December 9, 2022 at 6:11 pm Read More »

Bardo: False Chronicle of a Handful of TruthsDmitry Samarovon December 9, 2022 at 5:58 pm

In Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s hallucinatory trip to the land between life and death, Amazon is buying Baja California, and you can have a philosophical discussion with the conquistador Hernán Cortés atop a hillock of corpses. You meet your long-gone father in the bathroom of a large hall filled to capacity with your peers who want to give you an important prize and shrink down to the size of a boy while retaining middle-aged features. Your dead infant son keeps reappearing, often from between your wife’s legs, still very much alive.

These and dozens of other dream images are filmed in a seamless wide-screen format that fish-eyes toward its outer edges. They are what Silverio Gama, a stand-in for the director, sees in his last days after suffering a massive stroke on a subway train in LA. 

Whether you will be entranced, confused, or put off by Iñárritu’s latest deep dive into his own subconscious depends on whether you prefer your movies logical or lyrical, as well as how high your tolerance for unlikable and unrelatable protagonists is. Gama is a self-absorbed narcissist, and his visions are mostly self-serving, but I can’t deny their sweep and all-pervasive ambition. As long as you don’t think too long about some of the implications of what flashes past your eyeballs, this is a film to be dazzled by and lost in. In Spanish with subtitles. R, 159 min.

Netflix

Read More

Bardo: False Chronicle of a Handful of TruthsDmitry Samarovon December 9, 2022 at 5:58 pm Read More »

Beyond The NutcrackerJT Newmanon December 9, 2022 at 6:33 pm

December is obviously the time when dance companies dust off the old chestnut that, according to a 2017 Dance/USA survey, accounts for around 48 percent of their annual revenues. If you’re interested in The Nutcracker, we’ve got a round-up here. But there’s also more afoot in Chicago dance this month than the beloved Tchaikovsky ballet (based on E. T. A. Hoffmann’s 1816 story, “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King”).

For movement aficionados, there’s no better way to cap off the Year of Chicago Dance than visiting with some local companies and artists for their year-end productions. With so many selections to choose from, you’re sure to find something to suit your taste and leave you feeling full of holiday cheer.

For Nutcrackeroptions, there’s always the Joffrey version by Christopher Wheeldon, set during the construction of the 1893 Chicago World’s fair. (The Joffrey moved to the Lyric, 20 N. Wacker, last year after years of residency at the Auditorium.) The Nutcracker is running through 12/27; tickets at joffrey.org. Ballet Chicago takes over the mainstage at the Athenaeum for the 20th year, running 12/9-12/18; see balletchicago.org. If your plans take you out to the suburbs, Salt Creek Ballet’s Nutcracker runs 12/17-12/18 at McAninch Arts Center at College of DuPage; tickets at saltcreekballet.org. Or if you’re heading north, Ruth Page’s The Nutcracker (long a local favorite originally created by the legendary dancer and choreographer, whose name lives on in the Ruth Page Center for the Performing Arts on North Dearborn) runs two performances on 12/17 at the James Lumber Center at College of Lake County in Grayslake; visit ruthpage.org.

Two versions of The Nutcracker with a slightly different approach are happening this weekend; Hyde Park School of Dance combines ballet, modern dance, and hip-hop, as well as a new African dance section this year for their performance at Mandel Hall, running 12/9-12/10; see hydeparkdance.org. And Music Institute of Chicago returns with its annual presentation of Duke It Out!, which combines Tchaikovsky with the jazz score created by Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn. That’s happening tomorrow at 2 PM at Nichols Concert Hall in Evanston; tickets at musicinst.org.

And now for the nontraditional:

Jessica Kick presents Read to Me, a dance performance that explores “our early childhood literacy experiences and the effects they have on our relationship with reading in adulthood” at the Athenaeum. Through 12/11: Fri- Sat 7:30 PM, Sun 2 PM, Athenaeum Theater, 2936 N Southport, 312-820-6250; $10 children, $25 adults, athenaeumcenter.org.

Opening this weekend is Christmas Pageant, a performance devised by the Hot Kitchen Collective, “celebrating the overindulgence and mass-produced joy of the biggest holiday over the year and the sadness that lies underneath.” The collective, which is known for its edgy takes on “exploring stupidity at its core,” dedicates this show to everyone “who feels alone in a roomful of family members during the holiday season.” Through 12/17: Thu-Sat 7:30 PM, Ravenswood Fellowship United Methodist Church, 4511 North Hermitage. Tickets on Eventbrite, or Hotkitchencollective.com, $25.

