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Report: Blocked Railway Crossings “Dangerous” and On the Rise

Freight trains are blocking railroad crossings for longer periods of time in Tennessee, according to a government report, which poses possible public safety risks. The issue has caught the attention of the state and local leaders. 

Memphis City Council members vented frustration on the issue last month, grilling a freight company official on what would be a “reasonable time” for trains to block roadways here. Now, a new state report calls these blockages “dangerous” and a “safety issue gaining attention nationwide. 

For Memphians, delays for streets blocked by rail crossings can be a daily experience. A new report from the Tennessee Comptrollers Office defines them as: “instances where a train is stopped, blocking a highway-rail crossing so that motorists and pedestrians cannot use it.”

The delays can be annoying, stopping the flow of traffic for uncertain lengths of time. But Tennessee State Comptroller Jason Mumpower takes the delays a step further. 

“Blocked crossings are dangerous because individuals may be tempted to crawl between stopped railcars and be injured if the train begins to move unexpectedly,” reads the report. “Also, communities and citizens may be critically affected when police and emergency services are prevented from or delayed in reaching their destinations.”

The Federal Railroad Adminstration (FRA) collects reports of blocked crossings. The agency has an online portal for incidents. The state of Tennessee has a portal to that portal on its website, as well. 

State of Tennessee

Blockages can also be called in. Crossings typically have blue signs that read “report problem to …” listing a phone number and the identifying number of the railroad crossing. 

Federal Railroad Adminstration

Blocked crossings are increasing across the country, according to a 2019 report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO). One reason the report cited: Freight companies are making their trains longer to increase efficiency and decrease costs, with some trains reportedly more than three miles long. This can lead to delays as engineers inspect each car, looking for mechanical issues.   

Last year, the Tennessee General Assembly asked the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) for an annual report of the number of blocked crossings. The numbers have fluctuated over the years for reasons not outlined in the report but have risen from double- digits in 2020 to more than 1,000 over the last two years. 

State of Tennessee

Memphis does not rank anywhere near the top of that annual report. Observers here reported incidents at 13 crossings in 2021-2022, compared to nearly 46 in top-ranking Nashville that year. 

The most-reported blocked railroad crossing in Memphis that year was 732192R. It’s on a line owned by Norfolk Southern and crosses McLeMore Avenue, close to Southern. It was reported blocked by citizens 11 times in 2021-22.

The railway crossing at McLemore close to Southern. (Credit: Google Maps)

The following year, it was reported as blocked only five times. However, that FRA report has more detail on the blockages. In March 2022, the crossing was reported to blocked for 6-12 hours by a stationary train and ”pedestrians were observed climbing on, over, or through the train cars.” In April, a train blocked the crossing for more than a day, according to a report. In May, “first responders were observed being unable to cross the tracks.”

A map shows the rail crossing in Memphis most reported to be blocked by a train. (Credit: Google Maps)

No Tennessee or federal law penalizes railroad companies for blocked crossings, according to the Comptroller’s report. Some states have tried to bill the companies for the blockages, but rail companies then take the issue to the federal level. They’ve never paid a blocked crossing fee in any state, according to the Comptroller’s report. 

In 2021, federal lawmakers introduced the Don’t Block Our Communities Act, which would have created a 10-minute time limit for train crossings. The bill was failed to pass.

Memphis already has a time limit: A city ordinance says trains can’t block a crossing for more than five minutes. The law does not apply to trains in motion. No fines or fees come with breaking the law. 

Last month, Memphis City Council members brought in Michael Garriga, director of government affairs for BNSF Railway, to start a conversation on the topic. He described the company’s operation here as a big business, with customers such as Nike, Amazon, Walmart, and Kellogg. He also described the rail system in and through Memphis as a complicated one with numerous networks and cooperative agreements with other rail companies.   

(Credit: City of Memphis) Michael Garriga, director of government affairs for BNSF Railway, talks to Memphis City Council members about blocked railway crossings last month.

Council member Cheyenne Johnson asked Garriga, “What should the average time-frame be for a person waiting for a train to pass?” That answer was complicated, too, he said.

“I hate to answer it this way but it’s the only way I know how to answer it,” Garriga said. ”It’s going to vary because every train is different.”

