READ MORE

More coverage on flooding in Cahokia Heights

EXPAND ALL

Cahokia Heights residents raise questions about $10M grant to fix flooding, sewer issues

Feds order southwestern Illinois town to fix its ongoing sewage system problems

Here’s what we know about flash flooding, raw sewage issues in Cahokia Heights

Cahokia Heights mayor vows to use COVID-19 relief funds to fix flooding, sewer issues

Some residents skeptical over Cahokia Heights mayor’s pledge that flooding will be fixed

Feds reject $22 million grant request to fix flooding, sewage issues in Cahokia Heights

Flooding in Cahokia Heights has been an issue for years. Here’s what you should know

Illinois EPA awards nearly $1 million to help fix flooding issues in Centreville

Here’s how much Sen. Chris Belt, others made while working at Commonfields of Cahokia

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker pledges support for fixing Centreville flooding problems

Duckworth says environmental racism caused flooding, sewage issues in Centreville

Centreville, Cahokia and Alorton seek $22 million to fix flooding, sewage issues

IL Sen. Durbin addresses Centreville flooding issues. Local group felt left out

Illinois EPA announces Centreville flooding relief plan; residents want more answers

American Illinois Water plans to spend $1.5 million on Centreville’s supply system

Centreville violated government transparency law, IL Attorney General’s Office says

U.S. senators request EPA help to fix “urgent public health crisis” in Centreville

Centreville mayor skips meeting with U.S. senator on city’s flooding, sewage issues

Duckworth, Centreville residents say local officials must take action to fix flooding

Centreville homes flood again. Residents say no one will help them.

Raw sewage keeps flooding these Centreville homes. Now their owners are going to court.

Raw sewage pours into Centreville homes. Why won’t the mayor answer questions?

Raw sewage floods the homes of Centreville residents. Why hasn’t it been fixed?

A state senator from Centreville made nearly $58,500 last year for a position that doesn’t have a job description at a controversial water and sewer district.

Democratic state Sen. Christopher Belt is listed as superintendent of Commonfields of Cahokia Public Water and Sewage District in 2020 documents. He did not respond to the BND’s 12 phone calls, text messages and emails over more than a week requesting information about what he does there.

General manager Dennis Traiteur and district board chairman Curtis McCall Sr. both declined to talk about Belt’s role, citing a pending citizen lawsuit against Commonfields over years of flooding issues. Mark Scoggins, the Columbia attorney representing the district, did not immediately know about Belt’s role but confirmed he works there.

Click to resize

Alorton Mayor Jo Ann Reed, who is a cashier, clerk and board secretary for Commonfields, said Belt is heavily involved in the district’s day-to-day operations.

“He comes to work often,” Reed said. “When he’s not in Springfield, he’s at work. He comes to work all the time. Chris is a good worker.”

She added: “If you had to do a survey of people who work here, they’ll tell you that Chris works.”

Belt has acknowledged he was superintendent at the district that serves 7,000 water and sewer customers in Cahokia, Centreville and Alorton, three predominately Black and largely impoverished communities just east of the Mississippi River across from St. Louis.

He mentioned the superintendent job on a 2019 Illinois Senate Democrats video, and listed it on a 2020 economic interest form lawmakers are required to fill out. A list of last year’s Commonfields salaries the BND obtained through an open records request also names him as superintendent. Commonfields provided job descriptions for its 11 other employees — including the general manager — after a separate request, but none for Belt’s position.

The district has been heavily criticized by residents who’ve complained about poor management of the area’s failing sewer system. In 2020, St. Louis-area attorneys Nicole Nelson and Kalila Jackson filed a lawsuit on behalf of two residents in Centreville blaming Commonfields, local governments and public officials for decades of stormwater and raw sewage flooding homes, yards and roads.

Traiteur and McCall are listed as defendants, but Belt is not named individually in the lawsuit. Nelson said she and Jackson did not know Belt was an employee until the BND asked them about it.