Priestess of Twerk Credit Paula Court

Also this weekend is Nia Witherspoon’s Priestess of Twerk series at Links Hall. Priestess of Twerk is a work in progress from Witherspoon, a National Theater Project Award-winning theatermaker, vocalist, and composer. Hailed as a “Black feminist temple of pleasure,” the pieces are inspired by the “bad bitches” of hip-hop, the reproductive justice movement, and sacred sex workers of Egyptian temples. 

Performers include DREEEMY (aka Reem Abdou), Jenn Freeman (aka Po’Chop), Shelley Nicole, and Witherspoon, along with cellist/performer Serena Ebony Miller. With music and sound by Jack Fuller and Justin Hicks and costumes by Brandi Holt, the experience promises both ritual concerts and immersive temple experiences devised in collaboration between creatives from New York and Chicago and sponsored by both Links Hall and the Ragdale Foundation. 12/9 8 PM, 12/10 3 and 8 PM, Links Hall, 3111 N. Western, 773-281-0824, linkshall.org, $10-$40 (12/10 performances limited to ten participants).

On Monday, 12/12, the Chicago Human Rhythm Project brings you Holiday Rhythms 2022 at the Jazz Showcase in the South Loop. This one-night-only performance features live jazz music with The Jazz Hoofing Quintet, featuring Isaiah Spencer on drums, Marlene Rosenberg on bass, Brent Griffin Jr. on alto saxophone, Justin Dillard on piano, and Jumaane Taylor on taps. Special guests include vocalist Amyna Love, Stone Soup Rhythms, and more. The event benefits The Mayfair Art Center, a new arts incubator space on the south side. Mon 12/12 7 PM, Jazz Showcase, 806 South Plymouth Ct., 312-360-0234, chicagotap.org or jazzshowcase.com, $50-$75.

Mary, a Holiday Dansical Credit Jordyn A. Bush

Coming up on 12/18 at the Reva and David Logan Center is Mary, a Holiday Dansical, brought to you by Black Girls Dance, a company that empowers Black girls to pursue professional dance. Choreographed, written, and directed by founder Erin Barnett, Mary, A Holiday Dansical is a modern twist on Langston Hughes’s Black Nativity, told through ballet, hip-hop, tap, and contemporary dance. Sun 12/18 7 PM, Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts, 915 E. 60th Street, 773-702-2787, blackgirlsdance.org or arts.uchicago.edu/explore/reva-and-david-logan-center-arts, $20 kids, $40 adults.

And finally, we already previewed and reviewed this show, but we have to give yet another nod to The Buttcracker: A Nutcracker Burlesque. With its naughty premise and featuring some of the hottest burlesque, drag, and performance artists in Chicago, this send-up of the traditional Nutcracker breaks all stereotypes with its sex- and body-positive spin on the Tchaikovsky classic. Through 12/31: Thu-Sat 8 PM, Sun 3 PM; also Sat 12/31 9 PM, no performances Sat-Sun 12/24-12/25; Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N. Lincoln, 773-404-7336, thebuttcrackerburlesque.com or greenhousetheater.org, $30-$50 general admission (industry and SRO $20, VIP $75-$100, which includes stageside table, private VIP bar, meet and greet with artists, and show merchandise); NYE $60-$100 general admission, $150-$200 VIP. 18+ (21+ to drink) with a “pole booty drop” at midnight.

Read More

Beyond The NutcrackerJT Newmanon December 9, 2022 at 6:33 pm Read More »

Chicago rapper Philmore Greene levels up with Detroit producer Apollo Brown on Cost of LivingLeor Galilon December 9, 2022 at 6:00 pm

West-side rapper Philmore Greene has been crafting a catalog of mature, unfussy boom-bap since he dropped his 2018 debut, Chicago: A Third World City. His new fourth full-length, Cost of Living (released by esteemed hip-hop indie Mello Music Group), builds on his established elements—relaxed, sample-based instrumentals and thoughtful ruminations about the systemic unfairness that has historically afflicted Black people (and the frustrating new ways it manifests itself thanks to modern technology). But the album also feels rejuvenated, as though Greene’s creativity has been reborn and he’s newly excited to be doing the same work. This is no doubt in part because he’s found a collaborator who can supersize his vision: veteran Detroit beat maker Apollo Brown, who’s also worked with established MCs such as Guilty Simpson, Skyzoo, and Ghostface Killah. The producer populates Cost of Living with tracks built from lightly dusty samples that accentuate the crispness in his understated percussion. This music has a self-consciously throwback feel, but as much as Greene shows his deference to hip-hop history, he doesn’t let it distract him from focusing his songs on the present. He’s an unflashy rapper who delivers frank descriptions with a workingman’s confidence and care. His voice functions as a sturdy element in the album’s instrumentation; he ends his lines with exclamation points, so that each one lands like a rim shot in a drum break, and he smooths out the flow of his songs with a subtly soulful, melodic touch. On “Steep Life,” Greene reflects on the bleak socioeconomic outlook for young Black men, delivering his lyrics with his whole chest—he raps like he wants you to believe that even when the world blocks your path, you can make your own way where no one expects it.

