Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

District 5 Candidates for Unified School Board Concur on Support for Municipal Districts

Pickler and Wirth in Collierville

  • JB
  • Pickler and Wirth in Collierville

A debate of sorts Tuesday night between David Pickler and Kim Wirth, candidates for the Unified School Board for District 5, made one thing clear: Whoever wins that seat, representing the Germantown-Collierville area, will owe their primary allegiance to the prospective municipal districts there, not to the Unified District itself.”

The joint appearance of the two candidates was at La Hacienda Restaurant on West Poplar under the auspices of the Collierville Republican Club.

Asked point blank if they favored establishment of municipal school districts in Germantown and Collierville, both Pickler, the longtime former chairman of the old Shelby County Schools board, and Wirth, a communications executive with International Paper, answered “Yes,” categorically.

Both also professed concern for education throughout Shelby County, and, if elected, pledged to work, as Wirth put it, “as good neighbors toward the goal of great education for all or kids.” But both saw their first duty as being owed to the as yet unformed municipal school districts of Germantown and Collierville.

And each was at pains to advance an even narrower focus. Wirth, who has served as chairman of the board of the Memphis City Schools Foundation and has worked with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation on behalf of the MCS Teacher Effectiveness Program, said she would put her experience to work in a “good faith” effort to insure that the transfer of school buildings from the jurisdiction of the Unified School Board of Shelby County to the municipal districts would be both free and painless.

Pickler also stressed the importance of making over the buildings “without compensation,” contending that in numerous instances in the past that was how schools had passed from the jurisdiction of Shelby County Schools to that of Memphis City Schools, “though we [i.e., county taxpayers] had paid for them.”

He made the case for a concept of “shared services” whereby the Unified School District would bear the responsibility for such functions as transportation, nutrition, and special education and make these services available for schools within municipal districts as well as for those remaining within the Unified School District itself. (One of the points emphasized by Shelby County Commissioner Mike Ritz in a report made to the Commission Wednesday on likely expenses of new municipal districts concerned the significant add-on cost of such services, if incumbent upon the new districts themselves.)

Both candidates agreed that when the municipal districts are formed the schools within them should be allowed to enroll students living in adjacent unincorporated areas of Shelby County. Both agreed, too, that outlying areas of Shelby County should continue to be represented on the Unified Shelby County School Board even after municipal school districts are formed within those areas.

Categories
News

Memphis Flyer Wins Third Place on Bike to Work Day

Five Memphis Flyer employees took to the streets (and bike lanes) Friday morning for the annual Bike-to-Work Day, and we won an award for it.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Frank’s RedHot Bus Tour at BBQ Fest

Kevin Roberts on Franks RedHot scooter cooler

  • Kevin Roberts on Frank’s RedHot scooter cooler

Smack dab in the middle of the ocean of barbecue currently covering Tom Lee Park is a small island (to torture this metaphor) devoted to Buffalo chicken wings.

The wings come with the Frank’s To the People bus, sponsored by Frank’s RedHot sauce. The bus is traveling the country making stops at contests and festivals just like the World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest in order to spread the gospel about two Frank’s products: the Sweet Chili sauce and the new Thick sauce.

So about those wings at a barbecue contest …

Restaurateur, cookbook author, one-time host of TLC’s BBQ Pitmasters, and Frank’s pitch man Kevin Roberts sees it as enjoying basketball while enjoying football. It’s all about sports, and here at Barbecue Fest, it’s all about food.

Categories
News News Blog

Memphis Flyer Wins Third Place in Bike-to-Work Championships

Five Memphis Flyer employees took to the streets (and bike lanes) Friday morning for the annual Bike-to-Work Day sponsored by the Downtown Memphis Commission.

Here we are! Left to right: Chip Googe, Matt Writt, John Branston, Mark Plumlee, and Bianca Phillips.

Flyer_bike_to_work_crew.jpg

As a result, the Memphis Flyer/Contemporary Media took home the third place trophy for having one of the highest numbers of cyclists representing the company. St. Jude Children’s Hospital won first place, and Archer > Malmo came in second place.

flyer_bike_to_work_day_award.jpg

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Lend Me Some Shoe Polish: Is casual blackface appropriate in 2012?

I have to get this off my chest.

Lend Me a Tenor, the third door-slamming farce to land on a Shelby County stage in the past month, needs to be put out to pasture. Frank Rich was right when he described the 80’s-era hit as being all things farcical “except for hilarious.” But it’s not the absence of laughs (for Frank & me) that makes me think it’s time to let this one fall into obscurity. It’s the blackface.

This isn’t just knee-jerk political correctness on my behalf, though that accusation is inevitable. I’ve never been one to rule any set of words or images off limits simply because they are offensive to someone. Offense is a tool in every artist’s chest and, used wisely, interesting things may be accomplished. That’s not the case with Lend Me a Tenor.

Blackface, 2012

  • Blackface, 2012

Tenor is set backstage at a production of Verdi’s Otello and true enough, Shakespeare’s famous Moor of Venice has been a common blackface role. But this isn’t an historical artifact or a thoughtful exploration of another era and ethos it’s a common sex farce. And the bulk of the play’s mistaken identity humor is built around the notion that when a couple of white guys slap on blackface and an afro wig nobody can tell them apart.

That’s a problem for me, even if the play isn’t malicious.

I was surprised when Tenor showed up on Theatre Memphis’s schedule in 2003, gobsmacked when it received a high-profile revival in 2010 and a little disappointed to see it on Germantown’s season this year.

I’m curious to see how GCT’s Tenor comes together because, in spite of my personal issues, Ken Ludwig’s script is tightly wound, and some very fine people are involved in the production. I’m also curious to know if I’m the only person who thinks this show has outlived its “sell by” date?

For dates, times and ticket information, here’s a link.

Categories
News

Organ Donor Change-up Will Affect Memphis

John Branston looks into the controversy over organ-transplant service areas in Tennessee. And yes, it’s Memphis versus Nashville again.

Categories
News

That Whole Gay Marriage Thing …

Tim Sampson Rants on Obama, gay marriage, Leviticus, Mitt Romney, and Tony Perkins.

Categories
News

Damsels in Distress

Addison Engelking says the college comedy, Damsels in Distress, is surprisingly good.

Categories
News

Bike to Work Friday

The annual Bike-to-Work Day, sponsored by the Downtown Memphis Commission, is tomorrow. Bianca Phillips has the run-down.

Categories
News News Blog

Bike-to-Work Day

Bianca Phillips at last years Bike-to-Work Day

  • Bianca Phillips at last year’s Bike-to-Work Day

The annual Bike-to-Work Day, sponsored by the Downtown Memphis Commission, is Friday. Register to ride here so as not to miss out on your free bike messenger bag filled schwag.

Schwag bags may be picked up at one of the following energizer stations:
* Central Station Pavilion at Front at GE Patterson (7 – 9am)
* Trolley Barn at 547 North Main Street (7 – 9am)
* Church Health Center Wellness Center at 1115 Union (7 – 9am; accessible from Eastmoreland)
* New Olivet Baptist Church at 3084 Southern Ave (6:30 – 9am)
* Downtown Bicycle Expo at Court Square (11am – 1pm)

There’s a Downtown Bicycle Expo from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Court Square with live music by Deering & Down, electric bicycle tours, giveaways, and the presentation for the Bike-to-Work Championship Awards.

For information on organized Bike-to-Work day meet-up rides, route planning, or other tips, go here.

To read about Flyer writer Bianca Phillips’ first Bike-to-Work experience last year, go here.