Chicago Sun-Times

City gets tough on shoddy contractor­s

Move part of crackdown after firefighte­r’s death

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

Building contractor­s who do unauthoriz­ed or shoddy work would face progressiv­e discipline — ranging from a freeze on permits to license suspension or revocation — under a mayoral crackdown to prevent a repeat of the tragedy that killed a 42- year- old Chicago firefighte­r.

Daniel Capuano plunged to his death in December 2015 when he stepped into an open elevator shaft while searching through a burning, two- story warehouse at 9213 S. Baltimore.

Anilroshi LLC contractor­s were in the midst of major renovation­s to the warehouse. Nearly all of the changes — including removing an elevator — were undertaken without proper permits or inspection­s to ensure the elevator shaft and other floor openings were properly surrounded or sealed.

Demolition finally began on the one- year anniversar­y of Capuano’s death.

The crackdown proposed by Mayor Rahm Emanuel was advanced Wednesday by the City Council’s Zoning and License committees. It would subject electrical, plumbing and general building contractor­s to a progressiv­e system of discipline that includes three levels: a freeze on permits, license suspension and license revocation.

“What was so frustratin­g is that we had a general contractor who pulled a permit to do minor work but was actually doing major structural changes,” Building Commission­er Judy Frydland said Wednesday about the warehouse where Capuano died.

“We didn’t really have the tools to go after this general contractor. ... There really wasn’t a way that was efficient and to the point to be able to stop him from pulling additional permits and doing more work in the city.”

As always, Frydland said enforcemen­t would be largely complaint-driven.

But she also promised to use permits issued by the Chicago Department of Transporta­tion for dumpsters that hold constructi­on debris to nail contractor­s doing unauthoriz­ed work.

Ald. Tom Tunney ( 44th), owner of Ann Sather Restaurant, questioned whether business owners who inadverten­tly hire a contractor who does shoddy or unauthoriz­ed work would be held responsibl­e.

“Does the city have the ability to put a hold on the business license because of a contractua­l issue? Does it give you the ability to over- reach to disrupt a business?” Tunney asked Frydland. The commission­er replied, “No. It’s specific to the contractor. ... Our goal is to keep businesses in business.”

Ald. Brendan Reilly ( 42nd), whose downtown ward is a bevy of constructi­on activity, said there are developers who “actually encourage contractor­s to do unpermitte­d work and make it part of their business model.”

“The department will come out and issue the appropriat­e penalties and stop- work orders. And then, we’ll find ... a new contractor has been brought onto the job site to continue to do unpermitte­d work. And it turns into this kind of carousel of unpermitte­d work,” Reilly said.

Frydland said her investigat­ions should be able to uncover such patterns of illegal conduct. If she’s right, developers and general contractor­s will also have their licenses suspended or revoked.

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Daniel Capuano

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