Categories
News The Fly-By

Saggy Pants

In October, a Memphis man was arrested after he allegedly shot a teenager in the butt for wearing saggy pants. But Westside Middle School in Frayser is taking a more light-hearted approach.

For the past six weeks, boys who come to school wearing pants too far below their navel are “Urkeled” — staff members fasten the offender’s pants at or above their belly button using plastic zip ties.

The idea was the brainchild of Westside Middle parent liaison Theodore King, who said he’d rather see kids wearing their pants à la Steve Urkel, the nerdy neighbor known for his high-water pants on the late-’90s TV show Family Matters.

“Sagging pants is a cultural thing that we’re trying to fight within these [school] walls,” King said.

When the initiative began six weeks ago, King said administrators were zip-tying the pants of about 75 kids a day. But on the Monday after Thanksgiving break, only four students came to school with their pants too low.

“Before, it was rare to see a young man who was not sagging, because that was culturally acceptable. Now that’s shifting, and it’s becoming culturally acceptable to pull your pants up,” said Westside Middle School technology teacher and administrator Shaka Greene, the winner of the Steve Urkel trophy for zip-tying the pants of the most students each week.

“All the men who work at Westside dress for success every day, because many of our young male students don’t have that example in their community. They didn’t know that pulling your pants up is necessary for success in the business community,” said Westside principal Bobby White.

Before the Urkel initiative, students were written up for saggy pants and ordered to pull them up. But White said many students would pull them back down later in the day. Now students are not written up, but the embarassment of wearing high-water, zip-tied pants all day seems be effective.

“Our young ladies laugh at the boys who are Urkeled. They think it’s the most hysterical thing,” Greene said.

Eighth-grader Keldrion Vann said he’s been Urkeled about “11 or 12 times” with his most recent saggy-pants offense just last week. But he blames his recent Urkeling on forgetting his belt.

“It will probably happen again this week, but I’ve learned to at least try to remember my belt,” Vann said.

Westside also has begun encouraging boys to dress in suits and ties on Tuesdays. Girls are encouraged to dress in business attire on Thursdays.

“What we’re trying to teach is that you have to look a certain way to succeed,” White said. “Eventually, we envision all of our young men wearing vests and blazers.”

Categories
News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall

Ups and Downs

The Zippin Pippin, Elvis’ favorite wooden roller coaster, is making headlines after Green Bay officials announced that installation costs would be $500,000 more than originally expected, bringing the total cost of construction to $3.5 million. Green Bay mayor Jim Schmitt says he still believes in the project and is confident that private donations will cover the shortfall. According to the Victoria Advocate, Pippin supporters are counting on the attraction to bring big crowds to Bay Beach Amusement Park when it opens.

You know, if it works out for Green Bay, Memphis should really look into getting one of those.

Christmas Balls

Look at poor Bernard Mario Johnson. He looks sad because he’s become the latest victim in the culture war on droopy drawers. Johnson was arrested in a Memphis Walmart on Black Friday, because his visible red holiday underwear disturbed shoppers. The shoppers clearly have never visited peopleofwalmart.com and didn’t know what to expect from their experience. At least Johnson, unlike many of the characters photographed for the website, was wearing underwear.

King Clone

While on the topic of Elvis’ favorite roller coaster and peopleofwalmart.com, Elvis Presley Enterprises has announced that “due to the overwhelming response and success,” it will host a fifth Ultimate Elvis Tribute Artist Contest.

