FERGUSON, Missouri — With the region waiting nervously to hear whether the Ferguson police officer who killed unarmed teen Michael Brown will face charges, the leaders of a new high-level panel are looking to shift the focus to the underlying issues highlighted by the unrest over Brown’s death.
“There’s no decision that makes 100% of the people happy,” Rev. Starsky Wilson, a co-chair of the Ferguson Commission, told msnbc in an interview. “And so what’s best right now is to be thoughtful about how we can get to know one another, and move beyond whatever the announcement is.”
Rich McClure, a veteran of St. Louis civic life and Starsky’s co-chair, laid out some of the issues the panel will aim to tackle: Racial and ethnic disparities, a lack of economic and educational opportunities, and police-community relations.
Gov. Jay Nixon announced the commission’s members at an event Tuesday, and a state agency approved a $100,000 grant so it can start work immediately.
“Their most important work will not be what is written on sheets of paper or on a website,” Nixon said. “Their most important work will be the changes we see in our institutions and our work places, in our communities and in our interactions with one another. Change of this magnitude is hard; but maintaining the status quo is simply not acceptable.”
The commission is charged with releasing a report by no later than September 15, 2015, on the underlying issues raised by the unrest in Ferguson.
The16-person group includes representatives from the protest movement, as well as a local businessman, a law enforcement official, non-profit leaders, and academics. It has nine black members and seven white members. Ten are men, and six are women. (See below for the full list.)
McClure, a former chief of staff to one-time Missouri Governor John Ashcroft, insisted that unlike some other commissions, this one would have teeth. Though the commission’s recommendations aren’t binding, he said it would push to implement them through the legislative process and through executive actions.
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“And then after the commission is done, we are committed to set up a process for monitoring, for implementation, for further action, to ensure that citizens know: Here is what happened as a result of this report. And to keep the pressure on for real change,” McClure added.
Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder said Tuesday that he voted against funding for the panel because its report would only “gather dust on a shelf.”
Wilson, the well-connected president of a St. Louis grant-making organization focused on child well-being, said that by its actions, the commission aimed to offer an example of the kind of civic engagement that it wants to encourage.
“This kind of engaged group of people, who are diverse, taking responsibility for stewarding a process by which the entire region has input into its future, is a model for the democratic project of inclusive democracy,” he said. “This is really what America is about.”
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An announcement on whether Officer Darren Wilson has been indicted for Brown’s killing is expected any day. A decision not to indict could set off a new spasm of anger, over three months after protests and isolated violence roiled this St. Louis suburb in the wake of Brown’s death.
Starsky Wilson said commissioners’ ties to the community could allow it to help act as a force for calm in the wake of a decision.
“One of the great things about this commission is that it’s filled with active citizens, who are engaged in the dialogue and the preparation already,” he said.
Wilson and McClure could have a tough time keeping everyone on the same page. One member of the panel, Rasheen Aldridge, 20, is a local activist who last month led an occupation of St. Louis City Hall. Another, Kevin Ahlbrand, is the president of the state Fraternal Order of Police, and complained in August that “nobody is standing up for Darren Wilson.”









