BHM SLPS BOE

Month: January 2025

  • Candidate forum, take two

    On Wednesday, the Green Party of St. Louis hosted a rescheduled school board candidate forum at Legacy Bar & Grill in collaboration with the American Federation of Teachers (Local 420), St. Louis Democratic Socialists, Universal African Peoples Organization, Coalition of Black Trade Unionists, Communities’ One Project, Ecumenical Leadership Council of Missouri, and Organization for Black Struggle. The event was covered by KSDK. My 10-year-old campaign manager made it into the newscast.

    Screenshot from KSDK coverage

    Transcript of my opening and closing statements

    Opening

    My name is Brian H. Marston.

    I’m the only candidate who currently has kids enrolled in SLPS. I’ve been an SLPS parent since 2012.

    I’m the only candidate who filed a January Quarterly Report with the Missouri Ethics Commission.That’s an indication of my commitment to ethics, transparency, and accurate accounting.

    I’m a first-generation college graduate with an education degree. I also have degrees in math and philosophy.

    I’d be a certified high school math and Spanish teacher, if I’d done my student teaching my senior year. Instead, I started a web development company because I fell in love with the idea that information wants to be free.

    I have more than 25 years of IT experience. I’m good with spreadsheets and making systems and processes more efficient.

    The hardest and most meaningful thing I’ve done is being the director of North St. Louis YouthBuild, a construction training and GED program in the Hyde Park neighborhood.

    I worked with neighborhood residents, students, board members, union representatives, social workers, parole officers, politicians, government officials, donors, and volunteers to build the program from the ground up.

    We converted a two-story Sunday school to a two-family building. When we started, the roof was in the basement, which was an apt metaphor for a lot of things. Some of the 18-to-24-year-old students entered the program with 4th-grade reading levels.

    YouthBuild was housed on the corner of 19th and Newhouse at Friedens Church, which suffered a horrible fire two days ago, on Monday, Dr. Martin Luther King Day. I’m still trying to process that.

    In other volunteer roles, I’ve been the president of The Commonspace, Metropolis St. Louis, and my neighborhood association, and vice-president of BWorks.

    I have a solid track record of working with people in north city, south city, and the central corridor to help make St. Louis a better place.

    Closing

    Thank you to Legacy Bar & Grill for hosting this event, and to all the sponsoring groups for organizing the forum.

    Most of all, thank you to all of you for caring enough to be here tonight. Our public schools are worth caring about. They’re the cornerstone of democracy. Both are under attack. Monday wasn’t just MLK Day and the day Friedens Church burned to the ground: it was also Inauguration Day. We’ve got some difficult days ahead.

    The district and the board have received a lot of attention lately, most of it negative. I’m hoping we can work together to take that attention and turn it into positive outcomes.

    My campaign site is at brianhmarston.com. I’ve got yard signs in my car, if you’d like one.

  • 19th and Newhouse

    This is a lot to process.

    While I was at the Touhill Performing Arts Center for the MLK celebration today, Friedens United Church of Christ at the corner of 19th and Newhouse was burning (video). I’ve spent some time on that corner. It means a lot to me.

    I was last there for a walking tour of the Hyde Park neighborhood in August.  I took a bunch of photos.

    August 10, 2024

    Previously, I was the director of North St. Louis YouthBuild, a construction training and GED program housed at Friedens.

    Friedens forever
    Me with 15-day-old Milo, on the way to his first board meeting in 2008

    Before that, I was the treasurer of Friedens Neighborhood Foundation. Before that, I  helped organize a breakdancing competition at Friedens and attended the free community lunches on Wednesdays.

    I’ve maintained an unreasonable hope that something would breathe new life into those buildings. Now it seems they’ve passed on to the other side.

  • Beloved community

    My son (and SLPS student) Milo Marston performed today with The Sheldon’s All-Star Chorus at UMSL’s MLK Day celebration. I didn’t really know what it means to be proud of someone until I had kids.

    The keynote speaker was Fredrika Newton, Huey P. Newton’s widow. Her talk about being committed, body and soul, to the well-being of a community hit me hard. Afterwards, I made myself useful by taking group photos for people and got a chance to thank Fredrika. She wished me luck on my school board run.

