ORDER
WHEREAS, In a recent ruling, the Illinois Appellate Court has affirmed that the City of Chicago owes close to $58 million as a result of a binding arbitration award due to what the court described as "a series of mistakes and unsuccessful strategic choices" made by the City of Chicago's Corporation Counsel, past and present; and,
WHEREAS, In November 2006, the City of Chicago and Chicago Loop Parking (CLP), entered into an agreement whereby CLP paid the city $563 million in exchange for the city granting a 99-year lease and concession to operate the four underground garages in Grant and Millennium Parks. This agreement contained a clause stipulating that CLP was entitled to compensation in the event the city authorized any new competition by allowing any new public parking facility to open in a defined area in the immediate vicinity of CLP's leased garages; and
WHEREAS, Shortly after entering into this arrangement, the city approved a site plan for a new building (the Aqua) that included a 1,273-space public parking garage. On May 1, 2009, after construction ofthe Aqua was substantially completed, the city issued a public garage license to Standard Parking Corporation, the garage operator for the Aqua, situated approximately one block from the CLP garages and well within the competing parking area; and
WHEREAS, On August 20, 2009, CLP submitted a claim to the City for compensation. The city eventually conceded liability but disputed the amount of damages it owed CLP. As per their concession agreement, the city and CLP proceeded to binding arbitration in 2011 for a determination of damages. In 2013, after an eight-day evidentiary hearing, the three-member arbitration panel issued its final and binding award of nearly $58 million in damages; and
WHEREAS, The city conceded there were no grounds on which to vacate or modify the award but tried to mitigate the damages. Five months after the arbitration award was entered, the City filed to stay and modify the j...
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