“We were very shut out from Commonfields because we couldn’t get any information, so we had to piece together based on what we had,” Nelson said.

Belt is McCall’s brother-in-law. It’s just one family tie in a network of people who share campaign money and political sway in the Centreville area.

McCall is Centreville Township supervisor and is expected to become the first mayor of Cahokia Heights, a new city that will be established by the consolidation of Cahokia, Centreville and Alorton after the April 6 elections. McCall is unopposed.

McCall’s son, Curtis McCall Jr., is the current mayor of Cahokia. Commonfields paid McCall Sr.’s other son, Kerchavian McCall, $27,439 as a laborer who did maintenance and operated equipment for 752 hours, according to 2020 salary documents the BND obtained through the open records request.

Reed was on the Commonfields payroll as a cashier, clerk and board secretary, earning nearly $29,400 in 2020 for 830 hours.

Three Commonfields board members, who were paid $2,000 each in 2020, also serve on the Cahokia Unit School District 187 board: Marilyn Stringfellow, Richard Duncan and Potina Powell. They do not earn a stipend as school board members.

Duncan also is the clerk for the village of Cahokia and his wife, Debra, is its deputy clerk. Debra Duncan will be the new clerk for Cahokia Heights, as she’s part of McCall Sr.’s New Vision party in the upcoming election.

Who is Illinois state Sen. Chris Belt?

Belt has deep ties to the metro-east. He graduated from Lincoln Senior High School in East St. Louis and then completed a bachelor’s degree in history from Illinois State University. He went on to get two master’s degrees — public administration from Southern Illinois University Edwardsville and counseling from Lindenwood University in Belleville.

From 2013 to 2015, Belt worked for the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice Aftercare Services program as the central and southern region’s administrator, and before that worked for the St. Clair County Probation Department.

Prior to becoming a state senator, Belt was board president of Cahokia Unit School District 187. Belt’s sister, Yvonne, is married to the Commonfields board chairman, Curtis McCall Sr.

Belt assumed office as senator in 2019 and earns $69,000 as a part-time legislator.

Reed applauded Belt’s ability to split his time between being a senator and working at Commonfields.

“When we run short and things are tight, Chris does everything he’s asked to do,” Reed said. “If he has to take a bill to the post office, he’ll do that too. He just does what he’s asked to do. If we’re short and someone’s not there, he’s definitely a filler.”

State lawmakers are allowed to have jobs outside of their legislative responsibilities, though if they work for another public entity, the state requires them to disclose it on their statements of economic interest.

“What’s wrong with working and being in public office?” Reed said. “When is that bad? Because everybody can’t do it? I should be able to work where I want to work and run for political office if I want to.”

Centreville residents who’ve faced persistent flooding and stormwater problems have criticized Belt for not being accessible.

Earlier this month, Belt did not attend a virtual town hall meeting aimed at seeking answers on Centreville’s flooding issues. Belt, along with other local officials, have also been absent from meetings held by Centreville Citizens for Change, a group of residents demanding solutions.

In July, Belt did attend a meeting with Sen. Tammy Duckworth about the crisis in Centreville, but that meeting wasn’t open to residents.

Belt, McCall and campaign finance

State campaign finance records also show connections between Belt, McCall and committees related to Commonfields.

McCall is the chairperson for Belt’s campaign finance committee, Friends of Christopher Belt, and between 2018 and 2020, Belt’s committee contributed $16,850 to another committee chaired by McCall.

That committee — Centreville Township Citizens for Better Government — was formed in 2016 to support 18 candidates in various Centreville-area elections, including Belt and McCall. McCall individually loaned $80,557 to the committee between 2017 and 2020. Crowder & Scoggins, the firm representing Commonfields, contributed $26,000 from 2016 to 2020.

In 2019, Friends of Christopher Belt contributed $5,000 to yet another committee, Citizens for Commonfields Water District Trustees, to elect McCall to the Commonfields board.

