Awards Reception

2020 Award for Collaboration and Coalition Building

Congratulations to Laura Ginn, Green City Coalition Program Manager at the St. Louis Development Corporation, recipient of our 2020 Award for Collaboration & Coalition Building

The Award for Collaboration & Coalition Building recognizes a person, organization, institution, or initiative that:

  • Demonstrates incredible commitment to working through partnerships, even when it’s more challenging than “going it alone.”

  • Forges new connections that bridge gaps between people, organizations, and places that don’t normally interact with each other in the St. Louis region.

  • Shows up for others and participates directly in their work; does not only ask or expect that partners and collaborators come to them.

  • Approaches difficulty and conflict with understanding, compassion, and an open mind.

Humans of St. Louis storytellers Maleeha Samer and Colleen O’Connell Smyth met with Laura to learn more about her and her work. Here’s some of what she had to say.

Laura Ginn

Laura Ginn

“An alderwoman sent me a text message with 😧 😡 when she found out a property was demolished, and my heart dropped. I was feeling really guilty that I might have destroyed our rapport and relationship. I said, ‘Oh my God, I screwed up. This is terrible.’ So, I worked up the nerve to call her, and we talked it out while I explained what had happened. She hadn’t been to the property recently and didn’t know the back of the building had collapsed or that the neighbor supported the demolition. She was like, ‘Oh, okay. Well, that’s fine. Thank you.’ A couple of days later, I realized she had felt comfortable sending me those angry emojis instead of deciding that she’s never going to work with me again. I’m trying to take the criticisms and comments as more information to feed the decision-making process instead of taking it personally. Because it’s not as much about me as it is about this city – the broad context, the history, the now. When people give feedback, no matter if it’s negative or positive, that’s a win because we’re having a conversation that will guide how the work will continue.”

- Laura Ginn, Green City Coalition Program Manager, St. Louis Development Corporation

 
Laura Ginn

Laura Ginn

“There’s this 80-year-old woman who lives next door to a vacant building, and there are a lot of trees growing in the backyard. One of the trees coming over the fence is growing into the back of her house to the point where it’s pushing pieces of bricks off. There’s another tree whose limbs are falling and damaging the roof of her garage and car. Her social worker filled out a contact form on the STL vacancy website and asked if anyone could help. I was able to go out to this woman’s house and saw that the property owner hadn’t responded to the issue. We put it out to bid and paid Jubilee Services to remove the trees. It felt like such a small thing. But now a thing that stressed out the homeowner and caused legitimate damage to her property for several years is resolved. But how did we get to that situation? How did this woman end up helpless without any support? There are problems to address. There just aren’t enough people, and the systems aren’t always in place. So, it goes back to the tiny wins that keep the juices flowing for this work and drive the bigger change. I love that the solution came from a random contact form. I didn’t think anyone used that.”

- Laura Ginn, Green City Coalition Program Manager, St. Louis Development Corporation

 

We hope you can join us to celebrate community builders like Laura at our 8th Annual Community Building Awards on July 29!

 

Photostory by Humans of St. Louis, Maleeha Samer, and Colleen O’Connell Smyth. Photostory narratives represent the opinions of the speaker(s) featured only and do not necessarily represent the views of the Community Builders Network of Metro St. Louis.

2020 Award for Lifetime Dedication to Community Building

Congratulations to Loura Gilbert, former Vice President of Community Development at Commerce Bank and founding member of the Metro St. Louis Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) Association, recipient of our 2020 Award for Lifetime Dedication to Community Building.

The Award for Lifetime Dedication to Community Building recognizes a person who:

  • Has demonstrated a long-standing commitment to community building work.

  • Has exhibited leadership, vision, and a commitment to action and results.

  • Has catalyzed outstanding impact in community building policy, investment, and/or community change.

  • Has worked to challenge the status quo in the St. Louis region.

Humans of St. Louis storytellers Maleeha Samer and Colleen O’Connell Smyth met with Loura to learn more about her and her work. Here’s some of what she had to say.

Loura Gilbert

Loura Gilbert

“When you hear people’s stories about their neighborhoods, problems, and difficulties, you think you know what they’re dealing with. You have to be in their shoes. You may think, ‘Well, there’s an easy answer to this question. Save this, do that, make a plan.’ But you don’t know. People have to make choices. They might be saving to buy a house but then have a health problem and have to spend that money on something else. It wasn’t what they wanted. And when they can’t do what they wanted, that hurts. People without a safety net and families with small kids or elderly parents can get stuck in this rut. They want to buy a house and then grandma has a health problem, there’s not enough health insurance, they end up having to tap into their down payment or get behind on a bill or two, then that impacts their credit, and they’ve got to start all over again. That’s hard work. They’re down and they still say, ‘I’ve got to get back up.’”.

