On the Southeast Side, fighting for fishermen

Media coverage of the Asian carp controversy has tended to focus on environmentalists and commercial interests, along with politicians and government officials.  But Chicago’s waterways have lots of “stakeholders.”

At Chicago News Cooperative, Kari Lydersen talks with a couple of old working-class fishermen from the Southeast Side.  Eddie Landmichl is a retired steelworker who was one of the first to sound the alarm about Asian carp – marching around the Thompson Center one day several years ago with two dead Asian carp strapped to his walker to protest inaction by the Army Corps of Engineers.

With his buddy, bait shop owner Jack Vadas, Landmichl has been out front on the threat of invasion by round gobies, on over-fishing of perch, and on the need to regulate ballast water.  Vadas habitually makes sure his customers are in touch with their elected officials on these kinds of issues.

It’s a level of grassroots activism that we don’t often hear about.

Politicians “treat him like garbage, like the court jester,” says Daily Herald outdoors editor Mike Jackson of Landmichl.  “But on these issues he’s the most serious guy in the state.”

And when they start hearing from his friends – voters who fish – politicians have been known to become more respectful.

 

Stories from Chicago neighborhoods

As the news hole shrinks and staff cuts continue at major outlets, there are lots of stories going uncovered in Chicago.

  • After 30 years of the AIDS epidemic, what challenges do South and West Side residents face getting treatment?
  • How does a turnaround at a Bronzeville high school look from ground level?
  • How are changes at Provident Hospital and the reorganization of Cook County’s health services affecting low-income Chicagoans?
  • How are Southeast Side residents working together to move beyond their community’s history of polluting industry and toward a green economy?
  • Which in-school and after school programs really work to keep kids out of trouble – and improve their academic performance?
  • How is Mexico’s drug war impacting Chicago’s Mexican communities?
  • What are young people in Little Village doing about polluting coal plants, inadequate public transportation and lack of green space?

These are just a few of the stories from under-covered communities that will be featured here in coming weeks and months.

Others include: millionaire slumlords, Latinas in the arts, young people organizing to stop violence, TIFs in Austin, the impact of low-wage jobs on local economies, and how prostitution court works.  And there are lots more.

This site will connect you with reporting projects sponsored by the Local Reporting Initiative of the Chicago Community Trust’s Community News Project – articles, video and radio documentaries, blogs and multimedia projects, coming from seasoned journalists and up-and-comers, community organizations and nonprofits, and neighborhood papers, websites, and writing groups.

The goal is to add significant new information to the local news ecosystem.  It’s part of a larger effort to find ways to use new media and technology to keep communities informed.

Along with the Chicago Reporter, Community Media Workshop is administering the program – and helping to push out the results to local media and to interested media consumers.

Bookmark this site and return often – or sign up for e-mail alerts or an RSS feed — to keep up with these reports.  We’re expecting great things!