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Opinion The Last Word

Rogue Cops

General advice given to young people is to do their work well, lest they be fired from their job. Being fired holds a negative stigma and of course, for most people, can affect the likelihood of future employment, especially in the same industry.

Yet this does not hold true for police officers, it seems. Time and again we see police officers engage in misconduct of all sorts yet remain on the force. Even officers who have lost their jobs are often reinstated due to powerful police unions that negotiate pro-cop contracts. Worse yet, officers who have lost their jobs have been hired by other police agencies as if they did nothing wrong. Most recently, Louisville, Kentucky, Officer Myles Cosgrove, who was fired in 2021 for the fatal shooting of Breonna Taylor, was hired by a neighboring county. Cosgrove fired 16 rounds after officers entered Taylor’s apartment for a narcotics raid on March 13, 2020. Her boyfriend, not knowing they were officers, fired back with his lawful firearm and officers returned the fire, killing Taylor in the hallway.

Neither Cosgrove nor the other officer whose bullet struck Taylor were charged. Because, sure, this makes sense — killing someone and failing to utilize the required body camera during a raid on her apartment should definitely guarantee one future employment as an officer. Ugh. But that is exactly what the Kentucky Law Enforcement Council voted in November 2022 to reinstate Cosgrove’s license.

The problem of officers remaining on the job or being rehired after engaging in terrible work-related misconduct is remarkably common. In August 2021, Wisconsin Public Radio reported that some 200 officers who had been fired or resigned amidst misconduct investigations were still in the state’s employ.

This is seemingly terrible decision-making on the part of the hiring agency, as studies, including one published in the Yale Law Journal found that cops who were fired previously are more likely to be fired again or to receive complaints of “moral character violations.” In another example, Timothy Loehmann, the officer who fatally shot 12-year-old Tamir Rice in Cleveland in 2014, had previously resigned from a suburban police force before being fired for numerous issues. The Cleveland Police Department evidently did not check his personnel file.

Eddie Boyd III resigned from his job as an officer in St. Louis, Missouri, after he pistol-whipped a 12-year-old girl in the face, then a year later hit another child in the face with either his gun or handcuffs and then falsified the report. No worries, Boyd was soon hired by a police department in St. Ann, Missouri, before moving on to — wait for it — Ferguson, Missouri.

Never to be outdone, Florida’s German Bosque, often called “Florida’s Worst Cop,” was fired for various misconduct than re-hired seven times. The last time Bosque was caught on body camera coaching a subordinate how to conceal the truth about a crime scene. Other allegations were for excessive use of force, misuse of police firearms, and stealing from suspects.

How is this possible?

First, there is no national database of officers who have been fired or who resign during misconduct cases, although it is clear in the case of Cosgrove that Robert Miller, chief deputy in Carroll County, was well aware of the officer’s past when he hired the man. In other cases, perhaps the hiring agency did a poor job of conducting a background check, however absurd that sounds when hiring for a position that involves the use of lethal force.

Additionally, as Ben Grunwald, a Duke University law school professor, noted, sometimes hiring agencies actually want someone with a “cowboy cop” reputation. For example, in 2020 in Brevard County, Florida, there was an advertisement seeking to hire rogue officers, with the local chapter of the Fraternal Order of the Police posting on Facebook specifically to the “Buffalo 57” and “Atlanta 6” that it was hiring. The Buffalo 57 were 57 officers who resigned following the suspension of two of their colleagues for pushing a 75-year-old protestor to the ground, and the Atlanta 6 were booked on felony charges for assaulting two college students who were Black Lives Matter protesters.

It is no wonder that community trust in police has been declining for years. A Post-ABC poll found in early 2023 that only 39 percent of those surveyed were confident that police are adequately trained to avoid using excessive force, the lowest level since polling of its sort began in 2014. Likewise, a 2022 Gallup poll found only 45 percent of surveyed Americans were generally confident in police, even lower than in the aftermath of the 2020 murder of George Floyd.