- Loura Gilbert, former Commerce Bank Vice President of Community Development and founding member of the Metropolitan St. Louis CRA Association

 
Loura Gilbert

Loura Gilbert

“There are too many good projects. There are too many problems that can’t be fixed by a little bit of something, and the obstacle is always that there’s not enough time and money. Community building projects are expensive, and the impression is that there’s no money to be made even if the project is a good thing to do. We have to get people over the idea that not every project’s making as much as a $20 million, 20-story commercial building. You are making money. And more than making money, you’re making a difference.”

- Loura Gilbert, former Commerce Bank Vice President of Community Development and founding member of the Metropolitan St. Louis CRA Association

 

We hope you can join us to celebrate community builders like Loura at our 8th Annual Community Building Awards on July 29!

 

Photostory by Humans of St. Louis, Maleeha Samer, and Colleen O’Connell Smyth. Photostory narratives represent the opinions of the speaker(s) featured only and do not necessarily represent the views of the Community Builders Network of Metro St. Louis.

2020 Award for Growing in Equity and Antiracism

Congratulations to Neighborhood Leadership Academy & Neighborhood Leadership Fellows, programs of Creating Whole Communities, a collaboration between UMSL & MU Extension, winner of our 2020 Award for Growing in Equity & Antiracism.

The Award for Growing in Equity & Antiracism recognizes a person, organization, institution, or initiative that:

  • Demonstrates a deep and honest commitment to transforming their work so that it is more equitable, just, and antiracist.

  • “Walks the talk”—goes beyond verbal commitments to ask hard questions, point out inequities where they exist, and embrace and push through discomfort.

  • Actively works to dismantle systems of oppression.

Humans of St. Louis storytellers Maleeha Samer and Colleen O’Connell Smyth met with Dwayne T. James and Claire Rippel, Community Engagement Specialists at Creating Whole Communities, to learn more about the people who make Neighborhood Leadership Academy and Neighborhood Leadership Fellows happen. Here’s some of what they had to say.

Dwayne T. James (left) and Claire Rippel

Dwayne T. James (left) and Claire Rippel

“Systems needed to change yesterday, and development is happening in your community with or without you. As much as you want to sit back and enjoy a glass of wine, it’s time to get to work.

As an elected official, you know you’re looked at as a politician, and I was part of the system. How do you become not a politician but a community representative? I lived 2014. I was on the City Council for the City of Ferguson. There are things I could have, should have, and would have done differently. Even when you’re in that seat, you don’t always get the change you want to see. You still have to fight, and you have to have the community backing you to make things happen. When people say they want to develop in your neighborhood, sometimes you have to be the lone voice and ask them, ‘Excuse me, is that what’s best for our communities?’ So, how do you mobilize and work with the community even when they don’t think they have the power to use their voice? Because they’re sick and tired of being sick and tired.”

- Dwayne T. James, Community Engagement Specialist, Neighborhood Leadership Academy and Neighborhood Leadership Fellows, Programs of Creating Whole Communities, a Collaboration Between UMSL and MU Extension

 
Dwayne T. James

Dwayne T. James

“I come from a family of teachers. I’ve seen teachers who love and care for their students in different ways. I had a 4th and 5th-grade teacher, Mrs. Johnson, who cared about her students, but she was mean –– mean in a loving way. She was going to support us 100% to help us see right from wrong. If we went astray, she didn’t belittle or disrespect us. She showed us tough love, and we had some honest conversations. Luckily, I couldn’t go home and complain about Mrs. Johnson because my family members understood her. Then I had Mrs. Henderson in 8th grade, and she made us memorize the poem ‘If’ by Rudyard Kipling. We had to know exactly the way it was said, and I thought, ‘Why are we learning this stupid poem?’ We had to get his name right, too. Now, I recite the poem to this very day: ‘If you can keep your head when all about you, Are losing theirs and blaming it on you...,’ That’s community. These teachers knew what was best for us down the road. My friends and I talk about how we all had the experiences of the Mrs. Johnsons and Mrs. Hendersons, and now we understand what they were saying. I see myself doing that today when I work with youth. I show them I’m right there with them, and I respect them just as much as they would respect me.

