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News News Blog

City Launches Employee Suggestion Program

Got a suggestion to save the city money or increase revenue? If you happen to be a city of Memphis employee, you could win a cash prize for offering your advice to Mayor A C Wharton’s office.

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The city launched its new Employee Suggestion program on Wednesday morning. The program allows city employees an opportunity to share their ideas on how city operations could run more smoothly, improve safety, or save taxpayer dollars. If a suggestion is implemented, the responsible employee could win cash awards ranging from $250 to $1,000.

City councilman Kemp Conrad sponsored a council resolution for the program, and it was approved by the full council earlier this year.

“The best ideas to improve city government live with the people closest to the work being done,” Conrad said. “I hope this plan inspires employees and provides them with meaningful rewards for making creative suggestions.”

The program only applies to full-time or temporary city employees. Elected officials, division directors, and deputy division directors are not eligible.

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News

Marco? Polo.

Susan Ellis had a sammich and liked it.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Marco Polo at Carmela’s

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Made my first visit to Carmela’s Caffe last week to pick up lunch.

This sister restaurant to Ciao Bella is open 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Saturday and offers a mix of Italian and Greek fare.

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Opinion

Planes, Boats, and Trains

And now for a word about the Memphis economy.

Actually several thousand words. A new book, Aerotropolis: The Way We’ll Live Next, devotes a chapter to Memphis and FedEx. The Wall Street Journal included Memphis in a weekend story about airport hubs called “Cities of the Sky.” Mayor A C Wharton urged critics of incentives for Electrolux and Mitsubishi Electric to take a look at competing cities. And the Riverfront Development Corporation said it has a steamboat prospect for Beale Street Landing.

Each report contains a mixture of hype, error, and fact. Since aerotropolis is the biggest deal, I’ll start there.

Greg Lindsay, the co-author of Aerotropolis: The Way We’ll Live Next (with John Kasarda, who coined the word), also wrote the article in The Wall Street Journal, which puts Memphis in the same league as Dubai, Singapore, Hong Kong, Amsterdam, and Bangalore because of the FedEx superhub.

An aerotropolis, he writes, “can be narrowly defined as a city planned around its airport.” An aerotropolis “is an amalgam of made-to-order office parks, convention hotels, cargo complexes, and even factories, which in some cases line the runways” as well as “world-class architecture” and huge private investments.

Memphis International Airport is certainly easy to get in and out of, but mainly because it is not crowded. Passenger counts are off 25 percent from pre-9/11 levels. The architecture, including the future passenger transfer building and parking garage, is nice enough but hardly world-class.

Of course, it is their cargo hubs for FedEx and UPS that make Memphis and Louisville the envy of would-be aerotropoli (sic).

From the article: “Not so long ago, those cities were Southern Rust Belt towns. They have been saved by companies like Amazon and Zappos, which set up shop around the air hubs.”

Southern Rust Belt? I think that would be Birmingham. Zappos is an online shoe company with a facility 12 miles from the airport in Louisville. Amazon announced last year that it will build a big distribution center that will employ 1,400 people in Chattanooga, 300 miles from Memphis. But Memphis does have big distribution centers for Nike and scores of other companies. Point granted.

Lindsay paints a more accurate picture of Memphis in the book. He actually spent time driving around the airport, and his observations are spot on. He notes the “rusting industrial parks clinging like barnacles to the airport’s west side.” He gets a tour of Whitehaven and Brooks Road and learns about our ever-expanding circle of sprawl and low-end jobs.

This particular aerotropolis, in his words, “still has a long way to go.” When the Airport Cities World Conference & Exposition comes to Memphis in April, guests will convene at the Peabody.

Giving his own take on economic development, Wharton last week told critics of incentives to “read” and quit yapping. A review of the big catches and incentives in Tennessee, Mississippi, and Alabama in the last 20 years shows that Memphis paid less to get less and is still not in the car manufacturing game.

Mitsubishi Electric and Electrolux are third-round picks compared to first-round choices like Nissan, Hyundai, Toyota, Mercedes, and Volkswagen. The cities and states in the Southern car empire paid dearly to play but got thousands of jobs in return: Mercedes in Alabama, $253 million; Nissan in Mississippi, $363 million; Nissan in Middle Tennessee, $197 million; Volkswagen in Chattanooga, $577 million; Toyota in Tupelo, $296 million; Hyundai in Montgomery, $234 million. Electrolux and Mitsubishi Electric, which will build their plants near Presidents Island and the river port, got about $170 million combined in incentives.

Finally, the Great American Steamboat Company might be coming to Memphis. Possibly 250 to 500 jobs! Scenic paddlewheelers disgorging tourists flush with cash on our shores! A majestic Beale Street Landing for a bargain price of under $40 million!

