Canton Repository Guest Editorial June 2019
Recurring themes in stories about Canton and Stark County
concern the loss of population, flat incomes, and the advancing age of our residents.
Stark County’s population is the same today as it was in 1970. We are losing our young people. Common to many
cities of the “rust belt”, the population is getting older and less prosperous.
Young people leave for bigger cities and better jobs. What is mentioned less is
that this process has been going on for forty years. I know this because I was
one of those who left.
I grew up in Canton and graduated from GlenOak. I had a
great childhood but couldn’t wait to leave. In 1975 I moved to Columbus for
school and found a vibrant, exciting, growing city. I had always felt somehow stifled in
Canton. I wanted more choices, more
diversity, and more excitement.
It isn’t rocket science to figure out why young folks leave
the area, and why other young families don’t come here. All you need do is ask them. Social scientists, urban planners, and
researchers have conducted innumerable studies and focus groups over the years,
and they’ve learned that millennials and those younger, want to live in cities
that have diversity, character, cultural and entertainment choices, and public
transit. They want walkability, downtown
living, and cultural variety. Those under 40 are less interested in
monochromatic neighborhoods, car ownership, and suburbia. They want to feel connected; they want transportation
options, green spaces, and public gathering places.
Most of all they want diversity. These new generations are
the most diverse in American history, and the cities in America that are
successful, like Seattle, Boston, Chicago and Washington DC, are bustling with
Americans of Asian, Latin, and Middle eastern backgrounds. Americans under 40 have largely rejected the
old racial divisions of black vs. white, and now prefer to live and work with a
kaleidoscope of people of different ethnic backgrounds and lifestyles.
Certainly jobs are critically important, but it isn’t only
that people follow jobs. Businesses and employers also follow people and look
at demographics. The fast growing and
high paying tech and information companies are choosing to locate in areas with
strong education programs and younger, diverse populations. They locate where their potential employees
and customers live. It is why smart
cities invest in education, downtown development, and public transit. It’s why
cities like Denver, Portland and Salt Lake City thrive.
There isn’t a single successful city in America that does
not have a visible vibrant LGBT community. Look no further than Columbus to see
how a town that recognized and embraced its gay community became the most
successful and fastest growing city in Ohio.
Whole neighborhoods were rejuvenated and reborn, and its glittering
downtown is full of life. Festivals
bring people to the city core all summer long. The annual Gay Pride Parade and
festival, which began in 1982, now brings hundreds of thousands of people to
its downtown each June, along with millions of dollars in economic
activity.
I later lived in
Detroit, an area that epitomized urban decay and the hollowing out of our
cities. Friends suggested I was “rowing
back to the Titanic”. In 1990 I settled
in a small blue-collar city on the border of Detroit. Ferndale was getting older, less prosperous,
and losing population. The downtown was an empty beige canyon. But we began to promote the city as a place
that welcomed everyone, including artists, musicians, gay people, and others in
the “creative class”. We started music
festivals and pride marches. We empowered our Downtown Development Authority to
bring in new restaurants and nightclubs and placed greenery and baskets of
flowers downtown. We changed ordinances to allow patio dining, and soon the
city began to revive. We made the city
walkable with new streetlights and sidewalks. Above all we made sure that the
welcome mat was out for everyone. There
was initial resistance to the growing LGBT community, but when neighborhoods
blossomed and property values skyrocketed, that resistance melted away. Today
there is a building boom going on, the downtown is full of color and life, and
the largest demographic is people aged 25 to 34. Even Detroit is coming back. It is rebuilding
its downtown and building public transportation options even while embracing
its past. It has become cool and young
urban pioneers of every stripe are moving to the city.
Canton is making strides in the right direction, with a
budding arts district and a growing music scene. Farsighted developers are trying to build
apartments and living spaces downtown. We have amazing restaurants and taverns.
Events like the annual Blues Festival, Saturday concerts and First Fridays are
bringing people into the city. Groups
like ArtsinStark do amazing work but we must redouble our efforts.
We cannot hang our
hats solely on football and trying to bring back 1950’s era jobs. The dominant
colors as one travels downtown are too often the dusty grays of concrete and
tans faded brick. Regional leaders must temper sclerotic policies that push
suburban sprawl. The fate of the region
is inextricably tied to the success of our cities.
Business, religious, and political leaders must begin to aggressively
welcome young people, ethnic and racial minorities, and LGBT people to the
community. Such diversity is not just to
be tolerated or even recognized, but should be promoted, embraced and
celebrated. Such actions will help bring tech, information, and environmental
companies that now fuel the new economy of the 21st century.
It’s ironic that as Stark County gets older and less
populated, there are thousands of young families and children from Central
America stuck in holding pens on our southern border seeking to legally
immigrate to our country. Immigrants
built Canton in the last two centuries, and they can be the customers, workers and
residents for the next one.
I moved back to Canton last year because I have family here,
and because it has great parks, a low cost of living, and the friendliest
people in the Midwest. Folks are working
hard to make it better, and the potential is limitless if we think smart and
work together.
Craig Covey was a
human rights activist in Columbus, Ohio and a health educator for the Michigan
Department of Public Health. He was a
City Councilman and Mayor of Ferndale, Michigan, and an Oakland County
Commissioner.
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