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Sylvester Brown fired from Post

Statement from Sylvester Brown regarding termination from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch as issued at press conference on April 13, 2009:

Thank you for coming today…

For reasons I think you’ll understand, I humbly ask that you allow me to deliver this prepared statement without follow up questions.

Last week, I learned through my union, the St. Louis Newspaper Guild, that upper management at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch had decided to discharge me for violating the company’s ethics policy.

On March 27, I was told by upper management to leave the building, pending an investigation. I have not been allowed access since — not even to gather my personal belongings or to shake hands with the colleagues and friends I’ve made over the past nearly six years.

I’ve called this press conference to bid farewell to my friends at the Post Dispatch and the loyal readers who have made this enjoyable but at times difficult journey with me over the years.

Secondly, I’m here today to stand up for my name and reputation, which in the end, is all we really have.

I’m not going to use this occasion to debate the allegations made against me. We’ve passed out cards with my blog address, “sylvesterbrownjr.blogspot.com.” There, you will be able to review facts related to this battle, keep up with my work and monitor future developments.

In short, management alleges that I took a plane trip to Washington DC on March 26 as a gift in return for a column I wrote on and turned in the day before about a renewable energy project in East St. Louis.

I’m here to tell you that these charges are a gross distortion of the facts, which in my view, have been purposely manipulated to provide cover for far more desperate and nefarious acts within this once proud and honorable institution.

These are indeed desperate times in our industry. I fully expected the Post to drastically trim budgets and cut staff. The number of talented, seasoned journalists, who have been marched out of this building these past few years, speaks volumes about a frantic effort to survive while sacrificing, in my opinion, the integrity and goodwill once enjoyed by the Post-Dispatch.

However, and I’m embarrassed to admit it, I did not expect the Post to stoop to this – even in light of their pattern of distaste for me.

I did not expect my bosses to jump to an erroneous conclusion and immediately reduce me to nothing more than a stereotype.

Upper management, without the common courtesy of an explanation, quickly jumped on a stubborn, punitive, path of action and refused to back down even after the facts refuted their knee-jerk suspicions.

If management had bothered to ask, they would have known that my trip had nothing to do with East St. Louis. If they had taken time to really know me, my past, my passions (inside and outside the Post walls) about investing in black youth and creating vibrant, sustainable urban communities, they would have instinctively understood why the Summit Council for World Peace – an international organization dedicated to addressing the crisis of world-wide poverty – invited me to Washington and offered to reimburse me for the trip.

Unlike the Post, this agency, through former Congressman Walter Fauntroy, took interest in a book I’m working on which calls for a serious re-alignment of the black leadership agenda in order to work in accord with President Obama’s innovative initiatives that may finally effect real, long-lasting change in low-income, urban neighborhoods.

Sadly, management at the Post-Dispatch, in my opinion, embarked on and furthered a small-minded, predictable and divisive agenda, instead of welcoming my project, respecting me and a call for action in perilous times.

Five days after I was locked out the building, the Guild suggested that management at least hear my side of the story. Eleven days after I suspect they combed through my e-mails, looking for evidence to bolster their ridiculous claim, I heard from the guild.

Although I’ve been told that management hasn’t talked to one person involved with the DC trip, they decided to terminate me. A reason cited for my termination, the union tells me, was that management didn’t consider me “remorseful.”

On the same day the company decided to fire me, I learned through the grapevine that two other columnists were given a day’s suspension because they allegedly violated the company’s ethics policy for working with competing media.

The following day, after I heard of my discharge, the union called to share an offer from the Post to “protect my reputation.”

If I agreed to resign, which I understand requires I cannot speak, I would receive four weeks severance pay and the opportunity to freelance and/or write a farewell column. Under this arrangement, I was told, management wouldn’t leak the reasons for my termination.

Well, Post-Dispatch, thanks, but no thanks.

Just as I did not sell out for a plane trip, I do not sell out my integrity, my name or truth.

I’ll protect the reputation I’ve built in this community these past 22 years.

It’s apparent the Post doesn’t know me like my friends, colleagues and this community knows me. So let me be clear: I have no reason to be remorseful. The truth counters a need for remorse. I’m too stubborn to keep my mouth shut, too proud to cast down my eyes, and too old to shuffle.

The Guild’s executive committee voted unanimously to use all necessary resources to arbitrate this case and get my job back. Although I humbly appreciate its valiant support and its decision to fight these allegations, I’m asking the Guild to fight another day, not for me but for whomever is thrown off the ship next.

I couldn’t, in good conscience, ask my union to fight for a job I could never return to.

