Harmon vs. the political machine.
Judd, Dennis
The fragmentation of St. Louis's governmental structure is a
well-worn topic, and many of the city's problems can no doubt be
traced to the extreme refraction of political authority among an
excessive number of office-holders. A weak mayor, a three-member Board
of Estimate and Apportionment, a 28-member Board of Aldermen; these
aspects of St. Louis's charter make it easy to understand why
coherent decision-making is generally absent in the city's affairs.
More than any other single factor - perhaps even more than the political
isolation of St. Louis within its region - the absence of centralized political authority probably accounts for the city's poor record of
revitalization. Although he has often been called politically naive, a
little-known fact is that Mayor Clarence Harmon is on the brink of
changing the culture of institutional stalemate in St. Louis. If he is
successful, it will benefit St. Louis for many years to come.
In October, Mayor Harmon announced a plan to tear down the Arena
and redevelop the site as a 26-acre office park with one million square
feet of corporate office space. The attractiveness of this plan for the
city was not hard to fathom. Right off Highway 40 and across from Forest
Park, the site made it possible for the city to compete head-to-head
with suburbs for big companies looking for a campus setting adjacent to
a major freeway corridor. When the mayor said he had a developer in hand
ready to buy the land, he no doubt expected to be praised for his bold
leadership.
What Harmon got instead was a hostile reaction from
preservationists who called the Arena an architectural gem, from
citizen's groups saying that the Arena would be a splendid site for
an aquarium, and from the Board of Aldermen, who challenged his
authority to tear down the Arena without its consent. Indeed, when the
aldermen took the mayor to court, it was quickly established that,
indeed, the Arena could not be demolished without legislation
specifically authorizing it.
This circus has many acts yet to come. Though some have said the
mayor caused the Arena controversy because he didn't first seek
approval from the aldermen, his lack of political acumen in this case
would not likely have prevented the issue from being public and
divisive. There are too many fingers in the pie for it to have gone
smoothly. A major prospective tenant, Safeco Insurance Company, has
threatened to withdraw from considering the site unless a quick decision
is made to ready it for redevelopment. Under an agreement with the city
to allow it to expand in Forest Park, the St. Louis Art Museum has said
it will contribute $3 million to help develop the Arena site and to help
the city make its $50,000 monthly payments on the Arena. A
public/private Arena Advisory Board will soon give its assessment of the
developers' plan. The Downtown St. Louis Partnership has yet to
take a position, with some people believing that the office park could
lure some businesses out of the downtown area more than from the
suburbs. Preservationists and aquarium advocates are busy promoting
their view that the Arena should be saved, while parrying claims that
the Arena is not only an eyesore, but that its renovation is impractical
(it is now basically an empty shell).
Meanwhile, Mike Jones, who in the middle of it all resigned as the
mayor's chief of staff to accept the new post of Deputy Mayor of
Development, has said that if the site isn't developed within a
reasonable period (which he says is five years), "the last one out
of the city needs to turn off the lights." The Arena controversy is
one of the more entertaining shows to make the media tour of St. Louis.
A bad rap
It has often been said that Clarence Harmon has never made the
transition from the bureaucratic demands of being a police chief to the
political give-and-take of the mayor's office. He has regularly
taken public positions and announced major initiatives without doing the
necessary mending of fences, and as a result he has often had to beat
very public retreats. If the Arena case were just another instance of
this habit, it would hardly be noteworthy, though it would still be
somewhat entertaining.
The Arena controversy does not show weak mayoral leadership,
however, so much as it unmasks the nearly fatal institutional
limitations placed upon any mayor in St. Louis.
And while Mayor Harmon has been taking his public losses, he has
kept a quiet, single-minded focus upon something of enormous consequence
for St. Louis's future - he has been quietly reforming the
political fragmentation that leads to fiascoes such as the fight over
the Arena.
In light of the circumstances that constrain him, the mayor was
right to aggressively pursue a development project with the potential
that the Arena site offers. What are these circumstances? The city, in
fact, has no capacity to plan or assess individual economic development
projects. In many other cities the development of the Arena site would
have emerged on the public agenda much earlier, and within a context of
an overall plan for economic development. A mayor would have been able
to tap into the resources of a development or planning agency for
information and recommendations. With some alternative ideas in hand,
the mayor could then try to marry public resources with private capital,
with some professional and administrative capacity as a backup. Any
aggressive mayor would approach the legislative branch only after the
ducks were in a row - that is, with a specific, detailed proposal in
hand. Opposition would still arise in many cases, but the debate would
be conducted at a higher level, with everyone forced to bring concrete
proposals to the table.
In St. Louis such a leadership style would be scarcely possible.