When pressed further to say what would be a “reasonable amount of time” for a train to pass, Garriga didn’t answer because he said he didn’t know. But he reminded council members that he lives in the area and deals with blocked crossings, too. 

“I understand the frustration but there’s a service there; there’s a part of the economy that’s moving,” he said.

Council member Jana Swearengen-Washington invited Garriga to speak because her constituents were “very concerned about” slow or stationary trains. She asked Garirga if anything could be done about the issue. 

He said the companies could possibly communicate better about train switching schedules. He also suggested the council explore a new federal program to eliminate some railroad crossings with infrastructure projects, which could take years to complete. 

Swearengen-Washington said she will continue the conversation at Memphis City Hall, with a promise to bring in another railroad official to speak before the council soon. 

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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Mirth” by HEELS

“Yes, another video from our album ‘Pop Songs for a Dying Planet’,” says Josh McLane, drummer for the folk-punk powerhouse HEELS.

This is number four by our count, after “Dread”, “Last Man”, and, of course, the immortal “Box Of Porn In The Woods.”

This time, McLane and Brennan Whalen appear on a TV show that seems transmitted from a dark shadow world where it’s still 1959.

“We started out as another lazy-ass AI-made video,” says McLane. “We threw that in the trash and then Eric Huber came up with this and we couldn’t be happier. This video is about the only thing we all share, Screens and Sadness with moments of Hope.”

You can see HEELS in action at the Lucero Family Christmas show this Saturday, Dec. 16 at Minglewood Hall.

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

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Throttled by Timberwolves, Again

The Memphis Grizzlies fell to the Minnesota Timberwolves on Friday night inside FedExForum 127-103. This season, the Grizzlies have a 1-9 record at home and a 6-15 record overall. 

Memphis was severely exploited by the Wolves in rebounding, 54-28. Minnesota also had 23 second chance points while the Grizzlies only had nine.

In the end, Minnesota center Rudy Gobert grabbed 20 rebounds, which was more than the 11 boards grabbed by the Grizzlies starting five combined. 

“Really, really tough—he had nine offensive rebounds,” Grizzlies head coach Taylor on the difficulty of defending Gobert. “They had 23 second chance points. It was a challenge all night no matter who we put on him. We’ve got to be extremely better. They came in and punked us two games in a row now.”

The Timberwolves prevailed over the Grizzlies 119-97 on November 26th in their most recent meeting in Memphis.

The rebounding performance of the Grizzlies left Jenkins undoubtedly displeased. “They punked us in the first half on the boards,” the coach said following the game, “[and] too many fouls. They play with force. You’ve got to give them a lot of credit. They’re a really, really good basketball team.” 

Jenkins went on to say, “And then when we guarded really well, we couldn’t get a rebound. It’s [on] everybody. It’s one through five out there on the floor. We’ve got to take more onus on making that a priority every night, and especially against this team.” 

For Jenkins, it’s about the will and effort for his players to do better on the boards. 

Just one Grizzlies player, Santi Aldama, had a good rebounding performance; he finished with 10, one less than what the five starters totaled. 

Jaren Jackson Jr. led Memphis with 21 points while shooting 3-of-4 three-pointers and 7-of-14 overall. He has scored 20 points or more in 11 games this season.

“Work harder,” Jackson Jr. said on the team’s rebounding woes. “They’re big so you have to use your force and body. And everybody’s got to participate. Can’t just be anybody. Everybody’s got to do it together.” 

Jackson says things are getting better for the team. “We’re trending up in a lot of ways. You can’t look at everything too hard. We’re trending up though, we’re getting our chemistry down and our rotations down. We’re learning each other better. That helps on both sides of the ball.

“Don’t look at everything too hard and just appreciate that we are trending upward but don’t let this get away from us,” he continued. “Definitely look at the film, come together and realize we really got to improve little things. There are things that were glaring tonight that they exploited . … We’re about to play better teams, too. I feel like everybody in the league looks good right now. But shoot, Dallas, you know that’s next, [and] Houston twice. Teams that are also trending upwards. So, we just have to hone in on what we’ve been doing recently for sure.” 

Desmond Bane finished with 16 points, while connecting on 4-of-6 from the three-point line. 

