Around town, signs with the word “Imagine” hang in the windows of empty storefronts. More and more people are doing just that. On the east side of the tracks, an empty parking lot will transform into a 50-unit, affordable housing complex. New shops and restaurants have opened next door to the $48-million Rocky Mount Event Center for youth sports, which is attached to a new Federally Qualified Health Center, operated by the Opportunities Industrialization Center (OIC) of Rocky Mount.
These are outward signs of deeper change in how power is shared in this city of 54,000, the hometown of jazz pianist Theolonius Monk and boxing legend Sugar Ray Leonard. When the city began planning for how land would be developed around the new event center, residents from adjacent neighborhoods, who had only nominally been part of the process, did not just ask to be heard—they demanded it.
In building a Culture of Health, community partners are making the connection between quality jobs, affordable housing, economic development, and racial equity. The city is providing seed funding for communities to identify houses for renovation, and creating a system for those funds to be channeled back into neighborhoods.