| Kirkwood's Journey: A city united or divided? |
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| By William H. Freivogel and Jaclyn Brenning, Special to the Beacon | |
| Posted 2:11 pm Thu., 02.11.10 | |
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D uring the months after the Feb. 7, 2008, Kirkwood City Hall killings, several hundred residents gathered every couple of months to discuss how to achieve greater community understanding and healing. Memorial
Anthony Soufflé | For the Beacon Participants including Harriet Patton, president of the Meacham Park Neighborhood Improvement Association, and Bob Sears join hands during a memorial service Saturday evening at Douglas Memorial Church of God in Christ in Meacham Park. The event was organized to honor those who were killed in the shootings on Feb. 7, 2008 at Kirkwood City Hall. By the second meeting, nearly all of the news media had vanished. That left people, white and black, insiders and outsiders, to talk about their experiences with City Hall and each other. Much of the discussion turned to race, white privilege and the isolation of Meacham Park, the mostly African-American enclave on the edge of the leafy, mostly affluent suburb. Black residents told of being denied service into the 1960s at the popular Spencer's Grill lunch counter in downtown Kirkwood. Of being accused of cheating because a school paper was "too good." Of feeling sick to the stomach upon discovering that no African-American teacher was presented at a recent freshman orientation at Kirkwood High School. Of getting stopped frequently by a Kirkwood police force with no black supervisors and a handful of black officers. Many whites were surprised by the stories and unsettled by the idea of white privilege. One African-American man called 2/7 Kirkwood's 9/11, suggesting it was an eye-opening event that could lead to greater awareness of community problems. Now, two years later, the community meetings are over, although smaller conversations continue in book clubs, churches and dinner groups. The Beacon asked residents to reflect on race relations in Kirkwood, the soul-searching that followed the City Hall shootings and what was achieved by the discussions organized by the Community for Understanding and Healing (renamed the Community for Understanding and Hope.) The two-year anniversary of the shootings arrived as city officials were trying to explain and win support for a new mediation agreement drawn up under the auspices of the Justice Department’s Community Relations Service. This article is part of a series on Kirkwoodians' efforts to understand how race affects their city and what role it might have played in the City Hall shootings two years ago. Read more stories about Kirkwood's Journey. The series is part of the Beacon's Race, Frankly project. City officials praised the agreement at a packed meeting at City Hall on Wednesday, heralding it as a “new day.” But rather than inspiring harmony, the agreement has stirred up distrust in Meacham Park, where leaders see it as an attempt to sweep their complaints under the rug. City leaders still fail to acknowledge, they say, that the city has a race problem. Harriet Patton - the president of the Meacham Park Neighborhood Improvement Association and a prime mover behind the CFUH dialogues - left this week’s meeting unhappy that she and other citizens had not had a chance to voice their complaints. At the meeting, residents were limited to submitting written questions. She reiterated her rejection of the agreement.
Ask city officials now about race relations, and they uniformly answer that Kirkwood doesn't have a race problem today, nor did it on Feb. 7, 2008. That is when an angry, obsessed Meacham Park resident, Charles Lee "Cookie" Thornton, went on a shooting rampage at a City Council meeting that eventually left six dead, in addition to Thornton himself. Thornton was black; all of the victims were white. To Kirkwood officials and to many residents, the question about race is ill-timed, loaded or entirely the wrong one to ask. During the community discussions, several white residents complained that City Hall hadn't listened to them any more than to the black residents of Meacham Park. Other Kirkwood residents thought that simply asking the race question lent legitimacy to the man they perceive as a mass murderer. Many of these residents also think the question falsely presumes that Kirkwood has a racial problem. Police Chief Jack Plummer doesn't think that the time after the City Hall murders was the right time to talk about race. Two police officers -- both white -- were among those Thornton killed. "It was the wrong time for us" in the police department, Plummer said. "That is a very difficult issue for people to deal with ... particularly after the incidents in town. ... You have to let the dust settle." Mayor Art McDonnell, the chatty, affable grocer who was elected in the wake of the shootings, immediately took steps to open up City Council meetings and to reach out to Meacham Park residents. McDonnell now starts council meetings like a talk show host, walking among the rows of residents with a portable microphone, interviewing longtime Kirkwoodians and Scouts working to earn citizenship badges. McDonnell's folksy manner lowers tensions in the room. Last fall, the mayor told the Beacon he wished that the U.S. Justice Department's Community Relations Service hadn't come to Kirkwood after the City Hall shootings to conduct a racial mediation. The city doesn't have a racial problem and didn't have one when the