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Author: Mark Holguin

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Part II: Civil Rights & Cumulative Impacts

This is Part II of a series on how tenants are organizing to hold problem landlords accountable, and what happens when large companies and the state need to be held accountable too. If you haven’t listened to Part I: Tenant Rights and Resistance, listen to it now!

We wanted to share a follow-up conversation with Myisha Johnson, one of the three working members of State Street Tenant Resistance and the founder of Community First Plus, a new housing and environmental justice organization. She’s been connecting the dots between health problems and pollution from facilities like Kinder Morgan for over a decade. In this episode, we hear how Myisha felt when residents like her were asked to sign onto an administrative complaint to the EPA about the Missouri Department of Natural Resources. Then, attorneys Sarah Rubenstein and Bob Menees of Great Rivers Environmental Law Center will share about what happened when they filed the administrative complaint to the EPA on behalf of the Missouri and St. Louis City NAACP and Dutchtown South Community Corporation.

Part II: Civil Rights & Cumulative Impacts

https://news.stlpublicradio.org/podcast/we-live-here/2021-06-04/part-ii-civil-rights-cumulative-impacts
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Part II: Civil Rights & Cumulative Impacts

We wanted to share a follow-up conversation with Myisha Johnson, one of the three working members of State Street Tenant Resistance and the founder of Community First Plus, a new housing and environmental justice organization. She’s been connecting the dots between health problems and pollution from facilities like Kinder Morgan for over a decade. In this episode, we hear how Myisha felt when residents like her were asked to sign onto an administrative complaint to the EPA about the Missouri Department of Natural Resources. Then, attorneys Sarah Rubenstein and Bob Menees of Great Rivers Environmental Law Center will share about what happened when they filed the administrative complaint to the EPA on behalf of the Missouri and St. Louis City NAACP and Dutchtown South Community Corporation.

This is Part II of a two-part series on how tenants are organizing to hold problem landlords accountable, and what happens when large companies and the state need to be held accountable too. If you haven’t listened to Part I: Tenant Rights and Resistance, listen to it now!

Photos by David Kovaluk

Part II: Civil Rights & Cumulative Impacts

https://news.stlpublicradio.org/podcast/we-live-here/2021-06-04/part-ii-civil-rights-cumulative-impacts
https://news.stlpublicradio.org/page-not-found.rss
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Rep. Jason Chipman On Why Missouri Voters Should Get A Say On Gas Tax Hike

State Rep. Jason Chipman is the latest guest on Politically Speaking, where he joined St. Louis Public Radio’s Jason Rosenbaum and Jonathan Ahl to talk about the 2021 legislative session — and what’s to come when lawmakers return for at least two special sessions.

Chipman, R-Steelville, who represents Missouri’s 120th District. That takes in portions of Phelps and Crawford counties, including the cities of Cuba, Steelville, Bourbon and St. James. He was elected to the House in 2014 and will be ineligible to run again after 2022 due to term limits.

Here’s what Chipman talked about on the program:

  • His unsuccessful effort to require a gas tax hike that passed through the legislature to be put up for a statewide vote.
  • Efforts from the group Americans for Prosperity to gather enough signatures to place the proposal, which would raise the gas tax 12.5 cents per gallon over five years, before voters.
  • The two special sessions that Gov. Mike Parson is guaranteed to call in the coming weeks on a medical provider tax to pay for Medicaid and congressional redistricting.
  • Whether there could be more special sessions on election-related issues and efforts to prevent municipalities from reducing funding for law enforcement.

Chipman is a Navy veteran who worked for Brewer Science in Rolla before being elected to the House. Chipman is chairman of the House Administration and Accounts Committee, which handles internal administrative issues.

Follow Jason Rosenbaum on Twitter: @jrosenbaum

Follow Jonathan Ahl on Twitter: @jonathanahl

Follow Jason Chipman on Twitter: @JChipmanMO120th

Rep. Jason Chipman On Why Missouri Voters Should Get A Say On Gas Tax Hike
https://news.stlpublicradio.org/podcast/politically-speaking/2021-06-03/rep-jason-chipman-on-why-missouri-voters-should-get-a-say-on-gas-tax-hike
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Is Illinois Challenging Democratic Rhetoric About Redistricting?

On the latest episode of Politically Speaking, we talk about the ins and outs of redistricting in Illinois.

During the show, NPR Illinois’ Hannah Meisel and St. Louis Public Radio’s Eric Schmid and Jason Rosenbaum discuss how Illinois is one of a few states where Democrats have complete control over the process. And while Illinois Republicans haven’t exactly set the world on fire in elections in recent years, the decision to go forward with redistricting now is generating controversy for a number of reasons.

Some of the things discussed on the program include:

  • How the Illinois Democrats’ effort to create favorable maps for themselves conflicts with a national movement, primarily funded by left-leaning donors and groups, for “fair redistricting.”
  • Whether the maps that seem to be on a pathway to completion could be challenged in court because Illinois lawmakers aren’t using Census data. Those numbers won’t be available before a constitutionally mandated deadline.
  • The impact of redistricting on representation in the Metro East, a topic that Schmid explored earlier this month.
  • Why gerrymandering is not necessarily synonymous with irregularly shaped districts, something that Meisel discussed with Illinois Senate President Don Harmon earlier this year.
  • What Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who said during his 2018 campaign that he would “not sign a bill that is gerrymandered,” will do if the legislature sends redistricting plans that clearly help Democrats to his desk.

Missouri and Illinois have similar processes when it comes to congressional redistricting: Lawmakers end up passing a bill with a map, which the governor either signs or vetoes.

But Missouri’s state legislative process is substantially different: Commissions split evenly between the two parties get first crack at House and Senate maps, and appellate judges get responsibility for the processes if those bodies deadlock. State lawmakers in Illinois are responsible for drawing General Assembly maps.

Follow Jason Rosenbaum on Twitter: @jrosenbaum

Follow Hannah Meisel on Twitter: @hannahmeisel

Follow Eric Schmid on Twitter: @EricSchmid

Is Illinois Challenging Democratic Rhetoric About Redistricting?
https://news.stlpublicradio.org/podcast/politically-speaking/2021-05-28/is-illinois-challenging-democratic-rhetoric-about-redistricting
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Part I: Tenant Rights & Resistance

The pandemic triggered a major housing crisis, resulting in millions of renters and unhoused people across the country becoming at risk for being evicted or displaced. Meanwhile, those living in apartments with mold or pests have been stuck with environmental conditions that exacerbate asthma and COVID-19. Locally, tenants and housing advocates are pushing back by advocating for eviction moratoriums, holding landlords accountable, and working to create a tenants bill of rights. In this episode, we hear from the three working members of State Street Tenants Resistance about what motivates them to advocate for a tenants bill of rights, and the Community Empowerment Organizer of a local community development corporation will explain how to hold problem landlords accountable and what’s at stake when large companies and the state need to be held accountable, too.

Photos by Jia Lian Yang

Part I: Tenant Rights & Resistance

https://news.stlpublicradio.org/podcast/we-live-here/2021-05-21/part-i-tenant-rights-resistance
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