By Chris Davis. E-mail him at davis@memphisflyer.com.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Pizza at Trolley Stop

Okay, I’m just going to lay down the gauntlet. There isn’t a slice of pizza in town consistently as good as the slices at Trolley Stop Market. The fresh ingredients trucked over from Whitton Farms and the extra love from Jillbilly’s kitchen surely give it an unfair advantage. The crust is true perfection. It’s New York-style, so it’s thin and it bends, but it is sturdy enough to hold up to the weight of the toppings, cheese, and sauce. Oh, the sauce! Fresh and flavorful but not overpowering. Each slice always has the perfect amount of cheese, and you can be assured that it will string out in front of you with every bite. As far as the toppings go, you can’t go wrong. Pizzas are made all day long and come out with everything from farm-fresh squash, yellow cherry tomatoes, herbs, and a medley of mushrooms to the standard pepperoni. If you want one made especially for you, they’ll do that too. Order a slice, and it will easily be the best $3.50 you ever spent. But take it from me, go ahead and order two. — Stacey Greenberg

Trolley Stop Market, 704 Madison (526-1361)

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

Letters to the Editor

Thankful?

Like many, I am thankful that we have elected many Republicans and Tea Party members to serve us for the next two years (Editor’s Letter, November 25th issue). This will, without doubt, guarantee a landslide victory for Democrats and renewed hope for all of us in just two short years. Once these people start trying to implement some of the ideals they espouse, such as repealing the Civil Rights Act, criminalizing homosexuality, doing away with the Department of Education, and taxing the middle class to give huge tax breaks to all our poor, starving billionaires, people will quickly change their minds and sanity will return.

Jim Brasfield

Memphis

The Morning After

After reading John Branston’s “The Morning After” regarding the consolidation of governments (November 4th issue), I found myself asking: What is Shelby County really afraid of? How can members of the Memphis community stand idly by and allow this division to continue? Are we not all a part of the same county? Are we not all paying into the same economy? And yet many Shelby Countians not only want to remain physically separate from Memphians, they vilify their neighbors in Memphis.

What is Shelby County afraid of? Consolidation would mean smaller government, and it offers an economic advantage for the entire county. Does the Shelby County community not desire Memphis to thrive as they have thrived? Does the Shelby County community not want to afford the opportunity for all children to have a quality education? I’m sure the answer is a resounding no.

What is Shelby County afraid of? Branston’s article states, “No majority-white suburban county has ever consolidated with a majority black city.” Surely this is not an issue of separate but equal, is it? Are we allowing color and/or the “haves” and “have nots” to divide our community? Apparently, we are. Just because the words are not being uttered, it does not mean the implication is not there. Shame on us all.

Charity Campbell

Memphis

The Messiah?

Move to the side! The Messiah is coming with $90 million to help the Memphis City Schools system. I’m talking about the article “The Hand of Gates” (November 18th issue). Yes, Bill Gates donated money to our school system. Yes, we needed it, but what about the teaching methods?

I agree with Gates’ statement: “Years of experience, various degrees — it doesn’t explain the differences [between teachers].” What’s the point of having money at our disposal if the students don’t understand what they’re being taught? As a recent high school graduate, I understand the difference between regurgitating information and learning it. I hated algebra in high school, but now that I’m taking it in college with a better teacher, I can grasp the concepts. If we want to make a real change in the Memphis City Schools system, start with the teachers.

Raven Martin

Memphis

Hickory Hill

Regarding the story by Lindsay Jones in the November 11th issue, “Can Raleigh Spring Back?”: One Raleigh resident was quoted as saying, “I could’ve moved, but the house that I have is sufficient for me and my husband. … But when I see my surroundings go down and the value of my property, then I’m concerned.”

As a 20-year Hickory Hill resident, I have the same concerns. I was part of the annexation by the city of Memphis. The homes and businesses east of Riverdale Road up to Hacks Cross Road have been absorbed into the Hickory Hill community. It was once considered Germantown-extended and unincorporated.

Hickory Hill, once a thriving area, is on a steady decline. The Winchester corridor was like the Austin Peay corridor — full of all types of thriving businesses. Hickory Hill is headed down the path of the Raleigh Springs area. The tornado that came through Hickory Hill was a way out for the businesses that were declining. After the tornado, it was up to the business owners to come back to the community. It should not be up to a community church to take over a mall to make sure the community continues to thrive.

