Photograph; Mayor Rahm Emanuel joins over 200 members of the faith-based community to discuss the importance of providing Chicago Public School students with a longer school day and year. Thursday, August 25, 2011 | Brian Jackson~Sun-Times
By Becky Schlikerman And Dan Mihalopoulos | Originally Published at The Chicago Sun Times. Updated January 17, 2014

dt.common.streams.clsMayor Rahm Emanuel with the Rev. Charles Jenkins at US Cellular Field, in August 2011. | Sun-Times library

One of two schools that Des Plaines-based Concept Schools chain hopes to open next school year — at 8522 S. Lafayette Ave. in Chatham — would be the first tenant in a building owned by an arm of the Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church.

The Rev. Charles Jenkins, its pastor, touts on his church’s website how he “filled a key role” on Emanuel’s transition team when the mayor was elected in 2011. Jenkins gave the invocation at Emanuel’s swearing-in. He is an Emanuel appointee to the City Colleges of Chicago board and a board member of the private group New Schools for Chicago, which helps fund new charter schools.

If approved, the Concept school would pay nearly $529,000 in rent its first year, with annual lease payments going up to more than $961,000 by the fifth year, according to documents filed by Concept. It said the payments would go to the Fellowship Educational and Economic Development Corp., a not-for-profit headed by Jenkins.

The building on Lafayette Avenue was purchased for $7 million in 2011 by Hobby Lobby Stores Inc., based in Oklahoma City. In August, Hobby Lobby turned over the deed to the property to Jenkins’ church at no cost, property records show. The gift was the “largest donation to an African-American church in American history,” according to documents submitted as part of Concept’s school application.

The building has 75,000 square feet of usable space, all of which would be occupied by the school.

Concept has hired Hermene Hartman, publisher of an African-American publication that endorsed Emanuel in the 2011, as a consultant.

“Rather than just build a big church to open on Sunday, Pastor Jenkins really looked at how to use the land for the community,” Hartman said. “I think Jenkins went on a search, looking for interested parties, and they were the selected ones.”

Jenkins could not be reached for comment Thursday.

Also on the South Side, Be the Change Charter Schools wants to open a charter at the Bridgeport Art Center, 1200 W. 35th St., which is owned by Paul Levy, a real estate broker and principal of Prairie Management & Development Inc., who is a longtime friend of the mayor.

In 2010, Levy testified on Emanuel’s behalf when he beat a residency challenge to stay on the mayoral ballot. Levy testified then that he vacations with Emanuel, that each attended the other’s wedding and that he helped the mayor find his North Side home.

Levy didn’t respond to requests for comment.

A representative of Be the Change said the group was unaware of the connection between the art center and the mayor.

“That relationship was never shared

[with] us,” said Sonia Wang, a founding design team member for the charter group, which wants to open an elementary school.

Wang said the site, which hosts events and has art studios, was chosen because it has enough space for a school and could be expanded.

Founded by educators, Wang’s organization plans initially to lease 15,000 square feet, paying $180,000 in rent in 2015, with the rent rising yearly, to $500,000 by 2019, as the school expands.

Almost all of the Be the Change and Concept budgets would come from taxpayers, most of it from CPS, records show.

“CPS’ top priority when reviewing applications is to ascertain if the proposed school has a rigorous academic model and a clear, strong financial plan,” schools spokesman Joel Hood said, declining to discuss specific proposals.

Emanuel spokeswoman Sarah Hamilton said, “The mayor has confidence that [schools CEO] Barbara Byrd-Bennett and the board share a sole priority when it comes to our schools: meeting the goal of providing a high-quality education so our students are 100 percent college-ready and 100 percent college-bound.”