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NEWS & LETTERS, AUGUST-SEPTEMBER 2003

Benton Harbor, Michigan copes with class, race revolt

Benton Harbor, Mich. is a work in progress for Governor Jennifer Granholm.  She has assigned a task force to deal with a more than 90% African-American community with 25% unemployment that competes for the highest murder rate in the U.S., where a revolt took place on two nights this June.

Causes for the mid-June outburst have been brewing for many years: lack of educational and job opportunity; slumlord conditions; 42% single parent households with 130+ teen births per year (population 11,500); excessive force/harassment by police, and a series of wrongful convictions whose cameo is the sentencing of Ephran Paredes, 16-year-old honor student, to three life sentences for crimes he did not commit.

Things weren't always so grim in this beachfront town. Benton Harbor used to advertise the world's largest outdoor fruit market, and was 75% white. African Americans migrated here to work the farms and factories. There were foundries, parts plants, Clark Equipment, Heath do-it-yourself radio kits, and Whirlpool. The steamer Roosevelt brought Chicagoans over as tourists. Benton Harbor supported many churches and grocery stores. Today however, Interstate 94 has no exit to Benton Harbor.

From the 1960s to the 1990s global competition killed the factories. In the 1970s Benton Harbor schools were found guilty of racial discrimination.  When the federal government issued a desegregation order, white citizens moved to the surrounding communities. Benton Harbor students could choose to be bused into the surrounding, more prosperous (and whiter) towns, but not the closest, St. Joseph.  Today there is no busing for high school students.  Benton Harbor has become, as Jesse Jackson said, “The hole in the doughnut – an island of poverty in a sea of prosperity.” Since 1986 Benton Harbor and St. Joseph have been represented in congress by Fred Upton, a “Newt Gingrich Republican,” whose family established the Whirlpool corporation.

With white flight, institutions left--the newspaper, YMCA, FBI offices, the hospital.  There was a big split in the First Congregational Church and much of it moved to St. Joseph.  A proclamation from the state that court functions, including misdemeanor court, were to come under county jurisdiction was another blow to Benton Harbor. The jury pool whitened.

The motorcycle death of Terrence Shurn in the wee hours of June 17, which Benton Harborites believe was caused by a police chase, triggered the June revolt.  Mr. Shurn was a popular and valuable citizen and his loss cut Benton Harbor to the quick.

Three non-profit organizations existed in Benton Harbor before Governor Granholm's task force was formed. Cornerstone Group is an outgrowth of the Whirlpool Corporation; the Committee for World Class Communities (CWCC) is a phony civic group established by Whirlpool; and Citizens for Progressive Change (CPC) was formed at the grassroots in response to corrupt law enforcement, crooked prosecution and stacked courts. These groups serve Benton Harbor and St. Joseph, the traditional "twin cities." Two members of the task force were drawn from Cornerstone and CWCC.  No one from CPC was selected.

But according to a CPC activist, Cornerstone Group and CWCC don’t reach the people.  They are “gatekeepers,” controlling corporate money, funneling it into towns around Benton Harbor, not dealing with the core problems of depressed lives.  “Whirlpool, with lower taxes, favorable land deals...and other corporate demands, has profited from the dire situation of the Black population.”*

The executives of Cornerstone and CWCC have no interest in developing a creative street life in Benton Harbor, which is literally deserted and has no “downtown.”  Small businesses at the center of town are failing one by one because very few people go there.  Thus, those organizations that for years have presided over development-in-reverse of this depressed community were included in Granholm’s task force.  Meanwhile, CPC is struggling to maintain its identity as a criminal justice advocacy group and is being steamrollered by the “giant” task force.  It has to fight for criminal justice as a defined “task” for the “force.”

--January

* A scathing expose of CWCC can be found at:
http://wearemichigan.com/city/BentonHarbor/comments/071003.htm

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