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City Unveils ‘New and Improved’ Data Hub

The city of Memphis introduced a “new and improved data hub” Wednesday.

The site, data.memphistn.gov, first launched early last year and since then Ursula Madden, the city’s chief communication officer, said the city has been working to improve it.

The new site, which offers new and more detailed data sets, is meant to “increase usability and resident engagement,” said Craig Hodge of the Office of Performance Management.

“It builds on the mayor’s commitment to hold city government accountable for its performance,” Hodge said. “Internally, the Data Hub is the foundation for how we continually use data to inform our decisions; having a platform to load and share data across divisions allows city leaders to break down silos and better work together to be ‘brilliant at the basics.’”



In addition to tracking performance surrounding neighborhoods, public safety, youth, jobs, and good government, the site now allows users to track 311 requests, find civic assets near them, and see a real-time crime map.

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Madden said the new information is an effort to be “open and honest about what we’re doing well, but also our challenges.

“Ultimately if you have knowledge, you have some sort of sense of security,” Madden said. “You can take that information and do something with it. You can do things that improve your neighborhood.”

New features on the site include:

• An interactive map that shows nearby civic assets, such as parks, community centers, police and fire stations, and libraries

• Ongoing and recent capital projects and the city division responsible for them

• A real-time map of crimes, excluding sexual assault, throughout the entire city broken down by type

• A map showing ongoing and recent 311 requests, as well as code enforcement violations

Crime map


Users can also suggest other data sets not featured on the site. Madden said the site will “evolve” with new data sets being added to it in the future.

Unlike the old data hub, which she said was “sort of a static document,” the new site will be “active and engaging and can be utilized as the type of tool the public can use.”

“This is new for us,” Madden said. “We’re finally getting into the 21st century. We know that other cities already do this. So, we’re finally getting our data out to the public as well.”

City Unveils ‘New and Improved’ Data Hub

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Zoo Lot Construction to Begin Monday

Brandon Dill

It’s the beginning of the end for parking on the Overton Park Greensward.

Construction is slated to begin Monday on a project that will reconfigure the Memphis Zoo parking lot, adding an additional 415 parking spaces. Those spaces are expected to end the decades-long practice of parking cars on the Greensward, the grassy field adjacent to the zoo’s parking lot.

The first phase of the project will focus on the Prentiss Place parking lot, on the northwest side of the zoo. Work there will take about three months, and during that time, the lot will be completely closed. Once complete, the new Prentiss Place lot will have gained 108 parking spaces.

Prentiss Place is expected to stay open as a two-way street for most of those three months, though some closures are expected to complete pedestrian crossings and on-street parking.

savethegreensward.org

Construction crews will then begin work on the main zoo lot, just south of the zoo entrance. That work is slated to start this fall and winter, an optimum time to transplant many trees, which officials have said is necessary to the project.

During it all, the zoo’s North Parkway entrance will be staffed and open on busy days when overflow parking is expected. This will give access to the zoo from the nearly 200 on-street parking spots on North Parkway.
[pullquote-1] “By executing on this project, we’ll fulfill [Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland’s] promise to put 30-plus years of controversy behind us by permanently ending parking on the Greensward, as well as accommodating the growth of one of the nation’s top zoos,” Doug McGowen, the city’s chief operating officer, said in a statement. “We will surely have some growing pains as we work through the construction, but we’re committed to strong communication to make sure park visitors, zoo patrons, and neighborhood residents know what to expect.”

New zoo president and CEO Jim Dean said he was “very happy” to have the “strong” support of the Overton Park Conservancy, Overton Park Alliance, and the city of Memphis.

“The Memphis Zoo has been a part of Overton Park since 1906,” Dean said. “We have grown quite a bit since then and have faced some challenges.

The hotly contested battle for the Greensward

“We’re happy this resolution will, once complete, end parking on the Greensward. We are also excited about strengthening and growing our partnership with the Overton Park Conservancy and the Overton Park Alliance to continue to make Overton Park one of the best parks in the country.”

Tina Sullivan, executive director of the Overton Park Conservancy, said community support made the project possible and “is a testament to Memphis’ love for Overton Park.”