New businesses are not utilizing the vacant buildings between Hickory Hill Road and Riverdale Road. Is it too late for Hickory Hill to “spring back”?

Phyllis Burns

Memphis

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.

Categories
Music Music Features

Indie Bands’ Go-To Man

For a mid-sized city with a music industry struggling to re-assert its national relevance, Memphis has a high number of world-class recording facilities (Ardent, Young Avenue Sound, Electraphonic, Royal, Archer) and producer/engineers — more than one would think the city’s disparate music scene could support. Add to that the amount of home recording and smaller-project studios, and one finds a somewhat overcrowded local recording market.

But despite the current climate, local musician/DJ/recording engineer Andrew McCalla has quietly managed to establish himself as one of the scene’s most sought-after record producers.

“I’ve got enough folks wanting to record right now that I could probably fill 2011,” he says.

McCalla might also be one of the hardest-working men in local show business. A longtime fixture on the music scene as drummer with bands such as The Arch Rivals and The Perfect Fits, he’s also a well-known DJ around town, spinning under the name Buck Wilders, the host of WEVL‘s weekly Memphis Beat radio program, and a part-time soundman at the Hi-Tone Café. But in-between all that, McCalla records local music, mostly out of his Midtown home.

“My latest work space is at the house I’ve lived in for a little over a year now,” McCalla says. “I have two bedrooms that connect by a door: One is the control room; the other is the band room. Both rooms are really small, but I keep reminding myself so were Sun and Royal.”

McCalla’s recording odyssey began in 1997, when he bought a cassette four-track recorder and started making “experimental” bedroom recordings with friends.

“I figured out early on that it wasn’t just the song itself that made a record good. It was also the production and mixing that made it stand out,” McCalla says.

“The more stories I heard about how classic songs were recorded, the more I was drawn to the whole process. Since I considered myself more of a music fan than a musician, I figured recording was the direction I wanted to go in.”

Over the years, both McCalla’s expertise and equipment list have grown considerably. He currently works with a multi-track digital workstation, a pair of two-track reel-to-reel tape decks, and a modest collection of boutique outboard gear and microphones. His client list has also grown. McCalla’s resume boasts an impressive list of local bands, including The Warble, The Dirty Streets, Girls of the Gravitron, Noise Choir, The Ultracats, True Sons of Thunder, Tanks, and The Oscars.

“We heard the stuff Andrew did for Abe White’s other band, the Oscars, and it sounded great,” says Eric Friedl of True Sons of Thunder. “We ended up recording there, and it turned out good also. He really knows his room well and has a few tricks for special sauce.”

McCalla’s recordings tend to sound purposefully raw and honest — very reflective of how the bands he works with sound live, with very little in the way of way of studio trickery. He also works very quickly and encourages his artists to keep things simple and come in prepared.

“I like to record as live as possible,” McCalla says. “Nowadays, most folks track one at a time, isolating instruments, and redoing parts over and over until they consider it perfect. I feel this sucks the life out of the song. I just prefer to work with bands that are well practiced and ready to record.”

McCalla plans to expand the studio, convert fully to analog tape-based recording machines (he’s staunchly anti-ProTools and computer-based recording in general), and possibly launch a vinyl-only record label.

But for now, he’s got his hands full with his current workload, which includes debut albums for the spacey garage-rock trio Kruxe and local indie-rock supergroup Fraysia, among other projects.

“In no way am I an expert, but none of my favorite engineers or producers were either,” McCalla says. “With every project, I learn something new.”

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

Dracula’s Drag Show

If Twilight and True Blood have taught us anything about modern-day vampires, it’s that they tend to be ridiculously good-looking.

Hot vampires (and a few drag queens) will be everywhere at the “We’re Snowed In: Nightmare B4 Christmas” benefit party at Café Ole on Saturday, December 4th. The theme for this 8th annual Halloween-themed holiday party benefiting Friends for Life and Hope House is “Dracula’s Christmas.”