Philmore Greene & Apollo Brown’s The Cost of Living is available through Bandcamp.

Read More

Chicago rapper Philmore Greene levels up with Detroit producer Apollo Brown on Cost of LivingLeor Galilon December 9, 2022 at 6:00 pm Read More »

Something From Tiffany’sAlani Vargason December 9, 2022 at 6:35 pm

Looking at the promo poster alone—airbrushed and very winter-in-New-York-City—Something From Tiffany’s is striving for that classic romantic comedy feel. And the movie, at times, does hold some of the feel-good, memorable vibes of rom-coms past. It is pretty predictable, even if guessing what comes next in a movie isn’t your strong suit, but that doesn’t take away from the fact that Something From Tiffany’s is a cozy, comforting holiday watch.

As is appropriate based on the title, the movie starts at a New York Tiffany’s, with the locale not being the only nod to Breakfast at Tiffany’s. The two sides to the story are established right away: There’s single dad Ethan Greene (Kendrick Sampson) and his young daughter Daisy (Leah Jeffries), in search of the perfect engagement ring for Ethan’s fiance, Vanessa (Shay Mitchell). They briefly come in contact with the other side, which includes tattoo artist and lame boyfriend Gary (Ray Nicholson), who’s at Tiffany’s to find a small and fast gift in a well-known blue box for his upbeat girlfriend Rachel (Zoey Deutch). To top it off, Terri (Jojo T. Gibbs), Rachel’s restaurant business partner, steals scenes often thanks to her ability to be hilariously honest. 

Even though it’s taking notes from While You Were Sleeping in more ways than one, Something From Tiffany’s doesn’t exactly have the same effortless flow and authentic sweetness, but it does lean into its corny bits and heartfelt plot points. “Chemistry” is often thrown around, but the whole cast seems to have it in this one. The acting isn’t over-the-top or cheesy, and the romance that blossoms between Rachel and Ethan is sweet. It’s not overly Christmas-oriented—Rachel is Jewish, by the way—which makes for a pleasant winter rom-com perfect for a chill, holiday movie night. PG

Prime Video

Read More

Something From Tiffany’sAlani Vargason December 9, 2022 at 6:35 pm Read More »

Thanks for the Best of Chicago nominations!Chicago Readeron December 9, 2022 at 6:11 pm

Make your nominations on the ballot below!

Up until the nominating period ends at noon on Friday, December 9th, you can return to your ballot here at chicagoreader.com/best to nominate in additional categories or change your nominations.

Voting on the most nominated finalists will begin on January 18, 2023.

Best of Chicago is presented by

Read More

Thanks for the Best of Chicago nominations!Chicago Readeron December 9, 2022 at 6:11 pm Read More »

White NoiseDmitry Samarovon December 9, 2022 at 6:35 pm

It’s been said that bad books make good movies. Adapting a celebrated book for the screen is often a recipe for disaster because if the writer is doing their job, the picture a reader makes in their mind trumps anything the greatest filmmaker can come up with. Happily for Noah Baumbach, he’s chosen a flawed novel by a great writer and added a joyful sensibility absent from Don DeLillo and most of his previous films.

I reread the book just before seeing the movie and found the book disjointed. After the Airborne Toxic Event—the disaster at its center—the story paradoxically loses steam and never recovers. In 2022 it’s impossible to watch or read anything with a cataclysmic event and not relate it to COVID. Baumbach reportedly read and reread the book during lockdown. While the rest of us baked bread or quit our shitty jobs, he made this movie. 

All his films are about family dysfunction in one way or another, and the Gladneys certainly don’t lack issues. But they’re somehow not doomed, despite a worldwide disaster, a serious betrayal, and a collection of tics and eccentricities that would send a therapist screaming. 

The structural problems remain: there’s a campus comedy, a disaster flick, and a crime caper that never cohere, but I liked Baumbach’s Gladney family much more than DeLillo’s. The story is still about the hollowness of American consumerism, but there’s nothing in the book that rivals the joyful supermarket dance sequence that goes on and on and on as the credits roll. Perhaps if DeLillo had published his book post-plague, he’d have imbued it with a similar sense of relief. R, 136 min.

Music Box Theatre, streaming on Netflix December 30

Read More

White NoiseDmitry Samarovon December 9, 2022 at 6:35 pm Read More »

Joy and struggle

This article was originally published by City Bureau, a nonprofit civic media organization based on the south side. Learn more and get involved at citybureau.org.

Cardboard boxes of food stacked across the kitchen might appear scattered to outsiders, but make sense to staff working in a building on East 71st Street in Chicago’s Chatham neighborhood. 

