CSO: How the orchestra is finding its way during the pandemic. PAGE 3
NOTABLES: These HR leaders rose to 2020’s challenges. PAGE 15
CHICAGOBUSINESS.COM | FEBRUARY 1, 2021 | $3.50
Why banking isn’t working right now for Chicago’s largest bank Making loans and collecting deposits isn’t where the money is BY STEVE DANIELS Trust. After all, the S&P 500 improbably returned 16 percent; Northern is one of three global titans making most of its money managing and safeguarding assets for investors, and much of its fee revenue is tied to the values of those investments. But Northern also is a bank after all—the largest one headquartered in Chicago. And the bread and butter of banking—collecting depos-
its and making money from them by lending— proved an albatross. A 14 percent decline in net interest income, the money Northern made on its deposits, led to a 19 percent decrease in net income overall. It was Northern’s worst oneyear performance since 2010, when net income fell 23 percent. See NORTHERN on Page 30
Walgreens’ new CEO has plenty to learn BY ALLY MAROTTI When Roz Brewer takes over as CEO of Walgreens Boots Alliance on March 15, she’ll face some familiar challenges and others that will stretch her skills. The former chief operating officer of Starbucks and onetime boss of Walmart’s Sam’s Club chain knows how to reshape and dig-
Is this Joliet plan a bridge to nowhere?
A NIMBY spat over a link to two massive rail yards could be a turning point for the region
JOE CAHILL Who’s really going to be in charge at Walgreens? PAGE 4 itize a retail chain, top priorities for Walgreens. Her track record is spottier when it comes to delivering consistently strong growth, a crying need for Walgreens. Perhaps the most notable résumé gap is her lack of experience in health care. She’ll inherit predecessor Stefano Pessina’s plan to transform the Deerfield-based chain’s 9,000 drugstores into “neighborhood health destina-
BY ALBY GALLUN GETTY IMAGES
Brewer fills in some of the company’s blanks, but not all of them
JOHN R. BOEHM
2020 SHOULD HAVE BEEN A GOOD YEAR for Northern
Roz Brewer tions,” offering doctor’s appointments and other medical care. It’s a dramatic transformation that will take Walgreens and its new See WALGREENS on Page 12
U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush calls it “the bridge to the future.” To many Will County officials and residents, it’s a bridge too far. But the opinion that really matters now belongs to Gov. J.B. Pritzker. The fate of a massive industrial park planned in Joliet that could employ as many as 10,000 people rests largely in the hands of the governor, who has the final say over a proposed bridge
spanning Route 53 that’s essential to the development. It may be just a bridge, but it represents the hopes of pro-growth government officials and the fears of local residents fed up with heavy truck traffic originating from a pair of gigantic rail yards nearby. And the outcome of the standoff could be a turning point for a region that’s become one of the nation’s largest logistics hubs and, See JOLIET on Page 28
NEWSPAPER l VOL. 44, NO. 5 l COPYRIGHT 2021 CRAIN COMMUNICATIONS INC. l ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
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GREG HINZ
CHICAGO COMES BACK
Deputy mayor wouldn’t bet against Chicago’s recovery. PAGE 2
Words are powerful. Business leaders should choose them wisely. PAGE 4
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