Let鈥檚 play a little visualization game.
Close your eyes and imagine what a 鈥渨ealthy鈥 neighborhood looks like.
What comes to mind?
Maybe leafy trees, nice houses, amenities, parks and businesses. But probably not abandoned buildings, barren streets and empty lots.
Those things often are associated with 鈥減oor鈥 neighborhoods.
Let鈥檚 do one more visualization.
We want you to imagine a neighborhood that doesn鈥檛 have have much money but looks like a neighborhood with money?
Having trouble seeing this one?
You鈥檙e not alone. In the community development world it鈥檚 widely understood that bringing any kind of change to a struggling neighborhood can take years.
Yet the need for change is urgent. suggests blight is associated with serious health problems, not to mention stress associated with poverty.
So what happens when you try to make sure being poor doesn鈥檛 means a life surrounded by decay?
On this episode, we bringing you three very different stories about people with a common goal: Changing the look of poverty. Each one is a window into what it really takes to revitalize communities on the ground level.
In the Show
- , a middle aged postal worker who鈥檚 out to revitalize streets named after Dr. Martin Luther King across America.
- a long-time resident of north St. Louis who turned a vacant lot into an award winning community garden.
- , a collaboration of small municipalities in north St. Louis County who have banded together to help reverse decades of disinvestment.