Crain's Chicago Business

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GIVING GUIDE: Nonprofits prepare to navigate a post-pandemic world. PAGE 19

RESTAURANTS: How COVID changed lunch in the Loop. PAGE 3

CHICAGOBUSINESS.COM | MAY 24, 2021 | $3.50

Gallagher’s big leap to the big time

CRAIN’S CHICAGO BUSINESS

SUPPLIER DIVERSITY

Its pickup of Aon’s forced sales creates potent global No. 3 BY STEVE DANIELS

FOR MINORITY CONSTRUCTION FIRMS, A CATCH-22 Minority suppliers become ineligible for special city contracts if their average revenues surpass designated thresholds. The city is reviewing these equity caps. PAGE 12

When Aon moved its Chicago headquarters to London nine years ago, the city appeared to be losing its stake in one of the world’s most stable and profitable industries—purchasing insurance on behalf of businesses. Few in the sector took solace in the continued presence of far smaller insurance broker Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. Now, after negotiating a $3.6 billion deal for some of the jewels that European regulators are forcing Aon to divest to win approval of its merger with London-based Willis Towers Watson, Gallagher is positioned to be nearly the heavyweight Aon was when it decamped.

CEO J. Patrick Gallagher Jr. Based in Rolling Meadows, 30 miles northwest of the towering Aon Center, Gallagher always has been the more unassuming of the two. It focuses more on midsize business clients rather than the Fortune 500 served by Aon. An ex-McKinseyite, Greg Case, leads Aon; Gallagher is managed as a de facto family business, albeit one minding Securities & Exchange Commission requirements. CEO J. Patrick Gallagher Jr., grandson See GALLAGHER on Page 62

Making pot-infused snacks tastier: Can it be done? It’s a challenge Chicago, with its deep roots in the food biz, is well positioned to take on At a small food laboratory on the West Side, Chicago’s rich history in candymaking is mingling with its new role as a hub of the burgeoning cannabis industry. That’s where food industry veteran Stephanie Gorecki and her colleagues are cooking up candies for their new employer, mari-

Cresco Labs gummies

oping more edible pot products as existing customers and newbies look for ways to get high other than smoking. Edibles made up about 21 percent of total weed sales last year, trailing smokable “flower” at 51 percent, according to Chicago-based Brightfield Group. But edibles are growing

JOHN R. BOEHM

BY JOHN PLETZ

juana company Cresco Labs. On a recent afternoon, a machine squirted dark-red liquid into flexible molds, turning out nearly 150 gummies to be dusted with powdered sugar. Nearby is a rainbow-colored assortment of gummies that will hit the shelves in time for next month’s Pride celebrations. Cresco and its rivals are devel-

See EDIBLES on Page 56

NEWSPAPER l VOL. 44, NO. 21 l COPYRIGHT 2021 CRAIN COMMUNICATIONS INC. l ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

CHICAGO COMES BACK ‘I think we’ve got a ton of momentum.’ PAGE 4

REAL ESTATE A lush green composition on the bank of the river. PAGE 63


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