Two-year forward David Roddy chipped in 13 points and two rebounds. “It’s disappointing for sure,” Roddy said about the team’s rebounding issues. “It’s something that we’ve been harping on for the past few weeks now. It’s again tough when they have a lot of size with [Karl-Anthony Towns], Rudy [Gobert], Naz Reid, and [Kyle Anderson]. We just had to be better. We had to build out, box out, clear those guys out of the paint and let the guards clean it up. We didn’t do that today. We’re going to look back on film and work on it.”

Roddy believes the adversity with injuries and different lineups will help them as the season goes on. “I think it helps us all really in the end. People are thrown in different roles and positions and it’s going to be a great experience. At the end of the day you’re learning a new position, you’re learning different lineups, and what opponents are like. You can carry that on later in the season when things get more solidified. I see it right now as positive. We’re, again, going to enjoy this journey. We’re going to endure as much as we can and just trust in it.” 

The Ja Morant Countdown Continues 

Morant has four games left of his 25-game league suspension. The All-Star guard is expected to make his season debut against the New Orleans Pelicans on December 19th. 

Up Next 

Memphis will look to improve its home record against the Dallas Mavericks on Monday, December 11th, at 7 p.m. inside FedExForum. 

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Film Features Film/TV

Godzilla Minus One

You probably think of Godzilla as a lovable giant pet lizard with a crew of equally freaky frenemies who tear up Tokyo when they get into tiffs and occasionally fight aliens with questionable fashion sense. 

But that was not the creature who appeared off the coast of Japan in 1954. Director Ishiro Honda’s Gojira is an anti-war tract disguised as a monster movie.  Godzilla was a symbol of natures wrath, awakened and mutated by American nuclear bomb testing in the Pacific. The scenes of fiery devastation as Godzilla levels Tokyo with his atomic fire breath would have been familiar to the millions of Japanese who had lived through the American bombings at the end of World War II. Considered in this context, the ending, where a scientist creates a super weapon to defeat Godzilla, then kills himself to prevent the technology from falling into military hands, becomes especially poignant. 

The King of the Monsters may have lost his edge a bit over 37 features by a number of studios, endless merchandising, and a big budget series from Apple TV, but director Takashi Yamazaki was determined to take the big guy back to his roots with Godzilla Minus One. The picture opens with the familiar spectrum logo of Toho. The Japanese studio that pioneered kaiju movies 70 years ago recently regained the rights to make Godzilla movies from Legendary. It’s 1945, and a battered Zero lands on a ruined Pacific runway with a bomb still conspicuously attached. Koichi Shikishima (Ryunosuke Kamiki) is a kamikaze pilot who refused at the last minute to kill himself for an obviously lost cause. Around the time mechanic Tachibana (Munetaka Aoki) figures out that Koichi was faking technical issues, a monster attacks the airfield. The locals call it Godzilla, but it’s much smaller than the building-smashing bruiser we love. It’s just a regular-sized T. Rex, which is scary enough to kill the entire garrison except for Koichi and Takibana, who witnesses our hero run instead of taking a shot at Godzilla with his plane’s 20mm cannon. 

Koichi (Ryunosuke Kamiki) and Noriko (Minami Hamabe) contemplate the folly of man in Godzilla Minus One. (Courtesy Toho Studios)

After the war, Koichi returns to find Tokyo in ruins, and his family dead. The poor souls scavenging through the wreckage don’t let him forget he was supposed to die in the war. He takes in a street urchin named Noriko (Minami Hamabe) and Akkiko (Sae Nagatani), an orphan baby whose dying parents entrusted to her. Over the next few years, they build a life together, as Tokyo struggles to return to normal. Koichi gets a lucrative but hazardous job clearing mines from the harbor in a wooden boat in order to build a home for Noriko and Akkiko.

This long middle passage resembles the social realism of Yasujiro Ozu, whose masterpiece Tokyo Story was released the same year as Godzilla. Just as you’re getting attached to Koichi, Noriko, Akkiko, and their eccentric, long-suffering neighbors, a newly mutated Godzilla shows up and threatens to burn it all down again. If there’s one thing that makes this film different from all the other giant monster movies, it’s that this one has real stakes. It’s fun to watch a guy in a rubber suit stomp on a model train set. It hits different when the little people who live there just had you over for a delightful dinner. 

