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Letters To The Editor Opinion

Letters to the Editor

Candidate Endorsements

I’ve noticed a familiar trend in this year’s primary and general election cycle. It appears to me that the television, print, and even Internet media have favored and/or endorsed the candidate who enters the race with the most funding. It was extremely obvious to me when The Jackson Sun and The Commercial Appeal favored Ron Kirkland in the Republican primary for the 8th District and Roy Herron in the general election.

Kirkland outspent Stephen Fincher at least three to one, and at the beginning of the general election, everyone expected Herron to outspend Fincher, knowing Fincher entered the general with essentially no money due to a costly primary fight.

American media outlets are for-profit businesses, concerned with their bottom line. It’s doubtful the media would be unbiased in their election reporting and candidate endorsements. This leaves us, the electorate, to do our own investigations into the candidates in order to make an informed decision.

Ashley Jordan

Maury City, Tennessee

Editor’s note: For the record, the Flyer doesn’t endorse candidates.

Free Health Care?

Why is health care not free? How much is too much to pay for your health?

There are people all over the United States who are suffering from this monstrous system we call health care. Congress has turned our health care over to the hands of multi-billion-dollar corporations that do not care about us. The only thing important to them is money.

If we do not have enough money, do they just expect us to do nothing and die? Health care should not continue to go at this rate. People are dying because of the lack of resources to get appropriate health care, while the insurance companies sit back and get rich. We have a way to get our voices heard by voting on November 2nd. There is no need to suffer in silence. If we vote properly, change will come.

Kevin Porter

Murfreesboro, Tennessee

Bringing Out the Worst

I have a question for freedom-loving Americans: Why do national elections bring out the worst in us?

This election year we have a welcomed new party joining the free election process. Sadly, too many of those in the Tea Party who claim to honor and respect the Constitution seem to want to pick and choose only the parts they agree with. While I believe most Americans think we need another choice in a national party, it seems those supporting this new start-up want to resort to violence or secrecy.

Some Rand Paul supporters attacked a young woman carrying a sign protesting Paul’s stand on some policies. Several Tea Party candidates refuse to answer questions from those they deem liberal. Others refuse to obey election laws that require them to submit their finances. Still others refuse to attend debates. Most of these folks claim they want to take the country back.

The methods some are using resemble the Brownshirts of Germany in the 1930s rather than those who have fought for our freedom for over 200 years. Germany was facing political and economic troubles at the time. The Brownshirts used those troubles to gain power by attacking unions and the working class. America today has the same problems. We even have those who are using these problems to gain power by preaching hate and dividing us. Democrats and Republicans are throwing so much mud and misinformation that only citizens who dig very deep can ascertain who is telling a semblance of the truth.

Don’t be fooled by those who blame others for our troubles. Instead seek to find and vote for those willing to put forth solutions that benefit all Americans. Remember: We can lose our wonderful nation very quickly by embracing hate.

Jack Bishop

Cordova

Memory Loss

It amazes me that so many people have forgotten in just two short years how bad things were for eight years under Republican leadership. People are being fooled and confused by Fox News, Tea Party Republicans, and GOP propaganda.

The stock market is flying high — over 11,000 after two years of Obama and Democratic leadership. Check your 401(k), IRA, and pension funds for the truth about the recovery. Now, millions of Americans want to give power back to the Republican Party that got us into this mess. Republicans haven’t changed one iota since they drove the economy into the ground.

Ron Lowe

Nevada City, California

The Memphis Flyer encourages reader response. Send mail to: Letters to the Editor, POB 1738, Memphis, TN 38101. Or send us e-mail at letters@memphisflyer.com. All responses must include name, address, and daytime phone number. Letters should be no longer than 250 words.

