Monday, March 25, 2024

'Black Houses Matter' with radio jock treasurer


     "I see trees of green ... I see snowflakes, too," sings Maria Pappas, only a little off-key, accompanying the Louis Armstrong song "What a Wonderful World." "Red roses, too. Nothing's blooming! For me and you. And I think to myself, what kind of city is this? ... Hey hey, this is WVON, 'Black Houses Matter!'"
     It's just after 11:30 a.m. last Monday. The Cook County treasurer is sitting behind a microphone in the River City studio of the historic Black radio station, doing what she likes to do best: reaching out to ethnic communities, trying to give back money overpaid in property taxes.
     "And we are killin' it, killin' it!" she says. "Get these numbers, kids. From 3/20 of 2020, until 3/15 of 2024, we are up to ... almost to $300 million. We're at $285,571,000. How about that?"
     Pappas has brought along five staffers, including one in the chair across from her.
     "I've got Maurice Torrance with me this morning," she says.
     "Like the street," he observes, in classic radio sidekick fashion.
     "Maurice is my guy," Pappas says. "He's in charge of the tax sale in Cook County. He's in the legal department."
     Pappas began the radio show on AM 1690 in 2020, designed to prompt taxpayers in the Black community to find out if they've overpaid their property taxes. Last year, she added "Latino Houses Matter" on WVON's sister station, WRLL-AM 1450.
     "We are ready to roll," Torrance says. "And treasurer, for all those callers out there that are saying, 'Oh no, I never overpay, I never double pay,' just how easy it is to do so? Let's say your mortgage company does and you do, too. Guess what? That's an over-payment. Or if you pay, and the wife or spouse doesn't tell you that they pay, too — it's happened to me already. Guess what? You overpaid."
     The show is simulcast on Facebook Live. Pappas, who publishes an annual calendar illustrated by photos of herself wearing chic outfits, stands up and vamps for her viewers. She is wearing a cornflower blue coat, large round earrings and a white spiky pixie hairdo.
     "Don't throw eggs at me, this is phony fur," she says. "I bought on sale. I got it for 40 bucks. This is not one of these designer things. ... I have something very special to tell you this week. I have a good friend, and she told me to go to — get this! — 7214 N. Harlem. This is called Juju's, J-U-J-U apostrophe S. Vintage, Antique and ReSale Shop ..."
     Pappas takes two prearranged calls from people receiving refunds.
     "Denise! Denise! It's Pappas!" she cries. "How are you? Are you retired?"

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6 comments:

  1. Pappas isn't the problem with C[r]ook County taxes, the rotten to the core assessor's office & the even more rotten than that Board of Review, both of which are totally corrupt are the actual problems here.
    A series of article about property taxes several years ago in the Tribune had this amazing, appalling, disgusting & absolutely bizarre fact, that C[r]ook County has more real estate tax appeals than the rest of the country, combined!
    That's how corrupt & rotten to the core the system is here & no one wants to fix it!

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    1. It certainly is a "bad look" when members of government bodies, i.e. the Illinois House of Representatives and the Chicago City Council, can hold themselves out as especially well qualified to reduce a property owner's taxes, but the large number of tax appeals in Cook County, not all of which are successful by the way, is not proof of rot at the core of the Assessor's Office. It's an overly complex system with those in the know unwilling to make substantive changes. No surprise there.

      john

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  2. I couldn't be happier to read this. Like with Jesse White, we can all exhale a big "FINALLY, a goddam pol who gives a shit!"

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  3. What a trip! Good for her. I’m glad she’s making use of the AM signal for good instead of hate.

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  4. Lest we get too carried away with the whole "Maria Pappas, woman of the people" routine, let us not forget her Maria Antoinette act a few years ago when the mere rumor of a Target store opening up on the Magnificent Mile almost caused her head to explode.

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