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πŸ›οΈ Homelessness & Encampment Rules/Bridge Housing Siting

Bridge Housing Siting: Arlington Heights vs Chicago

How do bridge housing siting rules compare between Arlington Heights, IL and Chicago, IL?

Arlington Heights and Chicago have similar restriction levels.

Arlington Heights, IL

Cook County

Some Restrictions

Cook County's Continuum of Care partners with Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA) on Home Illinois Project Homekey-style hotel-to-housing conversions. Bridge housing siting follows local zoning; many suburbs treat it as group living or supportive housing under home-rule code.

View full Arlington Heights rules β†’

Chicago, IL

Cook County

Some Restrictions

Chicago bridge housing is funded through the Continuum of Care (CoC IL-510) administered by All Chicago, with state support from IHDA's Home Illinois initiative. Siting follows MCC 17 zoning treatment of group living and supportive housing, often as conditional uses in residential and commercial zones.

View full Chicago rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactArlington HeightsChicago
Lead funderIHDA Home Illinois-
CoordinatorCook CoC IL-510-
State override310 ILCS 67310 ILCS 67
SitingLocal zoning, conditional use-
Lead CoC-All Chicago, IL-510
State partner-IHDA Home Illinois
Zoning code-MCC 17
SRO registration-MCC 13-4-10

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Arlington Heights FAQ

Can my Cook suburb ban bridge housing?

Outright bans risk Fair Housing Act and 310 ILCS 67 challenges. Suburbs may require conditional use permits and reasonable operational conditions but cannot single out supportive housing for exclusion.

Where is suburban Cook bridge housing located?

Recent IHDA-funded Project Homekey-style conversions include Tinley Park and Hoffman Estates hotels, plus scattered-site units operated by nonprofits like Connections for the Homeless and Housing Forward.

Chicago FAQ

Where is Chicago bridge housing located?

Citywide, with concentrations on the West and South sides. Recent IHDA-funded projects include hotel conversions and scattered-site units operated by Heartland Alliance, Catholic Charities, and other CoC partners under MCC 17 zoning approvals.

Can a Chicago neighborhood block a shelter?

Outright bans risk Fair Housing Act and 310 ILCS 67 challenges. Aldermanic prerogative can slow approvals, but discretionary denials must rely on neutral zoning criteria, not status of future residents, to survive challenge.

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