While there is much to be done to address the many problems with policing in the U.S., the fix here seems quite simple: Stop hiring and rehiring people who are not good at their jobs.

Laura Finley, Ph.D., syndicated by PeaceVoice, teaches in the Barry University Department of Sociology & Criminology and is the author of several academic texts in her discipline.

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Astrology Fun Stuff

Free Will Astrology: Week of 05/18/23

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries dramatist Samuel Beckett, winner of the prestigious Nobel Prize for Literature, wrote 22 plays. The shortest was Breath. It has no dialogue or actors and lasts less than a minute. It begins and ends with a recording of the cry of a newborn baby. In between there are the sounds of someone breathing and variations in the lighting. I recommend you draw inspiration from Breath in the coming weeks, Aries. Be succinct and pithy. Call on the powers of graceful efficiency and no-nonsense effectiveness. Relish the joys of shrewd simplicity.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In the coming weeks, you Bulls must brook no bullies or bullying. Likewise, you should tolerate no bullshit from people trying to manipulate or fool you. Be a bulwark of integrity as you refuse to lower your standards. Bulk up the self-protective part of your psyche so you will be invincibly immune to careless and insensitive spoilers. Your word of power is BUILD. You will align yourself with cosmic rhythms as you work to create situations that will keep you strong and stable during the next 12 months.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): How much do you believe in your power to become the person you want to be? Ninety percent? Fifty-five? Twenty? Whatever it is, you can increase it in the coming weeks. Life will conspire with you to raise your confidence as you seek new ways to fulfill your soul’s purpose. Surges of grace will come your way as you strive with intense focus to live your most meaningful destiny. To take maximum advantage of this opportunity, I suggest you enjoy extra amounts of quiet, meditative time. Request help from the deepest core of your intelligence.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Early in the 19th century, cultural researchers Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm gathered an array of old folk stories and published a collection of what we now call fairy tales. Because the two brothers wanted to earn money, they edited out some graphic elements of the original narratives. For example, in the Grimms’ revised version, we don’t get the juicy details of the princess fornicating with the frog prince once he has reverted to his handsome human form. In the earlier but not published stories of Rumpelstiltskin, the imp gets so frustrated when he’s tricked by the queen that he rips himself apart. I hope you will do the opposite of the Brothers Grimm in the coming weeks, Cancerian. It’s crucial that you reveal and expose and celebrate raw, unvarnished truths.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Is there a job you would love to have as your primary passion, but it’s different from the job you’re doing? Is there a calling you would delight in embracing, but you’re too consumed by the daily routine? Do you have a hobby you’d like to turn into a professional pursuit? If you said even a partial yes to my questions, Leo, here’s good news: In the coming months, you will have an enhanced ability to make these things happen. And now is an excellent time to get underway.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Virgo-born Samuel Johnson (1709–1784) was a versatile virtuoso. He excelled as an essayist, biographer, playwright, editor, poet, and lexicographer. How did he get so much done? Here’s one clue. He took his own advice, summed up in the following quote: “It is common to overlook what is near by keeping the eye fixed on something remote. Present opportunities are neglected and attainable good is slighted by minds busied in extensive ranges and intent upon future advantages.” Johnson’s counsel is perfect for you right now, Virgo. Forget about the future and be focused on the present. Dive into the interesting work and play that’s right in front of you.