The warehouse feel and gleam of stainless steel appliances fades from the kitchen when stepping through a doorway into a nearby room. Columns of unopened food boxes form an almost mazelike pathway toward the backroom, where a small table makes it a tight fit. The room is modest, but serves as a space for brainstorming, arguing, cracking jokes, and discussing the needs of the staff of ChiFresh Kitchen.

ChiFresh is a food-service contractor and worker cooperative that prioritizes hiring formerly incarcerated Black women. Founded in 2020, ChiFresh has become a valued resource in neighborhoods across the city, serving healthy meals to low-income communities in locations such as daycares and schools. Owner and president Kimberly Britt explained that, from allergies to portions to temperature control, one mistake has the potential to throw off the quality of the end product.  

With the food business running smoothly, ChiFresh’s handful of owner-employees are in the process of organizing their own housing cooperative, which they believe will give them more control over their housing needs.

“Everybody wants three times the rent on your paycheck,” Britt said while reflecting on her own struggle to find housing. “Everybody wants to do a background check.” 

For many renters in Chicago, the feeling of being powerless and at the mercy of property owners is all too familiar. An array of issues plague the housing market—rising rents, prices, gentrification, and displacement—and given that Chicago has a shortage of 120,000 affordable housing units, housing co-ops have once again emerged as viable options to help fill the gap. 

A housing cooperative is a residential property that is owned and often managed by the people who live in the building. The members of the co-op do not pay rent to a traditional landlord and are jointly responsible for maintenance. Co-ops can make home ownership more accessible for lower-income residents.

While there is little legal resistance for those who wish to start a housing co-op in Chicago, there is an education gap because of the absence of a centralized place for information to assist aspiring co-ops along the way. So what does starting a housing cooperative entail? City Bureau met with folks establishing their own to discuss the joys, the struggles, and what they’re learning through the process.

As formerly incarcerated individuals, the ChiFresh worker-owners faced barriers to safe and affordable housing like cost, and credit and background checks, forcing them to live in areas that felt unsafe. 

“It’s not really realistic for us to have a $2 million building that we work out of, but we’re living in the hood, where we get our cars stolen, our houses broken into, etcetera, etcetera,” Britt said. 

“To live somewhere safe, it’s just, it costs you a lot,” agreed Edrinna Bryant, owner and chef of ChiFresh.

Like many people, the ChiFresh staff did not know what a housing cooperative was. Camille Kerr, consultant and founder of the worker ownership firm Upside Down Consulting, taught Britt and Bryant about the potential of cooperative models. ChiFresh had the vision of building a network of resources for people who were formerly incarcerated, and Kerr had the knowledge to help direct them.

“Being able to have someone who knew what a co-op was and just walking us through, we [were] able to plan this on our own and come up with our own ideas,” Bryant said. 

“Once we put our vision together,” Britt said, “how could you say no? The whole world is claiming to be about reentry.”  

Cooperative building isn’t linear, and without help from someone experienced in establishing one, it can be a difficult process to endure. ChiFresh is also receiving guidance from Jason Tompkins, a co-op resident and board member of NASCO Properties, an organization that primarily works with student housing cooperatives. “There is a learning curve if you really want to do this in a way that protects your sanity and, then really is able to keep it in the hands of the people,” he said, although he notes local resources like the Chicago Rehab Network can offer some assistance.

Connections 

The first step when establishing a co-op is building a network of interested members. For most housing co-ops, this network of potential members will be from a certain community. For example, ChiFresh is centered around supporting formerly incarcerated Black women. The Pilsen Housing Cooperative prioritizes longtime Pilsen residents. However, different members can pull a co-op in many different directions. 

Even the folks at ChiFresh disagreed on where to live. “How much peace would they get with the train going by every minute?” Britt, who sat at the far end of the table, asked as ChiFresh board members debated whether the co-op should be located next to a CTA train line. 

Yittayih Zelalem, codirector of the Nathalie P. Voorhees Center for Neighborhood and Community Improvement at the University of Illinois Chicago, has worked on community development issues and affordable housing. He said the strength of the co-op members is vital to building a financial entity together. So things like membership dues, fundraising, inspecting properties, and deciding on rules and guidelines must be established as a collective. 

Zelalem encourages people to think about living in a co-op as a long-term experience because people don’t often move into a co-op for only a year. “You’re going to be neighbors for years and years to come,” he said. 

Agreeing on the rules

ChiFresh’s cooperative bylaws and guidelines hold members accountable. Britt said there’s no room for them to sway from or make exceptions to those agreed-upon rules. 

“Because then that opens up Pandora’s box,” she said. 