Traiteur, the general manager, contributed $6,500 to Centreville Township Citizens for Better Government from 2016 to 2020. Belt, Scoggins and Traiteur have also contributed individually to Citizens for Curtis McCall — $1,100 from Belt, $5,000 from Scoggins and $11,500 from Traiteur since 2012.

The names of other Commonfields board members and employees also appear as donors to Belt and McCall’s committees.

Commonfields of Cahokia’s future

Dissolving Commonfields of Cahokia is part of the consolidation plan for Cahokia Heights and will be included in a referendum on the April 6 ballot, which will ask voters if they want the district to be eliminated. It’s uncertain whether the district will be replaced by another entity.

The village of Cahokia has its own water and sewer department, and its geography and responsibilities overlap with the Commonfields district, according to Lynn Matchingtouch, manager of the Village of Cahokia Water and Sewer Department.

“A lot of our customers intertwine,” Matchingtouch said. “Commonfields of Cahokia will have the water, the village of Cahokia will have the sewer, or vice versa. Then we all at some point have just all water and sewer customers and we all just have either all water customers or we all just have sewer customers.”

Belt’s future role, and that of other Commonfields employees and board members, has yet to be publicly specified.

The senator’s next economic interest statement is due May 1.

BEHIND OUR REPORTING

Why we did this article and what steps did we take?

The BND, as part of our ongoing reporting on chronic flooding problems in north Centreville, decided to explore state Sen. Chris Belt’s role as superintendent of Commonfields and how it intersects with his position of state senator.

The public funds both positions, and residents have complained that both Commonfields and elected officials have failed to address years of flooding and sewage overflow onto their properties and into their homes.

The BND filed an open records request with Commonfields in February for a list of employees and their salaries in 2020, and then another request for job descriptions. The district sent responsive documents, but did not have a job description for superintendent.

BND reporters followed up with Commonfields’ top administrators to ask about Belt’s exact role at the district, but they refused to comment, citing a lawsuit by citizens against Commonfields, and directed inquiries to an attorney representing the agency. The attorney did not have answers about Belt’s role.

Belt did not respond to numerous requests for comment.

Since March 9, the Belleville News-Democrat has called Belt on his personal cell phone number four times and left messages on his voicemail. We’ve also called his office phone number four times, plus sent two emails and two text messages.

Here are some of our questions for Belt and other Commonfields leaders:

  • What are Belt’s responsibilities as superintendent at Commonfields?

  • How long has he been superintendent? Did he have a predecessor? If so, who was it?

  • Who reports to Belt, if anyone?

  • How many hours a week does he typically work? When was the last time he reported to work and what was he working on?

  • What’s the difference between the general manager’s position and the superintendent’s responsibilities?

  • Is the superintendent involved in addressing infrastructure problems? If so, how?

We also want to hear your questions, comments, and story ideas about Commonfields. Please share your thoughts with Kelsey Landis (klandis@bnd.com) , DeAsia Paige (dsutgrey@bnd.com) or Kavahn Mansouri (kmansouri@bnd.com).

This story was originally published March 18, 2021 5:00 AM.

Kelsey Landis is an Illinois state affairs and politics reporter for the Belleville News-Democrat. She joined the newsroom in January 2020 after her first stint at the paper from 2016 to 2018. She graduated from Southern Illinois University in 2010 and earned a master’s from DePaul University in 2014. Landis previously worked at The Alton Telegraph. At the BND, she focuses on informing you about what your lawmakers are doing in Springfield and Washington, D.C., and she works to hold them accountable. Landis has won Illinois Press Association awards for her work, including the Freedom of Information Award.
DeAsia Paige joined the Belleville News-Democrat as a Report for America corps member in 2020. She’s a community reporter covering East St. Louis and surrounding areas. DeAsia previously interned with VICE and The Detroit Free Press. She graduated from The University of Kansas in 2020.