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News The Fly-By

What They Said

bout “Valuing the Worker” and the pay gap between CEOs and hourly employees:

“The CEOs have no reason to pay anything other than the bare minimum. They have become a class of mini-barons.” — 38103

About “Et Tu, Al? Sharpton Comes to Memphis and Adds His Thrust Against Consolidation”:

“Now that Al is against consolidation, maybe more suburbanites will vote for it.” — Mayfield

About “New Math” and the possibility of closing many city schools:

“I’m guessing that there is no intention of closing any schools. This ploy is laying the groundwork for some scam being devised by the School Czar Cash and his posse.” — nutnbtwork

About “Haslam Sticks to His Guns” and his position on gun control:

“If I have an unencumbered right to own and carry a firearm, can I own a working .50 caliber Browning machine gun or an operational howitzer? Why the restrictions on owning fully automatic or military grade weaponry?” — packrat

About “Going National” and the 2010 election:

“How many times is the City Council going to reverse what the people vote for, only to reverse their reverse and put the item back on the ballot? Is this not the third time for the city employee residency requirement?” — mad_merc

Comment of the Week:

About “The Rant” and the crop of “know-nothings” running for Congress:

“They were called ‘mugwumps’ because they had their mug on one end and their wump on the other.” — autoegocrat

To share your thoughts, comments, concerns, and — maybe — get published, visit memphisflyer.com.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Discrimination Debate

At least one Memphis city councilman is looking for a little “do ask, do tell.”

Proponents of a city ordinance protecting its gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender (GLBT) workers from discrimination say fear of retaliation has kept employees from coming forward to talk about unfair treatment.

But Councilman Shea Flinn, the ordinance’s sponsor, thinks he has a solution: an anonymous survey of all city workers.

“One of the things that kept coming up in debate previously was that this isn’t a problem in the city,” Flinn said. “[The Tennessee Equality Project has] had a problem getting people to come forward. We want to craft this study in a way where people feel free to speak their minds so we can gauge the problem.”

The City Council’s personnel committee approved a resolution calling for the study and the ordinance itself last week. The full council will vote on the resolution for the study and the first reading of the ordinance on Tuesday, November 9th. Though the ordinance must go through three readings before approval, the resolution for the study will either pass or fail at the next meeting.

Flinn took up sponsorship of the ordinance, which was re-introduced last week after the Tennessee Equality Project (TEP) asked the former sponsor, Janis Fullilove, to withdraw a similar nondiscrimination ordinance in August due to lack of support.

Before it was withdrawn, the original ordinance was accompanied by a resolution that called for protections for GLBT employees with companies contracting with city government. That drew criticism from opponents, so TEP decided not to pursue the resolution.

“We wanted to bring the ordinance back without the resolution for city contractors, because we felt like that was muddying the issue slightly,” said TEP vice chair Michelle Bliss. “We still support that, but at this time, our focus is on getting protection for city employees and improving Memphis’ reputation as a place where diversity is valued.”

TEP chair Jonathan Cole told council members last week that he has been in contact with GLBT city employees who have disclosed stories of unfair treatment, but “many express reluctance to come forward to tell their stories for fear of losing their jobs or enduring further harassment.”

Bliss said TEP supports the proposed study, but she expressed some concern about the way it will be handled.

“We are concerned about the same problems we’ve had getting people to speak — retaliation and identifying information being gathered or released,” Bliss said. “We’re also concerned that the right questions are asked.”

The city’s human resources department will create and administer the survey, and Flinn said he’d like input from TEP and the ordinance’s opponents on the Family Action Council. He believes the study will show that discrimination against gay city employees does exist.

Though she expressed some concern with how the study is designed, Bliss also thinks the end result will demonstrate the need for GLBT protections in city government.

“I think they’ll find that they have more problems than they think they do,” Bliss said. “That would be a good thing, because it will allow [the council] to address the problem.”

Categories
Cover Feature News

Blight Fighters

When Andrew McGill and his partner moved from the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina, they settled on a quiet, tree-lined street in a historic Memphis neighborhood. It didn’t take long for them to notice several properties with overgrown yards, missing windows, large piles of debris and appliances, and houses literally caving in, many of them owned by the same person.