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I would love you to go searching for treasure, and I hope you launch your quest soon. As you gather clues, I will be cheering you on. Before you embark, though, I want to make sure you are clear about the nature of the treasure you will be looking for. Please envision it in glorious detail. Write down a description of it and keep it with you for the next seven weeks. I also suggest you carry out a fun ritual to formally mark your entry into the treasure-hunting chapter of your life.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): In the coming weeks, you’ll be guided by your deep intelligence as you explore and converse with the darkness. You will derive key revelations and helpful signs as you wander around inside the mysteries. Be poised and lucid, dear Scorpio. Trust your ability to sense what’s important and what’s not. Be confident that you can thrive amidst uncertainty as you remain loyal to your core truths. No matter how murky this challenge may seem, it will ultimately be a blessing. You will emerge both smarter and wiser.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): If you take the Bible’s teachings seriously, you give generously to the poor and you welcome immigrants. You regard the suffering of others as being worthy of your compassionate attention, and you express love not just for people who agree with you and share your cultural traditions, but for everyone. Numerous Biblical verses, including many attributed to Jesus Christ, make it clear that living according to these principles is essential to being a good human. Even if you are not Jewish or Christian, Sagittarius, I recommend this approach to you. Now is an excellent time to hone your generosity of spirit and expand your urge to care for others.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In 1982, Capricorn actor Ben Kingsley won an Oscar for his role in the film Gandhi. Then his career declined. In an animated movie in 1992, he voiced the role of an immortal frog named F.R.O.7. who worked as a James Bond-like secret agent. It was a critical and financial disaster. But Kingsley’s fortunes rebounded, and he was nominated for Academy Awards in 2002 and 2003. Then his trajectory dipped again. He was nominated for the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Actor for four separate films between 2005 and 2008. Now, at age 79, he’s rich and famous and mostly remembered for the great things he has done. I suggest we make him your role model for the coming months. May he inspire you to emphasize your hits and downplay your misses.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I’m devoted to cultivating the art of relaxation. But I live in a world dominated by stress addicts and frenzied overachievers. Here’s another problem: I aspire to be curious, innocent, and open-minded, but the civilization I’m embedded in highly values know-it-all experts who are very sure they are in command of life’s secrets. One further snag: I’m an ultra-sensitive creator who is nourished by original thinking and original feeling. And yet I constantly encounter formulaic literalists who thrive on clichés. Now here’s the good news: I am a successful person! I do what I love and enjoy an interesting life. Here’s even more good news, Aquarius: In the next 12 months, you will have a knack for creating rhythms that bring you closer than ever before to doing what you love and enjoying an interesting life.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Most of us suffer from at least one absurd, irrational fear. I have a daft fear of heights, even when I’m perfectly safe, and a manic fear of mosquitoes dive-bombing me as I sleep, an event that has only happened four times in my life. My anxiety about running out of money is more rational, though, as is my dread of getting sick. Those worries help motivate me to work hard to earn a living and take superb care of my health. What about you, Pisces? Do you know which of your fears are preposterous and which make at least some sense? The coming weeks will be a favorable time to get a good handle on this question. Ask yourself: “Which of my fears are misdirected or exaggerated, and which are realistic and worthy of my attention?”