Unlike other emerging housing cooperatives, ChiFresh is approaching the process from a unique perspective. They’ve already established bylaws through their worker cooperative. 

Renee Hatcher, a professor and the director of the Community, Enterprise, and Solidarity Economy Clinic at UIC Law School, works with a variety of collectives and cooperatives, including housing co-ops. She said establishing bylaws gives a co-op the opportunity to legally note priorities centered on its mission. So if a group wanted to create a housing co-op that provided affordable options for its members, they can include that language in their bylaws. Hatcher also advises that a legal expert looks over the bylaws as well. 

“You can’t outright discriminate, but you can focus on certain communities,” she said.

For example, one of the first agreements in the bylaws of the Logan Square Cooperative is “to provide affordable, adequate, safe, and sanitary housing accommodations for persons of low- and moderate- income.” The co-op can also share information about openings at the space with potential members or organizations that align with the co-op’s mission. 

That diversity in experience typically adds to a cooperative. Mark Smithivas, a resident of the Logan Square Cooperative, said a co-op can be as diverse as the group wants it to be. He said he wishes Logan Square had been more diverse in age and families. “We’re all getting older now, so we’re also less able to do a lot of physical tasks,” Smithivas said, referring to things like shoveling snow and general building maintenance. 

But Hatcher said the first step for emerging housing cooperatives is forming a legal entity. That process is often broken down into two options: formally incorporating a business in the state or forming a nonprofit and applying for recognition by the Internal Revenue Service for tax exemption.

ChiFresh is an already established legal entity. And because of its success with fundraising and popularity and name recognition, funding the housing cooperative hasn’t been a huge struggle. 

Hatcher warned that one of the most common mistakes is rushing to acquire property before establishing an entity.

ChiFresh Kitchen Abel Uribe for City Bureau Credit: Abel Uribe / City Bureau

Collective financial stability

Kerr said in addition to applying for loans, ChiFresh is also looking for grants to offset additional costs to make sure the housing cooperative is affordable. 

“We probably got the funding lined up,” Britt said. 

That’s not the case for all housing cooperatives. Dianne Hodges, a longtime resident of one of South Shore’s oldest Black-run housing cooperatives, the Genesis Cooperative, first moved there in 2009. As board president, she led refinancing efforts and successfully approached the Chicago Community Loan Fund, an organization that provides technical and financial assistance to development projects that benefit low- and moderate-income residents.

“It’s not easy to get anything from them,” Hodges said. “They push you . . . they make you have accountability,” she said, referencing the training they had to go through to get funding. 

In March, the City of Chicago revealed a new pilot program aimed at preserving vulnerable properties in South Shore by granting money to housing co-ops and condos. The City’s Community Wealth Ecosystem Building (Community WEB) Program is allocating $15 million in grants to organizations that support entities like limited equity co-ops, a type of housing cooperative that limits how much a resident can resell their unit for. The idea is to maintain affordability. 

But what makes a housing co-op unique is its ability to move as a collective. Maurice Williams, the vice president of economic development for the Chicago Community Loan Fund, said individual credit scores aren’t necessarily important when starting a co-op. What matters more is the group’s financial standing.

One of the first financial steps for a housing co-op is simply establishing a savings and checkings account as a collective. Those accounts should also include accountability measures, like making sure that one person can’t withdraw and limiting individual access to the funds. 

Potential lenders will likely ask to see the group’s bylaws and funding structure. They’ll ask how much tenants will pay each month toward the loan, how much money has already been saved in the shared account, and how much the construction costs are. This information typically falls into what is called a pro forma document, which is essentially a financial blueprint or outline for a cooperative. It typically breaks down things like estimated expenses, annual revenue, and debt coverage.  

ChiFresh will likely still be able to establish equity within the future building while getting a significant portion of their costs covered through grants, fundraising, and loans. Kerr said they’ve already started constructing a pro forma document, and the priority now is finding property to determine the final dollar amount of the housing cooperative. 

“It all depends on the spot,” Kerr said. 

Finding the right space

“We’re thinking about Bronzeville because that’s close,” Bryant said.

“You’re gonna make me raise lots of money for Bronzeville,” replied Kerr, illustrating the sometimes difficult discussions needed to reach a consensus. Purchasing property for a housing cooperative is similar to purchasing property as an individual, with the added challenge of making the decision jointly.

Finding the right building for a co-op goes beyond aesthetics like high ceilings or a big yard. It’s important to determine the quality of the space and uncover any hidden costs that could be detrimental to the co-op’s financial success. 

“If you can see where a problem is, often it’s fixable. If you don’t know what the problem is, then it could be even a bigger problem than you think,” said Peter Landon, the founder of LBBA, a Chicago-based architectural practice that’s worked with housing cooperatives like the Pilsen Housing Cooperative. “You don’t want a money pit if you’re really trying to make it be affordable.”

