| East St. Louis: One
City’s Story
“You don’t have to look far in East St. Louis to see
something profound has happened there.”
Andrew Theising, associate political science professor at Southern
Illinois University Edwardsville, was telling the story of East
St. Louis’ tumble into impoverishment to the audience at the
St. Louis Fed’s fall conference. (See main
story on conference.)
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| Parson’s
Place, with 174 townhomes, is in the Emerson Park neighborhood. |
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The city’s dilapidated landscape attests to his statement.
Although it’s hard to see the city the way it once flourished,
there are some indications, such as new housing and stores, that
East St. Louis could make a comeback. But first, what happened there?
At the turn of the century, East St. Louis was a thriving industrial
town built by the “great capitalists,” including Andrew
Carnegie and J.P. Morgan. The railroad played a major role in its
economic growth. Factories ran 24 hours a day. Jobs were plentiful.
The population not only grew, but doubled each decade through the
first half of the 1900s. In 1959, the National Civic League named
East St. Louis an All-America City, honoring its culture of civic
excellence and the cooperative spirit among residents, businesses,
nonprofits and government.
Ironically, by that time, East St. Louis was on the precipice of
disaster. Industries had already begun to abandon the city for greater
economic opportunities elsewhere. Between 1960 and 1970, the city
lost nearly 70 percent of its businesses. Unemployment soared. Residents
moved out of town. The population drain continued for years. Between
1970 and 2000, the city lost 55 percent of its population.
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| The
Jackie Joyner-Kersee Center provides recreational and educational
opportunities for youngsters from surrounding communities. |
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During all this time, inaction by an ineffective city government
compounded the problems, Theising said. East St. Louis slipped into
a downward spiral that has been tough to stop. As businesses left
and the local government struggled, the tax base shrunk. As the
tax base shrunk, the local government struggled more.
The city eventually had to eliminate all but basic city services,
and even those were cut. The city couldn’t pay its light bill
or pay for its garbage collection. Street lights and stoplights
were turned off, and abandoned lots became dumping grounds for trash.
Police and fire protection was spotty, at best. Buildings began
falling down. Crime and unemployment rose.
East St. Louis and devastation became synonymous.
Today, for most of the city’s residents, things haven’t
changed much. Poverty is a way of life. However, in the last few
years, organizations and investors have made headway in economic
and community redevelopment. Concurrently, the population in the
surrounding county has been growing dramatically, which Theising
sees as good for the city.
“East St. Louis has too great a concentration of poverty,”
he said. “We need to bring back a middle class.” As
more people move near to and become familiar with East St. Louis,
the more comfortable they will be with the city and what it has
to offer, Theising said. He also said the city plays an important
role in the revitalization of St. Louis, across the river.
The importance of creative partnerships in spearheading the growth
that has occurred in East St. Louis was emphasized by Mark Olson,
a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
He cited the work of the federal government’s Enterprise Community
program, which has spurred collaboration among local government
agencies and community organizations.
“The Enterprise Community has tapped federal, state and local
resources to expand community development groups, provide workforce
development programs and make infrastructure improvements,”
he said.
Both existing businesses and new enterprises in East St. Louis have
benefited from private-sector investments that were cultivated by
the program, he said. One of the many outcomes was the construction
of a new building for the city’s oldest bank, Union Bank of
Illinois (now First Bank).
Other partners that are committed to improving East St. Louis include
the Casino Queen Foundation, which provided partial funding for
Kim’s Kids, a 24-hour day-care facility; the Jackie-Joyner
Kersee Center, which provides educational and recreational programs
for children; and the Metro East Lenders Group, a group of banks
working together on economic development in East St. Louis and in
nearby distressed cities.
One of the city’s most effective partnerships is with the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, which sponsors the East
St. Louis Action Research Project (ESLARP). The project’s
goal is to nurture partnerships between community groups in the
city and the students and faculty at the university.
Ken Reardon, former director of the project and currently an associate
professor at Cornell University, is credited with establishing ESLARP,
a revamped version of an earlier university program.
Reardon, who spoke at the Fed conference, echoed what others had
to say: Look to the leaders in the community. Those leaders, for
Reardon, turned out to be long-time resident Ceola Davis and a group
of her friends who were members of the Emerson Park Development
Corp., a neighborhood organization.
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| Kim’s
Kids, a 24-hour child-care center, opened in 1992 at 1000 Gaty
Ave. and expanded to two buildings in 1997. |
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“These were eight African-American women pledging to each
other that they would show up for work every day to begin building
a citizens’ movement in East St. Louis that could transform
a very old and a very difficult political system,” he said.
The group sought help from the university and also was instrumental
in organizing a coalition of black churches to assist them. Through
the years, they were able to develop partnerships among local community-based
organizations, public agencies and university students and faculty.
Early on, it was evident to Reardon that Davis and her friends had
dealt with the university before and that they weren’t in
the market for another university study. At their first meeting
with him in 1990, they outlined what it would take for them to work
with the university:
- Residents, not the university, would decide which issues to
tackle.