Categories
Fun Stuff News of the Weird

News of the Weird: Week of 05/18/23

Recent Alarming Headline

KOKH-TV reported that on March 12, a woman in Dickson, Oklahoma, was attacked by her neighbor’s pet monkey, Jack, resulting in her ear being ripped “almost completely off my head,” the victim, Brittany Parker, said. “He started grabbing handfuls of my hair and just ripped it out,” she added. Dickson police were called, and as they looked for the monkey, two shots were fired. “The shots came from the area of the victim’s residence. Officers went back to the house and found that a family member of the victim shot and killed the primate,” police said. Parker said she will need plastic surgery to fix her ear. P.J. Carter, Jack’s owner, is distraught: “I lost my best friend and pet due to it all,” he said. “He was my super monkey. I feel sorry for [Parker] and her injury. My friend and pet Jack lost his life over a massive misunderstanding and the lack of knowledge and education with an exotic animal,” Carter added. The district attorney has declined to file charges. [KOKH, 3/17/2023]

Creme de la Weird

The Mondaiji Con Cafe Daku (loosely translated: Problem Child Concept Cafe) in Sapporo, Japan, was forced to fire one of its waitresses in April after she was discovered to be adding her own blood to cocktails, the Daily Mail reported. The cafe owner called her actions “absolutely not acceptable” and said the establishment would close while every drinking glass was replaced. “We will hire a contractor to clean the store, change glasses, and dispose of alcoholic beverages that may have been contaminated,” he said. He called her actions “part-time job terrorism.” A local doctor said anyone who had patronized the cafe should visit a doctor and have a blood test. [Daily Mail, 4/13/2023]

It’s a Mystery

Over the last several months, Don Powell and his wife, Nancy, have been puzzling over uninvited inhabitants of their fancy mailbox in Orchard Lake, Michigan. USA Today reported that in August 2022, two small dolls, a miniature couch, and a small table appeared in the mailbox, which is custom-built to resemble the Powells’ home, with windows and a solar-powered interior light that comes on at night. The dolls were accompanied by a note: “We’ve decided to live here. Mary and Shelley.” Powell thought a neighbor might be spoofing him, but after exhaustive investigatory work, he’s no closer to knowing the source of the figures. Over time, the home gained a four-poster bed, a dog, a rug, and art for the wall. “The whole thing got rather whimsical,” Powell said. At Halloween, Mary and Shelley were replaced by two skeleton dolls dressed in black, and at Christmas, tiny, wrapped gifts appeared. Now, Powell is thinking of writing a children’s book about the mailbox mystery. “I think it creates a novel story,” he said. [USA Today, 4/13/2023]

The Continuing Crisis

Angel Footman, 23, a teacher at Griffin Middle School in Tallahassee, Florida, was arrested on April 7 and charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor, the New York Post reported. The charges came after school administrators learned Footman was allegedly hosting violent brawls between students in her classroom. Naturally, she set down rules: no recordings, and no pulling hair. No screaming (draws attention). Fights must be limited to 30 seconds each. However, several sixth-grade girls alerted administrators, and video turned up showing Footman at her desk while students fought each other. She’s scheduled for arraignment in May. [NY Post, 4/10/2023]

Bright Idea

Drivers along Interstate 5 near Eugene, Oregon, were startled on April 11 to see $100 bills floating through the air, Fox News reported. In fact, many cars stopped along the highway to grab the loot. When the Oregon State Police tracked down the source, it was Colin Davis McCarthy, who told them he’d been throwing the money out of his car to “bless others.” He said he thought he’d dispersed around $200,000. The OSP later revealed that McCarthy’s family had been in touch; he had depleted a shared family bank account for his Robin Hood moment. [Fox News, 4/14/2023]

NEWS OF THE WEIRD
© 2023 Andrews McMeel Syndication.
Reprinted with permission.
All rights reserved.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Arkansas Is Nice” by Bailey Bigger

For Bailey Bigger, there’s no place like home. The Arkansan singer-songwriter has released a new single that’s all about her affection for the country life. “Arkansas Is Nice” is a smooth sip of Laurel Canyon country-folk straight outta the Ozarks. She’d like to visit California, but for now, home is where the heart is.

The video is produced by Studio One Four Three and directed by Joshua Cannon. “The most important thing to me when making this music video was that I wanted to use real faces from Arkansas,” says Bigger. “I wanted to include actual friends and family from my life growing up in Marion. After we gathered the crew, the rest almost fell into place. Josh and Mica and I chose to create an on-screen version of a time capsule of my current life here in Arkansas, and it couldn’t be more beautiful.”

If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Joyce Cobb Kicks Off Sunset Jazz at Court Square

Sure, most Memphians have heard of the Sunset Symphony. There will likely be a big turnout for this year’s iteration of the traditional spring concert, centered on the Memphis Symphony Orchestra’s “MSO Big Band,” playing everything from swing to samba. That alone shows there’s a growing audience here that’s hungry for jazz. But not as many music fans know of that other great outdoor experience, Sunset Jazz.

