suntimes

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

City allows stage, sound system at protest spot near McCormick Place

At press conference with CoalitiAgainst NATO/G8 War Poverty Agendannounce final plans for march. Andy Thayer speaks Ronald Schupp (left)

At a press conference with the Coalition Against NATO/G8 War and Poverty Agenda to announce final plans for march. Andy Thayer speaks and Ronald Schupp (left) holds a sign detailing the protest that will occur at 12 noon on May 20th. | Al Podgorski~Chicago Sun-Times

storyidforme: 30524278
tmspicid: 11080920
fileheaderid: 5063503
Map: NATO Summit road closures and parking restrictions
The NATO Summit: Latest news, protests and events
Article Extras
Story Image

Updated: May 16, 2012 6:00PM



NATO protest organizers Tuesday announced they’d locked down the last piece of their protest puzzle — permission from the city to set up a stage and sound system three blocks from McCormick Place, which is as close to the summit as they’ll be allowed to gather.

After weeks of silence from the city on that request, permission was granted late Monday night, organizers of a May 20th protest march and rally said at a news conference outside McCormick Place, where the May 20-21 NATO Summit is being held.

“The devil is in the details on this thing, and if you do not have a sound system, if you do not have a stage on which to express your First Amendment rights, then those rights are relatively meaningless when you’re talking about a few thousand people,” organizer Andy Thayer said.

The staging area will be erected at Michigan and Cermak, where organizers with the Coalition Against NATO/G8 War and Poverty Agenda said they will end their march from Grant Park to McCormick Place on the opening day of the summit.

There, anti-war U.S. veterans who will lead the march will host a closing ceremony — limited by the city to 45 minutes — during which the vets will symbolically give back their war medals. Organizers said they anticipate a peaceful march and closing rally.

“We have been working for 11 months to get a legally permitted, family friendly march. Our last challenge was to get sound for the vets at the closing rally,” said organizer Pat Hunt. “We’ve got that now, and we’re turning our focus to NATO.”

Also Tuesday, at least four people were arrested in a march held by immigration protesters that began in Pilsen and ended at the Chicago Immigration Court, 525 W. Van Buren. Organized by Occupy Chicago and Our Lady of Guadalupe Anglican Mission, the protest was one of several being held this week in the build-up to the summit.





© 2011 Sun-Times Media, LLC. All rights reserved. This material may not be copied or distributed without permission. For more information about reprints and permissions, visit www.suntimesreprints.com. To order a reprint of this article, click here.