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There was a young man who joined the Ferguson Youth Initiative, and there I was trying to support him and better his life. I kept asking him questions: ‘What does that tattoo mean? How old are you? What’s your name?’ And he was like, ‘Dude, who are you?’ I was about to say, ‘I’m the founder of this organization. I’m the adult in this space. How are you going to question who I am?’ But I stepped back and realized, before I bombard him when I really want to uplift him, let me tell him who I am. If he wants to share with me, then he can. I said, ‘I’m Dwayne. Sorry about how I came off.’ And I stepped back to allow him to see me and get comfortable with me. We became good associates through the program. I saw him years later, and he came up to me to say ‘hello’ and compliment me on how I helped him. It showed me that if you’re going to do this community work, you have to be a part of the community. You have to expose your flaws and be authentic. If people don’t see that you don’t have it all together and don’t have all the solutions, then how are they going to connect with anything about you? Some of my best teachers had that edge about them. And we had something to connect on to see they were the same as us.”

- Dwayne T. James, Community Engagement Specialist, Neighborhood Leadership Academy and Neighborhood Leadership Fellows, Programs of Creating Whole Communities, a Collaboration Between UMSL and MU Extension

 
Claire Rippel

Claire Rippel

“When I was 21, I had my first in-depth experience working in the community. I was in Old North teaching photography and media literacy to kids, which I was not qualified for. It was hard and did not go how I had envisioned. So, I was upset about it, and my co-facilitator who was older and wiser said, ‘You're not Michelle Pfeiffer, and this is not ‘Dangerous Minds.’’ It was a good reminder that this is not about the movies, this is not about me waltzing into a community like a white savior. That was the best criticism I ever received, and that conversation has stuck with me. The way you build trust is not just through everyday interactions, but also through conflict. I want to see people, particularly those in power, listen to understand, not hear to respond. I listened to her and thought, ‘You’re totally right.’ And that helped me set my trajectory for getting myself in that mindset of doing long-term work with a community.”

- Claire Rippel, Community Engagement Specialist, Neighborhood Leadership Academy and Neighborhood Leadership Fellows, Programs of Creating Whole Communities, a Collaboration Between UMSL and MU Extension

 

We hope you can join us to celebrate community builders like the Neighborhood Leadership Academy & Neighborhood Leadership Fellows team at our 8th Annual Community Building Awards on July 29!

 

Photostory by Humans of St. Louis, Maleeha Samer, and Colleen O’Connell Smyth. Photostory narratives represent the opinions of the speaker(s) featured only and do not necessarily represent the views of the Community Builders Network of Metro St. Louis.

Congratulations to our 2020 Community Building Awards Honorees!

We’re thrilled to be honoring five incredible individuals and one incredible initiative at our 2020 Community Building Awards on July 29!

We’re also excited to be working with the talented Humans of St. Louis team again this year to put together stories about the important community building work that each of these honorees is doing. Watch our website in July for a special post about each awardee!

 

2020 Community Building Awards Honorees

 

Laura Ginn
Green City Coalition Program Manager, St. Louis Development Corporation
Collaboration & Coalition Building

Neighborhood Leadership Academy and Neighborhood Leadership Fellows
Programs of Creating Whole Communities, a collaboration between UMSL and MU Extension
Growing in Equity & Antiracism

Jessica Payne
Board President, Old North St. Louis Restoration Group and Founder/Owner and Social Justice Communicator, Osiyo Design + Engagement
Transparency & Trust

Tonnie Smith
West End neighborhood resident, Board member with Cornerstone CDC and St. Louis ArtWorks, and St. Louis Vacancy Collaborative volunteer with a special focus on reducing vacancy in the West End with the assistance of LSEM; collaborated with West End residents Keaira Anderson, Treena Thompson, and Lisa Potts to apply for and secure one of Invest STL’s first capacity building grants for Cornerstone in 2018
Resident Leadership

Neal Richardson
Co-Founder, Dream Builders 4 Equity and Vice President and Director of Business Impact Group, U.S. Bank CDC
Rising Star in Community Building

Loura Gilbert
Vice President of Community Development, Commerce Bank and founding member of the Metro St. Louis Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) Association
Lifetime Dedication to Community Building

 

Come help us celebrate these incredible folks on July 29!

 

Outstanding Achievement in Community Building: Joe Cavato

Congratulations to Joe Cavato, Principal & Owner at JAC Consulting LLC, recipient of our 2019 Award for Outstanding Achievement in Community Building!