Yikes! (Courtesy Toho Studios)

Giant monster/robot films are not exactly noted for their acting, but Kamiki carries the film on his back with a committed, harrowing performance as a man wracked by guilt, looking for redemption, and finding very little. Yakazaki’s script is sharp and political. When Koichi’s minesweeping job puts him on the vanguard of the fight against Godzilla, the director turns a Jaws riff into an indictment of blind patriotism. Asked to once again risk their life for Emperor and country after surviving a brutal war, a weary sailor mutters “This country never changes. Maybe it can’t.” 

Most impressive of all, Yakazaki does it all on a budget of just $15 million. For comparison, Legendary’s vastly inferior Godzilla vs. Kong cost $200 million in 2022. Godzilla Minus One is the best kaiju film since Ishiro Honda’s 1975 swan song, Terror of Mechagodzilla. When it comes to big lizards, sometimes less is more. 

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Tennessee Equality Project Publishes ‘Slate of Hate’ Ahead of 2024 Legislative Session

Proposed bills for the upcoming legislative sessions that are being dubbed as “Tennessee’s 2024 Slate of Hate” by the Tennessee Equality Project (TEP) include the banning of Pride and Black Lives Matter flags, and potential bans on LGBTQ+ content on the internet.

As the legislative session is set to begin on January 9, 2024, advocacy groups such as TEP are staying vigilant as proposed bills make their way to the forefront.

According to the Tennessee General Assembly, HB 1605, filed by Rep. Gino Bulso (R-Brentwood), would prohibit “LEAs and public charter schools from displaying in public school flags other than the official United States flag and the official Tennessee state flag.”

“This bill would have an impact on the flying of Pride and Black Lives Matter flags at school and many other flags as well,” said TEP.

In an Instagram post regarding the proposed “Slate of Hate,” users questioned whether this would also include the Confederate flag or flags of other countries used for geographical purposes.

“So you’re saying if I’m a Spanish teacher, I can’t display the flags of all the Spanish speaking countries of the world?” asked user @Joynicole12. “Recognizing flags, countries on a map, and knowing capitals are required by our standards.”

The other piece of legislation on the “Slate of Hate” is HB 1614, filed by Rep. Patsy Hazlewood (R-Signal Mountain),  would enact the “Protect Tennessee Minors Act.”

“The “Protect Tennessee Minors Act”; requires an individual or commercial entity that publishes or distributes in this state a website that contains a substantial portion of material harmful to minors perform reasonable age-verification methods to verify the age of individuals attempting to access the material; specifies that a violation of age-verification or data retention requirements is a Class C felony,” the bill summary reads.

A similar bill in Mississippi, Senate Bill 2346, went into effect in July of this year, and currently provides “liability for any entity that distributes on the internet without age verification.”

TEP said that while they are unsure of how “material harmful to minors is defined,” they have concerns that “it could include all LGBTQ content.”

What the Tennessee General Assembly has defined as “harmful to minors” in past legislative sessions has been criticized by groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee (ACLU-TN).

Regarding the proposed ban on drag shows earlier this year, ACLU-TN said “the legal definition of ‘harmful to minors’ in Tennessee is very narrow and only covers extreme sexual or violent content with no artistic value.”

TEP plans to update the “Slate of Hate” as more bills become available. The group is currently hosting postcard parties against “discriminatory legislation,” and is gearing up for their “Advancing Equality Day on the Hill” on February 13th.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Masquerade at Black Lodge Pours a Sip of Old Hollywood

There’s a heck of a lot you can do at Black Lodge. Rent movies, play board and arcade games, sing the night away at karaoke, have a multi-course paired dinner, or even swing around a broadsword while encased in a full suit of armor.

Now, one of the last physical video rental stores lets you take a step back in time to the heyday of old Hollywood. The Masquerade at Black Lodge cocktail bar launched in early November, with a menu boasting a variety of both unique and classic craft cocktails, curated by Aaron Ivory, former manager at the now-closed Pantá of Overton Square. Diners who frequented the former Spanish tapas restaurant could expect fun, bold, and dramatic themed nights and dazzling colorful drinks with Ivory behind the bar, and that same energy has found itself a new home on Cleveland Avenue. But this time with a cinematic twist.

“We mostly want to focus on classic cocktails in what feels like a classic Hollywood environment,” says Ivory, “so things like old fashioneds, negronis, champagne cocktails, mojitos.” Behind the bar, a large TV screen matches the mood, showing old black-and-white movies.

