After decades of segregation, anger boils
over in Milwaukee
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[August 16, 2016]
By Brendan O'Brien
MILWAUKEE (Reuters) - For Randy Jones, a
community activist in the Milwaukee district of Sherman Park, the
rioting that took place in his neighborhood over the weekend was
inevitable.
By most any socioeconomic measure, Milwaukee's majority black
neighborhoods lag far behind the white, a trend that has grown more
acute since the deindustrialization of the 1980s.
So when police shot dead an armed black man after stopping his car for
"suspicious activity," tempers ran out of control and parts of the city
burned.
Gunfire erupted on Saturday and Sunday nights. Protesters hurled bottles
and bricks, torched businesses, and damaged squad cars. At least eight
officers have been injured and more than 30 people arrested.
"When you hold a person down so long, they are eventually going to fight
back," said Jones, who recently ran for election to the city government
but lost. "It was going to happen eventually, it was just a matter of
when."Jones said when he was growing up in the 1970s and '80s, he had a
job each summer. Now teenagers, especially young black men, have no
income potential and too much idle time.
"They have no hope at all," he said.
By some measures, Milwaukee is the most segregated city in America. The
Brookings Institution think tank last December ranked the segregation of
cities on a scale of zero to 100 using U.S. Census Bureau data.
Milwaukee came in first with a score of 81.
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Almost 40 percent of black males in Milwaukee between ages 24 and 54
lack a job, a rate four to five times higher than for whites, said Marc
Levine, founding director of the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee's
Center for Economic Development.
Interstate highways create borders between impoverished neighborhoods
and more affluent areas. Black Milwaukee districts are interspersed with
vacant lots and abandoned, blighted houses. The typical hangout for
young black men is outside small corner grocery stores where they
socialize and become themselves targets of violent crimes.
Sherman Park, where the rioting took place, was once the home of
Milwaukee's black middle class but today more than 30 percent of its
people live in poverty, Levine said.
Police tensions with African-Americans date at least to the reign of
former Police Chief Harold Breier, who opposed the civil rights movement
in the 1960s.
The Milwaukee Police Department voluntarily placed itself under federal
review following the largely peaceful protests that resulted from the
police shooting death of Dontre Hamilton, a mentally ill, unarmed black
man in 2014.
An internal report charting data from 2005 to 2014 showed police
responded to life-threatening situations within 8.4 minutes in District
2 on the predominantly white south side but took 15 minutes to respond
in District 7 on the largely black north side.
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Police stand guard after disturbances following the police shooting
of a man in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. August 14, 2016.
REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein
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FOLLOWING FERGUSON AND BALTIMORE
Milwaukee is the latest American city to be gripped by violence in
response to police killings of black men following social outbursts
in places such as Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014 and Baltimore last
year.
"In a general sense they're connected in the same way they were
connected in Baltimore and Ferguson," Levine said. "It's fair to say
those systemic inequalities and long history of police department
abuses condition the environment so that it's an ongoing powder keg
that can erupt at any point."
Mayor Tom Barrett acknowledged poverty contributed to the social
unrest but underscored the need to restore order to be able to
attract investment.
"In the long term, we know we have to have more jobs in the
community. We know there has to be more investment, and you’d have
to be crazy to think that this activity (rioting) is in any way
helping," Barrett told a news conference on Monday.
Reggie Jackson, chairman of America's Black Holocaust Museum in
Milwaukee, said young blacks "feel like they are stuck in this
bubble" without any escape, and that misguided investment has failed
to provide needed jobs.
He cited the construction of a new basketball arena for the
Milwaukee Bucks that has been partly funded with $250 million of
taxpayer money.
"That money could have been used in these poor parts of Milwaukee to
improve the conditions of the neighborhood," Jackson said. "People
feel that it is a slap in the face."
(Additional reporting by Daniel Trotta and David Ingram in New York;
Writing by Daniel Trotta; Editing by James Dalgleish)
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