Headlining the drag-show entertainment for the evening is Jujubee, a contestant on season two of RuPaul’s Drag Race. Jujubee will be joined by a lineup of local drag queens and kings.

Attendees are encouraged to re-use their Halloween costumes (vampire or not) or come dressed as Christmas characters. The best costume will net a $100 cash prize, and runners-up will receive gift certificates. If you opt out of dressing up, the party’s organizers will see to it that you have something festive to wear.

“Everyone who walks in the door gets a pair of glow-in-the-dark fangs,” organizer Shane Jeffers says.

DJs Tree, Mary Jane, Steve Anne, Lil’ Eggroll, and Nathan Ashby will provide the music, and there’s even an all-you-can-eat buffet with everything from hot wings and shrimp cocktail to Christmas ham.

“We’re Snowed In: Nightmare B4 Christmas” Benefit Party, Café Ole, Saturday, December 4th, 9 p.m.-4 a.m. $15 (nrgluv@gmail.com).

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

Sew Be It

A few years ago, Amie Petronis Plumley, a kindergarten teacher at Grace-St. Luke’s, started a week-long sewing camp, for which she quickly sought assistance from Andria Lisle. And it was that camp that begat the recently released book Sewing School: 21 Projects Kids Will Love to Make.

Of post-publication reaction, Lisle, a longtime contributor to the Flyer who now works at the Brooks Museum, says, “A lot of my friends said, ‘I didn’t know you sew.'”

But sew she does. She learned it from her mother, as did Plumley, and they dedicate the book to them. Non-sewer Justin Fox Burks, also a Flyer contributor, provided the photos and dedicates the book to his mother as well.

Sewing School, featuring the camp’s students and other recruits, provides a colorful guide to get kids, ages 5 to 13, geared up, skilled up, and sewing through projects (patterns included) that range from an easy-as-pie pillow to a more complicated apron with pockets. The finished projects pictured are those done by the kids, who clearly take pride in their work.

At the camps, Lisle says Plumley uses her teaching background to keep the kids on-task, while she serves as the “goofy aunt who’s very indulgent.”

“Our one rule is: Sit and sew,” Lisle explains. “You don’t want to walk around with a needle in your mouth.”

 

“Sewing School” booksigning at Burke’s Book Store, Thursday, December 2nd, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Plumley and Lisle will also be selling the books at the Trolley Stop Market’s Holiday Artisan Sale, Saturday, December 4th, 3-8 p.m., and at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art’s Holiday Artist Market, Sunday, December 5th, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Overton Park Legacy

Nearly 40 years ago, the original Citizens to Preserve Overton Park (CPOP) won a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that blocked the extension of Interstate 40 through Overton Park and a large swath of Midtown. Our community owes a great debt to this small group of citizens who fought so doggedly to protect our park and our neighborhoods. But are we honoring their legacy?

It’s easy to assume that Overton Park is safe from harm. There are even a few laws to protect our city parks, like Section 12-84-2 of the Memphis Code of Ordinances: “It is unlawful for any person to cut, break or in any way injure or deface any tree, plant, or grass, or pick any flowers, leaves or nuts, wild or cultivated, in any park.”

And yet, the Memphis Zoo clear-cut four acres of Overton Park’s old-growth forest in early 2008 because our city’s Park Services division quietly approved it. When were citizens told about this plan to destroy publicly owned parkland? We had to figure it out for ourselves, early one Saturday morning, when chainsaws and bulldozers arrived to churn a priceless ecosystem into mud.

Last year, a city-funded botanical study found a rich array of more than 330 plant species in Overton Park and defined the forest as “an extremely rare virgin or old-growth forest” that almost certainly began growing when the last ice age retreated 10,000 to 12,000 years ago.

That study concluded: “Overton Park’s forest is a unique resource which cannot be replaced. It is invaluable to the city and to the region as an outstanding example of old-growth forest. Because it is within an urban setting, it is even more exceptional. Everything possible should be done to assure that it is protected in perpetuity.”