“We’ve done a lot of different things here,” says Black Lodge bar manager Annabelle Dorff, “and this is just another way that we can incorporate bringing the movie scene into the bar industry and mashing those together. The moment since I started working here, I’ve been looking at this section [of Black Lodge] closest to Cleveland, and I thought it would be a great cocktail bar. Then Aaron came in with a lot of experience and knowledge and helped bring that to fruition.”

Aaron Ivory (right) pours a cocktail for Black Lodge bar manager Annabelle Dorff (Credit: Samuel X. Cicci)

For Ivory, Masquerade is a way to introduce new drinkers to foundational cocktails. But he also refers to it as the anti-bar of Memphis. “People like to go out on Friday and Saturday and pack bars, but we’re approaching it differently here, a Sunday to Thursday schedule that won’t conflict with weekend programming. We want this to be more of a chill spot. It gives people who want to go out, grab some good cocktails in a less crazy or calmer setting, or go on a date, a different option.

“I think of it like this,” he continues. “We’ve got a lot of great cocktail places popping up like Cameo, Inkwell, Art Bar. Let’s say, Cameo are the cool kids, the popular kids, and deservedly so. But we want to be that cool kid sitting over on the bleachers, smoking a cigarette. I want to hang out with that guy, and that’s the kind of vibe we’re going for here.”

Frequent patrons of Pantá might notice some familiar drinks on the menu, too. “There are cocktails that I created there that I wasn’t ready to give up yet, so I’ve retained a few. I also built up an appreciation of different types of wine working there, so we’ve got German, Spanish, Portuguese, and American vintages here.” For those in need of a slightly different kind of buzz, Masquerade serves coffee to perk up any drooping eyelids.

While there may not be a full food menu, Masquerade has several small plates to fix outstanding hunger pangs. “We’re looking at smaller plates for now,” says Ivory, “something to get salt on your palate while you’re drinking.”

Masquerade is open Sunday through Thursday from 5:30 p.m. to 1 a.m., and is designed as a foil to Black Lodge’s regular bar and restaurant on the opposite side of the building, which will continue to operate separately. Much of Masquerade’s programming going forward will happen on Mondays, oriented around service-industry workers’ schedules.

But Ivory is just happy to be behind the bar again. “I just love making cocktails for people. I love doing my part and giving somebody a great night.

“If all goes well,” he adds, “it’s another part of the effort to get Cleveland rockin’ and rollin’. You’ve got Flip Side, Art Bar, us, Hi Tone, Crosstown Brewery. I don’t see why it can’t be another South Main or Cooper-Young area.”

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Liberty Pocket Park to Reflect Intentionality and Community Input

Liberty Pocket Park will celebrate its grand opening on Sunday, December 10th, at 2 p.m.

According to Liberty Park Memphis, the park will feature a half-mile walking trail and 10 pieces of interactive cardio equipment.

“Weather permitting, we invite you to see the new park, hear remarks from Mayor Jim Strickland and others who inspired it, and visit other new assets in Liberty Park, including a new football and soccer field and a new ninja course inside the Memphis Sports and Events Center.”

Ashley Cash, housing and community development director for the city of Memphis, said this addition fits into the development’s vision of a place for families and people to come in hopes of activating the center of the city.

Cash explained that while they opened the Memphis Sports and Events Center a year ago for different sporting events and activities, they wanted to make sure there were “assets for the community.”

“That’s where we are now,” said Cash. “It’s a nice sized park. We really wanted to have those fun places for community members to go, but then in conversations with the American Heart Association, be able to provide a place for people to come out and get healthy.”

The Flyer spoke with Cash ahead of the opening of Liberty Pocket Park regarding the development of the space, design considerations, and potential collaborations.

*This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Memphis Flyer: Can you talk about the consideration of the community when you all were designing and developing the Pocket Park?

Ashley Cash: As a part of the development, there was actually an old track that was on the northern part of the site. We anticipate some private development coming on board with a hotel and some other retail. That will go in the space of the old track, and a lot of people want that track. We also had several community meetings about what people wanted to see in the area, and oftentimes people talked about places where they could go congregate, be safe, and get some exercise, do some things with the family, and that’s where we envisioned a small park could go on the site. We thought about that replacement track, and while it’s maybe not the exact same size, this one’s got a little bit more curvature to it. We tried to create a nice walk for folks who are participating in that kind of sport. We really tried to bring what the community wanted to see, also with what we took away from the site at the time.