“We look forward to the day very soon when park visitors can look from the Doughboy statue to Rainbow Lake across a beautiful Greensward that is free of cars,” Sullivan said.

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‘State-of-the-Art’ Tennis Facility in the Works for Memphis

A new “world-class tennis facility” is coming to Memphis, the city, along with the University of Memphis and local organization Tennis Memphis announced Monday.

The three entities are partnering to renovate Leftwich Tennis near Audubon Park into what officials call a “state-of-the-art facility.” The $19 million project will “dramatically improve” the facility with the construction of 32 new courts. Twenty of those will be outdoors, and 12 will be indoors. The center currently has 12 courts in total.

Upon completion, the renovated Leftwich Tennis Center will remain a public facility open to the community for competitive and recreational play, as well as tennis lessons and clinics. It will also be the new home courts for the men’s and women’s Tiger tennis teams.


Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland was at Leftwich Monday for the announcement. He said the new facility will be a “true gem” for the community.

“I can’t say enough about how excited I am for this project to begin,” Strickland said. “And I’m not the only one. The philanthropic support shown for this has been exceptional. Not only will this be a tremendous asset for the University, but it will be a true gem for our community and all tennis lovers.”

Officials said the majority of funding for the project was raised privately, while $3 million is coming from the city and $5 million from the university.

U of M president M. David Rudd said the tennis center will be “one of the finest in the country, one that all Memphians will be proud of.”

Paul Goebel, coach of the U of M men’s tennis team said the new facility will be fit to host major events, such as national tennis tournaments and NCAA and conference championships. Goebel anticipates that will “attract thousands of out-of-town visitors each year.”

The new facility is slated to be completed by January 2021.


‘State-of-the-Art’ Tennis Facility in the Works for Memphis

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Fairgrounds Redevelopment Project Moves Forward

City of Memphis

A rendering of the proposed youth sports complex that will front Southern Avenue.

City leaders formally named the private development team that will lead the Fairgrounds redevelopment project Tuesday morning.

City leaders cleared a major hurdle to advance the plan in November with a positive vote on the project from the State Building Commission. At that time, though, commission leaders said they wanted another review of the plan. They wanted to ensure Memphis leaders could secure $61 million in private funds before they’d allow the city to issue $90 million in bonds for the city’s portion.

“If the money and the numbers do not work out, we will not move forward with the project,” Paul Young, the city’s director of Housing and Community Development, told the commission in November.

It was not immediately known Tuesday morning whether or not the city won that second approval from state officials. We’ll update this story with more information later today.

City of Memphis

A concept image of a new Fairgrounds.

However, a news release from Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland’s office said Tuesday his team had picked M&M Enterprises and Belpointe REIT to lead the redevelopment project.

“We’ve been working on this project for a while now, and I’m so pleased to have local talent stepping up and helping the city to transform this important piece of property,” Strickland said in a statement. “The underutilized Fairgrounds will be reimagined into a unique sports and entertainment destination for both Memphians and visitors.”

The project team will be led by local developer James Maclin, of M&M Enterprises. Maybe Maclin’s highest-profile project to date is the Broad Avenue mixed-use project he’s working on with Loeb Properties. Maclin is also involved in the redevelopment of the Racquet Club.

Belpoint is a real estate investment trust (REIT). These types of companies own many different types of real estate. Belpoint is based in Greenwich, Connecticut. A statement says the company is the first Opportunity Zone REIT registered with the securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

“An Opportunity Zone is an economically-distressed community where new investments, under certain conditions, may be eligible for preferential tax treatment,” according to the Internal Revenue Service.

The Fairgrounds is part of the University District Opportunity Zone.

City of Memphis

A pre-design rendering of the Fairgrounds redevelopment project.

In November, Young said the project would move through three phases. Phase one is complete, with Tiger Lane, improvements to Liberty Bowl stadium, and site work for phase two. The second part of the project would include the construction of the youth sport complex, which would front Southern on the south end of the Fairgrounds.

