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In Laclede’s Landing, Frustration Over City’s Inaction on Homelessness | St. Louis Metro News | St. Louis

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click to enlarge RYAN KRULL Abstrakt Marketing Group has significant office space in the Laclede’s Landing, including in the building to the right.

This summer, Abstrakt Marketing Group, by far the largest employer in Laclede’s Landing, grew increasingly frustrated by the city’s inaction on the large unhoused population living on the riverfront near its offices.

“I propose you come out of your office and show up,” says one email from Abstrakt sent to various city officials, including the mayor. “We understand you can’t magically solve our homeless problem….But you can do SOMETHING.”

Recently released emails between the company and the city show Abstrakt employees taking pains to document their concerns, some of which are small-ball, quotidian happenings that would be commonplace in almost any city, including groups of unhoused individuals simply gathering outside the marketing company’s space.

However, for the most part, the emails from Abstrakt to the city describe alarming scenes playing out on the streets and sidewalks alongside — and occasionally in the lobbies of — the buildings where the 500-plus employee company operates. The emails include accounts of a man exposing himself to workers and a woman walking around without pants on. A man brandishing a knife. A different man choking out a woman. Two men beating up each other. A man throwing a large rock at landscapers. 

Bricks have been thrown through windows. There are reports of open drug dealing, thefts from the offices. In May, a man reportedly threatened to kill a group of employees eating lunch at the Katherine Ward Burg park on the Landing. That same day, a man entered the lobby of Raeder Place building, which houses the Abstrakt office space and Old Spaghetti Factory, “waving a meat cleaver.” 

The city’s response, based on the emails made public, appears to be minimal. An email from Adam Pearson, Department of Human Services director, to the mayor’s chief of staff Jared Boyd states, “We have a number of encampments and other outreach efforts we’re trying to prioritize with a small team, but I did give them notice about this one.” Pearson advised that police accompany the outreach workers. 

In addition to Boyd and Pearson, the email exchanges include Mayor Tishaura Jones, the city’s executive director of operations Nancy Cross as well as other officials. 

Asbent what they feel is effective action from the city, business owners on the Landing have hired private security as well as paid out of their own pockets to have the streets cleaned, further examples of the privatization of what many say ought to be public services in the city. The email exchange also indicates the city repaired a broken traffic signal on Lumiere Place Boulevard, but only several months after Abstrakt first raised it as a concern.

The city’s handling of its unhoused population has been increasingly in the news in recent weeks. Earlier this month, the mayor ordered a makeshift tent city on the front lawn of City Hall camp to be cleared. Jones caught flack for that move, with activists accusing her of only doing so because Vice President Kamala Harris was coming to visit St. Louis for a Democratic National Committee meeting, but defended her actions as necessary to save lives.

After spotting the emails between Abstrakt and City Hall in the city’s open records portal on Thursday, an RFT reporter called Abstrakt and was referred by the company to Jan Sandweiss, who owns the historic Raeder Place building and is the president of the Laclede’s Landing Neighborhood Association. 

“Everything you read about happening at City Hall has been happening here for years,” Sandweiss says. “I’m not angry. I know it’s a difficult situation. [But] when we saw the encampment at City Hall, we thought, OK, now they’ll understand. They’ll come and help.” 

Asked if that has happened, Sandweiss says, “No.”
click to enlarge RYAN KRULL Jan Sandweiss, president of the Laclede’s Landing Neighborhood Association, says she’d hoped City Hall would have more sympathy for the neighborhood’s woes after clearing a homeless encampment on its own doorstep.

In March, the city cleared a homeless camp under the former President Casino Laclede’s Landing Pavilion. The city posted eviction notices to the camp’s residents, about two dozen of whom accepted shelter services from the city, a city hall spokesman told the RFT at the time. Soon thereafter, the remaining 10 or so residents were forced out. 

But both Sandweiss and Alderwoman Cara Spencer tell the RFT that within a few days, that camp had constituted itself not far from its former site. (The same thing seems to have occurred with the camp cleared from City Hall earlier this month, too.)

Syd Hajicek of Lifeline Aid Group, which assists unhoused people in the St. Louis area, says lately the inhabitants of the riverfront camp are moving to other areas of downtown. There’s “not a lot of resources” in the area, he says, and it takes 45 minutes for first responders to arrive at the camp during medical emergencies. Cement blocks obstruct many of the roads that lead to the camp. 