The Outstanding Achievement in Community Building Award recognizes an individual who:

  • Demonstrates a long-standing commitment to the community building sector.

  • Exhibits leadership, vision, and a commitment to action and results.

  • Has achieved an outstanding impact in community building policy, investment, or community change.

Humans of St. Louis storyteller Maleeha Samer met with Joe to learn more about his experiences and what he's learned during his years of community building work. Here’s some of what he had to share.

Joe Cavato

Joe Cavato

“One of the biggest obstacles to community building is creating engagement and the trust that it takes for people to feel like it’s their thing. I read this quote the other day: ‘If you’re coming into my neighborhood and doing something for me, you’re doing something to me.’ That often happens in large programs and initiatives unless there’s a sense of ownership. I didn’t know how hard it was to engage people productively, and I appreciate how important that is. I always assumed that there’s a product out there that needs to be delivered, and you figure out how to deliver it. And in order to deliver the right product and produce the right result, you’ve got to engage the community and get them to own it.”

- Joe Cavato, JAC Consulting LLC

Joe Cavato

Joe Cavato

“A lot of times the available tools provided by government programs don’t fit a particular need. The Wellston Housing Authority is a good example right now of a problem that doesn’t have a solution yet. Wellston’s got some housing that is difficult to own and operate. It’s one of the poorest towns in St. Louis County. And the housing authority has 200 units and about 600 residents. Well, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) came along a few months ago and took over, even though the housing authority was trying to work their way out of that situation. Some of the units needed to be brought up to date. Under the auspices of a new mayor, the housing authority was making significant efforts to upgrade its capacity. But HUD basically said that this housing authority sucked and couldn’t be saved. And instead of HUD using the tools and programs that they have, they decided to put it out of business. That’s an example of the architecture that housing authorities are working under and how there are structural obstacles in community building. You have to use the local resources and community engagement to work around that bureaucracy. Community development moves at the speed of trust.”

- Joe Cavato, JAC Consulting LLC

 

We hope you can join us to celebrate community builders like Joe at our 7th Annual Community Building Awards on April 11!

 

Photostory by Humans of St. Louis and Maleeha Samer. Photostory narratives represent the opinions of the speaker(s) featured only and do not necessarily represent the views of the Community Builders Network of Metro St. Louis or the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

Rising Star in Community Building: Aaron Williams

Congratulations to Aaron Williams, Committee Chairman, Young Friends of The Ville and 4theVille Team Member, recipient of our 2019 Rising Star in Community Building Award!

The Rising Star in Community Building Award recognizes an individual who:

  • Demonstrates dedication to and passion for the community building sector.

  • Exhibits leadership, vision, and a commitment to action and results.

  • Shows promising potential to achieve outstanding impact in community building policy, investment, or community change.

Humans of St. Louis storyteller Maleeha Samer sat down with Aaron to learn more about his work and what it means to him. Here’s some of what he had to share.

Aaron Williams

Aaron Williams

“The first time I met some longstanding community members of The Ville, we hung out at their house for a bar-b-que. We had a little brotherhood and sisterhood smoke. Mind you, these are women that are the age of my grandparents or oldest aunts and uncles, and we hung out for about three hours talking about everything and nothing. And that built the bond we needed to try out some things as a community-based group. We’re definitely not a success story right now, but we’re moving and we were able to trust each other quickly. Us three, along with our other team members, were willing to put in the time to get to know one another and build worthwhile relationships instead of just doing the work right away. Now I’ve known them for close to two years, and we feel comfortable telling each other that we love one another. That, to me, is important, especially because I’m not a touchy-feely guy. When this 60-plus year-old woman tells me she loves me, my typical reaction would be, ‘Thank you,’ or to cringe a little bit. But I feel comfortable saying it back, and that’s a testament of where we are and what we’ve built together.”

- Aaron Williams, Committee Chairman, Young Friends of The Ville, and 4theVille Team Member

Aaron Williams

Aaron Williams

“I learned about The Ville when I was at Washington University in St. Louis. My freshman year, I took a class with Bob Hansman called Community Building, Building Communities. And then I became his teaching assistant for two years. That class always stops in the neighborhood, and I was attracted to this place because I grew up in a similar historic black neighborhood in Kansas City called the 18th and Vine district. The more I came, the more I learned, the more I got engaged. It reminded me of home. And I knew that if I were home, I’d be pouring myself into 18th and Vine. But I’m in Saint Louis, so I’m pouring into The Ville, my second home. Most people here are middle-aged or senior citizens, and I appreciate that. When I come here, it’s like talking to my grandparents. There’s this traditional way of respecting elders by listening to what they say and trying to make something out of it. So I’ll sit out here at the Northside Community Housing Office or at people’s houses and listen to them sometimes complain or sometimes just dream. And that helps me realize we already have everything we need here in The Ville. There’s a lot of talent here and a very experienced community, and that’s what’s driven what we’ve gotten done – creating with their thoughts, their pain, their concerns, and their vision. At this point, it’s more a matter of changing the outside world’s perspective of this area and deconstructing the negative stereotypes so people will start paying more attention to it and investing more of themselves into it.”

