Home

News
Taking Care of Business
Obituaries
Viewpoints
Street Beat
Calendar

About us

Feedback

Community Guide
Search


Advanced Search

home : news : news September 03, 2010

11/25/2009 1:55:00 PM Email this articlePrint this article 
Not taking no for an answer: Community activist Jackie Leavy and U.S. Rep. Danny Davis at Tuesday's press conference.
TERRY DEAN/Staff
To get involved:

You can find a link to McCarron's column here. To get involved in the protest over the Park National Bank takeover, e-mail Jackie Leavy at wleavy8396@aim.com, Terry Finnegan at tfinn.op@gmail.com, Virgil Crawford at virgil_crawford@yahoo.com, or call Bob Vondrasek, 773-287-4570.


Austin, Oak Park groups join to save Park National

By TERRY DEAN and KEN TRAINOR

Web Extra!

Forcing the federal government to rescind its decision to allow the transfer of assets from FBOP Corp., parent company of Park National Bank in Oak Park, to U.S. Bank Corp., is among the goals of the newly formed Coalition to Save Community Banking, made up of Austin and Oak Park residents.

The group, along with nearly 100 supporters, hosted a press conference Tuesday morning outside Park National's former headquarters at Madison and Austin. They were joined by elected officials, including U.S. Rep. Danny Davis (7th), who, along with fellow Congressman Bobby Rush, are calling for a congressional hearing to look into Park National's seizure by the federal government three weeks ago.

The coalition is looking to get the attention of Congress and the media in the aftermath of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's takeover of Park National Bank. Supporters Tuesday said that what happened to the bank and its owner, Mike Kelly, should not have happened.

"The message has been sent that certain banks are too large to fail, but we're saying this bank is too good to fail," said West Side pastor, Rev. Marshall Hatch. 

The group has gathered hundreds of signatures on a petition to save the bank. Last Wednesday, a letter was delivered to Cong. Luis Gutierrez (D-4th), who is chairman of the House Committee on Financial Services' Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, demanding congressional hearings on the Park National takeover and the future of community banks in general. The letter includes the signatures of officials and activists in Oak Park, including Village President David Pope, and Terry Finnegan, a member of the Oak Park and River Forest High School Board of Education, who spoke Tuesday.

"African-Americans in the thousands are willing to protest, agitate, and switch banks in support of a white billionaire they know and trust - find me one titan of Wall Street who can make this claim," said Finnegan about Park National's owner, who has been known for years to support schools and community organizations in Oak Park, Austin and across the West Side. 

The letter asks Gutierrez for a response by Tuesday, Dec. 1. That also happens to be the deadline for collecting signatures on petitions, protesting the FDIC's treatment of Park National.

In Washington, meanwhile, the Congressional Black Caucus initiated a postponement of a vote on a financial regulatory reform bill last week. The Coalition to Save Community Banking says the Black Caucus is calling for the remaining TARP funds ($200 billion) to "go to help Main Street instead of Wall Street."

In Chicago, Tribune columnist John McCarron wrote about the Park National situation on Monday ("Are small banks too good to save?"), in which he quotes Bob Vondrasek, executive director of the South Austin Coalition Community Council.





Reader Comments


Posted: Monday, December 07, 2009
Article comment by: Jackie Schulz

Mike Kelly has saved so many institutions in this area, all without fanfare or publicity of any kind. Please keep me informed if there in anything I can do. thanks.

Posted: Wednesday, December 02, 2009
Article comment by: Cynthia Grazian

I am a former CEO of a south side bank. The FDIC and state manufactured the failure and gave us no chance to save ourselves. We found that the deal was already sealed with MB several months before. Now MB is kicking our customers and stating that they will not lend. Where are these small businesses to go. Besides the carnage to employment and families, what will happen to the machine that drives the revenue in this country? Small businesses are an endangered species.

Article Comment Submission Form
Please feel free to submit your comments.

Article comments are not posted immediately to the Web site. Each submission must be approved by the Web site editor, who may edit content for appropriateness. There may be a delay of 24-48 hours for any submission while the web site editor reviews and approves it.

Note: All information on this form is required. Your telephone number and e-mail address are for our use only, and will not be attached to your comment.
Name:
Telephone:
E-mail:
Passcode: This form will not send your comment unless you copy exactly the passcode seen below into the text field. This is an anti-spam device to help reduce the automated email spam coming through this form.

Please copy the passcode exactly
- it is case sensitive.
Message:
   





Copyright 2010, Austin Weekly News,
141 S. Oak Park Ave., Oak Park, IL 60302, 773/626-6332

To view any of the other publications owned and operated by
Wednesday Journal, Inc., click on the appropriate title.

Wednesday Journal Riverside Brookfield Landmark
Chicago Journal Forest Park ReviewChicago Parent magazine


Software © 1998-2010 1up! Software, All Rights Reserved