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January 23rd, 2020 Edition

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A tale of two St. Louis police unions

@stlouisamerican

@stlouisamerican

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St. LouiS AmericAn The

CAC Audited JANUARY 23 – 29, 2020

91 years serving, empowering and advocating equity in St. Louis

Vol. 91 No. 44 COMPLIMENTARY

stlamerican.com

UCC, Deaconess retire $12.9M in medical debt Call for Medicaid expansion in Missouri, citizen engagement

An open letter to developer Paul McKee Jr.

By Sandra Jordan Of The St. Louis American There are yellow envelopes in the mail this week to 11,108 St. Louis city and county families – envelopes that may contain an answer to prayers. Donors from the United Church of Christ came up with over $60,000 and the Deaconess Foundation donated $40,000. With that $100,000 donation, the church purchased $12.9 million in medical debt of families living at or below the poverty line through the RIP Medical Debt program – and wiped out their debt. Rev. Traci Blackmon, senior pastor at Christ the King United Church of Christ and UCC associate general minister of Justice and Local Church Ministries, described it as an act of loving thy neighbor – neighbors who are burdened with unpaid medical debt while living with incomes below the national poverty level in 78 local zip codes. “Every letter closes with this phrase, ‘You may never See UCC, A6

Nurse alumni oppose use of Homer G. Phillips hospital name By Zenobia Thompson For The St. Louis American

Photo by Wiley Price

Rev. Traci Blackmon, who hosted the announcement at Christ the King United Church of Christ, was unflinching in identifying the underlying politics in this crucial election year.

The Homer G. Phillips Nurse Alumni Inc. strongly oppose your proposed intentions to name a three-bed urgent care facility Homer G. Phillips Hospital. As advocates for improving health care in the medically underserved AfricanAmerican community, we welcome the placement of a three-bed urgent care facility on the near North Side. However, we are unequivocally and adamantly against this proposed urgent care facility bearing the honorable name of Homer G Phillips. Your intention to appropriate the name Homer G Phillips not only trivializes and diminishes the historical legacy Zenobia of attorney Homer G. Thompson Phillips and Homer G. Phillips Hospital, it is denigrating. It is our understanding that Dr. Will Ross of the Washington University School of Medicine, who is also a historian of Homer G. Phillips Hospital, and The St. Louis American expressed concerns to you regarding this ill-advised decision. Unfortunately, it is also our understanding that you were not persuaded to reconsider or even publicly offer an explanation. In The St Louis American, retired See NURSES, A7

‘A victory for Wellston’ Photo by Wiley Price

Marching for MLK in STL The civil rights faithful marched three miles from the Old Courthouse in downtown St. Louis to Leonard Missionary Baptist Church in Midtown in the 34th annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day March on Monday, January 20.

Community, elected officials partner to save low-income public housing By Rebecca Rivas Of The St. Louis American

Urban League opens community center on MLK day

Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis President and CEO Michael McMillan visited with Alisia Moore, her son Logan Burks, 5, and her daughter Alia Burks, 6, during the grand opening of its MLK Center in North St. Louis on Monday, January 20.

Martin Luther King Shopping Plaza hosts 17th location in St. Louis area By Sophie Hurwitz For The St. Louis American On Dr. Martin Luther King Day, January 20, the Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis held a ribbon-cutting ceremony for its new Community Resource Center in the Martin Luther King Shopping Plaza on Page Boulevard. The MLK Center, which was given to the Urban League for use rent-free by Baceline Investments, will be used as a home base for the Urban League’s 2020 census outreach efforts, employment resources, and resources for parents of Head Start children. See URBAN LEAGUE, A10

Photo by Wiley Price

For more than a year, Wellston residents locked arms to fight against the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s decision in n “Now that Wellston has been August 2018 to demolish 200 of saved, the people the city’s public have a grassroots housing units. About 530 opportunity to people (or 174 have their own families) reside community create in the lowa redevelopment income housing plan.” units – which is about one-fourth – Farrakhan Shegog of Wellston’s residents. Wellston is the poorest municipality in St. Louis County, where more than 40 percent of its 2,300 residents live below the poverty line – and 65 percent of those residents are children. “While it’s not a financially rich See WELLSTON, A7


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