Starting as a pop-up concert in 2018 in that historical downtown gem, Court Square Park, it had become an annual event by the next year at the request of Downtown Memphis, with series curator Deborah Swiney receiving a Downtown Memphis Vision Award that year.

This weekend, the annual free series is upon us once more, and there’s no better artist to champion the city’s jazz heritage than Joyce Cobb, who’ll perform with her band from 6-8 p.m., Sunday, May 14th, as the sun sinks in the west.

Those who attended the Stax Museum of American Soul Music’s Night Train gala on April 29th were treated to a performance by Cobb, and it revealed how her truly eclectic and passionate approach remains firmly rooted in jazz. Indeed, between songs she reeled off a list of the jazz greats who’ve emerged from Memphis — Jimmie Lunceford, George Coleman, Phineas Newborn, Jr., Charles Lloyd, etc. — by way of calling out the need for a Memphis Jazz Museum.

Yet despite her mastery of both the history and the artistry of jazz, she remains as stylistically diverse as ever. That’s only fitting for a singer who first came to Memphis from Nashville in the mid-seventies to record country music for Stax Records. After that fell through amid the label’s financial demise, she stayed here, becoming a Memphis institution in her own right. And she finally did get a Top 40 single, 1979’s “Dig the Gold” on Cream Records, a politically charged jam that borders on Afro-Pop, recorded at the now-legendary Shoe Productions Studio.

Joyce Cobb and band at the Stax Museum of American Soul Music’s Night Train gala (Credit: Michael Donahue)

The same venturesome spirit that led to her genre hopping in the ’70s persists today, as was well in evidence during her Night Train set. Calling out the Miles Davis classic “All Blues,” she gave us a heads up to listen to some lyrics she was adding to the typically instrumental piece. But we had to wait for that, as she proceeded to wail beautifully on the blues harp. Anyone who thought of Cobb as only a singer should certainly take note of this performance. And if you thought of her as strictly a jazz artist, listen to the lyrics that follow.

As an encore, Cobb took to the harp again, this time letting her ace band’s funky flag fly high. Expect more of this vibe, or vibes — from classic jazz to who knows what? — this coming Sunday evening at Court Square Park.

Sunset Jazz at Court Square takes place the second Sunday of each month, May through October, 6-8 p.m. Free.

May 14:  Joyce Cobb
June 11:  Gary Topper
July 9:  Deborah Swiney
August 13:  Paul McKinney
September 10:  Cequita Monique
October 8: Southern Comfort Band  (Univ. of Memphis)

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Now Playing in Memphis: From Book Clubs to Blackberries

Silver foxes Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen, and Mary Steenburgen head out on a bachelorette party trip to Europe in Book Club: The Next Chapter, a sequel to the 2018 sleeper hit comedy. Craig T. Nelson rand Don Johnson also reprise their roles as frigid husband and seasoned himbo with whom our heroines must negotiate new relationships. 

Before Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone to the world in 2008, there was the Blackberry. Known to its army of corporate users as the “crackberry,” it demonstrated both the advantages and disadvantages of 24/7 connectivity long before the first Instagram post. Blackberry by indie filmmaker Matt Johnson tells the story of Research In Motion, the company who ruled the mobile world in the Bush era. Wary of another disingenuous hagiography of a tech oligarch? Don’t worry, this one’s a comedy!

Charlie Day, star of the TV comedy staple “It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia,” makes his film-directing debut by biting the hand that feeds him. For Fool’s Paradise he enlisted Ken Jeong, John Malkovich, Kate Beckinsale, Adrien Brody, Jason Sudeikis, Edie Falco, Jason Bateman, Common, and a whole bunch more, to satirize showbiz as it is practiced today. You can be excused if you get a strong Being There vibe from this one.

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 represents the end of an era for Marvel and Disney. The main cast is retiring, and director James Gunn is moving to helm the rival DC movies. The Memphis Flyer‘s Sam Cicci saysGuardians Vol. 3 is the most creative Marvel film in years, a fitting end to Gunn’s time with Disney.” So far it’s pulled in $365 million worldwide, and shows no signs of stopping.