“Annesdale Park includes about 150 total properties,” McGill said of the community near Bellevue Junior High. “[This landlord] owned 6 or 7 percent of the entire neighborhood, and he was allowing all his properties to fall into horrible disrepair.”

With the help of attorney Steve Barlow, McGill is one of several Memphians — including, most recently, Memphis mayor A C Wharton — who have filed suit against the owners of blighted property through the Tennessee Neighborhood Preservation Act.

“We were very much involved in our community on the Mississippi Gulf Coast,” McGill said. “After witnessing what was lost in a natural disaster, we weren’t going to stand for someone disrespecting our new neighborhood.”

Though it didn’t see the kind of price spikes that occurred in cities in the so-called sand states of California, Nevada, Arizona, and Florida, Memphis has been hit hard by the foreclosure crisis. The city has filed suit against Wells Fargo, claiming that the lending giant engaged in predatory practices against African Americans and damaged the city’s property-tax income.

The foreclosure crisis, combined with the economic downturn and negligent owners, has led to blighted properties all over the city. In the last 10 years, more than 80,000 foreclosure notices have been served in Memphis, with maybe half of those resulting in actual foreclosures. There are 8,000 vacant properties in the city, as well as 13,000 vacant lots.

But Memphians are fighting blight any way they can.

From Binghamton to Eastview Street, residents have sued the owners of problem property in an attempt to get them to clean it up.

In Frayser, one of the worst communities for foreclosures, Steve Lockwood and the Frayser Community Development Corporation (CDC) are working to fix the problem, one home at a time.

Brad Watkins, organizing coordinator of the Mid-South Peace & Justice Center, spotlights area blight by posting videos to YouTube.

And with a grant from MemFEAST, artist Tommy Wilson plans to bomb blight with a mixture of paint, compost, and seeds to grow wildflowers in vacant lots. (For a Q&A with Wilson, see page 21.)

Last week, with Barlow’s help, Mayor Wharton filed 138 lawsuits against the owners of blighted property across the city.

Holding a picture of a boarded-up house surrounded by trash, Wharton said, “You don’t have to be a genius to figure out that things like this should not exist in America’s 18th largest city.”

Code enforcement identified the targeted properties as ones that had long been in violation of city code.

“It’s not a question of whether we’re going to sue you, but when we’re going to sue you,” Wharton said. “Hopefully, we won’t have to keep filing the lawsuits. Hopefully, they’ll get the message.”

Memphis is a city that relies heavily on property taxes, and Wharton called blight a “cancer on our source of survival.” The city is targeting owners of multiple neglected properties and absentee owners who live as far away as California and as close as Mississippi.

“If it’s not good enough for the cities where they live, it’s not good enough for the city of Memphis,” Wharton said. He added, “I wish I had a way of taking some of these properties, putting them on a flatbed, and rolling them right into [the owners’] neighborhoods and saying, ‘We brought your house to you.’ I wonder how long their neighbors would let them stay.”

In 2007, the state amended the Tennessee Neighborhood Preservation Act to allow civil causes of action to be brought against the owners of blighted property. Under the statute, blighted property meets one of eight criteria, including falling short of local codes or being a fire hazard, a dumping ground for trash or debris, or vermin-infested. Owners of nearby property can sue for the value lost to their homes. Organizations and businesses, as well as residents, can sue to force the owners to rehab the property.

Barlow, former head of the University Neighborhoods Development Corporation, began filing test cases several years ago.

“The properties we target are true problems for the whole community,” Barlow said. “They came to be in the condition they’re in through a long period of neglect and abandonment.”

Barlow began filing the initial suits in Chancery Court and General Sessions before deciding that Environmental Court was the best arena. Barlow, with the help of other attorneys, such as Bill Whitman, did the work pro bono, while neighbors covered the up-front expenses, such as court costs and home-appraisal fees.