”The complex will be located on the southern end of the Fairgrounds, on the site of the former Libertyland Amusement Park,” reads the city’s statement Tuesday. “It will focus on indoor sports, including basketball, volleyball, cheer, gymnastics, wrestling, and indoor track and field; it is projected to open in the first half of 2021.”

Phase three of the project would begin within five years of the completion of phase two. Phase three cold cost up to $30 million and include “iconic” entrances and exits, improvements to the Pipkin building, expanded parking, and more.

Justin Fox Burks

As of November, the Mid-South Coliseum would remain mothballed under the plan. But Young told committee members in November that private funding to revive the building would emerge if the area around it were reactivated.

The plan also aims to redevelop the north end of the Fairgrounds fronting Central with a mixed-use development. That development would include 30,000 square feet of retail space and 80 hotel rooms.

“The mixed-use development will be privately funded, although the city will provide infrastructure improvements,” reads the statement. “The private development will generate sales tax revenues for the Fairgrounds Tourism Development Zone (“TDZ”) which will be the primary source of funding for the new Sports & Events Complex.

“Using the TDZ will allow the city to redevelop the Fairgrounds using sales tax revenues that would normally go to the state and without having to rely on general operating funds which are used for things like police and firefighter salaries or on the capital improvement program which is used for things like street repaving.”

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City Looks to Ease Pothole Problem With Technology, Re-Paving

City of Memphis

The city of Memphis says it is just as frustrated about the many potholes riddling the city’s streets as you are, and that it is “confronting the challenge head-on.”

The city explained what causes potholes, how the city is working to repair them faster, and how the public can help in a blog last week.

The number of potholes grows exponentially in the winter, according to officials. When water seeps into the road and freezes, it expands, which often causes a pothole eventually. A lot of traffic means quicker-forming potholes.

There are up to 10 city crews assigned to repairing potholes at most hours, according to the city. However, rainy weather in the winter is a “double-whammy.” Heavy rain accelerates the pothole-forming process. Also, when rain fills the holes, crews aren’t able to repair them. Still, last year the city repaired close to 63,000 potholes.

The city asks that the public report potholes by using the Memphis 311 app, submitting a report online, or calling 311 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Also, if your car has been damaged by a pothole on a city street, you can file a claim with the city.

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The city wants you to know that Memphis isn’t the only city with ubiquitous potholes, citing in its blog Los Angeles, Topeka, and Seattle as other pothole-plagued places: “So, we’re not alone in our challenge, though that’s of little solace to us here in.”

In step with tracking and repairing potholes faster, the city is in the early stages of a partnership with a technology company in order to pilot a project that could allow cameras attached to city-owned vehicles to scan for potholes. The effort was announced during Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland’s State of the City Address last month.

As the project is still in developing phases, Dan Springer, the city’s deputy director of media affairs, said he is not able to name the company that the city is partnering with at this time.

City of Memphis

Still, the long-term solution for potholes is paving more streets. The city said it is working to catch up on the backlog in street paving due to the small amounts of funding allocated for re-paving in the past.

The city’s current fiscal year budget sets aside $19 million for paving, compared to $16.5 million during Strickland’s first year in office in 2016, $15 million in 2015 during the last year of A.C. Wharton’s tenure, and $5.8 million during Wharton’s first year in 2009.

But, Memphis can only pave so many of the approximate 6,800 lane-miles of road in the city, estimating it would costs “more than half a billion dollars” to re-pave every street in the city. The entire capital budget was $87 million for fiscal year 2018.

As the temperatures begin to rise, crews will begin repaving these streets.

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City, County Seek Agent to Oversee Pre-K Funds

The Memphis City Council is considering an ordinance that would appoint a fiscal agent to manage the city and county pre-Kindergarten fund.

The ordinance is a joint ordinance of both the council and the Shelby County Commission. It does three things, Doug McGowen, the city’s chief operating officer told a council committee Tuesday.

“First of all, it says that the city and county are in it together moving forward,” McGowen said. “The second thing is it establishes that we will use a joint fiscal agent, and thirdly it allows city and county officials to serve on that board.”

