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News The Fly-By

“Old Bridge” Closure Could Pinch Memphis

Predictions of the consequences from the planned, nine-months closure of the Memphis-Arkansas Bridge range from inconvenient to nightmarish, but a Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) official said there was simply no other way.

Speculation and worry followed last week’s announcement that TDOT plans to close the bridge while it builds a new interchange at I-55 and E.H. Crump. A public meeting about the project was held in West Memphis Monday. Another meeting is scheduled for 4 p.m. Thursday at Memphis Area Transit Authority Central Station. 

The project will cost close to $35 million and will replace the current cloverleaf design of the interchange, which TDOT calls “outdated,” claiming it poses safety and efficiency concerns. The new design will feature a roundabout to connect I-55 traffic to downtown Memphis and curved ramps to allow I-55 thru traffic to continue on and off the bridge without slowing down.

Courtesy TDOT

An artists rendering of the proposed new interchange at I-55 and Crump.

The three-year construction project won’t begin until spring 2016 and the planned closure of the bridge won’t begin until spring 2017, said B.J. Doughty, TDOT communications director. 

“We do not take this lightly; this is a major undertaking for us, as well,” Doughty said. “If there had been any other way … we would choose not to shut it down. We realize this is an enormous inconvenience for people.”

The long curved ramps to I-55 will be built over the roundabout, where the cloverleaf is now, Doughty said. To make way for big bridge pieces like beams and piers, there will be no place for traffic to pass, she said.

During construction, all I-55 traffic will have to be routed across the Hernando DeSoto M Bridge, and that has people worried.

Manny Belen, deputy engineer for the city of Memphis, said his office has expressed to TDOT that the project needs to be sensitive to the impact on businesses, commuters, downtown residents, freight movement, and emergency responders. 

“Additionally, we’ve expressed concerns about the impact of the planned detour through the Midtown section of I-240 and the inevitable traffic congestion,” Belen said. “The response from TDOT is that this nine-months closure is the most prudent direction and the least impactful.”

Congressman Steve Cohen said he does not support the planned closure and believes the construction can be accomplished without closing the bridge. At a minimum, he said, any closure period should be expedited.

Paul Morris, president of the Downtown Memphis Commission, called the planned closure “painful,” but its results will dramatically improve the approach to downtown Memphis and reconnect the French Fort neighborhood to downtown.

“I certainly wish there were a way for them to do the work without closing the bridge, which is going to be very bad for downtown and West Memphis,” Morris said. “This is little comfort, but we will have the Big River Crossing over the Harahan open by the time of the closure, meaning that it will be easier to bike rather than drive across the Mississippi River.”

If the bridge is closed as TDOT plans, I-55 traffic would be diverted to I-240 through Midtown, up to I-40 and across the Hernando DeSoto Bridge. Doughty said TDOT plans to work closely with local law enforcement and emergency services to keep traffic running efficiently in case of an accident.

Doughty said TDOT closed a section of I-40 close to downtown Knoxville in 2008, and the project went “incredibly smoothly.”

Categories
News The Fly-By

Monthly Subscription Box Caters to Grizzlies Fans

It may be off-season for the Grizzlies, but Memphians can still get a monthly dose of their favorite NBA team.

At Grizz Essentials, fans can receive a box filled with merchandise and team-themed items for $35 per month, available throughout the year and cancelable anytime. The price goes down to $29 a month for those who pay a year in advance.

What do you get? Past items have included scarves, pint glasses, sunglasses, posters, and T-shirts.

The monthly Grizzlies box is somewhat akin to a subscription to Birchbox, LootCrate, and other monthly providers of goods for various niches of culture. There are boxes tailored to vegans, beauty buffs, tech geeks, vinyl music enthusiasts, to name just a few.

Mark King, who owns Grizz Essentials with his wife, said the items are hand-picked. “When we first started, we just tried to pick things we thought people would like,” he said. “We’ve been partnering with businesses every month. It’s things I like, really — what I personally would like to have.”

As Memphis moves into summer, so does Grizz Essentials. In March, when it was still a bit blustery outside, the monthly box featured a scarf. During Memphis Beer Week in April, pint glasses were delivered. It depends on the month, the season, and what the fans want, King said. A piece of artwork featured in the May box was limited to a run of 250 copies.

“We have a set budget for each box,” King said. “We wanted one big item, like a T-shirt or scarf; two medium items that we try to make custom [like artwork]; and one small item. There’s so much that people are doing locally that it’s easy to have a variety of options.”

King got the idea for Grizz Essentials from seeing his wife’s subscription from ipsy, a $10 monthly bag of sample beauty products. King — a TV producer by day — joked about bringing a Grizzlies-themed service to the market. His friends thought he was crazy, but King persevered. He shipped his first boxes in February.

