Reform or revolution - whatever works.
Judd, Dennis R.
The general outlines of St. Louis's political culture are easy
to describe. On the one hand, it is saddled by an unreformed, fragmented
machine-style governmental structure that seems explicitly designed to
dissipate political energies. On the other, it has long had a
southern-style civic leadership centered in a downtown corporate elite.
To have any realistic chance to revitalize its downtown, the power
structure of St. Louis must undergo two seemingly opposite changes.
Somehow a strong public leadership must emerge out of the many
contending governmental fiefdoms, but at the same time civic leadership
must open up to allow many new groups and voices to gather at the
political table.
The idea that fundamental reforms may bring an end to fragmented
governments is about deed. Too many politicians benefit from the ward
system in St. Louis to allow it to be changed. Even more modest reforms
that might replace the weak mayor form and the Board of Apportionment and Estimate have been suggested, and they've gone nowhere. A few
years ago a Board of Electors recommended a consolidation of governments
in St. Louis County, but that foundered, just as had all previous
attempts at metropolitan reform in the St. Louis area.
Nevertheless, political change is in the wind in St. Louis and in
the region. It is likely to be more evolutionary than revolutionary, but
if it happens, it will come through such citizen-based organizations as
FOCUS St. Louis and Metropolis St. Louis. Both are positioned to help
change politics in St. Louis, though gradually and modestly.
FOCUS, with more than 1,200 members, came into being as the result
of a merger in 1996 between Confluence St. Louis and the Leadership
Center of Greater St. Louis. Confluence was officially organized in
1983, though its roots go back somewhat farther. In 1974 the Danforth
Foundation commissioned studies to assess the feasibility of starting a
regional citizens' organization. The idea kept percolating until it
bubbled up again in the early 1980s, when the RCGA asked researchers at
the University of Missouri-St. Louis and Saint Louis University to make
proposals about how to facilitate regional decision-making. When Civic
Progress, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the St. Louis Globe-Democrat weighed in favorably and the Danforth Foundation followed with funding,
Confluence was born.
From the beginning, Confluence was infused with a classic reform
ideology, with the purpose of engaging with governmental and civic
leaders and improving public policy. Gradual improvement, not protest,
was the order of the day. Virtually all of the original 100 members were
political or community activists, or people who dabbled in politics from
time to time. Throughout its history Confluence fit a distinctly
upper-middle class profile. Among the 16 projects it undertook from the
mid-1980s to mid-1990s are such policy issues as solid-waste disposal,
health care for the indigent, the distribution of sales tax among
municipalities, local governmental structure, racial polarization,
low-income housing and youth crime. To implement its preferred policies,
Confluence sometimes recommended new legislation, but just as often it
worked with established leadership structures, including Civic Progress,
to obtain political and financial backing for particular initiatives.
Leadership St. Louis was an important Danforth-sponsored initiative
that preceded Confluence and, in fact, ultimately provided much of
Confluence's initial membership. It is said that Leadership St.
Louis began as a result of a visit to Atlanta in 1975 by RCGA's
first executive director, Harry Morley (now of Taylor-Morley Homes). At
the time Atlanta had a leadership training program that helped establish
lines of communication across racial lines in that divided city. At the
urging of some civic leaders, in 1976 the Danforth Foundation founded
and initially ran Leadership St. Louis, although Leadership became a 501
(c)(3) organization by the mid-1980s, Danforth continued to pick up the
tab into the 1990s, when it gradually fazed out its support. About five
years ago Leadership became self-supporting, in part by charging a
$2,500 tuition.
Leadership St. Louis sponsors a nine-month program that (in the
words of a FOCUS pamphlet), "includes opportunities to enhance
self-awareness of leadership approaches and on-site visits and
interactions with decision makers to inspire participants to address
community challenges." The list of more than 1,300 graduates reads
like a Who's Who of political and community activists and opinion
leaders in the St. Louis region, though top corporate leaders, who
presumably need no leadership training, are not much represented. Some
of the more notable graduates include Karen Fuss, Debra Patterson (who
runs the Monsanto Fund), Dee Joyner, Denny Coleman, St. Louis Police
Chief Ronald Henderson and Mayor Clarence Harmon.
Leadership St. Louis was always an elite organization. It recruited
people who already held leadership positions in the region. It was hoped
that its seminars would foster friendships and informal networking among
its graduates. In this way, governmental fragmentation and
interjurisdictional rivalries might be partially overcome. According to a Leadership graduate, the program indeed works as intended: "When
I get a request from someone in my class, I don't say no."
