Protests could derail St. Louis' bid for
second Amazon hub: sources
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[September 23, 2017]
By Brendan O'Brien
ST. LOUIS (Reuters) - Protests in St. Louis
over the acquittal of a white former policeman who killed a black man
could impede the city's bid to attract Amazon.com's second headquarters,
academics and business executives said.
Marked by scuffles, teargas and property damage, the protests have been
unfolding as the city, which has a history of social unrest, is vying
for the lucrative Amazon deal.
"There is no good timing for something like this and it will have an
impact," said Didi Caldwell, founding principal with Global Location
Strategies in South Carolina, which helps companies choose locations for
new businesses and expansion.
Amazon, the world's biggest online retailer, said this month that it
planned to build a $5 billion second headquarters that could bring
50,000 new jobs to the winning city.
An Amazon spokesman declined to discuss the site search.
In its call for proposals from cities, Amazon said a "compatible
cultural and community environment" that included diversity, a high
quality of life and stable business climate were key. The company
intends to make a decision in 2018.
William Collins, a Vanderbilt University economic historian who has
studied the aftermath of the 1960s race riots in the United States, said
the impact on a city's ability to draw new employers depended on how
companies view such incidents.
“Does it suggest a deeply rooted problem that's likely to make living,
working, and investing in a particular location less attractive or less
profitable than alternatives? If so, it can have lasting implications,”
Collins said.
A September 16 ruling found former St. Louis policeman Jason Stockley,
36, not guilty of first-degree murder in the 2011 killing of Anthony
Lamar Smith, 24.
'NATIONAL ISSUE'
In August, after clashes in Charlottesville, Virginia, over plans to
remove a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee, regional economic
development officials wrote to site selection companies saying the
violence did not define the city.
St. Louis Economic Development Partnership officials said they were
aware of racial tensions highlighted by the protests but argued that the
problem was not unique to St. Louis.
"The protests, although the timing of them was not the best for St.
Louis, are really indicative of a national issue that needs to be looked
at," the partnership's Chief Executive Sheila Sweeney said on Thursday.
The day before, protesters at a high-end shopping mall blocked traffic
and chanted, "No justice, no profits."
Other cities that have indicated they are in the running for the Amazon
site include Seattle, Dallas, Houston and Denver.
[to top of second column] |
A woman who was pushed down by police is helped by a protester while
police try to disperse a crowd, after a not guilty verdict in the
murder trial of Jason Stockley, a former St. Louis police officer,
charged with the 2011 shooting of Anthony Lamar Smith, who was
black, in St. Louis, Missouri, U.S. on September 15, 2017.
REUTERS/Lawrence Bryant/File Photo
Charlotte, North Carolina, which saw riots last year after the fatal
shooting of a black man by a police officer, has not seen business
opt against moving there. Officials, who noted that the city's
efforts to break down bias led to the protests, said quantifying any
lasting impact was difficult.
"It's a troubling challenge of our time," said Dianne Chase,
spokeswoman for the Charlotte Regional Partnership, a public/private
economic development organization trying to attract Amazon. "We're
not alone, it's most unfortunate to say."
St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson declined to speak on the issue, but
told reporters this week that the city had a legacy of institutional
racism and needed to move forward with more jobs and stronger
civilian oversight of the police.
St. Louis is touting its central U.S. location, riverways,
interstate highways and rail lines, vibrant technology environment
and urban setting, as its main attractions.
While the city is a transportation hub with a low cost of living,
good housing stock and access to research universities, the unrest
could hurt its chances even if it made Amazon's final list, said
Global Location Strategies' Caldwell.
Companies looking for locations will never announce they have
eliminated a city for reasons like racial unrest, but that would
likely be the case, she said.
St. Louis residents expressed concern on social media over economic
impact related to the unrest.
“People were saying, 'Unless the city cleans up its act, we’ll never
get Amazon,'” said Lindenwood University economics professor Howard
Wall.
"Sometimes the economics are sort of a wash and it just becomes
about where am I more comfortable doing business and living,"
Caldwell said.
The St. Louis metro area has been a hot spot for the national debate
over racial bias in law enforcement since Michael Brown, an unarmed
black teenager, was killed in 2014 by a white police officer in
nearby Ferguson. The Brown shooting sparked riots and the rise of
the Black Lives Matter movement.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien; Additional reporting by Chris Kenning
in Chicago and Ben Klayman in Detroit; Editing by Ben Klayman, Toni
Reinhold)
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