We know our young people like to do a lot of things. They like to play soccer — there’s a lot of youth football leagues in the city of Memphis — so we took a sort of three-activity approach in that same area. Next to the Pocket Park we will have a [turf] football field, a new soccer field that will, for now, be managed by the parks department. We’re trying to fill those needs where we see sports activity rising that we can meet the need and provide those additional activities for kids and older people alike.

Do you foresee any collaborative partnerships with Memphis Sports and Events Center?

We work really closely with them, and the managers of the site are Eastern Sports Management (ESM) and they’re really great partners. They’ve hosted a bunch of stuff, SneakFest, American Cornhole [League], just all kinds of adult and youth leagues. We envision, hopefully expanding that partnership, where we can maybe collaborate on different types of events. Someone may be having an event inside, and we can simultaneously have an event outside. We think it’s a great opportunity where people may be able to practice or warm up; they’re right across from the big sports building. 

What can the community expect in terms of maintenance and potential expansions for the Pocket Park?

Of course, we expect to keep it well-maintained, as we try to do with all of our parks and all of our assets. In terms of amenities, there are already some exercise equipment type things like pull-up bars — stuff that doesn’t require electricity, human-powered if you will. What we hope to see is those being utilized. We’re excited to come back and revisit it in a year or two and see if what was developed is really reflective of what the community is doing, and how they’re using it, and if they’re any opportunities for us to make modifications to the park, at that time, we’re certainly open to doing that. I think folks are really excited about the high level of intentionality and design of the park.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Pummel Pistons Behind Historic Night From Desmond Bane

The Detroit Pistons were looking to put an end to their 17-game losing streak. Unfortunately for the Pistons, they are going to have to keep on waiting.

With a final score of 116-102, the Memphis Grizzlies heaped another loss onto Detroit’s now 18-game losing streak.

Let’s get into it.

Are the Memphis Grizzlies back?

The team we’ve seen in the past five games looks worlds different than the one that started the season 0-7. They’ve won three of their last four games, and in five more games, they’ll have the return of one of the best players in the league.

Wednesday night’s matchup against the Pistons might be the most complete game of the season for the Grizzlies. It was certainly the most complete game this season for Desmond Bane, who had a career-best 49-point game and put up the second-highest scoring game in Memphis Grizzlies franchise history.

Jaren Jackson Jr. and Desmond Bane have been a dynamic duo for Memphis all season, and this game was no exception. Jackson and Bane combined for 73 of the Grizzlies’ 116 points, including a 19-point third quarter from Bane.

It was the closest to a wire-to-wire victory as Memphis has gotten all season, with the Grizzlies outscoring the Pistons in three out of four quarters. Their 14-point win is tied for their largest margin of victory this season, and it is no coincidence that all three of those games took place in the past ten days. (December 6th, December 1st, and November 29th, respectively.)

Turnovers have been an ongoing struggle for the Grizzlies this season, so it was a nice change of pace to see Memphis convert 17 Detroit turnovers into 21 points.

Desmond Bane put up a career-high 49 points while leading the Grizzlies to a decisive victory over the Detroit Pistons. And while fans might think of Bane’s three-point shooting, he proved he can get you a bucket from anywhere on the court.

Only 4 of his 19 made field goals came from three-point range. He earned the rest of his 49 points from midrange, around the rim, or the free throw line.

The silver liner to the dark cloud that has been the first quarter of this season has been the emergence of Desmond Bane into a bona fide superstar. Bane should 100 percent be a starting all-star, although he probably won’t because of the team’s overall struggles. He’s been tasked with carrying a heavy load in the absence of Ja Morant and he has done so.

The Grizzlies got a bit of a contribution from every one, with points from every player who played more than the last 20 seconds of garbage time.

But they only had three players who finished the night having scored in double-digits – Desmond Bane with 49, Jaren Jackson Jr with 24, and new addition Jaylen Nowell with 12 points off the bench.

