Bureaucrats hide true price of Obama Presidential Center as taxpayers hit with infrastructure bill
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FIRST ON FOX: Former President Barack Obama once declared that his presidential center would be a "gift" to Chicago, but taxpayers are on the hook for hundreds of millions of dollars in hidden costs related to the beleaguered project.A Fox News Digital investigation shows taxpayers are now stuck footing the bill for surging public infrastructure costs required to support the project and no government agency can provide an accounting of the total public cost, despite months of queries and FOIA requests."Illinois Republicans saw this coming a mile away. Now, right on cue, Illinois Democrats are leaving taxpayers high and dry and putting them on the hook for hundreds of millions of dollars to support the ugliest building in Chicago," Illinois GOP Chair Kathy Salvi told Fox News Digital. "Illinois culture of corruption is humming along with pay-to-play deals to their allies and friends while lying to Illinois voters."When the project was approved in 2018, Obama pledged to privately fund construction of the expansive 19.3-acre campus in historic Jackson Park through donations to the Obama Foundation a commitment that remains in place as the centers construction continues to be privately financed.But the extensive infrastructure required to make the campus operationally viable including redesigned roads, stormwater systems, and relocated utilities is publicly financed, and without those changes, the center could not function.At the time, projections placed public infrastructure costs at roughly $350 million, split between the state of Illinois and the city of Chicago.OBAMA PRESIDENTIAL CENTER DEPOSITS JUST $1M INTO $470M RESERVE FUND AIMED TO PROTECT TAXPAYERSEight years later, the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) told Fox News Digital that approximately $229 million in infrastructure spending was tied to the site, up from its earlier estimate of roughly $174 million.The $229 million figure reflects state-managed spending, which may include federal transportation funds routed through IDOT.Meanwhile, Chicago officials have failed to produce a reconciled total showing how much city taxpayers have committed or how current spending compares to the roughly $175 million discussed when the project was approved.Fox News Digital submitted records requests and press inquiries to every agency involved in the infrastructure work, including the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT), Chicagos Department of Transportation (CDOT), the Office of Budget and Management (OBM), the Mayors Office and Gov. J.B. Pritzkers administration.Not a single office provided a unified, up-to-date accounting of total public infrastructure spending tied to the project. The investigation involved months of FOIA requests, partial disclosures and repeated follow-ups.No single agency appears to oversee the full scope of the infrastructure work, and neither the state nor the city has assembled a reconciled accounting a fragmentation that has made the overall public cost difficult to determine.Instead, agencies provided partial figures, declined to clarify whether city and state totals overlap or insisted that no consolidated total exists.The Illinois Attorney Generals Public Access Counselor (PAC) is reviewing whether multiple agencies complied with state transparency laws following Fox News Digital FOIA requests.The center sits on 19 acres of historic public parkland carved out in a controversial transfer for just $10 under a 99-year agreement, making the question of public infrastructure spending particularly sensitive. Legal challenges to the land transfer, including lawsuits arguing the arrangement was not in the public interest, were ultimately dismissed, although the merits of the arguments were not adjudicated on.The center though commonly referred to as a presidential "library" will not function as a traditional facility operated by the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), and former President Obamas official records will be maintained by NARA at a federal site in Maryland.While the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago is expected to provide digital access to archival materials, it will not serve as a federally operated records repository.Instead, the Chicago complex will be operated privately, without rent payments, by the Obama Foundation, the former presidents nonprofit organization, which oversees leadership programs and civic initiatives aligned with his values and policy priorities.Construction costs for the facility itself have ballooned from early estimates of roughly $330 million to at least $850 million, according to the foundations 2024 tax filings, although these expenses are being borne by private donors.Meanwhile, a $470 million reserve fund known as an endowment that the foundation promised to fill to protect taxpayers should the project go belly-up, has received only $1 million in deposits, Fox News Digital previously reported.OBAMA LIBRARY, BEGUN WITH LOFTY DEI GOALS, NOW PLAGUED BY $40M RACIALLY CHARGED SUIT, BALLOONING COSTSTaxpayers often fund routine improvements near major civic projects such as turn lanes, utility hookups or upgraded traffic signals but the scale of the work surrounding the Obama Presidential Center is far more extensive.By comparison, other modern presidential libraries required only limited public infrastructure upgrades and did not involve the removal of a major roadway or the wholesale redesign of a historic parks traffic pattern.Much of the publicly financed work reshaped the roads and utilities that once ran through Jackson Park.Cornell Drive a four-lane roadway that bordered the centers east side by the parks lagoon was permanently removed under the centers site plan and enveloped by the campus. Traffic that once ran alongside the lagoon has been rerouted farther west, reducing the number of public roads directly adjacent to the complex and creating a more unified campus footprint around the center.Crews also tore down trees, relocated water mains, sewer lines, and electrical infrastructure and installed new drainage systems tied to the facilitys structural needs as part of the public infrastructure project.City and state officials say the changes were necessary to manage traffic and visitor demand. Critics argued the redesign altered long-standing park infrastructure to accommodate the foundations preferred layout.What's clear is that without those road closures, reroutes and utility relocations, the project would not function as designed.The Obama Foundation, which is funding the centers construction, defended the project in a statement to Fox News Digital."The Obama Foundation is investing $850 million in private funding to build the Obama Presidential Center and give back to the community that made the Obamas story possible," said Emily Bittner, a spokesperson for the foundation."After decades of underinvestment on the South Side of Chicago, the OPC is catalyzing investment, from both public and private sources, to build economic opportunity for residents through jobs, housing, and public spaces and amenities."IDOT, which controls the states funding for the corridor and signs off on major transportation contracts tied to the project, acknowledged approximately $229 million in state-managed infrastructure spending but did not produce a consolidated accounting reconciling that total across all project phases."With all the main parts of this aspect of the overall project awarded, to date the state via IDOT has contributed approximately $229 million," an IDOT spokesperson told Fox News Digital in July in its latest release. "Approximate breakdown of these funds: $19 million in preliminary engineering; $24 million for construction engineering and $186 million for construction activities."The spokesperson said that the initial $174 million figure was from a "2017 was a preliminary cost estimate."CDOT, which carried out the roadway closures, traffic rerouting and utility relocation work inside Jackson Park, acknowledged Fox News Digitals Oct. 7, 2025, FOIA request and took a statutory extension but never issued a final determination or produced the requested records. The department also did not provide a unified city total or clarify how Chicagos capital allocations overlap with the states spending.OBM, which oversees the citys capital allocations, did not say whether the citys $175 million estimate remains current and directed Fox News Digital to the Capital Improvement Plan. Chicagos most recent 20242028 Capital Improvement Plan the citys multi-year infrastructure budget lists more than $206 million allocated to roadway and utility work surrounding the project. However, much of that funding is labeled "state," and neither state nor city officials could clarify how those allocations overlap with IDOTs reported total.In a FOIA response, OBM said it "does not have responsive records" showing any cost overruns, reallocations or a breakdown of spending across major components of the Obama Center infrastructure work.The agency also could not explain how Chicagos $206 million budget line relates to IDOTs $229 million figure or how much of the citys amount is actually paid by Chicago rather than the state.Pritzkers office gave conflicting responses and ultimately produced no records showing the states total infrastructure spending.Meanwhile, Mayor Brandon Johnsons office did not respond to repeated requests for the citys total infrastructure spending tied to the project or for how much more Chicago expects to commit.Without updated reconciliations from both levels of government, taxpayers still have no clear accounting of the financial obligations associated with the center.What is clear is that Obamas "gift" to Chicago comes with a hefty public price tag that has grown more complex and without updated cost projections, the true total cost remains unknown.
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