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Obama Presidential Center Contractors Complicate Big Opening

The ribbon-cutting festivities at the Obama Presidential Center are being overshadowed by a wave of financial grievances — construction firms are stepping forward to say they never received full payment for their work on the high-profile Chicago development.

The complaints span a wide range of losses. Some companies report being shortchanged by hundreds of thousands of dollars. Others say the figure climbs into the millions.

Fox News broke the story, shining a spotlight on payment disputes that have quietly festered behind the scenes as the foundation prepared for its public debut.

Situated within Jackson Park, the center occupies land that once belonged to the public. The Obama Foundation secured a 99-year lease on that city-owned parcel for the symbolic sum of $10.

Tied to that arrangement was a formal commitment — the foundation agreed to build out a robust endowment fund, the purpose of which was straightforward: protect Chicago residents and Illinois taxpayers from ever being burdened with the center’s future financial obligations.

That promise has not been kept, according to critics tracking the numbers. The endowment, which was meant to grow into the hundreds of millions, currently sits at just $1 million.

Meanwhile, the project’s costs have spiraled dramatically. What began as a $330 million construction estimate has since surged past the $850 million mark. The foundation has declined to release the actual final number.

Keeping the doors open won’t come cheap either. The Obama Foundation has projected annual operating expenses of around $40 million — a recurring cost that critics warn could eventually fall to taxpayers if the institution struggles financially.

Robert Grogan, the chairman of the Illinois Republican Party, did not mince words when addressing the endowment gap.

“One of their core promises was they were supposed to create an endowment as basically an insurance policy so the taxpayers wouldn’t get stuck with the bill,” he told Fox News. “They promised hundreds of millions of dollars for it. It’s still sitting at the $1 million mark [where it stood] when they opened it up. So I don’t believe that they’ve kept that promise.”

Grogan went further, questioning the long-term viability of the entire enterprise.

“The fact that they have created this probably unsustainable edifice to an ego and then, eventually, if it goes under, who’s going to be caught with the bill time and time again? It’s the taxpayers of the city, citizens of Chicago and the state of Illinois,” he said.

On the contractor side, the grievances are specific and substantial. Mike Owen, who serves as president of Adamson Plumbing, has gone on record stating that his firm is owed close to $4 million.

The problem extends beyond a single company.

Omar Shareef, who leads the African American Contractors Association, has confirmed that several Black-owned businesses connected to the project are now dealing with serious financial strain in the wake of unpaid balances.

The situation carries an added layer of tension given that the Obama Presidential Center has long promoted its commitment to uplifting minority-owned enterprises and investing in the surrounding community.

The Obama Foundation has disputed the narrative of financial disorder. Ahead of the grand opening, the organization issued a statement declaring the project financially sound.

“On the eve of our Grand Opening celebrations, we are pleased to reiterate that the Obama Presidential Center is fully funded with generous private contributions,” the foundation stated.

The foundation further indicated plans to pour “significant investments” into the endowment down the road — though no concrete amounts or deadlines were attached to that commitment.

As opening weekend arrives, the center moves forward while contractor bills sit unpaid, the endowment remains a fraction of what was promised, and the final construction price tag stays locked away from public view.
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