Several minority-owned contractors and subcontractors involved in building the $850 million Obama Presidential Center say years of cost overruns, payment disputes, and construction challenges have left their businesses on the brink of collapse as the project prepares to open in Chicago.
The controversy has intensified in recent weeks as contractors claim they are still owed millions of dollars for work performed on the center, despite the project nearing completion. Some firms allege the financial strain has forced layoffs, threatened their ability to stay in business, and left them battling mounting debt.
Contractors Claim Millions Remain Unpaid
According to reports, multiple subcontractors have accused project participants of failing to resolve outstanding invoices and change-order disputes. One contractor told Fox News Digital his company is still owed nearly $4 million, while other firms reportedly claim losses ranging from hundreds of thousands of dollars to several million dollars.
The Obama Presidential Center was originally projected to cost roughly $300 million but has seen its budget swell to approximately $850 million after years of delays, redesigns, litigation, and construction complications.
Contractors argue that the project’s escalating costs and management disputes disproportionately affected smaller firms that lacked the financial reserves of larger national construction companies.
Lawsuit Alleges Minority Contractor Was Driven Toward Bankruptcy
The financial disputes follow a separate lawsuit filed earlier by Chicago-based subcontractor II in One, a Black-owned construction firm that worked on concrete and rebar installation at the project.
The company sued engineering firm Thornton Tomasetti for $40 million, alleging discriminatory treatment and claiming it was subjected to unusually stringent inspection requirements and costly rework that generated massive losses. The lawsuit states the company was pushed toward possible bankruptcy as a result.
Thornton Tomasetti has denied wrongdoing, arguing that construction problems stemmed from subcontractor performance issues rather than discrimination. The firm contends delays and additional costs were caused by workmanship and experience deficiencies among certain contractors.
Diversity Goals Were Central To Project
The Obama Presidential Center was widely promoted as a model for minority participation in major construction projects.
The construction team included the Lakeside Alliance, a partnership between Turner Construction and several Black-owned Chicago firms. Earlier project materials highlighted that minority-owned companies would hold a majority stake in the construction partnership, an arrangement viewed as groundbreaking in an industry where minority firms are often limited to subcontracting roles.
Supporters argued the project would create economic opportunities for minority contractors and workers while bringing long-term investment to Chicago’s South Side.
Questions Grow As Center Nears Opening
The latest payment disputes have drawn renewed attention because they are emerging just days before the center’s scheduled opening. Reports have also raised questions about the financial protections available to contractors if disputes remain unresolved.
The Obama Foundation has continued to describe the center as a transformational investment for Chicago and has defended the project’s overall impact on the surrounding community. Foundation officials have said the center is expected to generate substantial economic activity and serve as a major civic and cultural institution on the South Side.
For some contractors, however, the opening comes amid ongoing legal battles and financial uncertainty. What was promoted as a landmark opportunity for minority-owned businesses has instead become, they say, a fight for survival.
READ NEXT: Fox News Star Tears Apart Trump’s Iran Deal

