- Aaron Williams, Co-Chairman, Ville Collaborative

Aaron Williams

Aaron Williams

“Community means safety. It’s a place where you can let your hair down, let your guard down, and say what you really think and feel about whatever the topic may be. In The Ville, conversations usually revolve around how this region has never valued things that were created by this community. The level of expertise in the The Ville - Greater Ville and the beauty that was coming out of this neighborhood didn’t matter. They’ve just always been residual. And that’s why we brainstorm ways to circumvent that perspective and regenerate this place now... we don’t want to wait for the big developer to come here. We don’t want to wait for the City to say, ‘Momentum is going in that direction now. We should probably do something in The Ville.’ We want to remain the same little island that everybody thinks we are and create value, restore dignity, and invest in this place off of the strength of what it is. That’s it. And that’s the comfort that you find in this community.”

- Aaron Williams, Board Member, Northside Community Housing, Inc.

Aaron Williams

Aaron Williams

“Maybe this is a fault of mine, but I love bending or breaking rules. Maybe that’s why I don’t get caught up in trying to be on the right side of history. I would love to see this region adopt that way of moving more often. Let’s have some arguments. Let’s talk about the elephants in the room. We don’t have to attack each other and hate each other afterward. Everyone can contribute. It doesn’t matter how many degrees you have or how much street cred you have. This region needs to do a better job of not being afraid of discourse. We polarize too easily, and instead of trying to understand things and seek innovative solutions, we’re afraid to step on toes. I’ve run into white people who are afraid to give their suggestions about The Ville because they don’t want to offend anyone. No! Tell me exactly what you’re thinking. It might be helpful.”

- Aaron Williams, Urban Land Institute St. Louis - Urban Plan Committee

“One thing that this region can do is stop celebrating people before their work is done. We are quick to call somebody an expert, or praise them for what they said without doing our homework, and actually seeing if they execute on what they say. Personally, I avoid awards. I avoid leadership programs. I avoid them because I don’t want that kind of attention, especially when I feel the work that I’m trying to do is not done. It was hard for me to accept this award from Community Builder’s Network. I asked if there were a way I could defer to someone else, because accepting it breeds mediocrity to me, when we actually need to push people to do better, do more. Acknowledge your shortcomings and ignorance and then seek out groups that can help you improve them. Don’t just be content with sticking with what you know and what makes you comfortable. I hate saying that, too, because I hate buzzwords. It’s like ‘comfortable space,’ ‘lean in,’ and ‘equity.’ But, I am human, and after you hear them so much, you start adopting the language. Show up. That’s really what people need to do. That’s the one thing we talk about a lot in Young Friends of The Ville, and when we started we didn't have the silver bullet or the answer. We decided we were really just here to listen and see where we can fit in. We’d have to raise money for the North Side because that’s what a young professional group does. But outside of that, it’s just figuring out where we can be helpful and stepping into that role.”

- Aaron Williams, Committee Chairman, Young Friends of The Ville

 

We hope you can join us to celebrate community builders like Aaron at our 7th Annual Community Building Awards on April 11!

 

Photostory by Humans of St. Louis and Maleeha Samer. Photostory narratives represent the opinions of the speaker(s) featured only and do not necessarily represent the views of the Community Builders Network of Metro St. Louis or the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

Excellence in Resident Leadership: Megan Betts

Congratulations to Megan Betts, Co-Founder of Northside Neighbors United and community member of Saint Louis Place, recipient of our 2019 Award for Excellence in the Public Sector!

The Award for Excellence in Resident Leadership recognizes an individual who:

  • Has shown incredible volunteerism and involvement in their community and/or community initiatives.

  • Goes above and beyond normal resident action to sit on boards, head committees, or encourage the engagement of other residents.

Humans of St. Louis storyteller Maleeha Samer sat down with Megan to learn more about her work and what drives her. Here’s some of what she had to share.

