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St. Louis American The
CAC Audited DEC. 30, 2021 – JAN. 5, 2022
Serving, empowering and advocating for equity in St. Louis since 1928
stlamerican.com
Thompson engineers remarkable career, company The St. Louis American’s 2021 Person of the Year
Vol. 93 No. 40 COMPLIMENTARY
Jubilee Day celebration launches new year Reynaldo Anderson will be honored
By Dana Rieck The St. Louis American
Kwame Building Group founder and CEO Tony Thompson is celebrating the 30th anniversary of the business. He met with his staff Monday, Dec. 20, 2021 in their downtown office.
As St. Louis celebrates the new year, a local organization is working to educate people of the significance Jan. 1 holds for African Americans. Jubilee Day is Independence Day for African Americans. It commemorates Jan. 1, 1863, the day President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, the document that led to the passage of the 13th Amendment, freeing all enslaved people in the north and south Dec. 6, 1865. “I think it has some kind Reynaldo of contemporary resonance, Anderson as most people don’t realize that declaration didn’t actually really free anybody because it only dealt with people that were in the Confederate states, not the ones in the north,” Reynaldo Anderson told The St. Louis American. “And so, that’s an example of why that day is more important to reflect on, how it then resonates with some of the things going on now around this idea of critical race theory and voting rights.” Anderson holds a doctorate of philosoSee JUBILEE, A6 Photo by Wiley Price / St. Louis American
By Alvin A. Reid The St. Louis American When Anthony “Tony” Thompson founded Kwame Building Group in 1991, the nation was in an economic recession. Undeterred, the young, first-time business owner forged ahead and crafted his business into what would become a force in the construction industry. While some business leaders belittle the area’s progress and some civic leaders fret about its future, Thompson has remained a steadfast champion for an economic future that embraces diversity and inclusion, knowing they are essential for the region to economically
prosper. As some businesses depart the city of St. Louis for other areas in the region and beyond, the head office for Thompson’s KBG remains downtown, just where it has been for three decades. For his perseverance, community outreach, philanthropy, and overall effort to create educational and economic opportunities for young St. Louisans, Thompson has been named The St. Louis American 2021 Person of the Year. After graduation from University City High School in 1978, Thompson headed west for pragmatic reasons to the University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas.
n Thompson has remained a steadfast champion for an economic future that embraces diversity and inclusion, knowing they are essential for the region to economically prosper.
See THOMPSON, A7
A Christmas gift of life
Local basketball coach receives new kidney in time for the holidays By JoAnne Weaver The St. Louis American
Highland (Illinois) High School boys’ basketball coach Deryl Cunningham received the best gift of all this Christmas: a kidney from his cousin, Tanya Woods, of Chicago. “It was tough…I was in bad shape,” he said. “It seems like it was a very close call because I wasn’t doing well with COVID-19, but by God’s grace, I made it through.” Cunningham fought COVID-19 towards the end of 2020, in addition to battling kidney disease, which has been ongoing for the last 10 years since he has an APOL1 gene from each of his parents. According to the National Library of Medicine, the gene is strongly associated with chronic kidney disease in African Americans. Fighting both COVID-19 and kidney disease landed See KIDNEY, A6
COMMUNITY
Reparations movement gaining momentum
The reparations movement is rising, thanks to the tireless work of committed activists, who have persistently raised the issue.
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Photo courtesy of Deryl Cunningham
Coach Deryl Cunningham just a few days before his kidney transplant with his Highland High School boys’ basketball team.
HEALTH
Group reverses course, says Prop R redistricting process to start in 2030 Proposition on April special election ballot
By Dana Rieck The St. Louis American The organization behind Proposition R announced they would no longer push for a rushed enforcement of the proposition’s redistricting provisions in this cycle, marking a complete reversal of their earlier intentions. In September, the Reform St. Louis coalition turned in 38,000 petition signatures and successfully triggered a special election April 5 for city residents to cast their vote on the charter amendment. The most significant reform in the proposition shifts the redistricting task from the Board of Aldermen to an independent citizen redistricting commission. Up until this week, Prop R coalition members remained adamant the formation of a citizen commission would give them time to redraw the boundaries for the 2023 election. Still, Aldermanic President Lewis Reed disagreed because the board was required by law to approve a new ward map by the end of this year. Earlier this month, the board did finalize See PROP R, A6
SPORTS
Normandy maintains its mask mandates
Area sports teams excelled in unusual sports year
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Sharifah Sims-Williams, a mother with twins in the Hazelwood School District, finds the resistance to mask mandates “unnerving.”
It was a tremendous year for high school sports in St. Louis, with athletes overcoming obstacles on their way to success.