Trump Tower ruled 'public nuisance' over fish kills

A Cook County circuit judge agreed with Attorney General Kwame Raoul, Illinois Sierra Club and Friends of the Chicago River that Trump Tower violated state environmental laws protecting the Chicago River.

The “Trump” sign at Trump Tower along the Chicago River.

The “Trump” sign at Trump Tower on the Chicago River.

Sun-Times file

Trump Tower is a public nuisance that threatens the Chicago River with its cooling-water intake system that illegally sucked in and killed thousands of fish over a number of years, a judge ruled this week.

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and a pair of environmental organizations had asked Cook County Circuit Judge Thaddeus L. Wilson last year to rule on failures of the building operator to comply with environmental laws.

The building at 401 N. Wabash Ave. operates without a proper state environmental permit, does not accurately report water discharge levels and violates at least three other laws, according to the lawsuit.

Wilson found that those facts are “well founded” and “not materially challenged.”

The judge said in an order Monday that the Trump Tower “has created and continues to create a a public nuisance in violation of Illinois law,” and the intake system operates “in a manner that substantially and unreasonably interferes with the public right to fish and otherwise recreate in the Chicago River.”

Raoul’s predecessor Lisa Madigan, Friends of the Chicago River and Sierra Club initially filed a lawsuit against the Trump building in 2018. That complaint was amended and refiled almost a year ago.

Former President Donald Trump, who is running against Vice President Kamala Harris as he seeks a return to the White House, opened the Trump Tower in Chicago amid much fanfare in 2009.

While the case still has additional court dtes, environmental advocates claimed victory.

“They were able to kill more fish and aquatic organisms than what would be allowed,” said Margaret Frisbie, executive director of Friends of the Chicago River. “This decision brings us near the end of a six-year journey.”

Frisbie’s organization estimates that thousands of fish and other aquatic life were sucked in by the Trump Tower’s cooling system.

“Trump Tower has litigated this case by pretending the rules don’t exist or that basic facts aren’t what they obviously are,” said Robert Weinstock, who represented the Sierra Club and Friends of the Chicago River through Northwestern University’s Environmental Advocacy Center. “The court’s ruling forces them to live in reality and comply with the law like everyone else.”

The building draws up to 20 million gallons of water from the Chicago River every day to help cool the building.

Because of the amount of water the building draws in, it is subject to federal and state requirements aimed at protecting the river and its fish.

“Trump Tower failed to follow state and federal regulations that protect the health of the Chicago River,” Raoul said in a statement. “All entities – no matter who they are – must be held accountable when they willfully disregard our laws.”

If the two sides don’t settle, there will need to be additional hearings to determine steps to take so the building can be in compliance with the law.

Raoul said he will also seek a civil penalty that will be assessed later.

A lawyer representing Trump Tower didn’t return calls seeking comment.

“We’ll be monitoring to make sure they obey the law,” said Jack Darin, director of Sierra Club Illinois, who said he’s “proud to hold these scofflaws accountable.”

Brett Chase head shot.jpg

Brett Chase

Chicago Sun-TimesAssistant editor/reporter, environment

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