- Residents would be involved in every part of the planning and
development process.
- The university would actively participate in projects, not
just collect data for a study. (Davis showed Reardon 61 reports
that the University of Illinois had done on East St. Louis between
1956 and 1990 at a cost of $13 million to taxpayers. Not one had
resulted in a benefit to her neighborhood, she said.)
- The university would commit to a long-term partnership, a minimum
of five years—after a probation period of one year.
- The university would help create a community-controlled, nonprof-
it independent organization to provide technical assistance to
neighborhood groups. This would ensure support for the residents
if the university ever pulled out.
Together, the Emerson Park group and Reardon and his students came
up with an award-winning community development plan. There was one
problem. No one would fund it. In the end, 30 regional agencies
turned them down.
The lack of interest was no surprise to Davis, who convinced Reardon
that they should start community redevelopment on their own, with
a cleanup of one street in the Emerson Park neighborhood.
A large group of volunteers collected trash along the main street
through Emerson Park. Because there were no funds to have it hauled
away, they piled bags of trash in the middle of the street. A local
television station did a story on the volunteers’ plight,
and by the next week the Emerson Park Development Corp. received
a check for $15,000. It was the beginning of bigger and better things,
Reardon said.
Over the course of the next summer, they used the money to haul
away trash that volunteers cleared from hundreds of lots. They designed
a playground and got a local church to build it. They fixed up and
painted the outside of houses with paint the university donated.
The efforts of the neighborhood group and ESLARP drew the attention
of the Illinois state treasurer, who worked out a plan for them
to receive $75,000 in state funding. They used it to buy materials
for more serious rehabs of houses. Habitat for Humanity workers
offered their help and started a faith-based initiative in East
St. Louis to construct new houses.
Eventually, ESLARP set up the Neighborhood Technical Assistance
Center, which offers training in community organization, neighborhood
planning, building and urban design, grant writing, digital technology
and nonprofit management.
From a weekend cleanup project in Emerson Park back in the early
1990s to ongoing multiple projects in various neighborhoods, ESLARP
today is a model for an enduring university-community partnership.
Its goal is to have a strong presence during its initial involvement
in neighborhood organizations and a diminishing role as the organization
becomes stronger.
The Emerson Park Development Corp. has evolved into a well-run neighborhood
organization capable of bringing about major changes. An impressive
example is the MetroLink (light-rail system) stop in Emerson Park,
Reardon said. Original plans for the extension of the light-rail
line called for trains to bypass the neighborhood. Undeterred by
the fact that the plans were already drawn, the development corporation
persuaded the powers-that-be to reroute the trains and put a stop
in Emerson Park. Since then, the corporation has partnered with
McCormack Baron & Associates to build affordable housing near
the stop.
“Everyone had written off this city,” Reardon said.
“But it just took one dedicated woman to start bringing people
together to do the impossible.
“If we can create this kind of long-term, sustainable partnership
for real development here in East St. Louis, what can we accomplish
in the rest of the region? We can do whatever we set our minds to.”
Progress in East St. Louis
Among a number of developments in recent years are:
Parson’s Place
This complex of 174 townhomes for rent is located in East St. Louis’
Emerson Park neighborhood. Adjacent to a MetroLink station and just
blocks from the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Center, it is the first phase
of more than 400 units of affordable rental and 100 units of for-sale
housing. The Emerson Park Development Corp. and McCormack Baron
& Associates are partners on the development.
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| The
5th & Missouri MetroLink station is also a hub
for buses and has a parking lot for commuters. |
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| The
State Street Shopping Center is at the core of a
revitalized shopping district. |
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| East
St. Louis has a new public library at 5320 State
St. |
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East St. Louis Community College Center
Scheduled for completion in the fall of 2003, it will be shared
by East St. Louis Community College, Southern Illinois University
and the Illinois Department of Employment Security. Located at 601
James Thompson Blvd., it also will be a one-stop service center
for Illinois’ Workforce Advantage program.
5th & Missouri MetroLink Stop
Construction on the initial MetroLink route from Lambert-St. Louis
International Airport to the 5th & Missouri station began in
1990 and was completed in July 1993. The construction of the St.
Clair County extension from 5th & Missouri to College Station
began in 1998 and opened in May 2001.
Jackie Joyner-Kersee Center
Opened in 2000, the 41,000-square-foot youth center is named for
the Olympic star and native of East St. Louis. The facility provides
computer rooms, learning resource centers, a music room and athletic activities.
State Street Shopping Center
This $3 million development at 24th and State streets is anchored
by Walgreen’s and Blockbuster Video stores. The shopping area
opened in 1999 directly across the street from a Schnucks supermarket,
making this area the city’s commercial center. Work recently
began on an addition, which will include a McDonald’s restaurant
and a Foot Locker shoe store. AutoZone, an auto-parts retailer,
is slated to open next to Schnucks.
East St. Louis Public Library
The 18,000-square-foot facility opened in January 2001 at 5320 State
St. The library provides the community with regional and global
information resources through the Internet and through the online
services of the Lewis and Clark Library System.
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