He said co-op members must be realistic in determining what they can afford at the moment and may consider creating accounts like a replacement reserve, which are funds set aside to eventually pay for costly repairs. Zelalem said establishing reserve funds into those accounts is vital to the strength-building of the cooperative. 

It’s important to factor additional costs like maintenance into the budget and consider city zoning ordinance laws and permit requirements required for any work needed. The city offers an online calculator to help estimate permit building fees. Tompkins said it could take up to two and a half years to move into a space.

Making it happen

Establishing a housing cooperative creates a snowball effect of learning, leading to a vast pool of new legal, housing, and interpersonal knowledge. 

It’s easy to nonchalantly discuss the desire to create group housing and picture what that might look like, but ChiFresh worker-owners said it takes more than a shared vision to make this happen—it’s a combined willingness and effort that’s taken them this far.

“[During our weekly meetings] we was strategizing and coming up with plans and what will work, we had different ideas, different targets, and everybody was just really putting forward like their own personal experience,” Bryant said.

The ChiFresh worker cooperative and soon-to-be housing cooperative has experienced challenges individually and as a group, but is now creating its own path in a system that structurally blocks housing options. While it isn’t easy, there’s joy in the freedom they are finding.

“We are in the beginning stages, we’re excited about it,” Britt said. “And we gon’ make this happen. Like we made ChiFresh.” 

Annabel Rocha and Jhaylin Benson are 2022 Fall Civic Reporting Fellows. Jerrel Floyd is City Bureau’s engagement reporter covering economic development and segregation in Chicago. You can reach him with tips at [email protected]. Learn more and get involved at citybureau.org. 


The ballot is open for nominations from November 10th until noon on December 9th: chicagoreader.com/best


Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls.


Wilson consultant Rickey Hendon apparently offered a Green operative an unspecified amount of money to drop a mayoral petition challenge.

Read More

Joy and struggle Read More »

Joy and struggleAnnabel Rocha, Jhaylin Benson, Jerrel Floyd and City Bureauon December 9, 2022 at 3:54 pm

This article was originally published by City Bureau, a nonprofit civic media organization based on the south side. Learn more and get involved at citybureau.org.

Cardboard boxes of food stacked across the kitchen might appear scattered to outsiders, but make sense to staff working in a building on East 71st Street in Chicago’s Chatham neighborhood. 

The warehouse feel and gleam of stainless steel appliances fades from the kitchen when stepping through a doorway into a nearby room. Columns of unopened food boxes form an almost mazelike pathway toward the backroom, where a small table makes it a tight fit. The room is modest, but serves as a space for brainstorming, arguing, cracking jokes, and discussing the needs of the staff of ChiFresh Kitchen.

ChiFresh is a food-service contractor and worker cooperative that prioritizes hiring formerly incarcerated Black women. Founded in 2020, ChiFresh has become a valued resource in neighborhoods across the city, serving healthy meals to low-income communities in locations such as daycares and schools. Owner and president Kimberly Britt explained that, from allergies to portions to temperature control, one mistake has the potential to throw off the quality of the end product.  

With the food business running smoothly, ChiFresh’s handful of owner-employees are in the process of organizing their own housing cooperative, which they believe will give them more control over their housing needs.

“Everybody wants three times the rent on your paycheck,” Britt said while reflecting on her own struggle to find housing. “Everybody wants to do a background check.” 

For many renters in Chicago, the feeling of being powerless and at the mercy of property owners is all too familiar. An array of issues plague the housing market—rising rents, prices, gentrification, and displacement—and given that Chicago has a shortage of 120,000 affordable housing units, housing co-ops have once again emerged as viable options to help fill the gap. 

A housing cooperative is a residential property that is owned and often managed by the people who live in the building. The members of the co-op do not pay rent to a traditional landlord and are jointly responsible for maintenance. Co-ops can make home ownership more accessible for lower-income residents.

While there is little legal resistance for those who wish to start a housing co-op in Chicago, there is an education gap because of the absence of a centralized place for information to assist aspiring co-ops along the way. So what does starting a housing cooperative entail? City Bureau met with folks establishing their own to discuss the joys, the struggles, and what they’re learning through the process.

As formerly incarcerated individuals, the ChiFresh worker-owners faced barriers to safe and affordable housing like cost, and credit and background checks, forcing them to live in areas that felt unsafe. 

“It’s not really realistic for us to have a $2 million building that we work out of, but we’re living in the hood, where we get our cars stolen, our houses broken into, etcetera, etcetera,” Britt said. 

“To live somewhere safe, it’s just, it costs you a lot,” agreed Edrinna Bryant, owner and chef of ChiFresh.

