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Mayor Brandon Johnson's transportation chief departing City Hall

Mayor Brandon Johnson's transportation chief departing City Hall

Yahoo21-06-2025

Tom Carney has resigned as commissioner of the Chicago Department of Transportation in the latest shakeup of Mayor Brandon Johnson's cabinet.
Carney, a longtime CDOT veteran who Johnson appointed to lead the department in December 2023, told colleagues on Friday that he will be leaving City Hall, Johnson spokesperson Cassio Mendoza confirmed Friday afternoon.
His departure follows several other high-profile exits in the Johnson administration this year — and comes before the annual NASCAR Chicago Street Race arrives in Grant Park during the Fourth of July weekend.
His last day will be July 3, according to an internal message Friday afternoon that was obtained by the Tribune.
'Today, I am writing to inform you that I have decided to resign my position as Commissioner of the Chicago Department of Transportation (CDOT),' Carney wrote. 'After much reflection, I have determined that the demands of the CDOT Commissioner position are no longer compatible with the significant needs of my family and other personal matters.'
In a statement, Johnson wrote: 'I want to thank Tom for his decades of service to our city. His work has made Chicago's streets safer, which has saved lives and made our city stronger.'
The city's Transportation Department oversees more than 4,000 miles of streets; streetlights, bridges and intersections; more than 400 miles of bike lanes and trails; and the partnerships that operate the Divvy bike-share system and the city's e-scooters. As commissioner and, before that, in other CDOT leadership roles, Carney also fielded increasing concerns about pedestrian and cyclist safety.
Before his appointment, Carney had been acting commissioner for months after Gia Biagi, his predecessor under Mayor Lori Lightfoot, stepped down in August 2023. Before that, he worked in several roles at CDOT, including as first deputy commissioner, managing deputy commissioner for operations and deputy commissioner in the in-house construction division, and was again acting commissioner in 2019 before Biagi was appointed.
Under Johnson, Carney also helped move ahead a long-running idea to revamp north DuSable Lake Shore Drive, although the plan put forth by the Illinois and Chicago departments of transportation is still likely years away from fruition. It has also met pushback from transportation advocates who say the rebuild doesn't go far enough to promote transit, biking and walking, or to address climate goals.
Carney also threw measured support behind an ordinance from Ald. Daniel La Spata, 1st, to lower the citywide speed limit to 25 mph. But the effort was voted down in February after Johnson declined to help La Spata shore up support for the legislation.
And a pilot program to use automated ticketing of drivers in bike and bus lanes downtown debuted last year under Carney as well.
The mayor kicked off 2025 by teasing a purge of officials in his administration who he felt were insufficiently loyal. During a 'Faith in Government Tour' panel in early February, Johnson said he should have 'cleaned house faster' when it came to holdover City Hall staffers who did not 'agree with (him) 100%' when he became mayor.
'If you ain't with us, you just gotta go,' Johnson said. 'I'm in a position now where I'll be making some decisions in the days to come, because playing nice with other people who ain't about us, it's just a waste of exercise.'
Around then, Aviation Commissioner Jamie Rhee and Park District Superintendent Rosa Escareno both stepped down and were replaced by allies of the mayor.
Others in the mayor's team who left the administration include Deputy Mayor for Labor Bridget Early, chief strategist Joe Calvello, Office of Emergency Management & Communications head Jose Tirado and Chief Operating Officer John Roberson. But their exits were not believed to be related to Johnson's comments.
Roberson, who has been in the mayor's inner circle from the start of his term, announced earlier this month he will leave City Hall to join the Obama Foundation, after weeks of speculation over his potential appointment to CTA president, a role that still remains vacant.

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