When FOCUS was created in 1996, it was able to hire a program
manager and two support staff, but that has quickly grown to nine
full-time professionals, six consultants and a couple of support staff
with a revolving group of interns. FOCUS appears to have gained
legitimacy with the St. Louis establishment, Since Danforth funding
ended in 1995, it has been successful in obtaining support from a
variety of corporations, foundations and other organizations.
Two years ago FOCUS was invited by Mayor Harmon to study and make
recommendations for a reorganization of the city's development
agencies. The Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District has invited FOCUS to
study its recent proposals for administrative reform. Do these kinds of
activities mean that FOCUS is being co-opted by the powers that be? Not
according to staff members. They stress that FOCUS is process-oriented;
that what they are trying to do is to institutionalize citizen
engagement in public issues. As evidence they cite their work in
organizing the citizen forums connected to the Downtown Now Plan. FOCUS
also organized and ran the community outreach activities for 2004.
There is a tension in FOCUS's self-definition that cannot be
easily resolved, however. As its work on the reorganization of St.
Louis's development agencies demonstrates, when it is called upon
to "study" policy issues, it also must inevitably offer
advice. To be invited back, it must respect political understandings and
established ways of doing things. But it must also take sides, as it did
when it recommended that the city's development agencies be
reorganized so that more money could be freed from control by individual
aldermen.
What can reasonably be expected of an organization like FOCUS? It
will presumably help bring about and introduce efficiencies into some
bureaucratic agencies like the Metropolitan Sewer District. It will be
able to organize citizen involvement in major undertakings without
appearing to have its own axe to grind. It may, to some degree and on
some issues, help to cut through some political rivalries and
antagonisms.
But the St. Louis region also needs more fundamental reforms. Since
Percy Green ceased being an activist sometime in the 1980s, St. Louis
has lacked the kind of rebellious spirit that Thomas Jefferson thought
to be important as a constant source of renewal in the Republic.
Credible anti-establishment organizations are missing from the St.
Louis political scene. The only plausible candidate for that role is
Metropolis, but it does not represent or articulate a coherent agenda,
nor is it likely to in the future. Having said that, it nevertheless may
become a catalyst for gradually opening up St. Louis's politics.
Failing that, at least the young people in Metropolis will have some fun
to show for it.
Metropolis began life as an e-mail listserve, a "virtual"
organization (so '90s!), but before long people started to meet and
talk about issues. From there Metropolis evolved into a social
organization for 20-somethings, many of them students, who wanted to
live in a city with a vibrant downtown culture. A person close to the
organization described its members as having no mortgages or children;
it is therefore understandable that it is more oriented to social
activities than to politics, sponsoring pub walks and informal
gatherings. These still go on, especially on Friday and Saturday nights
in the Washington Avenue area. Metropolis members organized the event
last year in which the last Seinfeld episode was projected onto the side
of a downtown building.
Once again, the Danforth Foundation has played a pivotal role.
Metropolis ceased being a virtual organization about two years ago when
Danforth offered funds for leadership training to members of the group.
Metropolis now has one part-time staff position, basically to administer
the Danforth grant. It is almost completely decentralized; anyone who
has an idea can start to run with it with virtually no overview, as long
as they can get some other members interested. The issues, however, are
confined to downtown revitalization. Metropolis may end playing a
meaningful role in the cause for downtown through their input into the
Downtown Now! plan, and simply because its members constitute a main
constituency for loft living.
Some people may view Metropolis as an anti-establishment group. But
it isn't nearly well enough organized for that. Even if it were,
its young people are likely to be more interested in making contacts
that can be used to grease the path to professional advancement than in
making waves. If it begins to build an organization structure in the
next few years, a struggle may well break out over Metropolis's
future. With FOCUS occupying the regional reform niche, it is likely
that Metropolis will remain focused on the downtown.
I mean no criticism with the observation that FOCUS and Metropolis
are not exactly pushing the envelope for fundamental reform, which would
involve such causes as governmental reorganization in the city and the
region.
Neither are these groups trying to unseat or even to modify the
power held by Civic Progress and the civic leadership. Still, St. Louis
needs reform; the region needs to build a culture of cooperation, and
it's all to the good that citizen-based organizations have evolved
to push these agendas.
Dennis Judd is professor of political science at University of
Missouri St. Louis.