Despite this strong recommendation, our exceptional forest still lacks any legal protection. Memphians know this forest as the “Old Forest” because it has always been there for us — a beautiful remnant of the big woods that once covered the Fourth Chickasaw Bluff — and it’s time we stepped up to protect it.

Zoo expansion is just one threat to Overton Park’s forest and other public spaces. Too often, our civic leaders treat parkland as if it’s disposable. Memphis lags far behind our peer cities in park spending per capita and park acreage per capita, according to the Trust for Public Land. As recently as 2007, Mayor Willie Herenton and several City Council members proposed selling off more than 20 city-owned parks.

In the past two years, the city’s engineering staff has proposed two different ways to repurpose Overton Park’s Greensward for storm-water detention. Last year, Mayor A C Wharton and several City Council members proposed closing our city’s oldest golf course because it’s not a money-maker. The Memphis Zoo turns half of the Greensward into a private parking lot about 20 times a year.

Right now, the city is reviewing plans to convert part of the southeastern corner of Overton Park into an overflow parking lot for the Memphis Zoo. This space is occupied by city facilities — greenhouses, machine shops, storage buildings, offices, and a fuel station — which would need to be torn down and rebuilt elsewhere at great expense.

Maybe it’s a good idea to relocate these facilities and redevelop the area as free public parkland. But does it make sense to spend our tax dollars to convert this land to a parking lot? Will citizens have any part in this decision? Going by the city’s track record, we’re likely to find out when the bulldozers arrive.

This woeful track record is why we are asking the city of Memphis to endorse the legislative designation of the Old Forest State Natural Area, which would protect Overton Park’s 150-acre forest for citizens to enjoy forever. We also support a strong conservation easement to protect the cultural and historical integrity of all 342 acres of Overton Park. And we want all of this to happen with plenty of public input, communication, and transparency.

We are joined in this effort by Clean Memphis, Greater Memphis Greenline, Livable Memphis, Memphis Heritage, Mid-South Peace & Justice Center, Project Green Fork, Sierra Club, Skatelife Memphis, and many individual citizens.

We hope you’ll join us, too.

Naomi Van Tol is president of Citizens to Preserve Overton Park. For more information, visit overtonparkforever.org.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Spirited

There are no limits or constraints in the world of cocktails anymore. Both the traditional and the modern co-exist on countless cocktail lists. Across the country, bar chefs are concocting unique, handcrafted, and deliciously drinkable creations, and Memphis has by no means been passed over by this trend. We are seeing more and more artisanal spirits enter our market, giving both professional and amateur mixologists many options for their bar. House-made cordials, infusions, and spins on classics are popping up all over our city, but it’s still very much in its infancy.

Luckily, we have a full artillery of spirits to work with. Corsair Artisan, based in Nashville, produces an incredibly expressive battery of liquors, from absinthe to whiskey. It seems as though Corsair, founded in 2007, has come about in the very midst of the cocktail culture exploding across the country.

“When we were deciding whether to launch, we saw a convergence of interest in high-quality, locally produced foods and the revival of classic cocktails,” says Andrew Webber of Corsair Artisan. “We thought craft spirits were going to take off on the back of these combined movements.”

As with cooking, crafting a good cocktail means sourcing the best possible ingredients. Corsair has that same meticulous attention to detail with the components of its spirits. “Most distillers use very conservative grain bills for whiskey relative to what brewers have been doing with craft beers. Using interesting barley preparations and unusual grains for whiskeys is one of our major passions,” Webber says.

Tasting their Triple Smoke Whiskey is a lesson in thresholds. Lovers of Islay Scotch will recognize some of the flavor profiles. However, those who don’t care for that particular style will appreciate that Cosair took the whiskey to the limit without going over the edge. It’s intense and wonderful. The Triple Smoke is crafted using Sweet mashbill paired with barley smoked with peat, cherry wood, and beechwood.

