Trust within the Chicago Sky organization is rapidly unraveling as internal ownership tensions spill into the public arena. What initially appeared to be a private dispute among stakeholders has now drawn the attention of city leaders, who are openly questioning the team’s management practices and decision-making. The situation has exposed deeper concerns about transparency and leadership at the franchise level.
The spotlight intensified in early February when officials in Bedford Park criticized Sky owner Michael Alter over rising expenses and poor communication linked to the team’s new practice facility. This public rebuke came shortly after minority investor Steven Rogers filed a lawsuit accusing Alter of breaching fiduciary duties through financial decisions that allegedly weakened minority ownership stakes. Although Rogers is the sole plaintiff named, the claims involve actions that affect several minority investors, fueling broader unease about how the franchise is being run.
Alter has rejected the accusations, insisting the lawsuit lacks merit. However, the timing has compounded scrutiny from both investors and local officials, turning what might have been separate issues into a single, widening credibility challenge. The overlap between legal action and public funding concerns has shifted the ownership structure from a private matter into a highly visible test of trust and accountability for the organization.
At the municipal level, frustration has centered on escalating costs tied to the new practice facility. The project’s guaranteed maximum price rose from an initial $43.2 million to roughly $45.7 million, prompting debate over how additional expenses should be divided. While the Sky proposed a shared cost arrangement, trustees grew wary after reviewing contract language suggesting the Village could face repayment obligations beyond its original commitments. Officials also pointed to unclear and inconsistent explanations about which costs belonged to the team versus the municipality, further eroding confidence.
Despite these concerns, Bedford Park approved the project’s pricing in late January, allowing financing to move forward. Still, questions linger about long-term responsibilities, benefits, and oversight, especially as the Village is set to own the facility while the franchise receives significant operational advantages. With an investor lawsuit advancing in court and city officials continuing their review of project documents, the Sky’s leadership now faces pressure on multiple fronts. How the organization navigates this moment may ultimately determine whether it can restore trust—or see it diminish further at a critical junct










