“Three Sisters on Top of the Water: President Kari Steele and Commissioners Brady-Davis and Brown,” South Side Drive Magazine
South Side Drive Magazine: The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago (MWRD) has been keeping our waterways clean since it was first established in 1889 Although it has a history of excellence and has won a couple of awards to prove it including the WEF Water Quality Improvement Award and the Schroepfer Innovative Facility Design Medal, consumers don’t know much about this agency, and often get it confused with the Chicago Department of Water. There are nine commissioners on the board of MWRD, and for Woman’s History Month, we chose to highlight the three African American women of MWRD, President, Kari Steele: Commissioner Precious Brady-Davis and Commissioner Yumeka Brown.
“I passed out literature, stuffed envelopes, and sat in community meetings, listening to residents’ concerns on various issues,” she says. During her volunteer work, she met a person whom she refers to as one of her most diligent and knowledgeable mentors, former Alderman Fredrenna Lyle, who asked young Kari Steele to revitalize the 6th Ward Young Democrats. “That’s when I got involved in a leadership role,” she tells us, “I became the chair of the group and hosted activities and asked my friends to be involved.” From there, she joined the Cook County Young Democrats (CCYD), became the Chair of that group and was active with the Young Democrats of Illinois. She says, “Politics quickly became my extracurricular activity.”
President Steele tells us that during her college years, she volunteered for Marc Morial, “Because I wanted to be part of the process that supported a Black man’s run for mayor,” she explained. “That was the first action where I stepped out on my own and it reminded me of the people who supported former Chicago Mayor Harold Washington.” Politics became a part of President Steele’s life from an early age. “My life has always been close to the community and the elected officials responsible for resolving their constituents’ concerns,” she says, adding, “Today, I am standing in the shadows of prominent politicians who have provided excellent guidance and who now hold me accountable for the actions and services I provide to the communities we serve.”
She earned a pre-med degree in chemistry from Xavier University in Louisiana, and worked as an intern at the MRWD, so choosing water was an easy decision. In addition, she held several positions, working in Houston for a water testing company and working in Chicago as a control lab water chemist for six years at the Chicago Department of Water Management Jardin Purification Plant near Navy Pier. She also held a position at L’Oreal as a formulating chemist for ethnic hair care products.
A turning point in her trajectory came when she was attending a community meeting. “A major issue came up concerning Southside residents who were experiencing major basement water backups and I found myself stepping forward and giving feedback about the role of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District and the City of Chicago Water Department to help homeowners.”
She says that doing that triggered her to take a leap of faith to further educate people on the essential work of the MWRD. At the urging of many of her peers and supporters, she ran for the MWRD Commissioner in 2012, and the rest is her story.
These three women are doing their part to protect our waterways, and they urge us, as consumers to do our part. “We at MWRD encourage Cook County residents to reduce their water use to necessity when there is a heavy rainfall so that the local sewers are not overwhelmed,” says President Steele, as she advises residents to take shorter showers, wait to run the dishwasher and delay using the washing machine during heavy rainfalls.”
Clean water is such an essential necessity, it’s great to know that we have these competent, well-qualified women, who really, really care about protecting our waterways.