The fiscal agent, who would serve for three years, would be tasked with establishing a quality pre-k program, as well as managing and distributing pre-K funds.

The dollar amount needed to fund the county-wide universal-needs pre-K is $16 million, McGowen said.


Previously, the city received $8 million of federal assistance to fund 1,000 pre-K seats in the county, but McGowen said that money will run out this summer.

The city and county now want to fund 2,000 seats beginning in the 2019-20 school year.

To do that, McGowen said last year the city put $3 million of excess city revenue as seed money into a dedicated pre-K fund. Additionally, a portion of city property tax revenue and taxes paid by companies whose PILOT (pay-in-lieu-of-taxes) incentive has expired goes to the fund.

The county commission approved the ordinance to appoint a fiscal agent on the first of three readings last week. The council is set to vote on the first of three readings in two weeks. If approved by both bodies, the county commission will issue a request for qualifications to choose a fiscal agent, who Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland and Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris would ultimately select.


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Allan Wade: Fast Man With a Phrase

Allan Wade, the veteran lawyer who represents the Memphis City Council, among other clients, is a glib talker, both in the courtroom and out, as he indicated once again in a hearing Tuesday in the courtroom of Chancellor Jim Kyle and afterward.

Allan Wade

The hearing concerned a request by several plaintiffs attempting to halt the council’s proposed use of city funds to launch a “public information” campaign in favor of three referenda on the November 6th ballot. Wade argued vigorously against the suit and was gratified when the Chancellor went on to rule that the issue was not “ripe” for judgment.

Wade was explaining as much to a reporter in the hallway of the Courthouse after the hearing when John Marek, also a lawyer and one of the plaintiffs, passed by, muttering something about “corruption.” Wade instantly shifted gears, responding “Kiss my ass,” and then continuing with his exegesis of what he saw as the relevant legal issues in the case.

The outburst was a reminder of another reported incident in the council chambers when, after a meeting, several attendees expressed criticism of an action taken by Wade in his role as attorney for the council. One of them, Theron Bond, said Wade responded with a profane threat, and another, Carlos Ochoa, who was attempting to make a video of the exchange, said Wade called him a “punk.”

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Police Official Says Bob Smith Account Friended Over 200 Activists

Day one of the federal trial over Memphis’ police surveillance wrapped up Monday with Sgt. Timothy Reynolds of the Memphis Police Department (MPD) on the stand.

Reynolds, who works in MPD’s Office of Homeland Security, was one of the key personnel responsible for creating and using the undercover social media accounts of Bob Smith.

On the stand, Reynolds admitted to adding more than 200 friends who he said were in connection to protests and other gatherings that could become unlawful.

First created in 2009, the Bob Smith account was intitially used solely for investigations and gang-related crimes, but its use changed over time, Reynolds said. A different and more specific type of intelligence gathering started after the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, as “we didn’t want a copycat shooter,” he said.

Other evidence revealed the undercover account actively sharing links, commenting on and liking posts, joining and posting in groups, and responding to event requests.

The information gathered through the Bob Smith accounts was then used to monitor the organizers of protests and other community events that MPD thought could be a threat to safety. Many of the events were centered around 19-year-old Darius Stewart, who was killed by an MPD officer in July 2017. Gatherings associated with the Black Lives Matter movement were also closely followed.

However, gatherings like town hall meetings and concerts were also monitored, Reynolds said.

In one email presented to the court, Reynolds’ boss, then-Major Eddie Bass, made Reynolds aware of the “potential for another adverse gathering” planned by organizers of a vigil that Reynolds had previously referred to as “peaceful.”

On another occasion, Reynolds said protesters were trying to “circumvent the permit process,” by planning events in public spaces like libraries where permits aren’t needed.

The plaintiff’s counsel also brought forth emails showing that on multiple occasions MPD shared intelligence on individuals and planned events with organizations outside law enforcement, like Fedex, AutoZone, and Memphis Light, Gas & Water. The information was shared via daily Joint Intelligence Briefing memos.

