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Community Block-club Clean Up Business Corridor 75th & Clyde to & Exchange Block Club Chicago Maxwell Evans August 9, 2020.

South Shore Cleanups Aim To Attract Businesses By Showing Neighbors Care

By Maxwell Evan Block Club Chicago

SOUTH SHORE — A new community organization held its first cleanup of 75th Street Sunday morning, as neighbors hope to spur investment in South Shore’s business corridors by investing their own time and energy.

Neighbors with the South Shore 7th Ward Community Council power-washed buildings, picked up trash and performed lawn care along the corridor for hours Sunday.

Streets and Sanitation employees, Chicago Police officers and Ald. Greg Mitchell (7th) set up at 75th Street and Clyde Avenue to assist in the cleanup effort. Masks, food and water were provided.

Nearly 60 percent of storefronts on 75th Street in South Shore are vacant, as are nearly half of the shops on 79th Street.

A community-wide effort is needed to attract “viable businesses” to those properties, said Jera Slaughter, organizer of Sunday’s cleanup and chair of the council’s 75th Street subcommittee.

Slaughter called on friends, neighbors and city officials to assist, organizing the cleanup in less than two weeks. She and the community council also presented Mitchell with a wishlist of services for the corridors’ vacant properties, including a youth center, a grocery store, health care providers and retail.

“I can’t tell you the last time anybody has attempted to clean this area,” Slaughter said. “It’ll take us all to pull this back together. We want to be able to invite businesses here, but it can’t be so dirty.”

Dates for future cleanups haven’t been confirmed, but the goal is to continue until 75th Street is beautified from Jeffery Boulevard to the lakefront, Slaughter said. The council will also oversee 79th Street cleanups.

Even as the commercial corridors struggle, residential areas to the north and south of 75th Street are well taken care of, said Ingrid Ermon, who lives a couple blocks from the cleanup’s staging area with her husband Russell.

Residents need to invest the same effort into the neighborhood’s business corridors and public areas as they do into their own homes, she said.

“South Shore, first of all, is a beautiful neighborhood,” Ermon said. “75th needs to reflect that.”