Judy Blume’s revolutionary young adult novel Are You There Go? It’s Me Margaret gets a worthy adaptation from director Kelly Fremon Craig and Simpsons producer James L. Brooks. Abby Ryder Fortson stars as Margaret, the confused middle-schooler who must navigate a move to the suburbs, puberty, and religious doubt all at once. Rachel McAdams and Memphian Kathy Bates give excellent support as Margaret’s mother and grandmother. Read my review, then watch the trailer.

Sam Raimi’s pioneering horror-comedy franchise continues its perfect record with new director Lee Cronin in Evil Dead Rise. This one’s definitely more scary than funny, but Cronin nails the franchise’s irreverent tone, and Alyssa Sullivan kills as a single mom possessed by demons who stalks a haunted apartment building. A must-see for horror fans, this one’s got legs.

South Korean director Hong Sang-soo and his frequent collaborator Kwan Hae-hyo are back together with Walk Up. Indie Memphis screens this affecting slice-of-life film, which premiered to laurels at the Toronto Film Festival, at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, May 17 at Studio on the Square.

The Super Mario Bros. Movie

 What’s the beeping noise in the distance? It’s the sound of The Super Mario Bros. Movie collecting coins. You just saw Guardians, but you can’t get enough Chris Pratt? Good news! You can hear him phoning it in as Mario in this animated adaptation that has earned enough to build Princess Peach a very nice castle. 

Categories
Music Music Blog

John Németh Wins Big at 44th Annual Blues Music Awards

There was an extra helping of good will and cheer as Memphian John Németh took home two Blues Music Awards at the Renasant Convention Center last night, one for his harmonica playing, another naming his May Be the Last Time the best Traditional Blues Album of 2022.

The good will began the night before, when a host of artists gathered at Rum Boogie Memphis for a revue that doubled as a BMA showcase and a fundraiser for Németh, who’s struggled with some serious health issues recently. As he noted on social media, “I am honored and grateful to have so many legends gathering in Memphis for my benefit.” In a sign that medical issues have not knocked him out of the game, Németh’s band, the Blue Dreamers, was the Rum Boogie house band that night, and Németh himself performed.

That’s been the case for some time, as he soldiered on last year in his usual bluesman’s itinerary. Just last October, after a performance in Minneapolis, he wrote “I was in serious pain during this show and had to sit during the performance. The vocals and chromatic harmonica are fierce.”

Despite successfully confronting health issues, Németh had an all-around great 2022, musically speaking. In January he thanked “roots music DJs for making my new Love Light Orchestra record the number one air played Soul Blues Album in the US for 2022. If you have not heard it, then please check out Leave The Light On.” That album was nominated for both Album of the Year and Soul Blues Album, but did not win either.

Other regional favorites who nabbed BMA’s included Charlie Musselwhite, whose Mississippi Son won best Acoustic Blues Album; Christone “Kingfish” Ingram, who was named best Contemporary Blues Male Artist; and Anthony Geraci, who received the Instrumentalist Pinetop Perkins Piano Player award.

National treasure Buddy Guy was the biggest winner of the night, with his album, The Blues Don’t Lie, picking up the Album of the Year and Contemporary Blues Album awards. The title song, “The Blues Don’t Lie,” written by Tom Hambridge, also won Song of the Year.