It’s clear to me that, even though we have worked together for all these years, management has never known me or what I stand for.

That supposed trained management would insinuate that a one day plane trip, where I spent more time in layovers than I did in Washington, was some sort of pay-off for covering an already written story is beyond logic.

Believe it or not, Post-Dispatch, I’ve been on planes before. This was by no means an exotic excursion.

Since I’m convinced such ridiculous logic has little to do with my termination, I’m forced to believe upper management acted on other, far more suspect motivations.

Perhaps it has something to do with the hasty meeting called after certain folks aligned with Mayor Francis Slay, a member of your community advisory board, issued threats to the newspaper after I wrote about his campaign and administration’s thug-like behavior.

Perhaps the real reason you’ve locked me out of the building is to confiscate the e-mails and letters I sent to the executive and managing editor, begging for intervention into what I described as discriminatory, inconsistent and unnecessarily punitive actions based on one editor’s personal, not professional, perceptions.

Maybe this action is a result of the Oct. 2008 letter I sent to management warning that a newsroom, already seriously lacking in diversity at the bottom and top, could ill afford to continuously mute the most visible and consistent black voice in its employ in response to his questioning of rules and policies drafted or enforced specifically for him.

I suspect that this press conference will send management scurrying to bolster their weak allegations. Be careful Post-Dispatch. My attorneys and the Guild are well aware of your stated reasons for my termination and of our tenuous relationship these past few years. As far as I’m concerned, in your gleeful attempt to rid yourselves of a payroll expense and a confrontational columnist, you’ve already defamed enough good people.

Be careful.

In closing, I want to thank the Post Dispatch readers. I will always value what we shared. Yes, our conversations were sometimes warm, sometimes controversial and sometimes contentious; but what family doesn’t have spicy, emotional debates?

I want to also thank my wonderful, talented colleagues – my friend and mentor Bill McClellan – my buddies Aisha Sultan, Deb Petterson, Carolyn Tuft, Steve Giegerich, Doug Moore, Tim O’Neal, Chris Gooden and so many others I fear I’m leaving out who helped me navigate the newsroom’s sometimes bewildering environment. I will also miss the street-wise banter I had every morning with Keith, Jeff, Kim and the rest of the security team.

Finally, I ask no one to feel sorry for me. So many have lost jobs here and across the country, I’m just among them now.

I’m blessed to have a wife, children, family and friends who value dignity over job security, pride over profit, fortitude over fame and truth over personal rewards.

If you will, feel sorry that this community has lost in the pages of the Post what I believe was a valuable and much needed voice that constantly urged St. Louis to rise above its engrained, petty racial and demographic divisions and explore the wonderful potential of its diverse populace.

If you will, feel sorry for my hardworking colleagues who have to continue fighting despite an upper management who are, in my view, so desperate to save their salaries and their own skin that they will stoop to destroying careers.

I walk away confident that I did my dead-level best to live up to the words mounted on the marble wall in the company’s foyer. Those words, by Joseph Pulitzer, say in part:

“Always fight for progress and reform … never lack sympathy with the poor, always remain devoted to the public welfare … never be afraid to attack wrong ….”

I leave this job with a positive vision toward the future, my shoulders girded and my head held high, knowing that I lived up to Mr. Pulitzer’s mandate.

Further, I am more deeply committed to the issues I have championed all these years. I am more convinced than ever that the charge of journalism is a check and balance fourth branch of government.

I insist that even in an age of spin, truth still matters.

Sadly, I believe the Post-Dispatch management cannot make the same claim.

Thank you.

Discussion

14 Responses to “Sylvester Brown fired from Post”

  1. Well, I can’t say it surprises me. After Browns blasting of Slay over the election, I’m surprised he wasn’t found outside a cigarette store on the north side with 11 bullets in him………

    Good luck Sylvester. You left a sinking ship. Hopefully your departure will only make the Post-Disgrace’s financial problems worse. I wish you well on your future endeavors.

    Posted by Turd Ferguson | 13. Apr, 2009, 8:03 PM
  2. Never ever bite the hand that feeds U!

    Posted by Lesson Learned | 14. Apr, 2009, 3:05 AM
  3. Unless Brown works for the Mayors office, I don’t see how he bit the hand of the P-D.

    Posted by Turd Ferguson | 14. Apr, 2009, 8:22 AM
  4. I for one will not miss Sylvestor . He was too much of a race baiter and served to rile up an already tense racial situation in St. Louis.

    I am from the East and have never seen anything like the St. Louis Race situation. EVERYTHING is viewed through a racial lens with Brown leading the way.