So far, business has been good, King said. In addition to Grizz Essentials, King is starting a project with some universities to build monthly college-themed boxes.

To learn more about Grizz Essentials, go to grizzessentials.com.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Commission Plays 52-Pickup

Early on in Monday’s regular business session of the Shelby County Commission, Commissioner  Melvin Burgess, a Democrat, moved to defer for two weeks a vote on appointing someone to fill a Judicial Commission vacancy, on the grounds that a discussion on the matter would crowd out some necessary and potentially lengthy deliberations on the county budget and tax rate for fiscal 2015-16.

That was either a face-value statement, as Burgess insisted, or a political maneuver, as the Republican members of the commission — or most of them — suspected, and very shortly the provisional consensus on a budget/tax rate combination that had apparently been reached in a lengthy commission session on May 20th began to come asunder.

Several of the GOP members — conspicuously excluding Steve Basar, who supported Burgess’ motion — objected that most of the 15 applicants for Judicial Commissioner were sitting in the commission audience and had cleared their personal slates in order to be present for the scheduled vote.

; Privately, they began to sense that some deal had been made that involved trade-offs of various kinds, and Basar’s support of the Burgess motion convinced some of them, at least, of something that Commissioner David Reaves, a GOP member from Bartlett, was willing to voice later on:

“It all goes back to the chairmanship vote,” Reaves said, referring to a reorganizational vote of the newly elected commission last fall. Basar, who had been vice chair of the previous commission, had expected to be elected chairman but was stunned to find that most of his fellow Republicans were committed to other candidates. In the end, a majority of Republicans united behind Democrat Justin Ford, who had often voted with the GOP contingent during his first term.

Whatever the reason for that reversal — and they were probably as much personal as political — it made for a commission divided along clearly partisan lines, with the body’s Democrats, plus Basar, on one side, and the Republicans, plus Ford, on the other.

For weeks last fall, the two factions waged procedural warfare, with the Democratic/Basar coalition seeking either to unseat Ford as chairman or to drastically limit his authority. In the end, Ford survived, though with modestly curtailed prerogatives, and the showdown eased up. It, indeed, had been largely forgotten, until Monday, when Burgess made his motion. 

Ford, as chairman, attempted to disallow any deferral, but in the resultant vote, Burgess’ fellow Democrats, plus Basar, prevailed.

“Basar tipped his hand,” Reaves said. “He’s looking toward September, for the next chairman’s vote and trying to gain some leverage. Why else would he vote that way? It allowed us to figure out quickly that he had flopped.”

Basar denied any such motive, but he agreed that the Republicans began to shift, more or less in unison, to a common strategy, “once they saw me voting again with the Democrats.”

One consequence was a defeat for a long-pending ordinance proposed by Basar to apply pedestrian safety laws to unincorporated areas of Shelby County. Basar needed nine votes, but Republicans Reaves and Terry Roland, who had agreed to help him meet his quota, withdrew their support.

Subsequently, the old arithmetic of Democrats-plus-Basar versus Republicans-plus-Ford reasserted itself on vote after vote, preventing agreement on matters that, as of the marathon commission meeting of May 20th, had seemed either settled or within easy reach. 

The commissioners had then seemed to agree on a formula dividing some $1.8 million equally between each of the 13 commissioners for them to distribute to non-profit organizations in their districts. That matter, now involving a lesser sum of $1.3 million and altered to include other services and recipients beyond non-profits, was referred back to committee on Monday.

More importantly, a sense of distrust had arisen among the commission Republicans regarding what they thought had been a common commitment to use part of a $6 million surplus claimed by the administration of Mayor Mark Luttrell to lower the county tax rate one cent, from $4.37 to $4.36. 

The GOP members now began to suspect behind-the-scenes collusion between the administration, which had never been sold on the tax decrease, preferring to use any left-over differential on infrastructure, and Democratic members, who, now supported by Basar, were proposing to raise several sums apparently agreed upon on May 20th — notably for the Sheriff’s Department and Juvenile Court, each of which were seeking significant increases.

Consequently, Roland proposed a 4-cent reduction in the tax rate (“as a way of getting one cent,” he would later acknowledge).That went down, by the same quasi-party line vote as before, as did a follow-up vote for the 1-cent reduction.

In the end, a “flat” or stable tax rate at the current level of $4.37 received the same 7-6 vote distribution for the first of three required votes, and all budget items were deferred or referred back to committee.