Megan Betts

Megan Betts

“A defining moment I really reflect on is the day that the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency decided that they were coming to St. Louis. I was sitting in my backyard very upset because of all the friendships I had made with all the residents in my neighborhood, and I knew that they wanted to stay in their homes and that they were losing those homes that had been in their family for decades. At that point, I thought, ‘What else is there to do?’ I looked up and around, I saw the vacant lot, and I thought, ‘They’re coming for us. How are we going to make sure that the rest of us can stay?’ I think about that day when I feel like nothing’s going right, or I’m tired, or I don’t want to do this work anymore. I looked around my house and saw that I might not even be able to stay here to raise my kids, and my neighbors would be far worse off than I would. So what am I going to do to change that?”

- Megan Betts, Co-Founder of Northside Neighbors United and Community Member of Saint Louis Place

Megan Betts

Megan Betts

“My kids go to Gateway Elementary and they’re right by the Pruitt-Igoe site. The trees were being torn down and the dirt from the NGA site was coming up. There was a big spike in asthma attacks in the kids and teachers, and even in those that didn’t have asthma beforehand. How do we get ahead of this to make sure our voices are heard and that we’re on top of working with the developer? One thing I truly remember from a neighbor that has lived in St. Louis Place her whole life is her reminder to always take a step back and think about how this work impacts your family. When I ran for office, I had to be away from my family and from community work. It was perceived that my doing work at the neighborhood association was to win the election. I can’t say yes to everything and make a real impact. So what should I be involved in because my time is limited and I want to do this work for all of them? The hardest was to not be doing the work that gave me the ability to run in the first place. And, oftentimes, you can get so engulfed in this work that your family might suffer. After the election, I realized community and family meant more to me.”

- Megan Betts, Co-Founder of Northside Neighbors United and Community Member of Saint Louis Place

Megan Betts

Megan Betts

“We had the opportunity to bring in a store that brought everyday basic amenities. It was a Family Dollar, but it’s more than anything that we’ve ever had over here after a while. We had little to no business in the neighborhood and that became detrimental. Our elected officials were not in support, and we actually didn’t know that until a neighbor found out. Within a week, we got a petition together for Family Dollar to come in, contacted the company’s representative, had a community meeting schedule, gathered almost 400 signatures, and were able to get it passed at City Hall. That was huge because I know how many people go to that store now. We have a very walkable community and there aren’t a lot of vehicles. So I would consider that a win over here in St. Louis Place.”

- Megan Betts, Co-Founder of Northside Neighbors United and Community Member of Saint Louis Place

Megan Betts 04.jpg

“When I go to community meetings I often hear, ‘What is the biggest thing residents talk about in the neighborhood?’ And ours is not really safety, but home repair. People can’t afford to fix their homes, but they know that new things are coming to the neighborhood and they want to be part of that. There are so many layers for us to get to that equitable standard. We’re still at the bottom, sadly, but we’re working, working, working. Money would make a difference in this work. In my neighborhood, no one is paid to do any community building. Everything is volunteer. One way to look at it is, ‘Oh my gosh, that’s great. Look at all those people volunteering their time.’ The other thing is that there’s a lot of stuff we’re missing out on because we don’t have someone fully dedicated to get deeper into the issues. A lot of us dedicate our time, but then life happens. So we veer off and then we come back together when there’s a fire and we have to put it out. I applaud everything that we’ve done with the little resources we have. But if we were able to pay somebody to do this, we could do so much more.”

- Megan Betts, Co-Founder of Northside Neighbors United and Community Member of Saint Louis Place

 

We hope you can join us to celebrate community builders like Megan at our 7th Annual Community Building Awards on April 11!

 

Photostory by Humans of St. Louis and Maleeha Samer. Photostory narratives represent the opinions of the speaker(s) featured only and do not necessarily represent the views of the Community Builders Network of Metro St. Louis or the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

Excellence in the Community Building Nonprofit Sector: Messiah Community Center

Congratulations to Messiah Community Center, recipient of our 2019 Award for Excellence in the Community Building Nonprofit Sector!

The Award for Excellence in the Community Building Nonprofit Sector recognizes a community-building nonprofit that:

  • Demonstrates excellence in multi-year, place-based, collaborative, comprehensive community building based on strong community engagement.

  • Uses data and evaluation to achieve maximum impact in their efforts.

Humans of St. Louis storyteller Maleeha Samer met with Becky Gill and Pastor Mike Okine of Messiah Community Center to learn more about their community building work. Here’s some of what they had to say.