Nowell was recently signed to his second ten-day contract with the Grizzlies, and it remains to be seen whether the front office will make retaining him a priority once Ja Morant returns. Morant has five games left of his 25-game suspension, but that still leaves the Grizzlies without their two best big men, Steven Adams and Brandon Clarke, for the rest of the season.

Nowell and center Bismack Biyombo were acquired thanks to the league’s disabled player exception. But as it stands, Memphis will need to waive a current roster player to keep Biyombo and waive two roster players if they want to keep both him and Nowell on the roster.

Who Got Next?

The Grizzlies will return home to face off against the Minnesota Timberwolves on Friday, December 8th. Tip-off is at 7 PM CST.

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News News Blog News Feature

Passenger Rail Planning Can Begin With New Funds

Passenger rail in Tennessee rolled further down the line Wednesday as the federal government announced a $500,000 grant to help leaders here begin planning a statewide line.

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.” 

In March, mayors of Memphis, Nashville, Chattanooga, and Atlanta submitted a proposal to the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) for a passenger line to connect those cities. 

In July, TACIR’s 139-page report recommended a statewide rail plan. It said the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) should submit the report to support the cities’ application.

This week, the cities were awarded a $500,000 grant from the FRA, a move announced Wednesday by U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Memphis) on X. 

Passenger rail service linking Tennessee’s major cities will be a major economic shot in the arm and will invigorate travel and tourism across our state.

This is a very big deal.

U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen

“Passenger rail service linking Tennessee’s major cities will be a major economic shot in the arm and will invigorate travel and tourism across our state,” Cohen said in a statement. “I was pleased to submit a letter of support for this project and am glad that the FRA has heeded my repeated calls to prioritize this important project. 

“Once this service is in operation, much of the country will be accessible by rail from Memphis. This is a very big deal, and I look forward to working with stakeholders in all of the route’s proposed cities to continue to move this project forward.”

The funds are from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act for the federal Corridor ID program to build a pipeline of intercity passenger rail projects ready for implementation. With the funds in hand, Tennessee leaders can lay the groundwork for an overall plan, a process that includes a scope, schedule, and cost estimate for a Tennessee passenger rail line. 

(Photo: TACIR)

TACIR’s report recommended five rail routes built in five phases. The first would connect Atlanta, Chattanooga, and Nashville.

(Photo: TACIR)

The next would connect Memphis and Nashville.

(Photo: TACIR)

The third-priority line would connect Chattanooga, Knoxville, and Bristol in East Tennessee. Another line would improve the connectivity between Memphis and Chicago. The final recommendation would connect Nashville to Louisville, Kentucky. 

These lines were prioritized based on the amounts of people they could move. For this, Atlanta, Chattanooga, and Nashville came first. Memphis and Nashville came second. 

“The route would connect Tennessee’s two largest cities, and connecting areas with large populations is often a key to success for passenger rail projects, although neither of these cities has as many people as Atlanta,” reads the TACIR report.   

TACIR’s plan would create a new rail division within the state, likely housed in TDOT. Doing this (and myriad other things necessary for such an undertaking) will need state money and that means vetting and votes from the Tennessee General Assembly. 

So far, rail plans here have vocal support from Tennessee Democrats and at least one Senate GOP member. The bill directing TACIR to study rail here was sponsored by Sen. Ken Yager, a Republican from the far-east corner of Tennessee (Bristol), and Rep. Antonio Parkinson, a Democrat from the far-west corner (Memphis). Rail could help both of those cities bring in people and their money. 

Rail action could likely see the floors of the Tennessee state House and Senate in its next session in January. Parkinson said that any rail idea would also need buy-in from Gov. Bill Lee’s office.

As for federal support, Cohen gave a mantra to U.S. Department of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg in September. 

“Memphis is the center of the country,” Cohen said. “We’ve got the bridge that goes across the Mississippi River. We’ve got commercial aviation. We’ve got FedEx. What’s good for Memphis is good for America.”

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Senate and House Redistricting Rulings Challenged at TN Supreme Court Level

A Nashville resident is seeking an expedited ruling by the Tennessee Supreme Court after the state challenged a three-judge panel decision that found state Senate redistricting maps unconstitutional.

Simultaneously, a West Tennessee resident is appealing the judicial panel’s finding that the House redistricting plan approved in early 2022 withstood constitutional muster. The challenge by Trenton resident Gary Wygant also seeks an expedited ruling by the state’s highest court.