Like many people, the ChiFresh staff did not know what a housing cooperative was. Camille Kerr, consultant and founder of the worker ownership firm Upside Down Consulting, taught Britt and Bryant about the potential of cooperative models. ChiFresh had the vision of building a network of resources for people who were formerly incarcerated, and Kerr had the knowledge to help direct them.

“Being able to have someone who knew what a co-op was and just walking us through, we [were] able to plan this on our own and come up with our own ideas,” Bryant said. 

“Once we put our vision together,” Britt said, “how could you say no? The whole world is claiming to be about reentry.”  

Cooperative building isn’t linear, and without help from someone experienced in establishing one, it can be a difficult process to endure. ChiFresh is also receiving guidance from Jason Tompkins, a co-op resident and board member of NASCO Properties, an organization that primarily works with student housing cooperatives. “There is a learning curve if you really want to do this in a way that protects your sanity and, then really is able to keep it in the hands of the people,” he said, although he notes local resources like the Chicago Rehab Network can offer some assistance.

Connections 

The first step when establishing a co-op is building a network of interested members. For most housing co-ops, this network of potential members will be from a certain community. For example, ChiFresh is centered around supporting formerly incarcerated Black women. The Pilsen Housing Cooperative prioritizes longtime Pilsen residents. However, different members can pull a co-op in many different directions. 

Even the folks at ChiFresh disagreed on where to live. “How much peace would they get with the train going by every minute?” Britt, who sat at the far end of the table, asked as ChiFresh board members debated whether the co-op should be located next to a CTA train line. 

Yittayih Zelalem, codirector of the Nathalie P. Voorhees Center for Neighborhood and Community Improvement at the University of Illinois Chicago, has worked on community development issues and affordable housing. He said the strength of the co-op members is vital to building a financial entity together. So things like membership dues, fundraising, inspecting properties, and deciding on rules and guidelines must be established as a collective. 

Zelalem encourages people to think about living in a co-op as a long-term experience because people don’t often move into a co-op for only a year. “You’re going to be neighbors for years and years to come,” he said. 

Agreeing on the rules

ChiFresh’s cooperative bylaws and guidelines hold members accountable. Britt said there’s no room for them to sway from or make exceptions to those agreed-upon rules. 

“Because then that opens up Pandora’s box,” she said. 

Unlike other emerging housing cooperatives, ChiFresh is approaching the process from a unique perspective. They’ve already established bylaws through their worker cooperative. 

Renee Hatcher, a professor and the director of the Community, Enterprise, and Solidarity Economy Clinic at UIC Law School, works with a variety of collectives and cooperatives, including housing co-ops. She said establishing bylaws gives a co-op the opportunity to legally note priorities centered on its mission. So if a group wanted to create a housing co-op that provided affordable options for its members, they can include that language in their bylaws. Hatcher also advises that a legal expert looks over the bylaws as well. 

“You can’t outright discriminate, but you can focus on certain communities,” she said.

For example, one of the first agreements in the bylaws of the Logan Square Cooperative is “to provide affordable, adequate, safe, and sanitary housing accommodations for persons of low- and moderate- income.” The co-op can also share information about openings at the space with potential members or organizations that align with the co-op’s mission. 

That diversity in experience typically adds to a cooperative. Mark Smithivas, a resident of the Logan Square Cooperative, said a co-op can be as diverse as the group wants it to be. He said he wishes Logan Square had been more diverse in age and families. “We’re all getting older now, so we’re also less able to do a lot of physical tasks,” Smithivas said, referring to things like shoveling snow and general building maintenance. 

But Hatcher said the first step for emerging housing cooperatives is forming a legal entity. That process is often broken down into two options: formally incorporating a business in the state or forming a nonprofit and applying for recognition by the Internal Revenue Service for tax exemption.

ChiFresh is an already established legal entity. And because of its success with fundraising and popularity and name recognition, funding the housing cooperative hasn’t been a huge struggle. 

Hatcher warned that one of the most common mistakes is rushing to acquire property before establishing an entity.

ChiFresh Kitchen Abel Uribe for City Bureau Credit: Abel Uribe / City Bureau

Collective financial stability

Kerr said in addition to applying for loans, ChiFresh is also looking for grants to offset additional costs to make sure the housing cooperative is affordable. 

“We probably got the funding lined up,” Britt said. 

That’s not the case for all housing cooperatives. Dianne Hodges, a longtime resident of one of South Shore’s oldest Black-run housing cooperatives, the Genesis Cooperative, first moved there in 2009. As board president, she led refinancing efforts and successfully approached the Chicago Community Loan Fund, an organization that provides technical and financial assistance to development projects that benefit low- and moderate-income residents.