These whiskeys aren’t even some of the more esoteric spirits that Corsair has produced. “About 20 experimental whiskeys, including lagered whiskeys, a chocolate bourbon, and a wormwood wit whiskey have proven popular with tasters but haven’t been released [yet],” Webber says. “Other experiments have produced whiskeys too unusual even for us!”

While gin isn’t the first thing that comes to mind when people think of Tennessee, Corsair is quietly changing that — at least in the world of the spirits enthusiast. Their Gin-Head Style American Gin came out of nowhere to win the gold medal at the San Francisco World Spirits Competition in 2009. They use only sustainably harvested, traditional botanicals and distill them in a hand-hammered pot in small batches. The botanicals are vapor-infused as opposed to the typical infusing into liquid alcohol. The result is a super-pure, intense-tasting gin that is fantastic.

The folks at Corsair are humbled by the overwhelmingly positive response their small-batch, hand-crafted operation has received.

“Once we make a spirit, we tend to be lost as to what to do with that spirit [beyond putting it in a glass neat],” Webber says. “We’re always amazed and gratified when we see what cocktail enthusiasts can do with our spirits, taking them in directions we never considered.”

Smoke & Spice

3 oz Corsair Artisan Triple Smoke

Whiskey

1/2 oz St. Elizabeth’s Allspice Dram

1 teaspoon lemon juice

2 dashes Regan’s Orange Bitters

Pour all ingredients in a mixing glass over ice. Stir at least 20-30 times to cool the mixture down and achieve proper dilution. Strain into a rocks glass with no ice and garnish with a lemon peel.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

A Kinder, Gentler Tea Party?

Spending an evening with Mark Skoda, the president of the Memphis Tea Party and a force in both the statewide and national Tea Party movements, can be instructive.

Skoda was the featured speaker at last week’s regular monthly meeting of the East Shelby County Republican Club, and I went to the Pickering Center to hear him out.

For those who fear that there is a nativist or even racist edge to the Tea Party’s efforts, Skoda arguably provided some grist for that mill.

There’s this: “We now have the king of Saudi Arabia. He came into the United States today. Did you know that? Do you know why he came into America?” A medical problem, Skoda noted.

“He wanted the very best health care. I wonder if he got his junk touched. But you as an American, as a white citizen, as an old person, get your junk touched every day, but the Saudi king can come over here and gets right through customs and gets into his private jet with all his gold stuff and enjoys all the benefit of our health-care system.”

And, for those who see Tea Partiers as barn burners in general, there’s this: “We’re at the point now where a little anarchy can go a long way. Not suggesting violence, but we have to no longer trust our federal government.”

But Skoda, who acknowledges having gone all out to see conservative purist Glen Casada of Franklin named speaker of the new Republican-dominated state House of Representatives, was restrained in his statements about the surprise nominee of the GOP House caucus, the more moderate Beth Harwell of Nashville.

“I hope that she’ll be true now to her conservative values and evidence that in her appointments,” Skoda said, and he professed to be equally open-minded about Governor-elect Bill Haslam of Knoxville, also regarded as more moderate than Skoda’s erstwhile candidate, Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey.

And in what may have been Skoda’s most surprising comment of the night, he declined to support calls for abolishing the state’s current requirements for gun-carry permits. This was an issue that during the late campaign bedeviled Haslam, who told a persistent gun-rights advocate he would sign legislation doing away with permits and then spent two weeks trying to modify that position.

Skoda was forthright. He said he favored the continuation of permits based upon approved training (though with “fees as low as possible”).

“Firearms have responsibility just like a car,” he said, and while the Second Amendment “absolutely” guaranteed the right to purchase and own a weapon, a “responsible process” was in order.

Skoda, who had much to do with last February’s national Tea Party Convention in Nashville, keynoted by Sarah Palin, said the next one would be held in Memphis, April 9th to 11th, and would feature such luminaries of the right as Ann Coulter and Laura Ingraham.