Despite the rough conditions, the rotating crowd of people who live there have nowhere else to go, Hajicek adds. 

“St. Louis has a very large homeless population and there’s not enough resources,” he says. 

Estimates of the population living at the riverfront camp vary depending on who you ask, with numbers ranging anywhere from 10 to 20, to as high as 50.

Spencer, whose 8th Ward includes Laclede’s Landing, says that the riverfront neighborhood is a victim of the region’s patchwork of policies related to homeless people, which have the effect of a few areas shouldering the great majority of the burden. 

“Every business district in the city has the responsibility of shouldering some of the unhoused and being home to members of that community,” Spencer says. “But when we concentrate them in a very small segment of the city without helping the business districts in other ways, they can’t shoulder all that.”

Put another way, she says, “Laclede’s Landing is out of balance.”

She blames both the state and the city. The state has disproportionately put the burden of unhoused on the city of St. Louis, she says. But the city has in turn disproportionately put its burden on a few specific areas, including the Landing and downtown. 

The Board of Aldermen is considering a bill to change a laborious plat and petition process that in the past prevented shelters from opening. Current zoning laws require shelters to receive signatures from residents near proposed sites. Some neighborhoods have made their opinions clear in the past — they don’t want shelters near their homes.

Critics say nixing the plat and petition diminishes citizens’ voices. The bill, which would incorporate an Unhoused Bill of Rights into city code, has also received flack for its call to allow unhoused people to urinate and defecate in public. 

Spencer has not come out one way or the other on that unhoused bill of rights. However, she says she recognizes that the city needs to be able to open new shelters. “Our current laws don’t make it possible,” she says.”But it’s important we do this WITH community, not at them.”

At least in theory, making it easy to open smaller shelters could have the effect of more evenly distributing the unhoused population throughout the city. 

“We need to recognize that Laclede’s Landing is literally the closest entertainment district to our region’s National Monument,” Spencer says. “We forget how insanely cool the Arch is. And that’s the entertainment district next to it, that should be working in tandem with it.”

There is serious worry expressed by both Sandweiss and Spencer that if the city doesn’t take action, Abstrakt could pull up stakes. Sandweiss says that roughly 700 people work on the landing (not including Horseshoe Casino), making Abstrakt’s 500-plus in-person workforce crucial for the vibrancy of the area. 

On a recent sunny morning, Laclede’s Landing was certainly looking the part of a residential and nightlife district worthy of its real estate just north of the Arch. Buildings along cobblestoned First Street have been renovated. Planters dot the sidewalks. What not long ago was a muddy, ad hoc parking lot is now the beautiful Katherine Ward Burg Park abutting the Eads Bridge. A new barbecue place is about to go in nearby. 

Yet, at least on this morning, foot traffic is minimal.

“Everyone’s afraid to come down,” says Sandweiss.

She says that many tourists who make the Arch their first sightseeing stop come to the Landing right after. As Sandweiss spoke, a family of sightseers did walk by, having just come under Eads Bridge from the Arch. They headed down First Street toward a private security guard on one corner, a man muttering to himself on another. 

“They say, ‘What have you done with your river?’ They’re from all over the country and they say, ‘We have a lake, and this is what we’ve done. We have a river, and this is what we’ve done.'” 

She keeps hearing the question, “How can you do this?” 

“I don’t know what to say,” Sandweiss says.

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Fenton Man Charged in Sword Attack on Roommate

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A warrant is out for a Fenton man’s arrest after he allegedly attacked his roommate with a sword. 

Police say that on Sunday, Angelus Scott spoke openly about “slicing his roommate’s head” before he grabbed a sword, raised it up and then swung it down at the roommate. 

The roommate grabbed Scott’s hand in time to prevent injury. When police arrived at the scene, they found the weapon used in the assault. 

The sword in question was a katana, which is a Japanese sword recognizable for its curved blade. 

This isn’t the first time a samurai-style sword has been used to violent effect in St. Louis. In 2018, a man hearing voices slaughtered his ex-boyfriend with a samurai sword. His mother said he suffered from schizoaffective disorder.

As for Scott, 35, the St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office was charged yesterday with two felonies, assault first degree and armed criminal action. The warrant for his arrest says he is to be held on $200,000 bond.

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Caught on Video, Sheriff Says He’s Ready to ‘Turn It All Over’ to Deputy

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Video of St. Louis Sheriff Vernon Betts taken by a former deputy suggests that the sheriff has a successor in mind to hand the reins of the department over to, even as Betts is in an increasingly heated campaign for reelection. 