Except there is no company currently plying the waters of the Mighty Mississippi. Paddlewheelers are nostalgic, pretty to look at, a fine place to have a drink, expensive to insure, and have small rooms with low ceilings. See the Delta Queen, moored on the Tennessee River in downtown Chattanooga.

Only a cynic would suggest that this announcement was timed to coincide with Memphis City Council capital-improvement budget discussions and the fact that the Riverfront Development Corporation needs $8 million to finish Beale Street Landing and would like taxpayers to fork it over.

So call me a cynic.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Game 62 Notebook: Grizzlies 109, Spurs 93

The Lead: If the season had ended today, the 8th seed Grizzlies would face off with the #1 seed Spurs in a first-round playoff series. For that reason, there’s been a lot of talk about how the two-game-in-three-night set the two teams just played could be something of a playoff preview. If that were the case, then the results would bode well for the Grizzlies.

In San Antonio on Sunday night, the Grizzlies came back from a 20-point first-half deficit to hold a lead with about 90 seconds to play before finally fading. Tonight, the Grizzlies controlled the game in the first half and ran away with it in the second, leading by as much as 25 at one point. The Spurs biggest lead was 2.

Three games into the season series, the Spurs are up 2-1, but the Grizzlies have now outscored the Spurs 303-300, with both losses tightly contested games in San Antonio.

The Spurs didn’t have Tony Parker tonight, but Grizzlies haven’t had Rudy Gay for a single minute in three games against the Spurs this season and played the last 29 minutes tonight without starting center Marc Gasol.

“No Call” Marc Gasol lived up to the nickname I’ve given him, getting bumped hard by Tim Duncan on a lay-up attempt without drawing a whistle. Complaining about this no-call get Gasol a technical foul. In the second quarter, Gasol stepped out to try to block a George Hill, and got called for a foul, his animated reaction drawing a surprising second tech and an automatic ejection. Surrounding all of this was a Jason Williams tech in response to a no-call on a Darrell Arthur attempt, another no-call on Duncan, and a tick-tack offensive foul on Shane Battier. All of this put the home fans in a bad mood, and lead official Dick Bavetta and his crew were booed loudly exiting the floor at the end of the first half.

The Grizzlies took a nine-point lead into the half, but were coming out without Marc Gasol and without a viable big to defend Tim Duncan. Darrell Arthur drew the assignment, and did as well as you could have hoped, but the big difference was that the Grizzlies were able to use quick, aggressive team defense to force turnovers (six in the third quarter), get out on the break, and push their lead into double-digits. Playing from behind, the Spurs went away from their potential post advantage, played smaller, and started forcing more three-points, with little effectiveness (4-16 in the second half) — the Grizzlies’ quicker, non-Gasol lineups providing better floor coverage to defend against the three anyway.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

MAD AS HELL: Riding the Right Wing’s Tilt-a-Whirl

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Remember the Tilt-A-Whirl—that carnival ride with the big red cars that would spin you around so fast, there was almost a guarantee that you would end up throwing up? Mad As Hell is introducing a segment called “Rightwing Tilt-A-Whirl” featuring some essential news stories you may have missed—those stories the “ fair and balanced” found important to ignore. These are news items everyone should know. But be warned—if you are that rare right winger who considers logic and reason an essential part of formulating an opinion then be prepared to take some deep cleansing breaths in the cool outdoors to expand your mind. Or, perhaps reach for the old reliable bottle of Pepto-Bismol.

Rightwing Tilt-A-Whirl

Cheri DelBrocco

  • Cheri DelBrocco

Shariah law! Republican state officials throughout the land have been elected to solve the most pressing problem of our time – Shariah Law. Republican-led states throughout the land are tripping over themselves to compete for the distinction of sponsoring the most extreme, ridiculous response to the perceived threat of Shariah law. Congratulations to Tennessee— the Volunteer state appears to have won the prize!

State senator Bill Ketron (R-Murfreesboro) has introduced Senate Bill 1028 that claims that Shariah law “continues to plague the United States generally and Tennessee in particular” by requiring Muslims to “actively and passively support the replacement of America’s constitutional republic” with an Islamic state. Thus, adherence to the “legal-political-military doctrine” of Shariah law “is treasonous and a felony punishable by 15 years in jail.” The bill further states that any adherence to Shariah law—including religious practices like feet washing and daily prayer is treasonous.

Reproductive Rights? – Wrong! Republican dominated states throughout the country have declared war on women’s reproductive rights in America. Over the last month, several states have proposed plans to deny women not only the right to abortion, but to restrict their availability to contraception. In Nebraska, legislation has been introduced that would authorize the use of “justifiable homicides” in defense of killings to prevent harm to a fetus.

