For the sake of all.
Freivogel, William H.
Within the city limits of St. Louis there is a slice of Clayton
Road running between Forsyth Boulevard on the north and Clayton Road on
the south and from Forest Park on the east to Shaw Park on the west.
That's the 63105 zip code and it includes Washington
University and the county seat.
Now think about that part of St. Louis from St. Louis Avenue on the
north to Martin Luther King Drive on the south, and from Tucker
Boulevard on the east to Grand Boulevard on the west.
That is 63106, and it runs roughly from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
building to the location of the old Sportsman's Park, just south of
Fairground Park. It's the part of St. Louis where blacks had to
live in crowded conditions before and after World War II because
restrictive real estate covenants blocked them from moving west.
Only 10 miles separate these two St. Louis zip codes, but 18 years
of life expectancy divide them. People living in Clayton live almost two
decades longer than those on the near north side of St. Louis.
That shocking statistic was a signature finding of Jason Q.
Purnell's For the Sake of All report in the spring of 2014. The
report tied health disparities to social determinants such as education,
quality of neighborhoods and economic status.
The report, compiled by seven African-American scholars at
Washington University and Saint Louis University, was well-received by
community leaders and dubbed a "landmark" report by the press.
Three months later, after the death of Michael Brown, the report became
required reading for those trying to understand the events unfolding in
St. Louis. Purnell, a professor at the Brown School of Social Work, says
he and his colleagues had no inkling how timely their work would become.
Outside media came to Purnell for clues about what fueled the
Ferguson protest. St. Louisans looked to the report as a kind of roadmap
toward a better and fairer St. Louis.
Key among its recommendations were calls for health clinics in
public schools, universal child-development accounts, early childhood
education and inclusive and affordable housing. These recommendations
were central to the Ferguson Commission's calls for action. Over
the past two years, For the Sake of All's findings have been
presented at community action forums and meetings of stakeholders as
Purnell and others build support.
Purnell hopes to help set up two more school-based health clinics
to go with the ones already functioning at Roosevelt High School and
Jennings. He and Washington University's advocates of childhood
development accounts also are working to set up pilot programs in St.
Louis and St. Louis County as a step toward universal accounts
statewide.
A childhood development account is a small savings account usually
set up when a child is born, using state or private donations. The money
can later be used for college or other purposes. Maine, Maryland, Rhode
Island, Connecticut, Nevada and parts of Indiana have accounts, ranging
from $50 in Nevada to $500 in Maine.
Purnell says researchers have found "socially disadvantaged
kids who have these accounts have better social and emotional
function.... Their mothers had lower levels of depressive symptoms....
Parents and caregivers have not just higher educational expectations but
educational expectations that remain high." Some studies show
"children who have savings in their name are three to four times
more likely to go to college and graduate from college," he said.
Purnell grew up in St. Louis. His family moved from Northwoods to
Creve Coeur when he was little. He attended St. Louis University High
School, Harvard and then Ohio State. After scooping frozen custard at
Ted Drewes, where most ice cream scoopers were white, the manager asked
if he'd be coming back and was a bit surprised when Purnell told
him he's be working at Lewis, Rice, Fingersh, the downtown law
firm.
A trained psychologist and public health expert, Purnell is cool,
calm and outwardly dispassionate. But during a recent 90-minute
interview he built to a crescendo of passion, still expressed with a
slow, quiet cadence.
NEW CONVERSATIONS
Purnell says conversations and plans are under way that
wouldn't have happened had it not been for Brown's death.
"I don't think this conversation happens the same way without
Ferguson, and for some people it doesn't happen at all. Some people
were dragged into this conversation because of Ferguson.... But we have
to understand what we mean by Ferguson. It didn't start on Aug. 9.
You can pick your starting points, 1619, the beginning of the great
migration from the South, 1865, 1872."
Purnell says St. Louis needs the civic infrastructure for a
deliberative reform process. This is how he describes that process:
Collect the data and research evidence, identify best practices used in
other places, make recommendations, implement programs that use best
practices, evaluate and track the data that comes out of the reform
strategy and start all over again.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Part of what still holds back St. Louis is the disarray "baked
into the structural fragmentation of St. Louis, and frankly a national
reputation we have as a region that does not work well together. St.
Louis lacks some of the civic infrastructure for ... coordination and
collaboration. ... Everybody talks about collaboration and coordination,
but it's nobody's job to manage it....
"I understand that when you grow up in St. Louis this is the
way things happen and on the 7th day God created Maplewood. This crazy
patchwork of 97 municipalities, that's just the way things are
unless you know how they got that way.... In addition to dealing with
the civic infrastructure, we have to deal with our civic amnesia."