“I ain’t here for all this rigmarole,” Betts says in the video while seated behind his desk at the Carnahan Courthouse. “The Lord sent me here to turn this department around and I’m doing the best I can and I think I’ve done a good job. I’ve got about eight months and I’m going to qualify for my fourth pension.”

He goes on, “Right now I can walk up out of here and live happily ever after and forget about all this…and live like a king.”

The sheriff then says his wife has been in Atlanta looking at houses and that the other deputy in the room, Donald Hawkins, is someone Betts has been training “to turn it all over to him.”

Asked about the video, Betts tells the RFT, “My future plans are to win reelection on August 6th by a wide margin and to continue my mission as the top elected law enforcement official to make St. Louis safer and stronger. Serving the people of St. Louis with integrity, honor and professional law enforcement qualifications is a sacred responsibility, and I intend to complete that mission.”

The video of Betts was taken by Barbara Chavers, who retired from the sheriff’s office in 2016 after 24 years of service. Chavers now works security at Schnucks at Grand and Gravois. Betts’ brother Howard works security there, too.

Chavers tells the RFT that she was summoned to Betts’ office last week after Betts’ brother made the sheriff aware that she was supporting Montgomery. It was no secret: Chavers had filmed a Facebook live video in which she said she was supporting Betts’ opponent Alfred Montgomery in the election this fall. “Make the judges safe,” she says in the video, standing in front of a large Montgomery sign on Gravois Avenue. “They need a sheriff who is going to make their courtrooms safe.”

In his office, even as Chavers made clear she was filming him, Betts told Chavers he was “flabbergasted” and “stunned” she was supporting Montgomery. 

“I don’t know what I did that would make you go against the preacher man,” he says, referring to himself. He then refers to Montgomery as “ungodly.” 

Betts goes on to say that not long ago, he was walking in his neighborhood on St. Louis Avenue near 20th Street when suddenly Montgomery pulled up in his car and, according to Betts, shouted, “You motherfucker, you this, you that. You’re taking my signs down.”

Montgomery tells the RFT that he’s never interacted with Betts outside of candidate forums and neighborhood meetings. 

“I don’t think anyone with good sense would do something like that to a sitting sheriff,” Montgomery says.

Montgomery has had campaign signs missing and on at least two occasions has obtained video of people tearing them down. (Chavers notes that the sign that she filmed her original Facebook video in front of is itself now missing.)

One man who lives near Columbus Square says that he recently put out two Montgomery signs, which later went missing. “If they keep taking them, I’ll keep putting them up,” he said. 

Betts says he has nothing to do with the missing signs. In the video Chavers filmed in Betts’ office, Betts says that his campaign isn’t in a spot where it needs to resort to tearing down opponents’ signs.

“If you sit here long enough, a man is getting ready to come across the street from City Hall bringing me $500, today,” Betts says. “I’m getting that kind of support. I don’t need to tear down signs.”

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St. Louis to Develop First Citywide Transportation Plan in Decades

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The City of St. Louis is working to develop its first citywide mobility plan in decades, Mayor Tishaura Jones’ office announced Tuesday. This plan seeks to make it easier for everyone — drivers, pedestrians, bikers and public transit users — to safely commute within the city.

The plan will bring together other city projects like the Brickline Greenway, Future64, the MetroLink Green Line, and more, “while establishing new priorities for a safer, more efficient and better-maintained transportation network across the City,” according to the release. 

The key elements in the plan will be public engagement, the development of a safety action plan, future infrastructure priorities and transportation network mapping, according to Jones’ office.

The overarching goals are to create a vision for citywide mobility, plan a mixture of short and long-term mobility projects and to develop improved communication tools with the public to receive transportation updates. In recent years, both people who use public transit and cyclists have been outspoken about the difficulties — and dangers — of navigating St. Louis streets, citing both cuts to public transit and traffic violence.

To garner public input and participation for the plan, Jones’ office said there will be community meetings, focus groups and a survey for residents to share their concerns. The city will also be establishing a Community Advisory Committee. Those interested in learning more should check out at tmp-stl.com/

“Everyone deserves to feel safe when getting around St. Louis, whether they’re driving, biking, walking or taking public transit,” Jones said in a news release. “Creating a comprehensive transportation and mobility plan allows us to make intentional and strategic investments so that moving around St. Louis for jobs, education, and entertainment becomes easier, safer and more enjoyable.”

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