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New St. Louis development plan seeks economic justice for overlooked neighborhoods

St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones speaks during the city's annual Mayor's Business Luncheon. She expressed her support for the St. Louis Development Corporation's new economic justice action plan.
Eric Schmid
/
St. Louis Public Radio
St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones speaks during the city's annual Mayor's Business Luncheon on Wednesday. She expressed her support for the St. Louis Development Corporation's new economic justice action plan.

St. Louis leaders unveiled a new economic development plan Wednesday that seeks to reverse the historic harm done to the city’s majority Black and brown neighborhoods from decades of past development decisions.

The Economic Justice Action Plan lays a path for ways the city can build economic opportunity over the next two decades, while ensuring new investments don’t repeat mistakes of the past.

The city must spend the influx of cash it got from the American Rescue Plan Act within the next four years, said St. Louis Development Corporation President and CEO Neal Richardson.

“We don’t want this to just be a transactional moment as we’re having conversations with developers and businesses,” he said. “We need to make sure we’re holding them accountable to working to ensure that our city residents — and our youth most especially — have the access to the opportunities they deserve.”

The plan evaluates parts of the city on specific indicators of need, such as high unemployment rates or historic housing discrimination, as well as areas of opportunity, such as when a neighborhood has a community development corporation or is located in a commercial corridor with ongoing construction.

Richardson said his organization is already putting the plan in play by targeting development and investment in Dutchtown, the area around the new National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency headquarters, Walnut Park and Martin Luther King Boulevard.

“We didn’t just want to have a blanketed statement of, ‘Oh, we’re helping north city,’” he said. “We wanted to have some key targeted areas so that you should be able to see some tangible differences in those neighborhoods.”

Those differences should be obvious by the end of 2026 when the ARPA funds central to SLDC’s investments must be spent, Richardson explained. He said the city chose these areas because they represent places that have been historically marginalized and that have high potential if investments are done the right way.

St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones supports the effort.

“Every St. Louis family, no matter which of the 79 neighborhoods they live in, deserves the same opportunity my family did to build a better life for their children and grandchildren,” Jones said.

She said the plan should make the development process more transparent for businesspeople and others, “building out a process and a structure to make sure anyone looking to do business in St. Louis knows exactly what it will take to do so.”

The city has come under fire recently for avoiding filling record requests. And concerns have been raised that SLDC is not publishing documents related to current development projects. Richardson said showing progress on developments over time is something his organization can improve upon.

“That’s one thing we don’t do a great job of historically in the city,” he said. “We talk about something for the moment it’s hot, but it falls by the wayside when it’s time for action.”

In addition to the economic justice plan, SLDC released its process for reviewing development proposals, which lays out a specific scorecard on how projects will be evaluated for tax abatements and other kinds of investments. Three aldermen have pleaded guilty this year to corruption charges related to developments.

These scorecards will be available on SLDC’s website for projects that go before the organization’s various development boards, Richardson said. He added that the agency’s review will include examining a developer’s past interactions with the city.

“We’re vetting those developers to ensure that you're a good neighbor, to ensure that you’re actually aligned with our vision for making St. Louis a more equitable city for all people to thrive,” he said.

Eric Schmid covers economic development for St. Louis Public Radio.

Eric Schmid covers business and economic development for St. Louis Public Radio.