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As Ford plant closes, Mac students look forward

Published: Thursday, December 8, 2011

Updated: Thursday, December 8, 2011 17:12

news_fordplant

Jonathan McJunkin '14

Ford logo overlooking the Mississippi River, seen from Ford Parkway. The plant will close its doors on Dec. 19 after 86 years in operation.


The oldest Ford assembly plant in the country, which for over 80 years provided thousands of jobs to Saint Paul and shaped the Highland Park neighborhood, will close its doors for good on Dec. 19, a few days after the last pickup rolls off the line. Though the loss of a long-standing community cornerstone is hard to contemplate, it will leave behind 122 acres of prime riverfront real estate and infrastructure like heavy rail and hydroelectric power, which many – including Macalester students – see as a great opportunity.

Saint Paul mayor Chris Coleman captured the feeling of many in the region in an email.

"Ford has been an important part of Saint Paul's historical fabric," Mayor Coleman said. "While we are sad to see their doors close, we are optimistic about the opportunity to use this land to create new businesses and jobs."

The plant is a 20-minute ride south from Macalester on the 84 bus, along the eponymous Ford Parkway. From most vantage points, it looks like any successful industrial site. Smokestacks and ventilation pipes reveal the factory's activity, and a large lit Ford logo welcomes travelers on the Intercity Bridge into Saint Paul. Lock and Dam No. 1, which began construction in 1917 to power the plant, sits just downstream.

Highland Park is unlike the typical image of a major industrial neighborhood. Rather than being relegated to the outskirts, the plant is nestled into the neighborhood's thriving commercial district, which runs along the Parkway and Cleveland Avenue and has the trappings, from Chipotle to Caribou, that one would expect in a more suburban setting.

If you get up close, you can see the rows of white Ford Ranger compact pickup trucks, the plant's current product. The plant has made over 7 million units of 45 different models – including the Model T and armored cars in World War Two – since it opened for business in 1925. Lately, the lot hasn't been as filled as it once was.

In 2007, after years of rumors amid decreased demand for pickup trucks like the Ranger, Ford officially announced that it would close the plant. Negotiations with United Auto Workers (UAW) and other stakeholders managed to push the closing back for years, but on Oct. 18 Ford finalized the date.

Between 2007 and now, the plant has reduced capacity from almost 2,000 jobs to around 800 that still remain—most of them, as one might expect, temporary positions.

"A fitting legacy"

When the closing was first announced in 2007, the Saint Paul Planning Commission appointed a Task Force of community members and city officials to begin the long process of research and planning for the site's future. Over the past four years, the city has produced reports on various development issues, such as green manufacturing, open space, and sustainability. All reports can be found online on the task force web page.

One of the major reports produced by the task force outlines five model redevelopment scenarios for the site. The Phase 1 Planning report considered economic viability, community space, land use, sustainability and transport access and set out to eventually create "a fitting legacy for both the Ford Company and the City of Saint Paul."

The five scenarios were several hypothetical ways to meet these goals. They range from a heavy manufacturing green industrial park scenario to a high-density residential space centered around new transit infrastructures, such as new bus lines and bike paths. These plans were created for the purpose of guiding future development, and are not actual plans for the site.

Mayor Coleman summarized the vision for the site held by many Saint Paul residents.

"We'd like to see it redevelop in a manner that complements the neighborhood, provides strong tax base for the city, adds a mix of uses including jobs, housing, commerce and open space and respects the beauty of the Mississippi River corridor," he said.

These five scenarios are not the only plans currently in the works for the site. Soon after the announcement, in Spring 2007, former UAW Local 879 organizer Lynn Hinkle (who worked at the plant for 30 years) formed a coalition with labor organizers, NGOs, community members, and students called Alliance to Re-Industrialize for a Sustainable Economy (ARISE). Hinkle previously led a group through the UAW that negotiated with Ford to prevent the plant's immediate closing. The group is now associated with Grand Aspirations, a group founded by a Macalester graduate in 2008 that focuses on environmentally friendly economic development.

ARISE has begun to propose a sixth scenario, which according to their mission statement, "incorporates green manufacturing, mixed-used sustainable community design, multi-modal transit and clean energy production." Since the organization's inception, Macalester students have played a major role in all stages of the planning process, which will soon reach a new, more concrete stage with the closing of the plant.

A New Vision

Willy Raedy '13 is the research coordinator for ARISE. He became involved two years ago through Grand Aspiration's Summer of Solutions program. According to him, the three keys to the ARISE vision are that it "equalizes [the housing situation], de-carbonizes and re-industrializes."

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