The plaintiff will resume questioning Reynolds Tuesday morning before the defense begins its cross-examination. After Reynolds, the next witnesses slated to take the stand are Mike Cody, Bruce Kramer, Major Stephen Chandler, and MPD director Michael Rallings.

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Another Year, Another Myron Lowery Prayer Breakfast

JB

Myron Lowery says goodbye to attendees at this year’s prayer breakfast, his 25th.

Although there were some early fits and starts, as is the case with most politicians, the political career of Myron Lowery began, more or less, in 1991 — the same year as the epochal election of Willie Herenton as Memphis’ first black elected mayor. And it would seem to have ended on Friday, January 1, 2016, when the Super District 8, Position 3 City Council seat Lowery decided not to pursue again in last year’s city election was filled with the swearing-in of Martavius Jones.

That’s 24 consecutive years, a considerable run and a record for an African-American official in Memphis, and if son Mickell Lowery had prevailed, as expected, in his election contest with underdog Jones, a former School Board member, the seat might have remained in the family for yet another generation.

The senior Lowery had to have had that prospect in mind a year ago, when in his 24th consecutive “Myron Lowery Prayer Breakfast,” he looked on as son Mickell moderated the festivities at the airport Holiday Inn in his stead. Lowery’s first prayer breakfast had been held on January 1, 1992, the day that both he and Herenton, the guest of honor at the breakfast, had been sworn in.

On that first occasion (held at The Peabody), as on the 24th, the breakfast — a fundraiser whose proceeds would be shared out with various deserving local causes as the event evolved — attracted an overflow crowd of politically influential guests. Except for a brief spell, a decade or so back, when Herenton began holding his own New Year’s prayer breakfast, more or less in competition, the Lowery breakfast always had the city’s mayor — first Herenton and then A C Wharton —on hand, along with most other local politicians of any consequence.

The breakfast became, as they say, a tradition, often a news-making one, depending on the candor and intensity of the speeches by political figures, which were interspersed with musical selections from local choirs and celebrated church singers and with, well, prayers.

It was a tradition that could have been expected to continue for a while except for that hitch in the outcome of the 2015 election. Not only was Mickell Lowery, the projected host of future breakfasts, upset in his Council race, but his father had rolled the dice and lost in his support of the reelection of then incumbent Mayor A C Wharton.

It wasn’t just that Councilman Lowery had backed the loser in the mayoral race. He had done so in the most conspicuous — and, to eventual mayoral winner Jim Strickland, most offensive — way possible. At last year’s breakfast, Lowery had asked Strickland, his longtime Council mate, to stand, and, after beginning with praise of Strickland, then not only proceeded to confer his public endorsement on Wharton (whom Lowery himself had opposed in the special election of 2009) but basically called out Strickland, at some length, for what Lowery deemed a premature challenge.

Rather than stand and continue to listen as Lowery went on with remarks that may not have been intended as patronizing but certainly sounded that way, Strickland walked out of the room.

He wasn’t there for Friday’s breakfast, although, in a preliminary mailing sent out to advertise this year’s prayer breakfast, Lowery had mentioned Strickland as one of the dignitaries invited to speak. Such speaking as Strickland had in mind to do was apparently reserved for the new mayor’s own inauguration address later that morning at the Cannon Center.

Strickland’s counterpart, Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell, was there Friday and spoke to a crowd that was still respectably sized, if obviously diminished from previous years. So was 9th District Congressman Steve Cohen, the featured speaker, who — as he usually does — provided a few verbal sparks.

Cohen’s most newsworthy statement may have been his blast at the Shelby County grand jury that recently failed to return an indictment in the shooting death, at the hands of a Memphis police officer, of a black youth, Darrius Stewart. After ter
JB

Rep. Cohen

ming the grand jury’s inaction “a mystery’ and wondering out loud why no indictment was returned, Cohen said, “Police need to think twice before taking lives” and dilated on a reform bill he is sponsoring which calls for federal funding to investigate such cases and for handling them in jurisdictions other than the one in which they occur.

