An Idea for Over-Advantaged Seattle: Meet Me in St. Louie

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Image by Alexander Schettino from Pixabay

Seattle is famous for the large number of Sister Cities it has adopted (21). They include Perugia, Kobe, Bergen. I have another idea: St. Louis.

In a provocative column in the Washington Post, Steven Pearlstein argues that instead of concentrating tech companies and venture capital in a few American cities (Seattle, Bay Area, Boston), and forcing workers to move there, we should spread the wealth and invest in second-tier, emerging-new-economy cities (Pittsburgh, Portland, Austin) and, even better, in once-grand legacy cities such as St. Louis, Cincinnati, Cleveland.

“Rather than move workers to opportunity,” Pearlstein argues, a new kind of urban and economic strategy “would be to move opportunity closer to underemployed workers, underutilized infrastructure, cheap land and plentiful housing ā€” in places such as Detroit, Cleveland, St. Louis, Baltimore and other large ‘legacy cities’ from the industrial era.”

The market forces, left to themselves, concentrate wealth and impoverish the laggards. But government can be a counterforce. After all, this happened during the Depression and the Cold War when under-investment in the arid West was corrected by massive investments such as Grand Coulee Dam. This compensatory investment then accelerated during the Cold War, when Defense needed bases closer to the Pacific war zones of Korea and Vietnam. Now we need to do “equity investing” again.

Consider St. Louis, a city I have recently come to fall in love with. Perched where the Missouri, Mississippi, and Ohio Rivers converge, St. Louis was a flourishing and wealthy city. Its enriched citizens donated their millions to the city, not to global causes as today. An example is Henry Shaw, who got it into his head to create one of the great botanical gardens in the world and did so. Same with Forest Park, larger than Central Park, a legacy of 1876 and host to the 1904 World’s Fair. Same with Washington University adjoining Forest Park, one of the leading research universities in the nation.

And did I mention that St. Louis has very affordable housing? Fine cultural institutions including the one that inspired me in starting Town Hall, The Sheldon. A rich diversity of ethnic neighborhoods. An oversized airport that is a legacy of its days as an aerospace city (McDonnell-Douglas, now Boeing). Good food and music.

St. Louis is just one of the ripe opportunities. The idea of reinvesting in these cities springs from an impulse to share and spread the wealth, not to hog advantages by increasing density and subsidies for the have-too-much cities. Spreading wealth and population and jobs ought to appeal to Seattle’s idealism. Maybe it could ease some of our prices and congestion, as well as enrich our own opportunities through supportive sisterhood.

And one more thing, the political aspect (and perhaps a good way to use Mayor Pete). To quote Pearlstein:

“What I find so curious is that here is an issue ā€” helping workers and regions that have been left behind ā€” that holds enormous appeal to supporters of President Trump and Sen. Bernie Sanders, and just about everyone in between. Not coincidentally, it involves regions that are most likely to decide the coming election. Yet none of the presidential candidates ā€” not Democrats, not Trump ā€” is even talking about legacy cities, or industrial policy or regional economic development.”

David Brewster
David Brewster
David Brewster, a founding member of Post Alley, has a long career in publishing, having founded Seattle Weekly, Sasquatch Books, and Crosscut.com. His civic ventures have been Town Hall Seattle and FolioSeattle.

3 COMMENTS

  1. Pittsburgh and Austin are already doing pretty well as second-tier tech hubs.

    There are a lot of cities that have tried to duplicate Silicon Valley. Seattle struggled and only recently made it. Boston was Silicon Valley before Silicon Valley was, and only now is starting to catch up.

    The secret sauce? A top-10 computer science research university that can not just churn out a local tech workforce and an educated, innovative culture, but also can employ the life-partners of people in the tech industry (the two-body problem is real). UW in Seattle, Stanford and Berkeley in the Bay Area, MIT in Boston, CMU in Pittsburgh, UT in Austin, Columbia in NYC (with an assist by NYU). The lack of a top computer science school in Los Angeles has held it back from becoming another tech hub.

    Also having local venture capital makes a big difference — that’s what got Seattle over the hump.

    St. Louis is a great place that deserves a boost up, but it’s not even in the running for a strong CS research university. And last I checked, there wasn’t a whole lot of VC funding there either.

  2. Replying to Kevin’s wise observations. I did not mean to imply that a tech-based economic revival for St. Louis is the only path forward, though pieces of it could work. The fact that St. Louis lacks some of the key components is part of my argument for directed development of such cities. Imagine if Amazon were to have picked the city for HQ2, for instance. Regardless, such targeted development takes 20-30 years, developing intellectual resources, venture capital, an employment base, and political consensus. Meanwhile, Seattle could do its part: cultural exchanges, satellite offices, university collaborations, paired explorations of emerging business sectors such as AI.

  3. These spirited ideas are insufficiently cognizant of the limitations of the role cities and states play in business location. We have supplied some of the building blocks— higher education, amenities — and thus have benefited economically from the huge agglomerative tendencies of the tech sector. We don’t have (and there’s no indication the public wants) anything close to the tools that would allow us to select St Louis

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