Attorneys for Francie Hunt, a Nashville resident and executive director of Tennessee Advocates for Planned Parenthood, filed a request Tuesday asking the court to move quickly in her case against the Senate redistricting map. Otherwise, if the appeal proceeds on its regular schedule, Tennessee voters will vote again in Senate districts the trial court has found twice to violate the Tennessee Constitution, according to the filing.

The state Attorney General’s main argument in the challenge of the judicial panel’s ruling is that Hunt doesn’t have standing to sue to overturn the Senate redistricting maps, which contain non-consecutive numbered Senate districts 17, 19, 20, and 21 in Davidson County, a violation of the state Constitution. Counties with multiple Senate districts are required to be consecutively numbered so the entire delegation or majority of the delegation can’t be replaced in one fell swoop.

Hunt resides in District 17, which is represented by Sen. Mark Pody, (R-Lebanon).

Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti filed a motion Tuesday asking the court to reject Hunt’s request, arguing the Supreme Court is likely to reverse the lower court’s finding because she has no standing to sue.

“Absent a stay, the state will be irreparably harmed because it cannot enforce a duly enacted law and because the General Assembly must either abandon the Senate map that it drew or cede its sovereign map-drawing authority to the judiciary,” Skrmetti’s filing says.

There’s not really any dispute about whether the maps comply with the Constitution. They don’t.

– Sen. Jeff Yarbro, D-Nashville

Meanwhile, Wygant filed a notice of appeal November 29 and requested an expedited decision December 1. In addition, he asked the court to separate the House and Senate cases “to avoid subjecting” voters to a second election in Senate districts found to be unconstitutional. Wygant challenged the House map, claiming it split 30 counties, more than necessary to reapportion 99 House districts.

The state responded to Wygant’s filing Tuesday with a move to negate it, saying he has not shown “good cause” to suspend the normal schedule, especially since there is no need for “new map” because it was found constitutional.

Democrats contend controlling Republicans, who hold supermajorities in the House and Senate, gerrymandered the districts to keep control.

The three-judge panel ruled against Wygant and found the House redistricting maps constitutional but determined the Senate maps to be unconstitutional and ordered the Senate to draw new maps by January 31.

“There’s not really any dispute about whether the maps comply with the Constitution. They don’t,” state Sen. Jeff Yarbro (D-Nashville) said Tuesday. “We should pass maps that comply with the Constitution rather than seek to not be subject to it. The state shouldn’t be in the business of finding immunity from constitutional violations for itself.”

Gov. Bill Lee signed the Senate and House maps into law on February 6th, 2022, two months before the April 7 qualifying deadline for Senate candidates. On April 6, the trial court enjoined the Senate map and extended the candidate qualifying deadline to May 5, while giving the legislature 15 days to approve a remedial Senate map.

The state sought an extraordinary appeal the following day when a spokesperson said, “While Lt. Gov. [Randy] McNally remains confident the appeal will be successful, the Senate will work on an alternative map so that it can be passed in the allotted time frame, if it becomes necessary.”

At trial a year later, an expert testified that the constitutional problems with the Senate map could be “cured” by changing fewer than five Senate districts. The plaintiffs’ court filing contends the General Assembly can work on changes to a “remedial map” this December and January so it can be enacted by early February.

Chancellor Russell T. Perkins of Davidson County and Circuit Judge J. Michael Sharp of Bradley County ruled against the Senate map while Chancellor Steven W. Maroney of Jackson found Hunt didn’t have standing to sue because there is “no demonstrable causal connection” between Hunt’s “generalized grievances” and non-consecutive Senate districts in Davidson County.

Hunt testified during trial that she was affected by a “dishonoring of the Constitution” with the way Roe v. Wade was overturned as well as the enactment of a “trigger ban” by the legislature on abortion rights in Tennessee. 

McNally spokesman Adam Kleinheider said Tuesday the lieutenant governor is “optimistic” the state’s appeal will succeed because of Maroney’s “compelling dissent.”

“If a redraw becomes necessary, the Senate will follow an open and transparent process similar to those in previous years. At the moment, however, the main focus is on the appeal,” he said.

Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com. Follow Tennessee Lookout on Facebook and Twitter.