The city does not have nor could it now produce a city plan or a
comprehensive economic development strategy. Without reference to larger
objectives, deal-making ends up being both political and passive.
Political because there are few standards for deciding whether a deal is
a good one or not. Passive, because the city must wait for developers to
make the first move.
St. Louis's institutional structure seems specifically
designed to emasculate mayors and to politicize development efforts. Two
agencies, the St. Louis Development Corporation (SLDC) and the Community
Development Agency (CDA), are responsible for the city's economic
development policy. The SLDC is a non-profit corporation that was formed
in the early 1990s to coordinate several other agencies. The much older
agency, the CDA, was founded in 1974 to administer the Community
Development Block Grant funds made available through the block grant
legislation passed by Congress that year. Depending upon whom one talks
to, there is either a competitive and sometimes hostile relationship
between these agencies, or a quite rational though ambiguous division of
responsibilities. As the two agencies have evolved, the SLDC takes on
bigger projects and tries to formulate overall economic policy, while
the CDA administers CDBG funds. The bottom line is that the mayor's
authority to provide direction has been sharply circumscribed.
The CDA administers more than $34 million in HUD funds, but most of
this amount is already earmarked for various housing and social service
categories. Even more significantly from a planning perspective, most of
it is routed to the CDA through the Comptroller's office - and
before the agency can receive this money, it must indicate how the funds
will be allocated among the city's 28 aldermanic wards. In effect,
every alderman can raise questions about allocations even before the CDA
sees any federal money.
The CDA is responsible for funding the SLDC; the understanding is
that each year the SLDC will get about 10 percent as much as the CDA.
This might seem to be a straightforward relationship were it not for an
interesting fact - the Executive Director of the CDA actually reports to
the Executive Director of the SLDC!
According to a report issued last September by Focus St. Louis, one
"strength" of the present structure is "the ingenuity
demonstrated" by employees of the two agencies, who
"independently develop informal relationships with other city
government employees to address the myriad of complications that
occasionally confront citizens requiring services from the city of St.
Louis." In other words, because businesses, neighborhood groups and
ordinary citizens cannot possibly figure out who is in charge on many
questions, if they go to the wrong office, there are employees skilled
enough to know whom to call. Another way to think of it is that
administrators have learned how to act like machine politicians.
The CDA is preoccupied with administering CDBG housing programs, so
it cannot be expected to do much, if any, overall planning. In principle
there is nothing to prevent the SLDC from becoming a planning or
economic development agency; however, and indeed according to the Focus
St. Louis report, it has been trying to carry out a neighborhood
planning process "designed to provide opportunities for citizen
input into the establishment of citywide re-development priorities on a
neighborhood basis." in reality, this has meant that the aldermen
have been able to wield huge political authority over the distribution
of funds.
A little history
To understand the relative weakness of the mayor's office
versus the aldermen, some history is in order. Near the end of his
administration, Mayor Vince Schoemehl made an attempt to consolidate
development efforts in the city, which were then divided among at least
six agencies, the Land Redevelopment Authority, the Land Clearance and
Redevelopment Authority, the Port Authority, the Community Development
Agency, the Development Commission, and the Planned Industrial Expansion
Authority. Each of these agencies was run by its own boards and had its
own agendas. Schoemehl asked the aldermen to consolidate these agencies
into a single redevelopment authority, and instead of being a city
agency, it would be established as a public/private corporate with no
civil service employees.
When they caught wind of this plan, the civil servants went
ballistic. They complained to their aldermen, and Alderman Martie
Aboussie spearheaded the demise of the plan. What Schoemehl managed to
salvage was quite small. In 1990, the five agencies were brought
together into a single building, and the St. Louis Development
Corporation was established, though its funding was limited to a share
of the federal funds flowing through the Community Development Agency.
The CDA and SLDC were governed by an overlapping board, and though the
division of responsibilities was not always clear, the SLDC was given
responsibility for overall planning and economic development.
Schoemehl paid a high price for the little he got. In 1990, the
city took out a loan against future block-grant funds, and agreed to
divide the money ward-by-ward. In 1992, Schoemehl's administration
launched Operation Conserv, designed to link the CDA to the
neighborhoods via a cooperative planning process. This program did
accomplish useful planning in the neighborhoods, but after Freeman
Bosley became mayor in the spring of 1993, the program was relabeled the
Neighborhood Stabilization Project and, critically, the funds became
allocated to wards rather than neighborhoods. In addition to controlling
the distribution of a big share of CDBG funds, the aldermen also got
direct access to staff support in the CDA for projects in their wards.