The first lawsuit was for a battered fourplex in an otherwise nice part of Binghamton. “As soon as we filed the lawsuit, within a month, the property changed hands. The buyer fixed it up,” Barlow said. “We thought the lawsuit probably had something to do with the seller letting go of it.”

According to the popular “broken windows” theory, blight leads to increases in neighborhood crime, including vandalism and more serious offenses.

Jan Rowe calls her friendly neighborhood near East High School a “little patch of Mayberry.”

“But what surrounds us is not great,” she said. “I don’t consider it very safe, and I just live one street over.”

In March, a 17-year-old girl left East High School with several male students. She later accused them of raping her in a nearby vacant home on Eastview.

Several years ago, the city announced an Eastview redevelopment plan, but it never went anywhere. So Rowe and her neighbors went down the street, taking pictures and identifying the worst properties, and then sued the owners.

“There’s part of me that hates having to go that route,” Rowe said, “but since no one seems to be doing anything, it’s at least something.”

In one case, Rowe won a small financial settlement, which she has put into a fund to do more lawsuits for other vacant property in the neighborhood.

“These owners must think some investor is going to come for their property, but it’s not going to happen,” Rowe said. “Occupy them or tear them down or sell them. Why keep property that kids are going into and destroying?”

She considers the results of the lawsuits mixed. At least one owner has failed to make the changes he said he would. However, last month, Rowe filed four more lawsuits.

“We’re in it for the long haul,” she said. “The neighborhood didn’t go bad overnight. As long as we keep pressure on these people, I don’t think any bad can come of it.”

In Annesdale Park, several blighted properties have been remediated in the past year. The historic neighborhood has wide streets and newly paved sidewalks, but mortgage fraud and absentee owners had taken their toll. Another problem was a longtime resident who owned a number of dilapidated properties.

In one particular case, the piles of debris were large enough to hide a car. In another, the home had been vacant for four years and was missing windows, allowing water in when it rained. The back of the house was falling down.

After asking the property owner to clean up — with no response — Barlow helped several neighborhood residents file a suit.

“We weren’t after his money. We told him up-front,” McGill said. “We also told him we weren’t ruling out going after his money if he didn’t do something.”

After hearing of Barlow’s successes, some in the corporate sector asked what they could do to take it to the next level.

“It was clear it was working: ‘Let’s try targeting an effort against larger-scale problems,'” Barlow said. “We decided to do a series of five lawsuits in the medical center district.”

Of the five, two of the multi-family rental properties were demolished within months of the lawsuit. Another was completely rehabbed, and the other two are currently undergoing renovation.

“We’re not looking to demolish any buildings,” said Beth Flanagan, director of the Memphis Medical Center, a group that includes the Memphis Bioworks Foundation, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, and the Regional Medical Center. “My stakeholders see a need for affordable housing. We want a nice environment, but we also need a place for our folks to live.”

“But if there’s no hope for it,” Barlow added, “let’s get it over with.”

The most recent, and most high-profile, of the legal actions was the start of the mayor’s campaign to end blight.

“We’re trying to scale up the effort to meet the size of the problem,” Barlow said. “This ties in directly with foreclosure. A large part of the problem citywide is bank-foreclosed property that remains vacant and uncared for.”

Steve Lockwood, executive director of the Frayser CDC, buys foreclosed properties with the hope that he can get to them before they fall into total disrepair.

“We do foreclosure counseling to try to keep people in their houses. We’re absolutely adamant about that,” Lockwood said. “But once they come up empty, they’ve got to be dealt with.”

And more empty homes means more blight. As the number of foreclosed homes has increased, the Frayser CDC has had to keep pace. According to Lockwood, they’ve redeveloped as many houses in the past year as they have in the last seven years.

In his quest to move dispossessed families back into homes, Lockwood often struggles to identify the legal owners of property.

