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- <text id=89TT1539>
- <title>
- June 12, 1989: American Scene
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 12, 1989 Massacre In Beijing
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- AMERICAN SCENE, Page 10
- East St. Louis, Illinois
- A City Without Bootstraps
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In this place, the hottest ticket is a ticket to somewhere else
- </p>
- <p>By Lee Griggs
- </p>
- <p> In the seamy Mississippi River city of East St. Louis,
- Ill., the grim local joke is that the crime rate is finally
- starting to level off because there's not much left to steal.
- Block after city block is boarded up or burned out. Many
- buildings have been reduced to rubble as thieves cart away
- everything of value: bricks, aluminum siding, copper wire, even
- heavy cast-iron manhole covers from the potholed streets to be
- sold for scrap. The housing authority complains that aluminum
- downspouts are swiped from its buildings within hours of
- installation. Trash-strewn vacant lots along the river stand in
- stark contrast to the gleaming Gateway Arch of St. Louis, in
- plain sight less than a mile away across the river.
- </p>
- <p> Time was when East St. Louis enjoyed a modicum of
- blue-collar prosperity. In the '40s and early '50s it ranked
- second only to Chicago as a national rail and stockyard center.
- But almost all its industry has left, driven out by high crime
- rates and property taxes. Thousands of jobs have gone with the
- factories, leaving the city a pocket of nearly hopeless poverty
- in the generally economically well-off St. Louis metropolitan
- area, and quite possibly the worst-off urban center in America.
- </p>
- <p> The biggest employer left is the local school district,
- which pays no taxes, is $11 million in debt and plans to lay off
- a quarter of its teachers for the next academic year. The tax
- base has eroded from $175 million in 1965 to less than $50
- million. Property values are so low that the town's tallest
- structure, the vacant twelve-story Spivey Building, was sold for
- $25,000. The number of retail businesses is less than 200 and
- steadily declining. The population, once 80,000, has shrunk to
- 55,000, 97% black and two-thirds on welfare.
- </p>
- <p> There has not been a municipal audit since 1985, but
- estimates of current debt run as high as $40 million. The city's
- mercurial third-term mayor, Carl Officer, 37, has gone so far
- as to propose selling city hall and six fire stations to raise
- cash, assuming anybody would buy them. City employees routinely
- get paid a month or more late.
- </p>
- <p> The police force of 70 officers is at half the authorized
- strength because of layoffs. Its newest patrol car is nearly
- five years old. Many cars no longer have functioning two-way
- radios for lack of repair funds, and some cops have had to buy
- their own. There is no money to hire recruits, and the average
- age of the force is up to a doddering 46 1/2 years. "We just
- don't have the money and the personnel to keep the peace," sighs
- Inspector Lawrence Brewer, a veteran of nearly 22 years in the
- department. "There are guys literally jumping on our car hoods
- to sell us crack, but there's no money to pay informants or make
- buys. We have the highest homicide rate in the state, and people
- come across from Missouri to buy crack and dump bodies here. The
- bad guys know we can't handle it all."
- </p>
- <p> The financial stress worsened dramatically in April last
- year when city assets were temporarily frozen after East St.
- Louis failed to begin payment on a $3.4 million judgment arising
- from the beating of one local jail inmate by another in 1984.
- The city is now beset with dozens of lawsuits. Firemen have sued
- successfully to collect three years of back uniform allowances,
- only to be told that the award left no money in the till to pay
- their salaries. A bill making its way through the state
- legislature will erase the deficit in the current budget and
- finally put an end to payless paydays for city employees, at
- least for the time being.
- </p>
- <p> Until then, toilet paper will remain a rarity in city hall
- rest rooms. The city cannot even afford new bulbs for its
- traffic lights. Parking meters work, but nobody feeds them
- because there is no money to hire meter maids. Garbage
- collection stopped for several months after the city fell
- $262,000 behind in payments to its trash contractor, and remains
- sporadic at best. Residents routinely dump garbage in vacant
- lots or abandoned buildings. As fast as buildings are boarded
- up to stop looting and dumping, thieves steal the plywood. Bob's
- Board-Up Service in St. Louis no longer accepts jobs in East St.
- Louis because customers there don't pay their bills.
- </p>
- <p> Last December a task force appointed by Illinois Governor
- James Thompson declared a financial emergency in East St. Louis
- and noted, in understatement, "There is growing public concern
- over the city's ability to provide basic municipal services
- required to ensure public safety and the welfare of its
- citizenry." Protested Mayor Officer: "I do all I can with the
- revenue I have." The task force offered a loan but conditioned
- it on Officer's accepting a state-approved financial director
- with total control over city spending. So far Officer has not
- agreed to that condition, and the municipal crisis deepens.
- </p>
- <p> Antiquated city pumps break down all too regularly, backing
- up raw sewage into East St. Louis High School and forcing the
- cancellation of classes. At the Villa Griffin public housing
- project, a persistent pool of sewage on a playground, dubbed
- Lake Villa Griffin by angry residents, led to the filing of
- criminal charges against the city to force sewer repairs. When
- Mayor Officer failed to appear at a hearing on the matter, a
- county judge clapped him into jail briefly for contempt.
- </p>
- <p> State police, moved in to supplement the understaffed local
- force, are concentrating on drug arrests and housing-project
- security. Selling crack has become the city's biggest business,
- and is so widespread that peddlers sometimes flag down motorists
- on nearby I-70 to hawk crack packets at $20 a pop. Traffic
- backups on city streets often turn out to be buyers lined up at
- drive-through crack houses.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the crack trade is conducted in the housing
- projects, which have been run by a private firm since 1986, when
- the corrupt local authority was ousted by the U.S. Department
- of Health and Human Services. "Living here is hell," says Villa
- Griffin resident Rosie Kimble, 44. "I'm scared to go out to
- church at night for fear someone will break in while I'm gone.
- It's already happened once. With all the dopeheads around here,
- there's shooting almost every night. You walk out the door,
- they're liable to shoot you dead."
- </p>
- <p> It wasn't always that bad in East St. Louis. Katherine
- Dunham, a grande dame of the dance, was able to operate a studio
- in the city in the late 1960s. Heptathlon gold medalist Jackie
- Joyner-Kersee recalls a happy childhood there and still returns
- occasionally from the West Coast to visit friends. But today
- the hottest ticket in East St. Louis is a ticket out of it. The
- two high schools produce perennial state champions in football
- and basketball, putting a few gifted athletes on the road to
- college, hoping for stardom in the N.F.L. or N.B.A. For other
- youngsters, there is profit in peddling crack but not much else.
- </p>
- <p> "There's nothing here for me," says Jeffrey Hickman, 18, a
- Villa Griffin resident. "Only dope, gangs and shooting every
- night. I'll stay and graduate from school, but there's no way
- I can make something of myself here. I got to go someplace else,
- anyplace. Maybe the Coast Guard."
- </p>
- <p> Over at city hall, Mayor Officer somehow manages to remain
- determinedly upbeat, citing an ambitious $437 million plan for
- developing the East St. Louis riverfront that would include a
- cargo port, recycling center and high-rise apartments
- overlooking the river and downtown St. Louis. But no work has
- been done on the project for three years, and the tax-exempt
- status of the bonds sold to finance it is under review by the
- Internal Revenue Service. "I'm still optimistic," Officer
- insists. "We'll haul ourselves up by our bootstraps." But
- attorney Rex Carr, a lifelong resident of the city, has a dimmer
- view. "East St. Louis today doesn't even have bootstraps," he
- says. "I see no way out."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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