Aldermanic control over federal funds became even more institutionalized when Bosley sought a 3/8-cent sales and a 1.2-cent capital improvements
tax. Schoemehl had tried but failed to get tax packages through, but
under Bosley the proposal sailed through the Board of Aldermen and onto
the election ballot because it was understood that the money would be
distributed for projects ward-by-ward.
Back to the future
The only exception to city's inability to plan would seem to
be related to downtown redevelopment, wherein Downtown Now and various
civic leaders seem to be well on the way to crafting a plan for the
revitalization of the downtown core, at a cost of just under $1 billion.
Even this instance shows the mayor's weakness.
Civic organizations have filled a vacuum left by the relative
absence of a public capacity to lead regeneration. In other cities, the
mayor and development agencies would be expected to take the lead in
planning the redevelopment of the downtown core, but in St. Louis the
mayor can get on board, if he wants to, while civic leaders and
consultants (sometimes hired by the city) assemble the redevelopment
coalition. As might be expected, the coalition is extremely limited in
authority, lacking the muscle to much influence what the Laclede's
Landing Redevelopment Authority or the Park Service might want to do
with the city's waterfront. A critical defect indeed, and one that
could be remedied, if at all, only through strong mayoral leadership.
Clarence Harmon has been keenly aware of the chains that bind him,
and he has been working hard to undo them. In April 1998 he appointed an
11-member Reorganization Committee, charging its members with the task
of making recommendations for the reorganization of the city's
development agencies. Chaired by his chief of staff, the committee
included two aldermen (Paul Beckerie and Bernice Jones-King), plus
several civic leaders. The committee released a preliminary report on
Sept. 17, and after more than two months of discussion, this Nov. 4 the
mayor sent a final report to the Board of Aldermen, under the title,
"The Restructuring of the Development Operations." The changes
urged by the mayor are the most far-reaching put forward in decades. If
adopted, they might allow the city to finally achieve a capacity to
plan. An important side benefit would be that at least some development
policies might become depoliticized by taking them out of ward politics.
The Reorganization Committee calls its recommendations
"radical" and "wide-ranging." And so they are. It
recommends that a new office, a Deputy Mayor for Development, be
established in the mayor's office. The Deputy Mayor would be
charged with coordinating planning and economic development policies.
The CDA would be dissolved as a city agency, and the SLDC would be
substantially reorganized. A new City Plan Commission would take
responsibility for planning for the city; it would oversee a new
Planning and Urban Design Department and the SLDC (and the current
Community Development Commission would be dissolved). Both would report
to the Deputy Mayor. A separate Office of Federal Entitlement Programs
would administer the city's federal entitlement funds. Instead o,f
decisions flowing solely through the Comptroller's office, at least
now the mayor would have a role because this agency would be supervised
by the Board of Estimate and Apportionment. In place of the current
allocation process that automatically divides CDBG funds into 28 pieces,
a two-year plan and budget would allocate money to neighborhood and
city-wide projects.
The reorganization plan depends upon two primary elements. First,
it has to be expected that ward politics will continue to determine
allocations of a substantial portion, and maybe most, of the federal
dollars. Channeling these monies into a separate city office is a way -
one hopes - of reducing aldermen's motivations to influence the
activities of the plan commission and the SLDC. This tendency will be
reinforced by the fact that the two development agencies would report to
the mayor's office, through boards of directors appointed by the
mayor. Second, the Reorganization Committee recommends that a critical
flaw in the current development structure be remedied: the fact that no
local funds are now available to the CDA or the SLDC. This fact has
hamstrung development in St. Louis for decades. Under federal rules, HUD
money cannot be used to promote the city, and most federal money is
earmarked for specific purposes. Obviously local money is necessary to
make the reorganization plan work.
This is the culture that Clarence Harmon inherited. Already he has
made moves to change it. He has appointed Mike Jones as a Deputy Mayor
for Development. Jones exercises informal influence over the CDA and the
SLDC. Staff members of both agencies have sat through a series of
meetings with Jones, who has been trying to sell the message that things
will work better for the city if the agencies cooperate in implementing
overall policy priorities. This is about as much as the mayor can
accomplish until the Board of Aldermen agrees to pass legislation and
recommend changes to the city's charter so that planning and
economic development can be officially reorganized.
If Clarence Harmon succeeds at bringing reform to the planning and
economic development process in the city, the legacy he leaves will be
positive and far-reaching, even in the unlikely event that he becomes a
one-term mayor. He may not always have the best political instincts, but
if he manages to push through fundamental reform of the city's
planning and development processes, his critics would be forced to
acknowledge that he possessed the vision and political skills to alter
the culture of political paralysis that has held back St. Louis for so
long.
Dennis Judd is professor of political science at University of
Missouri St. Louis.