“It’s not easy to get anything from them,” Hodges said. “They push you . . . they make you have accountability,” she said, referencing the training they had to go through to get funding. 

In March, the City of Chicago revealed a new pilot program aimed at preserving vulnerable properties in South Shore by granting money to housing co-ops and condos. The City’s Community Wealth Ecosystem Building (Community WEB) Program is allocating $15 million in grants to organizations that support entities like limited equity co-ops, a type of housing cooperative that limits how much a resident can resell their unit for. The idea is to maintain affordability. 

But what makes a housing co-op unique is its ability to move as a collective. Maurice Williams, the vice president of economic development for the Chicago Community Loan Fund, said individual credit scores aren’t necessarily important when starting a co-op. What matters more is the group’s financial standing.

One of the first financial steps for a housing co-op is simply establishing a savings and checkings account as a collective. Those accounts should also include accountability measures, like making sure that one person can’t withdraw and limiting individual access to the funds. 

Potential lenders will likely ask to see the group’s bylaws and funding structure. They’ll ask how much tenants will pay each month toward the loan, how much money has already been saved in the shared account, and how much the construction costs are. This information typically falls into what is called a pro forma document, which is essentially a financial blueprint or outline for a cooperative. It typically breaks down things like estimated expenses, annual revenue, and debt coverage.  

ChiFresh will likely still be able to establish equity within the future building while getting a significant portion of their costs covered through grants, fundraising, and loans. Kerr said they’ve already started constructing a pro forma document, and the priority now is finding property to determine the final dollar amount of the housing cooperative. 

“It all depends on the spot,” Kerr said. 

Finding the right space

“We’re thinking about Bronzeville because that’s close,” Bryant said.

“You’re gonna make me raise lots of money for Bronzeville,” replied Kerr, illustrating the sometimes difficult discussions needed to reach a consensus. Purchasing property for a housing cooperative is similar to purchasing property as an individual, with the added challenge of making the decision jointly.

Finding the right building for a co-op goes beyond aesthetics like high ceilings or a big yard. It’s important to determine the quality of the space and uncover any hidden costs that could be detrimental to the co-op’s financial success. 

“If you can see where a problem is, often it’s fixable. If you don’t know what the problem is, then it could be even a bigger problem than you think,” said Peter Landon, the founder of LBBA, a Chicago-based architectural practice that’s worked with housing cooperatives like the Pilsen Housing Cooperative. “You don’t want a money pit if you’re really trying to make it be affordable.”

He said co-op members must be realistic in determining what they can afford at the moment and may consider creating accounts like a replacement reserve, which are funds set aside to eventually pay for costly repairs. Zelalem said establishing reserve funds into those accounts is vital to the strength-building of the cooperative. 

It’s important to factor additional costs like maintenance into the budget and consider city zoning ordinance laws and permit requirements required for any work needed. The city offers an online calculator to help estimate permit building fees. Tompkins said it could take up to two and a half years to move into a space.

Making it happen

Establishing a housing cooperative creates a snowball effect of learning, leading to a vast pool of new legal, housing, and interpersonal knowledge. 

It’s easy to nonchalantly discuss the desire to create group housing and picture what that might look like, but ChiFresh worker-owners said it takes more than a shared vision to make this happen—it’s a combined willingness and effort that’s taken them this far.

“[During our weekly meetings] we was strategizing and coming up with plans and what will work, we had different ideas, different targets, and everybody was just really putting forward like their own personal experience,” Bryant said.

The ChiFresh worker cooperative and soon-to-be housing cooperative has experienced challenges individually and as a group, but is now creating its own path in a system that structurally blocks housing options. While it isn’t easy, there’s joy in the freedom they are finding.

“We are in the beginning stages, we’re excited about it,” Britt said. “And we gon’ make this happen. Like we made ChiFresh.” 

Annabel Rocha and Jhaylin Benson are 2022 Fall Civic Reporting Fellows. Jerrel Floyd is City Bureau’s engagement reporter covering economic development and segregation in Chicago. You can reach him with tips at [email protected]. Learn more and get involved at citybureau.org. 


The ballot is open for nominations from November 10th until noon on December 9th: chicagoreader.com/best


Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls.


Wilson consultant Rickey Hendon apparently offered a Green operative an unspecified amount of money to drop a mayoral petition challenge.

Read More

Joy and struggleAnnabel Rocha, Jhaylin Benson, Jerrel Floyd and City Bureauon December 9, 2022 at 3:54 pm Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


The Florida strategy

MAGA’s attempt to scare white voters into voting against Pritzker didn’t work so well, to put it mildly.


It worked!

Leasing CHA land to the Chicago Fire is part of a longstanding plan to gentrify the city.


MAGA flip-flops

Men from Blago to Bolduc are trying to sing a new song.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show Read More »