In a true sense, nothing got resolved on Monday, though several commission meetings, both scheduled and ad hoc, are sure to revisit the budget/tax rate matters between now and the July 1st fiscal-year deadline. And several members, seeing the prospect of consensus slipping further way, are foreseeing that an official arbitration process will need to be invoked.

“Irresponsible,” was Chairman Ford’s verdict on Monday’s meeting.

• On the mayoral-race front, most observers are now betting that the Rev. Kenneth Whalum Jr., the New Olivet Baptist Church pastor and former school board member, will run for mayor, despite his insistence that he will defer to Memphis Police Association President Mike Williams, a declared candidate.

“He’s making noise like he is,” said Williams last week at Broadway Pizza, after one in a series of what will be several organizational meetings, noting that “I have never asked Whalum about not running. …  I’m just moving at my pace. Even if he runs, we’re still going to be friends. … My destiny has nothing to do with his destiny.”


•Oh, and make room for Robert “Prince Mongo” Hodges on your tout sheet. The Zambodian prince, a frequent mayoral candidate in the past, says he’ll pull a petition for mayor next week.


• And, almost unnoticed, Joe Cooper (yes, that Joe Cooper) has put together a potentially effective campaign team in his latest quest for a political comeback as a candidate for the City Council Super District 9, Position 2 seat.

Cooper says he expects to spend $100,000 on his race and has engaged the professional consulting team of Matt Kuhn and Mike Lipe to help him do it. Gene Buehler and Karla Willingham Templeton are Cooper’s campaign co-chairs.

Cooper, who serves wrestling legend Jerry Lawler as an agent and manager, says that Thursday of this week will be officially recognized as “Jerry Lawler Day” in both Memphis and Jackson, Tennessee, with Mayor A C Wharton said to be ready to issue a proclamation in his City Hall office on Thursday and Jackson Mayor Jerry Gist honoring Lawler similarly on Thursday night.


• So, guess who else is being touted for Mayor. Yep, Harold Ford Jr.

But not of Memphis, Ford’s erstwhile home base. No, the transplanted former 9th District congressman and 2006 U.S. Senate candidate, is apparently being talked up for mayor of New York, his current abode — the most recent hints of such a prospect coming from Bloomberg Business, which reported last week on a Lincoln Center “American Songbook” gala that, according to the periodical, honored Ford for his fund-raising efforts on behalf of the center.

Said the article: “‘Mayor’ was on the lips of some guests, though not Ford’s. Asked about his interest in leading the city, Ford, who once considered a run for a U.S. Senate seat from New York and has endorsed Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential race, said ‘I’m a new father for the second time, that’s what I’m focused on.'” 

The next mayoral race in New York will occur in 2017. Current Mayor Bill de Blasio, an avowed liberal, is in some quarters considered vulnerable to a challenge from the center or right.

Categories
News News Feature

Belize It!

Mary and her husband had planned a dream vacation to Belize. It was the top priority on their bucket list of places to enjoy together after retirement. Last March, after 40 years as a teacher in Stone Mountain, Georgia, she finally arrived in the country they both had hoped would be a shared paradise. But she had to come alone, after burying her life partner just two months before.

As she related her experience as we sat outside at a sunny Belizean bar and restaurant, there was no hint of what would have been understandable melancholy. She elected to sell most of their worldly possessions, including a five-bedroom house. She worked through the vehement skepticism expressed by her adult children that she could go it alone in Central America. But Mary has fallen in love again. Not with another man, but with a simplicity and vibrancy of life she hasn’t felt since her childhood.

It’s the eternal human quest to find contentment and happiness that lured my wife Lisa and me to Belize. It’s a country of unmatched natural beauty and ethnic diversity — and equally visible abject poverty. With a government that’s borrowed itself to the hilt, Belizeans exist without unemployment insurance, food stamps, and welfare programs. You could consider it a laid-back version of rugged individualism. Their motto is, “Take care of your needs first and your wants become secondary.”

We met many American fellow travelers. It’s safe to say that many of our countrymen have a tendency to flaunt their self-perceived superiority while abroad. Some of the American visitors were brash, loud-laughing, loud-talking masters of the universe. They consumed voluminous amounts of alcohol, not that there’s anything wrong with that while on vacation, but the solitude and time for personal reflection Belize has to offer are lost on such people. I didn’t really hold anything against the sometimes crude attitudes of my fellow Yankee Doodlers. The majority of Americans have been taught to believe that happiness can only be achieved through hard work, determination, and sheer will. Serenity is not top of mind.