The U.S. House of Representatives have three pending bills which would strip all funding for the 800 Planned Parenthood clinics around the country. Also, all Title X funding, which provides family planning for low-income Americans would be totally cut. Let’s hope these Republicans have the same success as their Republican predecessors have had in their wars on Iraq, Afghanistan, drugs, crime, education and poverty.

Government Service! As the War on Government Workers and the Middle Class continues in Wisconsin, there are some lesser known proposals in the 144-page bill that the governor, Scott Walker, wants enacted. One is the repeal of the rule requiring municipal governments to disinfect their water. Mr. Walker thinks treating drinking water is too expensive for his state. In 1993, 104 people in Wisconsin died and 400,000 got sick when the Milwaukee water supply became infected. Although municipalities in that state can keep their water clean for as little as $10,000 per well, the governor thinks that is too high a price to pay to keep citizens safe from deadly microorganisms and illnesses.

Birther Announcement! Yesterday, while hawking his new book, A Simple Government on right wing radio’s Steve Malzberg’s show, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee claimed President Obama had grown up in Kenya. “One thing that I do know is having grown up in Kenya his view of the Brits, for example, is very different that of the average American,” said Huckabee, a Fox News host and possible Republican candidate for President in 2012. Afterwards a Huckabee spokesperson said the former governor of Arkansas had “misspoke” when twice claiming on two different networks that the President grew up in Kenya.

Sharing the Pain! In New Jersey the Republican governor has proposed that middle class workers earning less than $50,000 should share the pain by taking a 25% reduction in pay and benefits. In the sharing however, he does not agree that over 225,000 millionaires in New Jersey should participate by increasing their taxes a mere 3% ($30,000) per annum. Repeat, the $50,000 per year worker can afford a $12,500 per year pay cut along with a reduction in their retirement and medical benefits but the folks earning $1,000,000 per year cannot afford an additional tax of $30,000 per year.

Tilt to the Right. Whirl. Nauseated yet?

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News

Overton Square Plans Unveiled

There’s still no word on which major grocery store chain will construct a 53,000-foot facility along Cooper Avenue in Overton Square. But Loeb Properties unveiled the design at a public meeting tonight. Read more at the Flyer News Blog.

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Daily Photo Special Sections

Ethan Bronner

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News News Blog

Overton Square Plans Unveiled

There’s still no word on which major grocery store chain will construct a 53,000-foot facility along Cooper Avenue in Overton Square.

Bob Loeb, president of Loeb Properties, told the crowd gathered in the standing-room-only public meeting at Memphis Heritage Tuesday night that the city must first commit to building a two-level parking garage in part of the massive parking lot between Cooper and Florence.

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Once the city commits, Loeb believes the mysterious grocery will follow suit. Loeb said he needs a commitment from the city by June 30th. He estimates the parking structure will cost $5 million, and it also includes a detention basin to curtail problems with the flooding of Lick Creek. The parking structure would accommodate patrons of all businesses in the area.

Most of Tuesday’s public meeting focused on the new design of Overton Square. The proposed grocery store would be pulled up to Cooper Avenue, a decision that falls in line with the recently-passed Midtown Overlay plan. It would most likely feature window displays along Cooper with an entrance facing Trimble.

The plan preserves all of the buildings on the south side of Madison, with the exception of the Palm Court building that once housed an ice skating rink. Loeb said they hope to fill those buildings with restaurants and retailers.

“We want this to be a neighborhood place that’s family-friendly,” Loeb said. “It’d be good if we had some [businesses with] live music, but we’re not trying to compete with Beale Street.”

The plan also accounts for streetscape improvements and preservation of the curving alley between buildings. The cut-out area at the intersection where cars make right-hand turns from Madison onto Cooper would be reclaimed to make the intersection safer for pedestrians.

The design, prepared by architectural firm Looney Ricks Kiss, is in stark contrast from the plan proposed last year by Sooner Investments, which called for tearing down the old buildings on the south side of Madison to make way for a grocery store. Memphis Heritage and Midtowners organized against that plan, and Sooner backed out. Memphis Heritage president June West said she’s happy with the new Loeb Properties plan.

“We can’t tell you how supportive we are of this project,” said June West during the meeting.

A man in the audience mumbled: “I’ve never heard her say, ‘supportive.'”

Loeb said the next step will likely be meeting with the Memphis City Council on the future of the proposed garage.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Swimming to Germantown: “Dixie Swim Club” opening rescheduled at GCT

Dixie Swim Club

  • Dixie Swim Club

Germantown Community Theatre’s production of THE DIXIE SWIM CLUB was postponed last week in order to begin necessary repairs on the converted one-room schoolhouse. The opening has been rescheduled for Thursday, March 3, at 7:30 pm.

Ticket patrons with reservations for the original opening weekend will be contacted to reschedule their ticket reservations within the amended run. Please contact the Germantown Community Theatre Box Office at 901.937.3023 for updates.