“We’ve just done one really nice house, and there’s a comparable house right next to it that is empty and in foreclosure,” he said. “But we can’t find anybody who claims to be the owner. In the meantime, we’ve got an abandoned place that is unsecured, and the yard is waist high. We’ve got a nice little house next door that we’ve put a lease-purchase person in. It’s a problem.”

In Tennessee, a property can be foreclosed on in 28 days because the law does not require a court hearing. The overwhelming number of foreclosures has created a glut in the housing market. Homes worth $40,000 or more have been sold to the Frayser CDC for $1. “The banks don’t want them in their inventory,” Lockwood said.

But that’s the best-case scenario for a community. Many properties hang in limbo, as the owners have been advised to move out, but the foreclosure process has stalled.

“We’ve got folks who were advised by their attorneys to move out, and eight months later they found out they still owned the house. We’ve had clients who moved back in,” Lockwood said.

Brad Watkins, of the Mid-South Peace & Justice Center, has noticed a similar trend when it comes to paying taxes on those properties.

Recently, Watkins began filming “BlightWatch,” a series of Internet videos spotlighting local vacant property.

“We wanted to show people the extent of what is out there,” Watkins said. “If you live in certain parts of the city, you don’t see how pronounced the problem is.”

The Peace & Justice Center initially began looking at housing issues because of area homeless, but they soon noticed the myriad ways foreclosures and blighted property were affecting the city and its residents. From August 2004 to December 2009, for instance, there were 900 fires on vacant property. The center estimates each fire costs the city about $17,000.

The financial hit also comes in the form of unpaid taxes.

In filming “BlightWatch,” Watkins realized that in many cases, ownership was unclear. The lending agent on a home might have started the foreclosure process and never completed it, or the owners might have declared bankruptcy, but the bank never transferred the property to its name.

During a recent Wells Fargo event to grant $48,000 to local charities, members of the Peace & Justice Center confronted bank staff with the more than $60,000 in back taxes owed to the city and county on what was identified as Wells Fargo-owned property.

This led to a mid-October meeting with Watkins, Wells Fargo officials, the city treasurer, and the county trustee. Wells Fargo claimed ownership of four properties — and said they would pay the back taxes — but as for the rest of the properties, they claimed they were simply the trustee, not the owner.

“You’ve got to create an environment where certain things won’t be tolerated,” Watkins said.

His next goal is to get a recent state law activated locally.

Under the act, passed by the Tennessee legislature last spring, communities and neighborhood groups are allowed to clean blighted property and then place a lien on that property equal to the value of their costs.

Though the law doesn’t stipulate a specific process, Watkins suggests that neighborhood clean-up efforts would have to be approved by the Memphis City Council or the Shelby County Commission. After the property is brought up to code, it would be verified by the Office of Planning and Development.

Before proceeding, Watkins is waiting on an opinion from the county attorney as to whether the statute needs to be approved by both the City Council and the County Commission.

“We think this is a great way for the community to take the issue by the horns,” Watkins said. “Not only can they clean up in the neighborhood, but by placing liens on the property, they can hit irresponsible lending institutions and absentee property owners in the pocketbook.”

Under the Tennessee Neighborhood Preservation Act, defendants cannot be owner-occupants of the property, meaning the average citizen can’t sue a neighbor just for having an overgrown yard. Still, those involved in fighting blight stress the lawsuits are aimed at owners who can afford to make changes.

“The last thing we want to see in this effort is some senior citizen who doesn’t have the financial means to fix up the house they’ve lived in for 40 to 50 years,” Watkins said. “We’ve got to go after the big fish.”

Going after those fish can make a difference.

Annesdale Park’s Andrew McGill did a lot of the legwork for his lawsuit: taking pictures, making sure everyone was following the terms of the settlement agreement. Every time the case went to court, he was there.

“I wanted to be looking at the judge, and I wanted the judge to know how important this was to us,” McGill said.