killings occurred, he said. Last month, when the city officials signed the Justice Department mediation agreement to address the "residual effects of desegregation and past discriminatory practices," McDonnell characterized the mediation in glowing terms. The city officials approved the mediation agreement over one dissenting vote, that of Council member Joe Godi. Godi, who is white, said, "A racial problem is what they want in Meacham Park" and the mediation agreement will only exacerbate any racial tensions that exist. Godi said he was "no follower" of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. but thought King's words about being judged by the content of one's character, not the color of one's skin, should apply to choosing people for Kirkwood's boards. Patton, a long-time Meacham Park leader says it is "Kirkwood's unwillingness to acknowledge that there is a problem, that is a difficult problem." She says she resigned from the Justice Department mediation effort because city officials would not face that reality. Those who believe a serious racial problem persists point to these facts:
The Justice Department’s Community Relations Service brought together a team of city officials and a team of community representatives to resolve “perceived racial issues in the community.” The Justice Department representatives collected more than 100 complaints from Meacham Park residents at an April, 2008 meeting. Residents took away the impression they would hear back on the complaints within six months. But the mediation process dragged on much longer, and Meacham Park leaders say none of their complaints has been investigated. Those on the mediation teams explained Wednesday night that instead of investigating individual complaints, they had looked for the “systemic” problems the complaints illustrated. One was the weak Human Relations Commission, which the agreement promises to bolster by better training members and by investing $60,000 in a computerized system that will receive citizen complaints 24 hours a day. Another key problem identified by residents was the police department, which promised in the agreement to reach out to the young people of Meacham Park through a variety of new and continuing programs, many operated in conjunction with churches. But the mediation agreement does not address some key concerns. It does not discuss the Kirkwood schools, which were not involved in the process. Nor does it commit the city to increase the number of African-American police officers or supervisors in City Hall. The reformed Human Relations Commission has no power to investigate the complaints it gets or to mediate solutions. And the new satellite police office to be established in Meacham Park will not be staffed. The mediation agreement did not apply to the schools because the city does not control the school district. C.J. Larkin, a senior lecturer at Washington University Law School who assisted in the process, said she did not think the school district was asked separately to participate in a mediation process, although she added she wasn’t positive. The Justice Department in Washington would not comment on why the school district was not included. Antona Smith, a Meacham Park resident who helped lead the CFUH community discussion groups, is disapppointed. "The city may feel good saying they are going to do this, but I'm not sure they are going to do anything," she said. After reading about the agreement on the stltoday.com website, she was particularly depressed by some comments that readers posted to the story. Setting the tone was USA-GreatestCountryOnEarth who wrote, "What a joke. Another sensless (sic) piece of work to appease a group of people who are basically children refusing to take responsibility and help themselves. Meachem (sic) park has always been and will always be a cesspool of crime." Some of those who feel most strongly about the persistence of a race problem in Kirkwood are white residents who have worked across color lines. Cecelia Stearman, the wife of the Rev. Scott Stearman at Kirkwood Baptist Church, has built the Community Gospel Choir into a successful, integrated group that recently performed for the second year in a row at the Martin Luther King Celebration at Powell Hall. Kirkwood Baptist Church is one of several Kirkwood churches which have reached out to Meacham Park, this year co-sponsoring an “old-fashioned Christmas” to help the needy. "The blacks and whites in the choir have embraced each other and we have come to love and appreciate each other so much," Cecelia Stearman wrote in an email. "We have become FRIENDS. It's such a SMALL piece, but I can tell you that I am thankful we have done it. We can see that relationships, really working at getting to know people and spending time with them, make a difference in how you see them, even if what you see means YOU have to change." But she added, "I'm really sorry to hear that the city officials, especially those who sat though those meetings, are saying 'Kirkwood doesn't have a race problem.' It shows that they haven't heard a thing or that they are just choosing to ignore what they've heard. Those I have come to love in the Community Gospel Choir have shared honestly, and it wasn't easy. "No racial issues here?" Franklin S. McCallie, principal of Kirkwood High School from 1979 until 2001, focused on race from the day he took over the school. Former Superintendent Tom Keating told McCallie that “solving the interracial problem” was his number one task. Mediation
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