Chicago Contrarian Seeks to Stop Nonprofit and Youth Funding

Chicago Contrarian has issued a call to end city funding for local nonprofit organizations and Chicago’s summer youth employment initiatives.
The outlet argues that nonprofit groups have become deeply embedded in Chicago’s civic infrastructure, often working alongside municipal agencies to deliver social services, neighborhood development efforts, and youth programs. In the wider Chicago area, roughly 57,800 nonprofit organizations employ more than 780,000 people and generate over $139 billion each year. Critics cited by Chicago Contrarian contend that such financial pipelines risk empowering politically connected intermediaries, complicating accountability between elected officials and service providers, and obscuring for taxpayers whether growing appropriations produce measurable benefits.
The city’s main summer employment initiative, One Summer Chicago, underscores the scale of these partnerships. City records show that the program’s 2024 budget reached about $76 million after an $11.6 million increase, with a target of providing approximately 28,000 positions for residents ages 14 to 24. Officials said nearly 28,000 young people participated in 2024—a 39 percent jump from prior years—while the 2025 season delivered around 28,800 placements. Supporters highlight these numbers as evidence of the program’s reach, but fiscal conservatives question whether channeling funds through nonprofits yields long-term outcomes that justify continued budget expansion.
Available research on Chicago’s summer youth employment efforts offers promising yet inconclusive findings. A widely cited randomized study documented a 43 percent drop in violent-crime arrests over a 16-month period among youth offered program positions. Additional research on the One Summer Chicago Plus model found “about a 51 percent drop in violent-crime arrests” among at-risk teens in 2012. Still, follow-up analyses show that gains often fade once participation ends, and evidence of lasting improvements in employment or education remains limited. These concerns have prompted many on the political right to call for more rigorous evaluation before funding grows further.
Chicago Contrarian describes itself as a commentary platform focused on political, social, cultural, and law-and-order issues in the city. Launched in August 2019, it aims to provide “fresh and unfamiliar insight” along with contrarian viewpoints on Chicago affairs. The outlet positions its coverage as an alternative to what it characterizes as the prevailing progressive narrative in local media.









