Crain's Chicago Business

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NOTABLE HEALTH CARE HEROES: These professionals have gone beyond the call. PAGE 15

BEST PLACES TO WORK: Check out our list of the 100 finalists. PAGE 9

CHICAGOBUSINESS.COM | MARCH 8, 2021 | $3.50

Bailing out of Water Tower Place Retailers jump ship as the property’s owner sets a new course

Josh Bradshaw, community resource manager at Advanced Medical Transport

JOHN R. BOEHM

As the owner of Water Tower Place plots a comeback for the Mag Mile mall, a bunch of tenants have decided not to wait around to see how the plan turns out. At least 10 retailers, including Banana Republic, Aritzia and Riley Rose, have left Water Tower in recent months, departures overshadowed by the recent decision of Macy’s, the mall’s biggest tenant, to close its department store there. Water Tower’s post-pandemic future also will include a much small-

JOHN R. BOEHM

BY ALBY GALLUN

er role for its second-largest tenant, American Girl, which is shrinking its store there and giving up See WATER TOWER on Page 28

ILLINOIS’ VACCINE LEADER? Second City’s second act IT’S NOT CHICAGO. How private-equity owners aim to pump The region we all could learn from turns out to be Peoria. Here’s why. OFTEN OVERSHADOWED BY THE METROPOLIS to its northeast, Peoria outshines Chicago and much of Illinois when it comes to coronavirus vaccinations. Peoria County tops all 102 Illinois counties in pushing vaccines to its most vulnerable residents. As of March 4, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health, 84 percent of county residents 65 or older had received a first dose, two times the rate for Chicago and Cook County. Some 51 percent of Peoria seniors had been fully vaccinated as of that date, well above the statewide rate of 20 percent. Surprised? So was Monica Hendrickson, pub-

BY A.D. QUIG

lic health administrator at the Peoria City/County Health Department, at a Feb. 24 event when Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced that “if Peoria County were a state, it would be No. 2 in the nation for total doses administered per 100,000 residents.” “I’m very happy I had a face mask on, on live TV,” Hendrickson says. “Otherwise, my shock would be more expressive.” Planning, partnership, outreach and centralization appear to be key factors boosting vaccination rates See PEORIA on Page 31

new energy into a comedy institution BY ALLY MAROTTI After a string of years that were hardly a laugh riot for previous management, Chicago’s famed Second City is entering its second act under new owners. New York-based private-equity firm ZMC announced late last month that it would acquire the

61-year-old comedy institution, roughly four months after the company put itself up for sale following years of contemplating the move. ZMC declines to disclose terms, but deal tracker PitchBook pegs the price tag at $50 million. Though private-equity firms See SECOND CITY on Page 31

NEWSPAPER l VOL. 44, NO. 10 l COPYRIGHT 2021 CRAIN COMMUNICATIONS INC. l ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

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REAL ESTATE

YOUR VIEW

Buyers are snagging bargain prices on downtown condos. PAGE 3

We can only build COVID immunity by building trust. PAGE 10

3/5/21 4:26 PM


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