Acoustic Blues Album: Charlie Musselwhite – Mississippi Son
Acoustic Blues Artist: Doug MacLeod
Album of the Year: Buddy Guy – The Blues Don’t Lie
B.B. King Entertainer: Tommy Castro
Band of the Year: Tedeschi Trucks Band
Best Emerging Artist Album: Dylan Triplett – Who is He?
Blues Rock Album: Albert Castiglia – I Got Love
Blues Rock Artist: Albert Castiglia
Contemporary Blues Album: Buddy Guy – The Blues Don’t Lie
Contemporary Blues Female Artist: Ruthie Foster
Contemporary Blues Male Artist: Christone “Kingfish” Ingram
Instrumentalist-Bass: Danielle Nicole
Instrumentalist-Drums: Kenny “Beedy Eyes” Smith
Instrumentalist-Guitar: Laura Chavez
Instrumentalist-Harmonica: John Németh
Instrumentalist-Horn: Deanna Bogart
Instrumentalist-Pinetop Perkins Piano Player: Anthony Geraci
Instrumentalist-Vocals: Shemekia Copeland
Song of the Year: “The Blues Don’t Lie,” written by Tom Hambridge Soul Blues Album: Sugaray Rayford – In Too Deep
Soul Blues Female Artist: Thornetta Davis
Soul Blues Male Artist: Curtis Salgado
Traditional Blues Album: John Németh – May Be the Last Time
Traditional Blues Female Artist Koko Taylor Award: Sue Foley
Traditional Blues Male Artist: John Primer

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

Grocery Project Targets Food Desert In North Memphis

A project to bring a grocery and resource center to residents in North Memphis is underway.

Councilwoman Michalyn Easter-Thomas presented the North Memphis Grocery Project as a way to address the food desert in North Memphis. She says the store is to be built on Chelsea Avenue at Tunica Street.

An article in the University of Memphis’ Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law publication ML — Memphis Law Magazine by Ryan Jones defined food deserts as “communities that have poor access to healthy and affordable foods. … They are usually concentrated in low-income and historically marginalized areas throughout the country, with issues of longtime systemic racism, racial residential segregation, poor access to transportation and economic inequality woven into the history of these barren food landscapes.”

On Thursday, Easter-Thomas presented the project to residents at a community meeting at Springdale Baptist Church. “A grocery store is something that you all have said that we needed,” she said to the gathering. “I would love for all of us to have access to be able to get something of quality and affordability in our own backyard.”

Easter-Thomas, who is a resident of the community, told the Memphis Flyer that it was public knowledge that there was a need to address the food desert in the community. She said that in her position as councilwoman, she wanted to advocate and get funding started for this project.

Cornelius Sanders, executive director of Promise Development Corporation, explained to residents that the Memphis City Council passed a resolution from American Rescue Plan funds in October 2021 to get the project started. They then entered a purchase agreement for 1993 Chelsea in April of 2022. The project owns 12 acres of land as of May 2023.

Easter-Thomas heavily emphasized the duality of the project as a place for groceries and resources, differentiating it as a resource center and not a retail center. 

“The whole aspect is bringing much needed resources together with the collaboration of public and private and government and philanthropic dollars to ensure that those resources are there,” she said. She explained that these resources will encompass aspects of dental, pharmacy, medical and financial. Easter-Thomas said that groceries will be the only retail component there.

She said that this is intentional, because there are a lot of land-owning Black entrepreneurs in the area, and they want to support them, encourage them, and “allow them space to expand.”

“I don’t want to compete with them or make it hard for them to continue to thrive and progress in North Memphis,” she said. “It’s intentionally not including any retail so that those Black businesses can thrive with the upcoming of everything else in the project.”

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

State Officials Plan Passenger Rail System to Connect Tennessee’s Big Four Cities

Imagine catching a train to Nashville, Knoxville, Chattanooga, or Little Rock. 

Making that a reality is now in the planning stages, and transportation experts say passenger rail is getting its biggest push in decades. In Tennessee, officials have been working in the background to develop a plan to, maybe, connect the state’s largest cities: Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville, and Chattanooga. A federal grant program could help planners here to connect Tennessee to other states via rail. 

In 2022, the Tennessee General Assembly asked the state-housed Tennessee Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations (TACIR) to begin studying “the potential for passenger rail service linking the major cities in each of the Grand Divisions of the state.”