It took about a year, but he says it was worth it. The five properties in the worst condition are looking much better, and it’s spawned something of a neighborhood renaissance.

Kevin Brewer, former Annesdale Park president, is currently repainting and remodeling his house. He’s not the only one.

“All of our neighbors are sort of doing the same thing,” Brewer said. “The more everyone could see other homeowners doing stuff … “

Residents also have protected their investment. McGill will soon be relocating to Nashville because of a new job.

“Now that I have my house on the market, I get paid back for that effort,” McGill said. “If I hadn’t done all that — in this real estate market — I would have really suffered.”

Q&A with Tommy Wilson,

Bomb the Blight mastermind

The city’s fight against blight might involve legal battles, but one self-professed “Arkansas farm boy” has another solution: Bomb the blight with wildflowers. Local photographer Tommy Wilson won $1,500 to fund his “Bomb the Blight” project at the Crosstown Arts MemFEAST dinner in early October. He used the money to purchase seeds and build a cannon for shooting seed bombs into blighted areas. Each “bomb” is a latex balloon filled with wildflower seeds, fertilizer, organic matter, and pigment. Wilson’s guerrilla gardening project kicks off in the Washington Bottoms neighborhood on Saturday, November 6th, at noon. — Bianca Phillips

Flyer: What sparked your interest in blighted areas?

Wilson: I take pictures all over the city, and I’ve noticed that Memphis is one of those weird cities that goes from really, really nice to really, really neglected. There are areas nobody pays attention to, and I want to call attention to them.

You’ve built a cannon for distributing your seed bombs. Why not just throw seeds? I wanted the project to have an artistic bent. Using the cannon and paint will make a big abstract work. That gives me the artistic side plus the whole beautification thing.

How many wildflowers are you planting?

Depending on the plant, there should be between 200 and 5,000 seeds per bomb. I intend to use around 100 bombs per location.

How does that work if the seeds are inside a balloon?

Pure latex balloons biodegrade at the same rate as plant matter because they are made of sap. According to the balloon manufacturer, they should biodegrade within three to six months. They will break into small fragments within one to two months.

Why are you starting at Washington Bottoms in Midtown?

It’s within a mile of my house. Also, since [Crosstown Arts in Midtown] is the organization backing this, I thought it would be appropriate to do that area first.

What other areas will you target?

We’re going to do five areas. They’re having an event on Broad Avenue in November called “Old Face for New Broad” and I’ll be doing one over there as part of the event. I want to do some of the Sam Cooper corridor that they tore out for the interstate in the ’70s. I’ve been contacted by some people in South Memphis and in Orange Mound to come look at a site. We’re going to try and spread this around the city.

When will you be bombing?

The first one will be done this fall, but [after that] is contingent on funding. If money comes along and I can extend it further, then we’ll just keep rolling with it until February.

Is there concern about the city mowing down the wildflowers in the spring, since some of these areas may be city property?

I’m using native plants, and if they mow them down, that will just spread them. If they spread, that’s great.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Film Spotlight: For Colored Girls

For Colored Girls

For Colored Girls is Tyler Perry’s adaptation of Ntozake Shange’s 1975 play For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf. The award-winning play, a series of 20 poems, stands as a significant work in the African-American lit canon. But as Perry moves from the Madea comedies that made him famous to more serious work, he lacks the shading and nuance (and perhaps humility) to stave off melodrama.

 The film follows the threads of nine women, many of whom are identified by a different color of the rainbow. These women are saddled with issues from abortion and abuse to infidelity and molestation, and we are not spared a single detail, as one violent rape scene makes clear. Fortunately, the performances by Thandie Newton, Loretta Devine, Anika Noni Rose, and especially Kimberly Elise are strong enough to withstand the heavy material. It isn’t long, however, before Perry’s glib style seeps through his attempt to add contour to the framework of Shange’s play.