Still, Purnell looks at the school health clinics as a green shoot
of improved collaboration and coordination among St. Louis institutions.
"Where else have you seen the there major health system cooperating
on something?" he asks. He adds that "serious institutions are
taking a serious look at the Ferguson Commission report which was
influenced by the For the Sake of All Report."
ROLE OF RACE
"Why aren't you talking about racism?" a citizen
Purnell at one of the first community action forums.
Purnell told him he would find race on just about every page of the
report. But he added, "Just standing up and saying racism, is not a
solution or a strategy." St. Louis' problems are "shot
through with racism. But the question is: What do we do? And what we do
has to be couched in terms that speak to that family in Clayton and
Chesterfield and Webster Groves and Kirkwood and Ladue.
"If we had called this For the Sake of Black People, we
wouldn't be talking about it."
The question that must be answered for citizens, Purnell said, is
"Why does this matter for me?"
"If we can't both quantify and communicate the answer to
that question, we ought to pack up our stuff and go home because St.
Louis is not going to change fundamentally because it is good for black
people. But if you can tell me how helping a child in his or her family
thrive and live in health and safety" and how that "is going
to accrue to the benefit of my family and my life and the livability of
the region that many of us call home, then we are cooking with gas.
"Which is not to say you don't have conversations about
race. You do. But they have to be strategic conversations about race and
realistic conversations about race."
Purnell admires the new generation of civil rights leaders he has
watched develop out of Ferguson, such as Brittany Packnett, head of
Teach for America in St. Louis and a member of the Ferguson Commission
and the President's Task Force on 21st Century Policing. He praises
the Campaign Zero project on police use of force that Packnett put
together with other Ferguson activists, Johnetta Elzie and DeRay
Mckesson.
But he has reservations about the "real hesitance among some
of the younger leaders to even use the word leader ... as if leader is a
bad word.... At the end of the day you need leadership. Period.... If
people can't see a better future and you are not able to articulate
what that would like, you cannot sustain the movement. You cannot
sustain a movement on anger and frustration."
KING'S LEGACY
"Dr. (Martin Luther) King gets beat up by the younger
generation," Purnell added. "But we wouldn't be talking
about an 'I have a List of Complaints' speech 50 years later.
The clarity of the goal was crucial, integration of public
accommodations, the vote, those were clear goals. You knew what they
meant. And then he used this new fangled technology of TV to broadcast a
modern-day moral drama that people couldn't escape. It was coming
into their living rooms and there were only three or four stations you
could turn to."
The younger generation's use of social media has been
"quite masterful" he said, but "it is hard to have that
kind of discipline of message with so many outlets and so many ways
people get information."
There is no escaping the enormous impact that race and segregation
have on St. Louis' problems, he said. "The most difficult
challenge that we uncovered in this work and has slapped me in the face
over and over again is segregation.... If you asked me what is the one
thing we need to tackle it would be segregation."
Purnell adds, "I've begun saying that St. Louis is an
innovator in segregation" from the 1916 housing segregation law to
restrictive real estate covenants to slum clearance to the
discrimination against blacks in receipt of FHA loans.
"As an African-American man it makes my blood boil. So much of
the current conversation is why don't people just try harder, but
people have been trying hard for a century and at every turn they are
blocked and not blocked just by personal prejudices, structurally
blocked by law and politics. Richard Rothstein has a statistic ... in
his paper (on housing segregation) that there were thousands of FHA
loans and the number that went to African Americans was double digits
... These are people trying hard, they've been trying hard for
generations." Rothstein is a housing discrimination expert at the
Economic Policy Institute.
"They say baseball is the national pastime," add Purnell.
"Forgetting is the national pastime in the United States. There is
nothing more quintessentially American like forgetting. We have no sense
of the sweep of history and how current day outcomes are shaped by these
baked in disadvantages ... that you can't bootstrap your way out
of."
St. Louis not going to suddenly have new mixed income housing in
Clayton or Ladue, he said. But he says St. Louis "can we come up
with a more equitable way of developing at the regional level?"
"Minnesota distributes its tax revenue so that more
disadvantaged parts of that metro area get resources," Purnell
notes, adding, "The zoo here is not free. I've checked my
property tax bill. We pay for the zoo. But we've decided
that's a public good. What if equitable development were a regional
good. What if we decided it's not okay that there are parts of our
region where there is no grocery store or no affordable housing or no
safety from gun violence or no job? It wouldn't cost us that
much.... We're talking about dollars and cents of an assessment
into a general pool to make St. Louis a livable place. To make St. Louis
a place where we don't rank 42 out of 50 in economic mobility.
"Overall that is not sustainable. We are paying a price for
segregation ... and the bill is going to come due sooner than we
think."