Lawmakers wanted to know the condition of existing rail tracks here and who owns them. They wanted to see what a network of rail lines between the cities would look like. How many state-sponsored rail projects have been done over the last decade? What are other states doing on passenger rail?

What are the costs? How many people might ride it? Who would operate it? What kind of property would need to be acquired? Where would passenger stations be built? What kind of equipment — engines, train cars, and the rest — would need to be purchased?

Lawmakers gave TACIR more than a year to answer most, if not all, of those questions. Since then, the commission has logged many hours of hearings and studies. Its report on passenger rail in Tennessee is due in July. 

TACIR’s research plan (the plan to plan the plan, if you will) said lawmakers “believe freedom of movement and an interconnected economy are important aspects of the quality of life for Tennesseans” and for economic opportunities.   

“Sponsors assert that when people can move freely between urban areas in Tennessee, it expands access to entertainment, shopping, and business venues …,” reads the report. “Additionally, sponsors feel it is important to explore feasible options to promote public mobility services as an amenity to bridge the gap between the traditional expectation of unfettered mobility and the modern constraints of transportation costs, congestion, negative environmental effects, and public health concerns.”

It seems Tennessee missed out on millions of dollars of federal funds to identify new rail routes, though. While TACIR is still working on a state plan, a key federal deadline passed.

Last May, the Biden Adminstration announced a $1.8 billion funding program to help states plan new passenger rail lines. This fund was approved by Congress in 2021’s Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. 

For this, Transportation for America, a transportation advocacy group, called the money a “once-in-a-lifetime” opportunity to boost rail across the country. 

“If Amtrak, states, interstate compacts, regional passenger rail authorities, and localities play their cards right, these historic funding levels coming from the [Federal Railroad Administration — FRA] and the renewed national mandate for Amtrak can result in a much improved and expanded national network of passenger rail,” the group said in a February blog post.

Applications for projects were due in March. A list of projects that get funded is due Saturday. No Tennessee project will be on the list, apparently. 

However, state officials have another potential funding source to plan for rail. On Monday, the FRA opened applications for a $5.8-million program to help states plan rail connections to other states. The deadline for this program is July 10th.   

“Interstate rail compacts will advance passenger rail service such as between cities like Memphis and Little Rock and will provide the mechanism and technical assistance for greater cooperation between states in advancing passenger rail,” Rep. Steven Cohen (D-Memphis) said in a statement Wednesday. “I was proud to have introduced the Interstate Rail Advancement Act and was at the White House when President Biden signed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that included its provisions. I will continue to work to improve passenger rail service and continue to advocate a passenger rail line between Memphis and Nashville.” 

Categories
Hungry Memphis

David Grisanti’s on Main to Open in Collierville

David Grisanti will open his new restaurant, “David Grisanti’s on Main,” but it’s not Main Street, Memphis. It’s going to be on Main Street, Collierville.

The Italian restaurant, which will be located at 148 North Main Street, is slated to open in “two or three months,” says Grisanti, who is part of the Grisanti lineage of Memphis chefs. 

“My grandfather had the restaurant downtown and it was on Main, too,” Grisanti says, referring to downtown Memphis. David’s dad was the late restaurateur John “Big John” Grisanti.

As for the fare, Grisanti says, “I’m still going to do my traditional family recipes. I’m still going to do my fish. Still do my prime ribs and all that. And my olive, cheese, and prosciutto appetizer. A lot of people love manicotti.  And I’m still going to do my Elfo.” He added that he will also be doing a lot of fish specials.

Grisanti, who formerly had a restaurant at Sheffield Antiques Mall in Collierville, says,”I love Collierville. Everyone’s been great. That whole Sheffield mall was really a good start for me.”

His new restaurant will be bigger, seating 122, as opposed to about 75 people at Sheffield’s. And, he says,  “It’s going to have a bar.”

David and Robyn Grisanti