Belize offers the exact antithesis of everything we’ve been taught to desire. Most Belizeans get around on bicycles or golf carts as primary transportation. Or they walk. The American dollar is worth twice as much as Belizean money. The average Belizean makes about $20 a day. Yet, in this melting pot of ethnic, cultural, and religious diversity, there appears to be no caste system. No one seems particularly jealous of anyone else’s status as server, waiter, bartender, driver, security guard, or beach captain. Instead there was a shared universal zest for enjoying life’s basic pleasures. They have a roof over their heads. They have an abundance of natural foods. They work hard for hourly wages. They love their heritage — and their children (who seem to love and respect their elders). For Belizeans there is no fee to enter into paradise, because they believe they are already living in it, every day they are here on earth. There is a serenity of body and spirit that can’t be measured. It emanates from within.

On the next to last day of our stay, we caught up with Mary again. She just appeared from a side street in the bustling Placencia Village. It’s a community noted for having the narrowest main street in the world. She had just emerged from a Thai-owned restaurant and massage parlor. I thought that sounded interesting, but Lisa insisted we had business to attend to first. Besides, Mary told us she was in a hurry to get to her apartment. She was going to get some rest and prepare herself for the “second half” of what had already been a very active day of walking, talking, visiting, and learning about the country she now calls home.

She was preparing, too, for a visit from her daughter, coming from Illinois. She hoped one day her son and his family would make the trip, as well. As we waved goodbye, I could not help but think how proud and happy her late husband would be if he knew how well his wife is fulfilling their bucket list.

Categories
News News Blog

The Commercial Appeal Union Holds Rally

It may have been a warm afternoon in Memphis, but members of the Memphis Newspaper Guild weren’t having a picnic on The Commercial Appeal lawn.

Employees stand outside The Commercial Appeal building on Union Avenue.

  • Alexandra Pusateri
  • Employees stand outside The Commercial Appeal building on Union Avenue.

The union held an afternoon rally to raise awareness about the roadblock that held up the guild and the newspaper’s contract negotiations. The point of dissent is the addition of disciplinary measures included in the union’s contract. The company tried to include the language previously, but the union struck down the motion unanimously in March.

“The company is trying to eat away at our most basic right — the right to have a fair hearing whenever someone is disciplined,” said Wayne Risher, president of the newspaper guild. “We feel like they would be able to fire us for any reason at their discretion if we agree to it.”

Currently, the company operates within a progressive discipline format. It starts with a verbal warning and moves up to suspensions and firings. The union’s bulletins have reported that the proposed clause by the company claims that “progressive discipline is not required,” although it is customary.

The union is also fighting against the control of discipline moving toward management — “something [The Newspaper Guild] believes will be used to reduce or eliminate the chance an outside arbitrator would ever reverse a bad disciplinary decision,” according to a bulletin released earlier this year. The new clause allows management to determine disciplinary measures against an employee at its own discretion.

“We had a tentative agreement that we had second thoughts about,” Risher said. “We ended up voting it down in the ratification process. We have not been back to the bargaining table since the company has not changed its position and still wants to impose that change in discipline language on us.”

According to Risher, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel’s newspaper union in Wisconsin has maintained a “better relationship” with its own publishing company than The Commercial Appeal union “historically.” (The newspaper joined the group last year.)

“They’ve always tried to keep the union down here,” Risher said. “It’s just an extension of that old-fashioned thinking.”

The union president said the contract allows the company to attract new employees and maintain current employees in order to provide journalism to the Memphis community.

“We’re not really asking for money, although we’ve only had three raises in the past 13 years,” Risher said. “What we have basically been working on has been status quo that would not be any new money. We look at it like we don’t want to go backwards. We don’t want these rights taken away from us. We feel like it’s a fair contract if it preserves our rights.”

A call to the publisher of The Commercial Appeal was not returned.

Categories
Music Music Blog

This Weekend at the Levitt Shell: Kristina Train, Jakubi, Seryn, MarchFourth!

Kristina Train plays the Levitt Shell this Thursday night.

The free summer concert series at the Levitt Shell continues this weekend with four more concerts.

Thursday, June 4th at 7:30 p.m.

This Weekend at the Levitt Shell: Kristina Train, Jakubi, Seryn, MarchFourth!


Friday, June 5th at 7:30 p.m.

This Weekend at the Levitt Shell: Kristina Train, Jakubi, Seryn, MarchFourth! (2)

Saturday, June 6th at 7:30 p.m.

This Weekend at the Levitt Shell: Kristina Train, Jakubi, Seryn, MarchFourth! (3)

Sunday, June 7th at 7:30 p.m.

This Weekend at the Levitt Shell: Kristina Train, Jakubi, Seryn, MarchFourth! (4)

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

RIP: Memphis Actor John Malloy

John Malloy as King Lear (L) with Jazzy Miller. And as Jones (R) in ‘Cannery Row.’