 Perry falters, maintaining a moral high ground that seems wholly out of place in a story about struggle. There is only a muted empathy for Newton’s character, whose affinity for sleeping around stems from, predictably enough, sexual abuse she suffered as a child. And her impossibly swift epiphany — which could easily take years of therapy to work through — rings false. Only one male character is sympathetic: A closeted husband is outed and dismissed, as Perry introduces and then sidesteps a discussion of homosexuality in the black community. In the end, Perry strips away any hint of ambiguity, favoring instead the neat lessons of a fable: Don’t sleep with random men. Don’t take him back. Don’t stay with him.

With all its flaws, Perry’s adaptation may very well reach more audiences than a live theater performance would, and perhaps afterwards audiences will be drawn to Shange’s original.

Opening Friday, November 5th, multiple locations

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Mega-Veggie Pizza with Vegan Cheese at Mellow Mushroom

When I went vegan in 2004, I thought my cheese-pizza-ordering days were over. I knew I could make a vegan cheese pizza at home or order a cheese-less veggie pizza when dining out. But stringy, melty vegan cheese offered at a pizzeria in Memphis? That was never going to happen. But then I ordered my first vegan cheese-covered pie at Mellow Mushroom. The pizza chain began offering Daiya vegan cheese on all of its pies and hoagies back in May. I chose to sub out Daiya for the usual feta on this Mega-Veggie pizza, which was piled high with tofu, sun-dried tomatoes, spinach, green peppers, mushrooms, onions, black olives, tomatoes, broccoli, banana peppers, and artichoke hearts. If you haven’t tried vegan cheese in a while, you should know that it’s come a long way in the past two years. Daiya, the newest vegan cheese to hit the market, is by far the most authentic-tasting cheese out there. And it melts!

Bianca Phillips

Mellow Mushroom

9155 poplar in Germantown (907-0243)

mellowmushroom.com

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Daily Photo Special Sections

Triggers

Triggers perform at the P&H Cafe Friday.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Eat for Bad Dog and Other Things To Do

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Thursday is Dog Day, a fund-raiser for Rock 103 DJ John “Bad Dog” McCormack, who is currently undergoing treatment for leukemia.

A number of restaurants and other businesses are donating a portion of the day’s proceeds to help cover Bad Dog’s expenses. Among the restaurants: Young Avenue Deli, River Oaks, East End Grill, The Cottage, and the Half Shell.

Donations are also being accepted through the Friends of Bad Dog website. You can check the website as well for a full list of participating businesses.

And there are more items for your to-do list, including a wine dinner, voting, and beer-making …

Categories
News

Bill and Melinda Gates Visit MCS

Bazillionaire Bill Gates and his wife Melinda visited Memphis City Schools today. Mary Cashiola has a report.

Categories
News

Bill and Melinda Gates Visit MCS

A year after Memphis City Schools (MCS) won $90 million from the Gates Foundation, co-chairs Bill and Melinda Gates were in Memphis today to see, in part, how all the “pieces line up.”

“To hear how the community is coming together is quite something,” Melinda Gates said.

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Memphis won the large, multi-year grant by showing a commitment to bold new initiatives, as well as a comprehensive partnership with non-profits, national education entities such as The New Teacher Project, other foundations, and teachers themselves.

In the past 10 years, the Gates Foundation has focused its domestic efforts on education, and most recently, teacher effectiveness.

“I was surprised when we got into education how little was known about effective teaching,” Bill Gates said. “Years of experience, various degrees — it doesn’t explain the differences (between teachers).”

MCS is currently working under its teacher effectiveness initiative or T.E.I. Learn more about that and what it means for Memphis, in this recent Flyer cover story.

In addition to initiatives directly impacting student achievement, MCS is participating in a Gates study on what makes an effective teacher. As part of that, volunteer educators have had their classrooms filmed.

“There are lots of great teachers out there,” Bill Gates said. “What we haven’t done is identify what effective teachers are doing and spreading that to others.”