Mike Owen, president and owner of Adamson Plumbing, said his company is owed nearly $4 million for work on the center. “That is a hole that no subcontractor, small business can survive,” Owen told Fox News Digital. He attributed the losses to repeated design changes, rework, and more than 100 change-order requests during the project. Owen said the losses have drained his company’s reserves, created uncertainty for employees, and could force layoffs. He described a chaotic work environment that stretched years longer than anticipated, and he noted the emotional toll: “I haven't had eight hours or six hours sleep in over a year. I'm cooked emotionally.” Owen said his company was forced to redo portions of the stormwater system at a cost of nearly $900,000, even after Chicago’s chief plumbing inspector later confirmed that the original method complied with city code.
The Obama Foundation told Fox News Digital that it paid Lakeside Alliance as the project’s construction manager and has no contractual relationship with subcontractors. The foundation said it has no outstanding disputed charges with Lakeside Alliance. Lakeside Alliance acknowledged that projects of this scale are inherently complex and that outstanding project matters often continue after construction. The alliance stated that approximately 475 contractors worked on the project and that it remains committed to working through outstanding matters. Neither party directly disputed that some subcontractors incurred losses. Construction management literature notes that proper risk allocation and clear claim resolution strategies are essential to avoid such disputes [2][2].
Omar Shareef, president of the African American Contractors Association, told Fox News Digital that multiple minority-owned firms face significant losses. One minority-owned subcontractor owner, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to nondisclosure agreements, claimed $2.5 million in losses over a five-year project timeline. Shareef said some firms risk losing bonding capacity and facing bankruptcy. “The promise was that this project was going to uplift minority contractors and uplift the community,” Shareef said. “What sense is celebrating Juneteenth if our Black contractors are not getting their money?” The largest known dispute involves II in One Concrete, a Black-owned firm that claimed over $40 million in additional costs, later entangled in a racial discrimination lawsuit. At least two minority-owned subcontractors that worked on the project later sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, according to court records reviewed by Fox News Digital.
The center’s opening celebration, featuring performers such as Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Wonder, and John Legend, coincides with unresolved payment disputes that have lasted years. Owen expressed pride in the finished structure despite the financial strain. “We are still proud to have been part of this job. We just wish it would have gone a different way financially,” he said. The project’s total construction costs have been reported at $830 million and may have exceeded $1 billion [3]. The Obama Foundation secured the site through a 99-year lease with Chicago for a one-time fee of $10. As the center opens to the public, the financial fallout for some of the firms that built it remains unresolved.