I’m really going to miss getting the random “catching up” phone call from Memphis actor John Malloy.

Malloy, who passed away this week at the age of 82, was a character actor’s character actor, as comfortable on stage as he was in front of a camera. He played one of the lovable bum’s in the 1982 film adaptation of John Steinbeck’s Cannery Row with Nick Nolte and Debra Winger, and appeared in a number of other films such as Black Snake Moan, Hoffa, and My Blueberry Nights. Malloy also taught theater classes for the University of Memphis’ Continuing Education program. ” 

I only had the pleasure of working with Malloy once, in a rough and tumble production of Shakespeare’s Henry V, produced in the beer garden of the Tennessee Brewery. The gruff-edged actor loved Shakespeare, and loved acting as much as anyone I’ve ever seen. He told the best backstage stories and was incredibly patient as a certain young actor (turned theater critic) asked endless questions about McNary Co. Sheriff Buford Pusser and the drive-in movie classic, Walking Tall: The Final Chapter. 

If you don’t know about Pusser and the Walking Tall Movies, this is as good a place as any to start. 

In the final installment of the original Walking Tall trilogy, Malloy played Mel, a Hollywood producer who comes to Tennessee to make a movie about Pusser’s tragic life and crime-fighting exploits. 

Here’s the scene where Mel meets Buford. I especially enjoy how believably Bo Svenson, the actor playing Pusser, delivers the line, “huh?” Enjoy it. And rest in peace John Malloy, you were one of a kind. 

RIP: Memphis Actor John Malloy

Categories
News News Blog

Mayor Luttrell Tackles Trash, Litter Offenders

Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell is trying to step up the efforts to clean the streets — literally.

The county is adding eight inmates to its crews from the Shelby County Corrections Center. These crews will be picking up trash in unincorporated areas of the county near Millington, Cordova, Woodstock, and Northaven, as well as the northeast and southeast areas of the county.

Last year, the county spent $350,000 for roadside trash, covering workers, equipment, fuel, and fees to dump in landfills.

“With more crews on the roadways, those costs are likely to rise this year,” Luttrell said in a media release. “However, we’ve budgeted for the additional resources. The appearance of Shelby County needs to improve in order to retain and attract new businesses and residents.”

According to Bill Gupton, director of the corrections center, 24 inmates will be out every weekday picking up trash. On Saturdays and Mondays, DUI offenders additionally undertake the task.

These inmate crews will also be watching for litter offenders. The Public Works division maintains hidden cameras throughout the unincorporated neighborhoods as well, which are monitored daily for littering and illegal dumping. According to a media release, culprits could be “arrested for illegal dumping and, in some cases, face felony charges for large amounts of trash and other debris.”

Categories
News News Blog

New Hotel Planned for Pinch

Front Street Group LLC

Proposed site plan for a new, four-story hotel on Front Street.

The starting pistol has been fired on the race to redevelop The Pinch District.

A Memphis company wants to build a four-story, 108-room hotel on Front Street between Jackson and Overton, just across the street from Bass Pro Shops at the Pyramid. Front Street Group LLC issued a zoning request to the Land Use Control Board for an extended-stay hotel.

The hotel will not be hourly rate, the request says. Room prices will range from $189 to $225 per night or $1,100 to $1,300 per week.

The planned site for the hotel is now zoned for mixed use, meaning a mix of retail, office, and residential space. The company is trying to get the land zoned for use as a hotel. The lot is now a surface parking lot.

The plan for the hotel, which was not named in the documents, shows it will be built right up the edge of Front Street with a split-level parking garage built in back. The brick building will “resemble the brick of the Redbirds stadium” and the “awnings will reflect similar designs on Front Street,” according to the request.

“To the contrary of damaging any significant historic, natural, or scenic feature, we hope the hotel will encourage visitors to enjoy and value the historic Pinch District as well as the nearby Mississippi River and its parks,” the document said.

The request for the hotel will be heard on Thursday, July 11 at 10 a.m. at Memphis City Hall.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Sprock n’ Roll — new Midtown Party Bike

Sprock n’ Roll, a party bike company based in Midtown, will launch on June 12th. Reservations are available online at www.sprocknrollmemphis.com.

They are starting with two bikes and a Midtown route going between Cooper-Young and Overton Square. 

According to Ashley Coleman, who owns the company with her husband, Sprock n’ Roll hopes to add additional routes to Overton Park and eventually downtown. 

The bikes hold a minimum of 8 people, maximum 16. Prices range from around $20 to $40 per person. Tours take 2 hours.