  • It’s gettin’ hectic

    If you had plucked my alter ego Mosh Hard out of the pit at an Urge concert at Kennedy’s in the early 90s and told me that in 30-something years I’d be running for school board and Steve Ewing would endorse me, I’d be like, “Whatchoo talkin’ ‘bout, Willis?” Steve’s brought so much joy to my life. Four Years of Flavor, the photography book about him, is dropping in about a week.

    Photo by my campaign manager, SLPS fifth grader Molly Marston
  • Making the rounds

    I attended the school board meeting on January 14 at Yeatman Middle School. The meeting made headlines for other reasons (fast forward the YouTube video to 2:33), but this large assemblage of principals has a lot to be proud of.

    On January 15, I was in the basement of Oak Hill Presbyterian Church for a Tower Grove South Neighborhood Association meeting and captured this snapshot of peak retail politics in River City: Mayor Tishaura Jones at the mic, opposite Alderwoman Daniela Velázquez who recently introduced a city charter amendment that would shift the mayor’s authority to a non-elected city administrator, with TGSNA board member Dan Pearson in the middle, making a friendship bracelet.

    Of the 12 school board candidates, I was the only one to file a January Quarterly Report with the Missouri Ethics Commission. It was due on January 15. I’m committed to transparency, ethics, and accurate accounting.

    On January 15 and 16, I stopped by Commerce Bank on South Grand for what have become regular visits with Joey Reyes and Dave Barber. They put the “personal” in “personal banker.” They’ve been trying to get online banking set up on my candidate committee account since December 13. We’re going to crack the code eventually.

  • Yard signs

    I’ve got 500 two-sided, three-color yard signs to move from my living room to in front of your city home or business. Pick one up this Saturday, January 18, between 3 and 5 at Steve’s Hot Dogs (3145 South Grand Blvd / 63118). If Saturday doesn’t work for you, get in touch, and we can make other arrangements.

    Help spread the word by taking a picture of you with your sign and posting it on social media with the hashtag #marstonforschoolboard.

    Thanks again to Ken Zarecki for the design. They were silkscreen printed by union sign shop O.R. Pechman.

  • Race, SLPS, and the city

    RaceSLPS K-12 Enrollment
    Black12,525
    White1,976
    Hispanic1,328
    Asian459
    Multiracial210
    Indian34
    Pacific Islander10
    16,542
    Source: Missouri Department of Elementary & Secondary Education, data as of 11/21/2024
    RaceCity Population, Age 5-19
    Black or African American Alone22,787
    White alone10,292
    Asian Alone2,240
    Two or More Races4,483
    American Indian and Alaska Native Alone142
    Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander Alone14
    Some Other Race Alone1,109
    41,067
    Source: U.S. Census Bureau. American Community Survey, ACS 1-Year Estimates Detailed Tables, 2023.

    It took some work to condense the data into these two tables. The racial (and ethnic) categories, ages, and years for the two data sources don’t align perfectly, but I don’t think that significantly impacts the summary statistics.

    Back in 1996, when the web was young and so was I, I was a research associate at the Office of Social and Economic Data Analysis. It was my job to post the underlying data for the first table above on the web for MO DESE.

    Putting the two tables together and doing a little additional calculation reveals that 55% of Black kids in the city between the ages of five and 19 attend an SLPS school, but only 19% of white kids do. Overall, only 40% of kids age five to 19 are enrolled in SLPS.

    Another way to look at it is that there are 2.2 times as many Black school-age kids in the city as white kids, but there are 6.3 times as many Black kids in SLPS.

  • Spread the word

    I have 1,000 campaign business cards in hand from union printer The Ink Spot. They were designed by the one, Z only, Ken Zarecki. Let me know if you’d like some to pass out to city voters.

    front of business card
    back of business card

    My list of individual endorsements is coming along. I’m grateful to be backed by such a stellar crew.

    To help aggregate posts about my campaign and elevate their visibility on social media, use the hashtag #marstonforschoolboard.

  • 2024 wrap-up

    I closed out 2024 with a total of $2,331 in campaign contributions (thank you!) and 1,084 page views on this site. 79% of the website traffic has been from people on mobile devices (phones). Something no one except Google and I care about is that the site is rocking it on PageSpeed Insights. (I’ve never seen a site get 4 x 100% before.)

    Performance: 100%, Accessibility: 100%, Best Practices: 100%, SEO: 100%

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