RIVER NORTH — The honorary "Trump Plaza" along the Trump International Hotel & Tower is no more.
The brown sign honoring the controversial developer/presidential candidate is gone from north Wabash Avenue. The sign disappeared shortly after 47 aldermen and Mayor Rahm Emanuel moved to take it down last week.
"We'll put the sign back up when he releases his taxes," Emanuel, a Democrat and supporter of Trump opponent Hillary Clinton, joked last week.
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The sign had been up since 2006, when Trump's 98-story tower on the Chicago River was still under construction. Former Ald. Burt Natarus (42nd) and Mayor Richard M. Daley sponsored the ordinance erecting the honorary street sign, but Trump's disparaging remarks about Chicago and various groups of people on the campaign trail have recently drawn the ire of local pols.
The honorary "Trump Plaza" near the developer's namesake tower remained until this week. [DNAinfo/David Matthews]
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Trump likened Chicago to a "war-torn country" in last month's presidential debate, but his comments about immigrants and women also set off a nerve with local aldermen, who cited the presidential candidate's "complete disregard for civil liberties" in their proposed ordinance.
Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd), who said in August the sign was not even on his "top 100 list of priorities," led the push last week to take the sign down. Online records show the proposed ordinance is still pending in committee. The next council meeting is Nov. 1.
A City Hall source said the Department of Transportation removed the sign.
It wouldn't be the first time action was taken on an honorary street sign before there was full council approval.
Over the summer, signs went up honoring community activist Hal Baskin in Englewood after Ald. Toni Foulkes (16th) submitted an ordinance to do so. But when Ald. Anthony Beale, chairman of the Transportation Committee, found out the signs were erected before the council signed off on it, he had city workers take them down.
Those signs cost $1,400 to install, but officials didn't say how much it cost to remove them.
A representative for the Chicago City Clerk, which monitors local legislation, said the proposed ordinance wouldn't become law till Nov. 9, barring mayoral intervention.
Representatives for Reilly, Emanuel and Trump Tower did not immediately return messages seeking comment.
The honorary "Trump Plaza" along the Trump International Hotel & Tower is no more. [DNAinfo/David Matthews]
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