The congressman used the formula “3 C’s” to describe leading items on his wish list for the new session. Spelling them out, they were: “commutations,” which he wants to see more of from the federal government, especially in relation to drug convictions; “cannabis,” an increase in the liberalization of marijuana laws; and “Cuba,” the further flowering of the relationship, recently opened up by President Obama, between the United States and the island nation to our south.

Much of Cohen’s speech was given over to the theme of greater bi-partisan collaboration in Congress. He stressed the need for “collegiality and respect for [one’s] colleagues” and said that he himself was “getting better all the time” with regard to both “tools and relationships.”

On the national scene, Democrat Cohen stopped just short of congratulating the Republicans for their choice of Paul Ryan as House Speaker. On the local scene, he thanked Mayor Luttrell for being a partner in government and, while anticipating a good relationship with Mayor Strickland, made a point of expressing his appreciation for former Mayor Wharton, another absentee on Friday.

Mickell Lowery had opened up things Friday with a suggestion that the annual prayer breakfast might be continued, though in a scaled-down form. His father, when it came time to make final remarks, made a tentative effort at calling the roll of elected officials who were present, only to let that effort tail off when he realized that most of the Shelby County Commissioners, the group he started with, had already left the scene.

As for the future of the prayer breakfast, former Councilman Lowery put the question to those audience members who remained. “Should it be continued?” he asked. Most of those remaining applauded, in degrees ranging from the polite and perfunctory to the enthusiastic.

Presumably, we’ll find out next year.

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Wharton Has Big Crowd for Opening of Second Headquarters on Poplar

JB

The Mayor was feeling his oats on Saturfday.

What a difference a week makes!

Mayor A C Wharton’s opening of a campaign headquarters in Whitehaven last week was a presentable enough affair, and a necessary one, given that one of his two major opponents, Councilman Harold Collins, has an unmistakable presence there.

Btut the Mayor’s opening on Saturday of another headquarters on Poplar Avenue a week later was both quantitatively and qualitatively more ambitious and was beyond doubt a more resounding affair for the Mayor. For one thing, he was more forceful than he had been a week earlier, exuding a great deal of apparently unfeigned confidence.

Buoyed by crowd

This was important, given that the Mayor’s race might well be decided right there, in the Poplar Corridor, where Wharton’s other major opponent, well-funded Councilman Jim Strickland, has already demonstrated real strength.

Buoyed by a big, responsive crowd containing no few influential members, Wharton eschewed the kind of defensiveness that led him, at Whitehaven, to volunteer an unforced denial that his campaign was “ toxic’ to office-holders (thereby putting the idea in heads that may not have previously harbored it).

Too, the logistics on Saturday were far more favorable. As at Whitehaven, the Mayor’s rally was arranged outside, with rows of seating under a tent-roof for some, while others had to stand. But on Poplar there were more chairs, while spreading trees provided ample shade for those standing, and large fans on either side of the assembly kept a strong but gentle breeze circulating.

The rally area on Poplar, moreover, was reachable by just a step or two out the back door of an interior headquarters space that was multi-roomed and cavernous. So the large crowd had no trouble shifting back and forth, more or less compactly, and without discomfort.

How large was the crowd? In the hundreds, easily. The rally group outside numbered at least 200, pushing higher, and extrapolating from the fact that there had to be significant numbers who remained inside, a claim of between 300 and 400 could at least be entertained.

And Saturday’s crowd could fairly be described as racially diverse, much more so than the predominantly African-American one at Whitehaven had been (though Wharton described them both as if they had been veritable UN assemblies).

Different logistics

An article in this space regarding the Whitehaven rally originally estimated the crowd at that rally in and around the tent
[italics mine] to be between 50 and 75. To put it mildly, that figure was objected to, both immediately thereafter and on Saturday at the Poplar headquarters rally, where this reporter encountered an organized tag-team volley of complainants.

(High-ranking ones, too, including, on Saturday, the city’s First Lady, Ruby Wharton, from whom, however, I was actually able to extract a generous-sized smile. Fair trade, that.)

And, though I had indulged the good folks at Whartonville South by amending my account to include their own (carefully attributed) claim of 150-200, I continue to believe my original estimate was correct. (Look again at those italics overhead.)

