FERGUSON, Missouri — Ferguson School Board President Rob Chabot announced Thursday at a community meeting that school will “absolutely” be open Monday after more than a week of violence and unrest that rocked this suburban community outside St. Louis.
“We are prepared for school on Monday and we’re really excited about that,” Chabot said to applause.
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To the mostly white audience of 300 or 400 packed in the First Baptist Church here, it was a welcome sign of a return to normalcy at an event meant to reclaim the image of a town that has become the center of a national debate over racism and police brutality.
“We cannot let the media define who Ferguson is,” said Brian Fletcher, the city’s former mayor of 28 years who organized the event under the new “I love Ferguson” banner. “We must take back the tone and tell the world what Ferguson has been, is, and will be,” he added.
Organizers equipped with a one-page fact-sheet touting positive aspects of the community, from the popular farmers market and the monthly community newspaper to the EarthDance Farm, the oldest organic farm in the state.
The city of just over 20,000 has been invaded this week by satellite trucks and Humvees, but the image on their TV screens is not the one many people here say see when they go about their lives in a city whose highway exit signs and official website call “historic.”
“It seems like people are coming here basically to exploit the situation and ultimately to maybe get a Pulitzer, maybe get their picture on Twitter re-tweeted a thousand times,” Mark DeSantis, a software developer who has lived in Ferguson for 10 years told msnbc.
“Jesus, we are beyond progressive,” Fletcher said after the meeting.
The message of “I love Ferguson,” which Fletcher dreamed up a few days ago to get peoples’ attention, has become a gravitational center for this side of Ferguson. He’s already raising $13,000 and printed 5,000 yard signs, with many more on the way. Any extra money will go to the businesses that were damaged in the unrest.
One-by-one, residents came to speak and offer suggestions about how to heal the community and bridge the divide between what many here acknowledged are “two Fergusons” and make the city better than ever.
There were ideas about how to increase the number of city wards in order to add black members of the city council without ousting current members and a proposal for a scholarship program to send young black men to St. Louis Police Academy.
The local veterinarian, whose business was vandalized, suggested the largest-ever single ALS Ice Bucket Challenge right down the middle of W. Florissant Ave, the center of the protests. Another resident proposed a parade. Yet another invited everyone to a concert.
Byron Conley, one of the few black community members to take the microphone, said he wanted police officers to just talk casually to residents more often. But even he wasn’t happy with his town’s image in the national press. “They want to cover what they want to cover,” he snorted.
But the attention also makes Ferguson a place where people joked about how many times they’ve been interviewed on TV. One local pastor said he had done 17 interviews, before leaving to take another call.
It makes a place where James Knowles III, the city’s mayor, gets a roaring standing ovation when he takes the podium, but has to keep his remarks short, because, ”I’ve got to be on Anderson Cooper in just a few minutes, so I can’t be too teary eyed,” he said.