Becky Gill (left) and Pastor Mike Okine

Becky Gill (left) and Pastor Mike Okine

“I come from Ghana, where community building is just the nature of the people. Throughout the large cities, small cities, and rural areas the sense of community is very high. Everybody cares about everybody. You have different people in your church from different backgrounds. You watch the news. You see what is going on. And you want to be in a church that has hands and feet in the community, so people don’t see you just as a building that people go to on Sundays. At Messiah Community Center, we are defining this space to ensure that it’s open to everybody. We make sure that even though there are divisive issues in the community, we try to save politics. Let’s say you have one party wanting to do something in this space? What about the other group? Yeah, people individually belong to parties, even in the church. But we try to do things that will not divide. We want this to be a place where people can come and have understanding; where they can live together and get to know each other to understand each other.”

- Pastor Mike Okine, Messiah Community Center

“A high priority for us is having community-led events. This isn’t a space that’s about the experts coming in and teaching things, but about the apartments’ residents and neighbors with certain skills that can offer what they know. We had our martial arts classes taught by someone who brought his kids to programming and was like, ‘These classes are great. I would love to do this.’ Now he’s been volunteering for close to a year. Our cooking classes have been led by someone we met who’s living in an apartment building in the neighborhood. We hosted a block party in the fall, and the weather was pretty crappy because we’ve had crappy weather since November. It was fun to see neighbors and different people that have been involved here. One lady noticed we didn’t have any large trash bags because we only had smaller trash cans. So she brought a huge trash bin and started helping with cleanup. We had our cooking instructor bring her family and others to help. And one of the ladies who comes to exercise and her grandson was helping them, too. We had fires going, and kids were coming from down the block to make s’mores. It was cool to see everybody saying, ‘Hey, what’s going on?’ There was food and fun. People were talking and getting to know each other. And a lot of different people that didn’t necessarily know each other before the day started had a really good party together.”

- Becky Gill, Messiah Community Center

 

We hope you can join us to celebrate community builders like the team at Messiah Community Center at our 7th Annual Community Building Awards on April 11!

 

Photostory by Humans of St. Louis and Maleeha Samer. Photostory narratives represent the opinions of the speaker(s) featured only and do not necessarily represent the views of the Community Builders Network of Metro St. Louis or the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

Excellence in the Public Sector: Loretta Hiner

Congratulations to Loretta Hiner, Senior Housing Analyst with the City of St. Louis Affordable Housing Commission, recipient of our 2019 Award for Excellence in the Public Sector!

The Award for Excellence in the Public Sector recognizes an individual, government, quasi-government agency, or tax-supported entity that:

  • Develops or protects policy that supports investment in communities.

  • Demonstrates innovative use of resources for community improvement.

  • Is proactive, persistent, professional, and efficient in finding ways to support community building initiatives.

Humans of St. Louis storyteller Maleeha Samer sat down with Loretta to learn more about her work and experiences. Here’s some of what they talked about.

Loretta Hiner

Loretta Hiner

“When I first started this work, I was focused on what I needed to do and what my responsibilities were. I didn't realize the interconnectedness. Now I see that I’m just one little piece in this much larger pie. And instead of fighting for a slice of pie, I see us making it a bigger pie. Playing off our strengths together, we are all working for a much greater good. It could be people working together to get a city swimming pool open in the mornings. It could be people working together to create traffic calming techniques and to make roads safe for pedestrians and bicyclists. It could be people realizing that they want to live in a community that’s clean and safe, so they start to pick up the trash. Or people looking out for where they live, demanding more, and taking the first step to make it the way they want to make it. When people realize the power within themselves and start using that power, we all see a new exponential strength that we sometimes didn’t even know we had.”

- Loretta Hiner, Senior Housing Analyst with the City of St. Louis Affordable Housing Commission

Loretta Hiner

Loretta Hiner

“There’s a project called East Fox Homes, started by a church in the South Grand area, with a lot of refugee and immigrant congregants who were being priced out of their housing. The church paired up with a nonprofit organization and started identifying a number of vacant and dilapidated houses around the Gravois Park neighborhood, and acquired them. They submitted a multilayered finance project to us, of which we were one funder, to rehab a number of historic structures and convert them into affordable rental housing. At the ribbon cutting, I remember seeing representatives from all the different funders coming together and seeing what it took to get that project done. The church and the nonprofit created a living example in which these units, for the next 30 years, will be able to house generations of people who will no longer be cost-burdened by the price of housing. The new residents have a stake in the community, and they’ll be able to retain more of their income. Now they have firmly established that they belong in the neighborhood and that this is their home.”

