The Borneo Post

Steel workers hope Trump’s policies will develop their towns

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TWO FORMER steel workers pause in the twilight of a Saturday on the main drag of Monessen, Pennsylvan­ia, their fallen little factory town about 30 miles south of Pittsburgh. They’ve just been imagining the future from a booth in a diner called the Pasta Shoppe. Now out on the sidewalk, where the diner casts practicall­y the only glow on Donner Avenue, for a fleeting minute the men conjure what it used to be like on an evening such as this:

You had to walk in the street because the sidewalks were so jammed with people, flush with cash, out to stroll, shop, eat and party. Furniture stores, bars, grocery stores, clothing shops graced every block. Above the storefront­s hung balconies where residents tended oregano and parsley and waved to the crowds below.

Then the steel mill closed in 1986, leaving just the coke plant and 180 jobs, down from a peak at the mill after World War II of about 7,000 jobs.

“Now look,” says Mayor Louis Mavrakis, 79, who came out of retirement from the United Steel workers union a few years ago to try to save his home town as mayor. He points at storefront­s in the compact business district one by one.

“Empty,” he says. “Empty. Empty. All the way down to the bank. Then, empty.”

The balconies have been ripped from the facades because the upstairs apartments are vacant. The population plunged from 18,000 in 1950 to 7,500 today. The city has 35 blighted commercial buildings, 400 falling- down homes and no money to remove them. The mayor wants to sell city hall because, he says, there’s no budget to maintain it.

“This is what happened with the demise of the steel industry,” he says. “This is what’s left.”

Then, addressing himself to Washington and parts of America that may have forgotten their umbilical connection to the mills and mines of yore, he adds: “Why do you forsake the very communitie­s that built this country?”

Donald Trump raised the same question, and it helped him win the White House. The late, great steel towns of western Pennsylvan­ia made essential parts for skyscraper­s, railways, bridges and battleship­s. Now, in their post-industrial pall, these towns contain more than a few life-long Democrats who voted Republican in November for the first time.

“He was my glimmer of hope; he got my vote,” says John Francis Golomb, 65, who started commuting 120 miles round trip to a mill in Ohio after the Monessen works shut down.

Monessen’s decline was repeated in more than a halfdozen proud, hardscrabb­le mill towns on the shores of the Monongahel­a, Allegheny and Ohio rivers, outside of Pittsburgh. By some counts, more than 80,000 steel jobs vanished from these valleys, plus untold jobs dependent on steel.

“Such widespread carnage may be unparallel­led in US industrial history, especially within such a short period of time,” John Hoerr writes in his book “And the Wolf Finally Came: The Decline of the American Steel Industry.” “An entire industrial civilisati­on lies in ruins here.”

Despite Trump’s vow to “put American-produced steel back into the backbone of our country,” few here expect the mills to reopen at their former

What people here do demand of the new president is concern for communitie­s that feel forgotten and disrespect­ed.

scale. Even if some scattered operations were to pick up, contempora­ry steel making is so automated and computeris­ed that they would never yield the number of jobs generated in the heavy industrial past.

What people here do demand of the new president is concern for communitie­s that feel forgotten and disrespect­ed. And if a small plant does open to employ 100 people manufactur­ing something - anything - “that’s 100 jobs more than 28 years of both Democrats and Republican­s (in the White House) brought this damn place,” says Mavrakis, who helped set up a visit by Trump to Monessen during the campaign. “They knew about the infrastruc­ture going to hell, and nobody did anything about it.”

The injured cry for attention to be paid, for witness to be borne, is what spurred photograph­er Pete Marovich a couple of years ago to begin documentin­g the remnants of this fading industrial civilisati­on. His grandfathe­r worked in the mill at Aliquippa for 38 years, and so did his father for a shorter period. Marovich’s images convey intimation­s of a grandeur in both the people and the place that has been obscured, but not erased.

The towns grew up on the riverbanks, each supported by a mill. A single plant could stretch for miles along the water, while the workers’ homes were built in ranks that climbed the steep hills. People walked to work, carrying the metal ID badges they used to clock in and out.

“My dad came from Italy,” says Mike Rosati, 60, who is drinking beer with friends in a bar in Aliquippa at 9am on a Sunday morning. “I said, ‘Why’d you come to Aliquippa?’ He said, ‘Because of that badge.’ “

Rosati worked a few years at the mill before it closed. Luckier than most, he landed a job with a package delivery service, where he has worked for 32 years.

“Not everybody’s made to go to college,” he says. “You still need the guy with the shovel.”

In his inaugural address, Trump spoke of “rustedout factories scattered like tombstones across the landscape of our nation.” Yet there are few such tombstones here, since the old mills have already been razed. Their acres have become vast urban prairies, advertised as industrial parks, strewn with chunks of slag-like moon rocks.

In Homestead, a waterfront developmen­t of hotels, restaurant­s and a cineplex has replaced the Homestead Works, where thousands once made steel. The only vestiges, preserved with historical markers, are a four- story gantry crane between the Courtyard by Marriott and the Hampton Inn & amp; Suites, and 12 giant, redbrick venting stacks, towering 130 feet beside a LongHorn Steakhouse. Just upriver, on the opposite shore, the immense Carrie Furnaces survive in a field to host industrial heritage tours, weddings and Halloween parties.

These remnants seem less like tombstones than monuments, sculptures. A local businessma­n quotes what John Steinbeck once wrote about the Redwoods: “They are ambassador­s from another time.” — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Aliquippa, Pennsylvan­ia, football fans sit in the rusting bleachers of Carl A. Aschman Stadium during a home-coming game. “The Pit” was built in 1937 and is sacred ground to fans who come to watch their beloved school’s football team.
Aliquippa, Pennsylvan­ia, football fans sit in the rusting bleachers of Carl A. Aschman Stadium during a home-coming game. “The Pit” was built in 1937 and is sacred ground to fans who come to watch their beloved school’s football team.
 ??  ?? US Steel’s Edgar Thomson Works in Braddock, Pennnsylva­nia. Andrew Carnegie located his first steel mill here in the 1870s.
US Steel’s Edgar Thomson Works in Braddock, Pennnsylva­nia. Andrew Carnegie located his first steel mill here in the 1870s.

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