    Posted by Niel More | 14. Apr, 2009, 9:39 AM
  5. Kuddos to you Sylvester Brown! I have always admired you for your moxy and willingness to have the hard conversations…then put in ink those things which others neededf to hear…or were just too politically stiffled to say!
    A mutual (late) friend of ours would be very proud of you…wish he could be here to “chew” on this one with you! You remind me of him…both paaionate and driven! Just as MO politics lost a good man…the Post lot a compelling writier! God Bless you and your beautiful family!~

    Posted by Kim Pohrer | 14. Apr, 2009, 1:41 PM
  6. Greg Freeman was a healer. Sylvester Brown Jr. is a race baiter and divider. Take your hate to another town Sly, good riddance.

    Posted by Tony LaGenius | 14. Apr, 2009, 4:21 PM
  7. I met you in a park with your girls before you joined the Post and thought you were a kind, gentle and thought -provoking man. I was delighted to read your columns, even when I did not agree with you. Truthfully you are the main reason I read the Post and recently used your article ( about Clooney and a local woman sharing a mission) in my classroom. St. Louis is afraid to talk race; I personally found your words compelling. You are dead on when you pose the assumption that the people running the Slay machine made sure you were fired. I hope you are able to shed the light on the dirt in this town.

    Posted by Janice Jackson | 14. Apr, 2009, 6:32 PM
  8. Sylvester Brown… GOOD BY! What a racist. Loosley accusing the Mayor conspired to have him removed. Just like Sherman George (who by the way should have been held accountable by the AA Community not martyrd) balming the Myor for hi own faults. Break the rules and you are innocent. I think he knew what he was doing to become another martyr. go work for the American. they can use your hate.

    Posted by city lover | 14. Apr, 2009, 9:38 PM
  9. Hasta la vista, a-hole. Have a great life in obscurity with your buddy, Lizz Brown.

    Posted by Not a Sylvester Brown Fan | 15. Apr, 2009, 7:43 AM
  10. Is it a coincidence that the only Post reporter that didn’t act as a PR spokesman for Slay gets fired on dubious charges? Aren’t Slay and Rainford on the board at the Post Dispatch? Is Jake Wagman on Slay’s payroll as a publicist,by reading his biased pro- Slay columns you would think so?

    Posted by Star Jones | 15. Apr, 2009, 10:52 AM
  11. Most certainly, this guy is quite galvanizing. I often disagree with him, but found his column the reason for buying that bar rag newspaper.
    He made me think about things. Being a conservative white & never having “the black experience”, I looked at his rhetoric/logic to gather a sane commentary. He & I would have been able to discuss things & come to a sensible conclusion. That’s a rare thing in St. Louis. We won’t admit we’re divided, but we surely are. Unless I’m missing something, his firing wasn’t racial. The pd’s charges seem pretty bogus. Involvement of outside forces? Could be.
    So, who’s next to be booted? Surely not the folks who tow the company line.
    So, Mr. Brown, I’ll be looking for you to pop up in a meaningful place.

    Posted by Mobile Mike | 15. Apr, 2009, 12:46 PM
  12. Have to agree with some of the posts above. Yes, he is the #1 race-baiter in town. But what folks are NOT saying is what a complete, complete hypocrite many say Sylvester is. A “champion” of public schools……..yet he sends his kids to private school. I won’t get into his “personal” race relations…..but I think some of you insiders know what has been pointed out by many, again pointing to the hypocrisy.

    Posted by realist | 15. Apr, 2009, 8:19 PM
  13. http://www.stlamerican.com/articles/2009/04/16/news/political_eye/peye01.txt

    The community – literally – had his back, as a diverse group of some 40 people stood behind him as he spoke.

    Glimpsed in his crowd of supporters: Percy Green II, Jamala Rogers, state Rep. Jamilah Nasheed, the Rev. Tommie Pierson, John Chasnoff, Eric E. Vickers, Dawn Fuller, Bill Ramsey, Zaki Baruti and state Rep. Maria Chappelle-Nadal.

    Justin Meehan stood, front and center, holding a sign that read, “Cancel my Post-Dispatch subscription now.” His hand-lettered sign also identified the Post as a paper “where no news is good news.”

    When Sylvester had concluded his powerful speech and hugged his two daughters (one of whom quietly wept throughout), he turned to his supporters. Fittingly, the first person he embraced was former Fire Chief Sherman George.

    Was anyone important missing?

    Posted by kjoe | 16. Apr, 2009, 7:24 PM
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