Skate City is owned by Lawrence Wise, Sr., his son Larry Wise and his daughter Laura Wise also work with him at the skating rink.
For their day jobs, Lawrence is a police officer for the East St. Louis Parks District, and his son Larry is a police officer for the Shiloh Police Department in Shiloh, Illinois. "The parents appreciate the police presence," said Lawrence.
"Pre pandemic, we'd have three to four hundred kids on the weekends", said Skate City owner Lawrence Wise, "It gives them something to do, keeps them off the streets, out of any trouble".
Skate City is full of reminders of the intersection of black American culture and civil rights. At the counter, Wise sells #Hypethestripe movement shirts and an American flag with a black stripe across it, the symbol of the movement, hangs on the wall outside of the rink. The #HypeTheStripe movement started by the Unpaid Labor Contribution Project was created to acknowledge the first twelve generations of Africans that were forced into slavery in the United States.
Regulars to Skate City show up for Monday Night Skate not just for the exercise and social aspects of skating culture, but also for the music. Larry Wise, Jr. selects the mix at the DJ booth and plays a range of music from classic disco to modern-day R&B and hip-hop. Lamont Sparks, a regular at Skate City, said, "We're not going to skate to any type of music. If we don't like it, it will probably show on our face".
Skate City is only having three public skating sessions a week for skaters at least 21 years old due to the COVID-19 pandemic.