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Mississippi River Association Under Civil Rights Investigation

The Mississippi River flooding its usual banks of East St. Louis near Malcolm W. Martin Memorial Park on June 7, 2019.
File Photo / Mary Delach Leonard
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漏 2024 外网天堂
The Mississippi River floods its usual banks at East St. Louis near Malcolm W. Martin Memorial Park in June 2019.

The Environmental Protection Agency is investigating whether a five-state governmental association that works on issues related to the Upper Mississippi River violated the Civil Rights Act.

In July, the federal agency鈥檚 External Civil Rights Compliance Office accepted a complaint against the , which represents the governors of Missouri, Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota.

The complaint, filed by , alleges the basin association discriminates against communities of color by preventing them from participating in the development of programs, projects and policies related to flooding along the Mississippi River.

鈥淎s an association of these governors, they have a lot of power to effect policy changes at the state and federal level,鈥 said Olivia Dorothy, a river restoration director at American Rivers.

Kirsten Wallace, the association鈥檚 executive director, said in a statement the organization denies the allegations and believes the complaint lacks merit.

The complaint alleges a pattern of behavior by the association. It focuses on its community outreach efforts in its , which is meant to evaluate flood risk, sediment management, long-term drought and other concerns in communities along the Upper Mississippi.

The study, which began during , also proposes immediate and long-term strategies to manage the Mississippi River more effectively. Those strategies were shaped and influenced by feedback in local sessions where the association invited community members to share their concerns about the river.

Dorothy said there were few people of color at the public meetings.

鈥淲e raised these concerns with UMRBA, going back to the spring of 2019 before they even announced and finalized their public engagement schedule,鈥 Dorothy said. 鈥淲e pointed out they needed to do outreach to some of these communities that haven鈥檛 been engaged before.鈥

Communities of color along the Mississippi River often face the brunt of flooding damage and recovery challenges that flood managers regularly overlook, she said.

鈥淭hey need help with nuisance flooding, with home renovations to prevent flood damages in the future,鈥 Dorothy said. 鈥淲e have a tendency in the flood management community to ignore the flooding that continues to happen behind levees where we supposedly have this flood control infrastructure.鈥

This kind of situation affects residents in East St. Louis and more acutely those in Cahokia Heights, said Norma Patterson, a pastor at Good Shepherd Faith United Church of Christ in East St. Louis. She experienced numerous floods while living in her first house in the city from 1965 to 1998.

鈥淭here were so many floods in this city to the point where at least three times during that 33 years I lived in that house, FEMA has had to pay me because of the flooding,鈥 she said.

East St. Louis hasn鈥檛 had floods as bad since 1993, but the damage remains, Patterson said.

鈥淚 never heard of this organization, and I work closely with the city, at least I have in the past,鈥 Patterson said. 鈥淚鈥檓 wondering who did they talk to? Anybody down here?鈥

Environmental organizers locally noticed the basin association avoided hosting sessions in majority-Black river communities, like St. Louis or Cairo, Illinois, said Maisah Khan, policy director at the Mississippi River Network, an advocacy organization.

Khan recognizes it鈥檚 not possible to host a meeting in every area along the river but said the choices of Hannibal, Cape Girardeau and Godfrey, Illinois, were striking.

鈥淭he cities that were chosen for the listening sessions are predominantly white,鈥 Khan said. 鈥淚f you intentionally chose places where there aren鈥檛 as many people of color, you鈥檙e also increasing the barriers to communities of color.鈥

She said she was the only nonwhite person at the Hannibal session.

鈥淲hat is missed when we are not engaging intentionally with communities of color are the very real impacts of flooding, of climate change, of housing issues,鈥 Khan said.

That includes the lasting effects from mold, which can come from repetitive flooding or basement backups, she said.

鈥淣ot a single person in the Hannibal public meeting raised any issue like that,鈥 Khan said.

The main goal of the civil rights complaint is to both force changes to the Keys to the River Report, but also to strengthen the association鈥檚 future work by engaging with different communities and perspectives, Dorothy said.

Eric Schmid covers the Metro East for 漏 2024 外网天堂 as part of the journalism grant program: , an initiative of The GroundTruth Project.

Eric Schmid covers business and economic development for 漏 2024 外网天堂.