There may have been a lot of coming and going at Whitehaven that was hard to encompass visually and difficult to enumerate, but the interior headquarters space there appeared to be about the size of a small studio apartment, and at no point did it contain what could be described as a throng.

And the distance from the front door of that modest office space in Whitehaven to the tented area where the rally itself was held was a bare asphalt area that, on HQ day, with temperatures approaching 100, came off as about as vast and unsheltered as Death Valley, California

It was hot on Saturday on Poplar Avenue, too, but not only were the logistics more inviting, so was the format of the rally. There was no elongated waiting-around period, as there had been at Whitehaven, and instead of the ten or so speakers preceding the Mayor’s advent at last week’s opening, there were only three or four on Saturday, most of them concise and well-spoken. (Among them was the ever-gracious co-chair Lois Stockton, inadvertently overlooked at a previous year’s Wharton opening, but a solid plus on Saturday.)

The number of elected officials lending support for the Mayor on Saturday was somewhat larger than it had been a week earlier, and as easy to list, inasmuch as, at one point or another, they were all acknowledged by emcee Bobby White (or “Roberto Blanco,” as he was re-dubbed for the occasion by Councilman Edmund Ford Jr, one of Saturday’s speakers.)

Hot rhetoric

Things got started on Saturday with something of a stem-winder by Mike Carpenter; County Commissioner Reginald Milton had a passably good speech, too, concluding, “We don’t need a new mayor. We got a mayor!”.

On hand were: Municipal Judge Tarik Sugarmon, Council members Wanda Halbert and Ford, state Representatives Barbara Cooper and G.A. Hardaway; County Commissioners Milton, Van Turner, and Willie Brooks; and Probate Judge Kathleen Gomes.

Especially considering that Mayor Wharton had just been through a somewhat devastating week, the key point of which was having to deal with the shooting death and funeral of MPD officer Sean Bolton, he summoned up a collection of exhortations that were no less spirited for being disjointed.

A sampling:

“I know it’s hot out there…[but]we are going to turn op the A C!,,,,[With] people just melting in the sweltering heat of joblessness and hopelessness, why would you turn off the A C?….I think that’s the time your turn it up, and that’s exactly what we’re going to do on October 8!”

The Mayor distinguished between his opponents as “thermomerter people, who tell you what the temperature is” and himself, a “thermostat” who knew how to calibrate things back into balance. The choice, he said, was between “those who crow about problems and talk about a future of doom” and a Mayor who had brought 10,000 new jobs and could “get off his butt” and go get seed money for the city without raising taxes.

“What’s wrong with going to Bloomberg and getting $5 million? What’s wrong with getting on a plane and bringing the money back here?…What’s wrong with saying, ‘Governor, you’ve got $6 million that you cannot spend’” and talking
Bill Haslam into funneling that much to Memphis?

Wharton boasted of recent pieces in The Huffington Post and the Chicago Tribune that called Memphis a “city of promise,” and he concluded with his patented rainbow note: “We can’t work as black folks, we can’t work as white folks, we can’t work as brown folks, we’ve got to work together” toward “the Destiny of One Memphis!”

To repeat: Disjointed but spirited. Somehow, it came off as a tour de force.

And more important than the words was the image of a man of passion and personality (which is what A C Wharton, at his best, is on the stump), determined to see both his campaign and his mayoralty through and, crowd-wise, able to match, if not beat, opponent Jim Strickland, who had pulled a large but more homogeneous crowd of his own at a headquarters opening on Poplar three weeks ago.

“You tell me somebody else who could turn out a crowd like this on a day like this!” Wharton had said in his remarks. And it was no idle boast.

The message on Saturday was clear: Whoever turns this man out will have to go some.

Monday night debate

• Meanwhile, push will come to shove for five mayoral candidates — Wharton, Strickland, Collins, Mike Williams, and Sharon Webb — on Monday night at 7 p,m. at the National Civil Rights Museum for the next in what will be a spate of mayoral debates between now and October 8.

This one is sponsored by WMC-TV, Action News 5; the NCRM; the League of Women Voters; and the Memphis association of Black Journalists..