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Joe Biden is coming back to PA. Here’s where he should go

Black voters in PA's cities gave Biden the presidency, but they're still suffering.

President Joe Biden is stopping twice in my home state over the next week, and Iโ€™d have a few suggestions of places he should visit.

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

The White House announced on Monday that Biden will speak in prime time at Philadelphiaโ€™s Independence Hall on Thursday to address โ€œthe continued battle for the soul of the nation.โ€ Heโ€™ll be back on the western end of the Turnpike in my hometown of Pittsburgh on Labor Day, where itโ€™s not clear where heโ€™ll appear. But I have a question: exactly which part of the nationโ€™s soul will Biden address in Pennsylvania? Itโ€™s true that the Trump campaign and its acolytes are still trying to hijack democracy here after their loss in the 2020 election cycle, but itโ€™s equally true that that the government for decades hasnโ€™t delivered much in the way of positive outcomes for the Black folks in urban areas. Itโ€™s hard to argue that there are two better cities for a sitting president to address those issues than Philly and Pittsburgh.

Hear me out. With PA a crucial swing state, it was Black voters, specifically in Philadelphia and its suburbs, that helped push Joe Biden end the national nightmare known as President Trump. It wasnโ€™t exclusively Black voters of course, but Black folks are Democratsโ€™ most reliable voting block and Philly has a trove of them who turned out for the Biden/Harris ticket. But Philly is the kind of city rarely discussed when the issue of gun control comes upโ€”we reserve that discussion generally for when mass shooters grab assault rifles and shoot up suburban schools, not for urban gun violence. So far this year, Philly, a city of 1.5 million, where Black folks are a plurality, has seen more than 2,820 โ€œshooting incidentsโ€, with 361 homicides as of August 29, according to the Philadelphia Police Department. The New York Times wrote this about the crisis on Aug. 11:

So far this year, more than 1,400 people in the city have been shot, hundreds of them fatally, a higher toll than in the much larger cities of New York or Los Angeles. Alarms have sounded about gun violence across the country over the past two years, but Philadelphia is one of the few major American cities where it truly is as bad as it has ever been.

The crisis is all the more harrowing for having been so concentrated in certain neighborhoods in North and West Philadelphia, places that were left behind decades ago by redlining and other forms of discrimination and are now among the poorest parts of what is often called the countryโ€™s poorest big city.

Small-d democracy is important and the president should address it. But Biden shouldnโ€™t roll out of Philly without stopping by some of those blighted neighborhoods to talk to the Black mothers and grandmothers who showed up to put him in office as well as the young, Black men who donโ€™t vote in as high a numberโ€”maybe because theyโ€™re more concerned with finding work at a decent wage and staying alive until the next day.

Pittsburgh is the smaller and the least Black of Pennsylvaniaโ€™s two major citiesโ€”a fact that speaks not only to the cityโ€™s populationโ€”which is about a quarter Black out of about 300,000 total residentsโ€”but also its culture. Sure, weโ€™ve got a Black mayor for the first time, itโ€™s just that it took the entire 200-plus year history for him to be elected. Pittsburgh is White Americaโ€™s Atlanta, a city for average white folks can visit and enjoy, or relocate to and thrive without much effort, because everything from the cityโ€™s politics to its nightlife, medical establishments and restaurants reflect the fact that although Black folks have been a significant part of the population here for 150 years, our concerns and culture have never been centered in a real way by city government, institutions or power brokers.

The result of that was a now-famed 2017 study that identified Pittsburghโ€™s quality of living for Black residents as the worst in the countryโ€”which is amazing considering what I just said about how likely you are to die of a gunshot if you live in our larger neighbor city four hours east. Pittsburgh has a toxic combination of a sky-high Black infant and maternal mortality rates, low levels of Black homeownership, wages and educational attainment, high Black unemployment and so forth. One of the studyโ€™s authors posited that just by relocating away from Pittsburghโ€”which I did from 1995 until 2017โ€”Black folks could safely assume theyโ€™d live longer, healthier lives while working more productive careers at higher wages. Literally, just by moving.

So when Biden comes here, I can imagine that the backdrop will be somewhere that invokes the cityโ€™s history as a center of white, blue-collar union town, or near one of the cityโ€™s gazillion bridges to highlight the impact of the infrastructure bill he finally got through Congress. Neither, though, is where he should go.

If Biden wants to make a difference here, he should check in on the cityโ€™s Black neighborhoods, like the Hill District, which is where I spent my early childhood and parts of which Iโ€™m convinced are cancer clusters, given the eventual deaths of my grandmother, mother and first cousin and diagnosis of the mother of one of my uncles by marriage, all of whom lived in the same now-torn-down project complex in the โ€˜70s and โ€˜80s. Those projects are gone now, given way in part to the new Burrows Street Townhomes, โ€œa modernist enclaveโ€ where three bedrooms will run you $630,000 to start. He should visit Lincoln-Lemington, Larimer and Homewood, a cluster of mostly-Black and poor neighborhoods in on the cityโ€™s east side where even the rampant gentrification in that of town has yet to take hold.

Biden should also stop by UPMC Magee Womenโ€™s Hospital, which sits at the edge of the University of Pittsburgh and its renowned medical complex. I was born there; so were my sons and just about every other person I know. If youโ€™re Black and from Pittsburgh, thereโ€™s a better than 50 percent chance this is where you entered the world. But recall that astounding Black infant mortality rate of 14.9 per 100,000, and then note that for white Pittsburgh babies, the number is 3.3 per 100,000. There are a number of structural reasons for this, and all of them canโ€™t be fixed by throwing federal money at the problem. Still, Biden would do a lot more good visiting the moms and babies in Mageeโ€™s NICUโ€”where my cousinโ€™s baby survived being born premature and weighing less than a pound just four years agoโ€”than rehashing old steelworker mythology.

Remembering that the Black folks in Philly, and yes, across Allegheny County, helped put him in office is something Biden shouldnโ€™t forget, and should think about repaying, before his stop through the the Keystone State.

Straight From The Root

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