• Back in October, a coalition of Shelby County commissioners combined to put the county commission on record as opposing the then pending November 2nd referendum on city/county consolidation.

This was the same county commission which (though differently constituted) had combined with the Memphis City Council a year earlier to create and subsidize the Metro Charter Commission, which developed and proposed the referendum in the first place.

And, of course, the voters on November 2nd pretty much obliterated the consolidation concept. The referendum lost by a majority of 85 percent in the outer county, and though it passed muster in the city, it was only by the barest of margins, 51 percent. Decisive? Enough to put the issue on hold for the generation that usually passes before wiped-out consolidation proponents decide to try again?

Nah! Not by Steve Mulroy, the intrepid and decidedly un-bashful commissioner from District 5, an East Memphis-based swing district on the seam of city and county. Mulroy believes that what was defeated so badly was not consolidation per se but only the somewhat feckless variety that was proposed by the 2009-2010 version of a charter commission, one that was basically put together by Memphis mayor A C Wharton, who transitioned from county mayor to city mayor during its formation and thereby was able to name all its members.

So Mulroy, less than a month after consolidation was rejected, has a brand-new resolution proposing that the county commission (yep, the same county commission that said no in October) give its approval to — are you sitting down? — a “Resolution in Support of the Concept of Consolidation,” which would provide for a new charter commission.

The measure was scheduled for discussion in committee this Wednesday and, presumably, will be taken to the county commission’s regular biweekly public meeting on Monday for a vote.

Mulroy professes to believe that the commission will be open-minded, particularly his fellow Democrats — several of whom joined the majority of the commission’s Republicans in October to reject consolidation.

At the time there was an ongoing backlash against the referendum among African Americans in the inner city, and both Sidney Chism, the current commission chairman, and James Harvey joined newcomer Justin Ford in voting no to consolidation, along with GOP members Wyatt Bunker, Terry Roland, Heidi Shafer, and Chris Thomas — the latter three being new members representing suburban areas outside the city.

Mulroy’s resolution suggests that the commission’s October vote, like that of the voters in November, “could be misinterpreted as opposition to metro consolidation generally,” which is described as “appropriate and inevitable.”

The resolution proposes that “the city council and county commission have greater input into the selection of members of any appointed Metro Charter Commission”; that “[g]reater efforts are made to achieve racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic diversity among any charter commission appointees”; and that “[a]ppropriate efforts are made to avoid any undue influence of corporate interests on the process.”

Lastly, the resolution declares, “The issue of school consolidation, if still applicable, should be given weight equal to that of any other major issue in charter commission deliberations.”

That, of course, is an allusion to the currently raging controversy between the city and county school boards, which seem locked in a race to transform the relationship between the two school systems of Shelby County. The Shelby County school board may seek legislative approval in January for a separate county school district for county schools, while the city board is considering a proposal to surrender its charter, a move which, if approved by city voters in a referendum, would automatically consolidate the two systems.

One of the ironies of the current situation is that the issue of school consolidation, carefully sundered from the November 2nd vote, is now front and center, and Mulroy’s more inclusive resolution clearly acknowledges the issue as relevant to his proposal for a new Metro Charter Commission.

Mulroy’s resolution had already prompted a response by one prominent opponent of consolidation, Tom Guleff of Save Shelby County, an organization formed to combat the consolidation effort.

Guleff has e-mailed his network of consolidation foes, alerting them to Wednesday’s committee meeting and proclaiming the following:

“The pro-consolidation forces are back. To be honest, the cult-like fascination with consolidation is creepy. After being soundly defeated by an 85 percent margin in the county, the losing side wants to rewrite the narrative of its demise and bring it back to life. I could understand the current effort, if the vote was close, but it wasn’t. This small group appears disconnected from political reality. This is just plain weird.”

The fat, as they say, is once again in the fire.