smigon
Old enough to know better
This was an interview about the poverty/affluent areas being so close yet so far away. Please listen to the discussion, it is only a few minutes long but sheds light on the plight of so many African-Americans. I followed up with my own experiences of seeing this happen first hand.
[URL="http://www.npr.org/2014/08/17/341164546/in-st-louis-area-a-short-distance-can-make-a-big-difference"]how one number can affect so many lives[/URL]
The Ferguson riots are just both maddening and saddening to me. Please listen to this short interview on NPR regarding the difference one single digit can make person's life.
I grew up in the zip code of 63105 where I was given the fortune of one of the best young educations in the nation and access to culture and educational activity. Listening to this report about the differences between Clayton and neighborhoods of Ferguson and other North St. Louis townships really shows how just one number in a zip code can make a difference in how people are treated.
Later in life I moved to the hip-urban area of Soulard near downtown St. Louis and felt the cultural difference personally. Soulard's zip code, coincidentally, is 63104. This zip code encompassed not only the young professional residents and quaint bars and restaurants, it also housed the Darst-Webbe housing projects. We couldn't order pizza to be delivered because companies are not allowed to discriminate against delivery addresses within a zip code, which is one we shared with one of the most dangerous parts of the city. We were refused many services simply because of one number. Plumbers and locksmiths were wary and sometimes refused jobs in fear for loss of their tools or worse, their lives. One digit affected the lives and livelihoods of both residents and businesses.
I hope someday there will be a time when one digit doesn't matter.
[URL="http://www.npr.org/2014/08/17/341164546/in-st-louis-area-a-short-distance-can-make-a-big-difference"]how one number can affect so many lives[/URL]
The Ferguson riots are just both maddening and saddening to me. Please listen to this short interview on NPR regarding the difference one single digit can make person's life.
I grew up in the zip code of 63105 where I was given the fortune of one of the best young educations in the nation and access to culture and educational activity. Listening to this report about the differences between Clayton and neighborhoods of Ferguson and other North St. Louis townships really shows how just one number in a zip code can make a difference in how people are treated.
Later in life I moved to the hip-urban area of Soulard near downtown St. Louis and felt the cultural difference personally. Soulard's zip code, coincidentally, is 63104. This zip code encompassed not only the young professional residents and quaint bars and restaurants, it also housed the Darst-Webbe housing projects. We couldn't order pizza to be delivered because companies are not allowed to discriminate against delivery addresses within a zip code, which is one we shared with one of the most dangerous parts of the city. We were refused many services simply because of one number. Plumbers and locksmiths were wary and sometimes refused jobs in fear for loss of their tools or worse, their lives. One digit affected the lives and livelihoods of both residents and businesses.
I hope someday there will be a time when one digit doesn't matter.