- Loretta Hiner, Senior Housing Analyst with the City of St. Louis Affordable Housing Commission

 

We hope you can join us to celebrate community builders like Loretta at our 7th Annual Community Building Awards on April 11!

 

Photostory by Humans of St. Louis and Maleeha Samer. Photostory narratives represent the opinions of the speaker(s) featured only and do not necessarily represent the views of the Community Builders Network of Metro St. Louis or the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

Excellence in Banking: U.S. Bank Community Development Corporation

Congratulations to U.S. Bank Community Development Corporation (CDC), winner of our 2019 Award for Excellence in Banking!

The Award for Excellence in Banking recognizes a bank or lending institution that:

  • Gets involved beyond traditional lending in community building activities.

  • Is creative in how it supports community building.

  • Provides direct support to community building organizations.

  • Has a strong community presence.

  • Demonstrates a deep understanding of the sector and a willingness to accept more risk.

Humans of St. Louis storyteller Maleeha Samer met with Darren Van’t Hof, U.S. Bank CDC’s Managing Director of Environmental and Community Capital, and David Desai-Ramirez, Executive Director of the Southern Region of IFF, to learn more about the CDC’s community building work. Here’s some of what they had to say.

Darren Van’t Hof (left) and David Desai-Ramirez

Darren Van’t Hof (left) and David Desai-Ramirez

“I hear talk about the need for more people that are passionate, committed, and have expertise in investing in the community or engaging in public service. For someone like myself, I’ve literally never thought a day about running for office, and it feels like something that other kinds of people do – something that, if you ever did do, you’d have very little agency within a broken system. But as long as we all continue to have that skepticism, then it’s going to be hard to get to the policies to start to turn things around a little bit. I’ve been influenced by a lot of the activists and what I’ll call truth-tellers. They are telling us the truth about these systems. And they keep reminding us, ‘Are you guys really moving the needle? What about this family over here and their housing? How do we continue to get better and do more?’

The good news for states like Missouri that tend not to be first movers on social policy is that there are models everywhere that we can follow. The even more hopeful news is that they’re in places that politically resemble Missouri. We need more people engaged in public service, and we need corporations that are economic engines. But it’s hard when their shareholders are saying, ‘What are next month’s earnings?’ We’ve got to get to a place where we’re pushing them to take a longer view and ask, ‘How can I exist in 20 years? What will my workforce look like? What investments am I making into the community so that I can be around and be thriving and flourishing in 20 years?’”

- Darren Van’t Hof, Managing Director, Environmental and Community Capital at U.S. Bancorp Community Development Corporation, and David Desai-Ramirez, Executive Director, Southern Region of IFF

Darren Van’t Hof (left) and David Desai-Ramirez

Darren Van’t Hof (left) and David Desai-Ramirez

“One of the challenges I express every time I’ve been in an Anti-Bias, Anti Racism (ABAR) workshop has been that the people in the room are generally there because they want to be there. You already have a group of willing participants. How do you get at the people that don’t want to have the conversation or don’t think there’s an issue? One of the observations that I’ve seen in a lot of this work has been where people, particularly white people, come into the conversations as their starting point. Some would step into an ABAR workshop and it would be a punch in the face: ‘I don’t understand this. Why are we having this conversation?’ And then there’s a lot of people in the room saying, ‘Oh, we’ve known this for a hundred years. Why are you just now hearing about this?’ So, to me, the challenge is making more people aware. That would go a long way to addressing the problems. There are now second and third generations of families that have only known the suburbs and avoid urban centers like the plague. That didn’t happen a generation or two ago when you might have had parents or grandparents that were part of the urban core. It’s becoming increasingly disconnected, and it’s led by a lack of awareness. If we had awareness, we could start to chip away at some of these conversations.”

- Darren Van’t Hof, Managing Director, Environmental and Community Capital at U.S. Bancorp Community Development Corporation, and David Desai-Ramirez, Executive Director, Southern Region of IFF

 

We hope you can join us to celebrate community builders like the U.S. Bank CDC team at our 7th Annual Community Building Awards on April 11!

 

Photostory by Humans of St. Louis and Maleeha Samer. Photostory narratives represent the opinions of the speaker(s) featured only and do not necessarily represent the views of the Community Builders Network of Metro St. Louis or the University of Missouri-St. Louis.