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Near Relations

When you chair the Memphis City Council, an institution more or less always under the media microscope, you’re going to command a decent share of attention. When your surname is Swearengen, a name that was memorably attached to a judge and to a previous well-known council figure — the late Jim Swearengen and Barbara Swearengen Ware, respectively, both now deceased but still venerated — that’s going to further enhance your public profile.

And when, on top of all that, you have active connections to the city’s power establishment, you’re in good shape to run a political race in Shelby County.

The advantage is magnified to the degree that people don’t know much about your opponent.

Just telling it like it is: City Council member Jamita Swearengen owns such an advantage, even though she’s running against an incumbent for the office of Circuit Court clerk, an obscure but well-paid position.

At a fundraiser in Swearengen’s honor at the new Hein Park home of consultant Steven Reid on Monday, attendees were asked what they knew of her opponent. Most of them didn’t know the person’s name or even the fact that she was indeed the incumbent, a fact that usually favors a candidate. “Is it something Ford?” one normally well-informed person asked. And her unstated meaning was clear: must be one of the unknown candidates (of whom there have been many) who happen to be surnamed Ford, but are not members of the well-connected inner-city power clan of that name, yet hope to profit from the coincidence.

No, the incumbent Circuit Court clerk is named Gipson. Temiika D. Gipson. She has been in office for four years, having defeated in her party primary Del Gill, a long-term rank-and-file Democrat who has ever been the bridesmaid in election races, and then gone on to edge out GOP incumbent Tom Leatherwood in the 2018 “blue wave” general election. Not only does she hope to profit from some name recognition herself, she doubtless anticipates some spillover on behalf of her daughter Arriell Gipson, who is running in the Democratic primary for county clerk against incumbent Wanda Halbert and two others — William Stovall and Mondell Williams.

For the record, there are Republican candidates for both of these races as well — Soheila Kail for Circuit Court clerk and Jeff Jacobs for county clerk.

• Though a band was on hand for the event and there was a diverse, concert-sized crowd, Steve Mulroy and Lee Harris were not really enacting a do-si-do in this shot from last Thursday night’s opening of Mulroy’s headquarters at Highland and Poplar. They were merely exchanging possession of the microphone. But Mulroy, a Democratic candidate for district attorney general, and Harris, who is running for re-election as Shelby County mayor, are mutual supporters and prominent at each other’s events. Julien Harris, the mayor’s son, at right, was an appreciative audience member.

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Citing New State Law, Councilman Wary of Plastic Bag Ban


One Memphis City Council member is hesitant to move forward with a plastic bag ban here after a state law passed in April prohibiting cities from regulating the use of them.

Councilman Worth Morgan said the “merits of the discussion are an interesting topic,” but the conversation should be had with state legislators: “We’re having it in the wrong place in a city council committee room and not in Nashville.”

Morgan said the newly-passed state law that bans local governments from regulating the “use, disposition, or sale of an auxiliary container” prohibits all local regulation of plastic bags and that a “ban constitutes a regulation.”

“It would be my preference that if we want to have this conversation, we drive to Nashville,” Morgan said. “I think right now this ordinance doesn’t have a place in Memphis City Council.”

Councilman Berlin Boyd, a co-sponsor of the ordinance along with Chairman Kemp Conrad, told Morgan he “begs to differ” and that the council has an “obligation to do what you can as local legislators to try and circumvent what happens in Nashville.”

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“If we weren’t creative in our thinking about removing the Confederate statues, Nathan and his comrades would still be in our parks,” Boyd said. “We took the risk and did something and guess what? Those monuments are gone.

“We owe it to everyone. It’s our job to take risks. Give this a chance to try to make Memphis a green and clean city.”

The ban in question would prohibit the distribution of single-use plastic bags at checkouts in retail establishments with 2,000 square feet or more. Each violation of the ordinance would result in a $50 fine.

Boyd, who first brought forth the idea of plastic bag regulation in November, said the goal of the ban is to protect the environment and reduce overall waste, citing plastic-bag-riddled streets, waterways, and trees.

“Waterway protection is extremely important,” he said. “No matter what media outlet you’re looking at, our sea animals are basically inhaling and eating plastic bags.”

Boyd also said taxpayers pay between $2.5 and $3.5 million a year for plastic bag removal.

Dennis Lynch, chair of the Sierra Club in Memphis told the council he supports the ban, saying that plastic bags “encourage the throw-away society instead of getting people to recycle.”

He also noted environmental concerns similar to Boyd’s.

Councilwoman Robinson raised practical questions about the ban, like the effect it would have on elderly shoppers. She said for them plastic bags are easier to carry than large paper or reusable bags.

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“I don’t want us to make an environmental decision that has a negative impact on the people that actually live here,” Robinson said. “How are we going to make sure they have what they need?”

Robinson said the council should be “very thoughtful we don’t have any unintended consequences.”

Boyd said that is a conversation the council should be having anyway, as Kroger, which has more than a dozen stores here, plans to completely phase out plastic bags by 2025.

But, ultimately, Boyd said shoppers will have to make behavior changes. “People will have to adjust to it.”

Swearengen, echoing Robinson, voiced concerns from her constituents in Orange Mound who shop at the Midtown Kroger on Union. She said many don’t have cars and as a result, bike or use public transit to get there. It’s easier for them to carry plastic bags than paper bags when doing so, she said.

Swearengen noted that plastic bags can hang on the handlebars of a bike and that paper bags deteriorate in the rain.

To that, Councilwoman Gerre Currie said local organizations could provide cloth and other types of reusable bags.

“If this is something we are trying to do, the onus is on us to reach outside where we are sitting here and partner with organizations to provide free bags.”

The council is scheduled to take the second of three votes on the plastic bag ordinance Tuesday (today).

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Neighbors Question Cooper-Young SkyCop Camera Project

Preserve Cooper-Young/Facebook

SkyCop cameras could soon watch the streets of Cooper-Young and not everyone is happy about that.

A Tuesday-morning statement from the Cooper-Young Business Association (CYBA) said the board bought seven cameras from SCIT Technologies, Inc. last month. Two of those cameras will read license plates. If installed, all video and license plate information captured would go directly to the Memphis Police Department’s (MPD) Real Time Crime Center (RTCC).

The statement, from CYBA executive director Tamara Walker, said “this action is a direct result of the active and ongoing violent assaults that have been taking place in our business district over the last several months.”

In May, several men were robbed and beaten in the Young Avenue Deli parking lot, according to WREG. Two men left the bar and were heading to their car “when three vehicles pulled up. Men wearing bandannas and masks jumped out,” according to WREG, and one of the attacked men said the attackers had pistols and assault rifles. The men attacked and robbed another man before fleeing in their cars.

WREG

Last month, police told WREG that a man kidnapped and robbed a woman and then robbed an Uber Eats driver.

“We believe that these cameras, in addition, to the armed security patrol that businesses are hiring, new lighting that is being installed, fencing around property, regular clean up and maintenance, as well as individual business surveillance will bring an immediate impact on this violent activity happening in the business areas in our district,” Walker said in a statement.

However, some Cooper-Young residents say the SkyCop camera project was done without any feedback from the community and are urging residents to contact the CYBA and Memphis City Council member Jamita Swearengen to comment.

“If these blue blinking lights are able to deter crime along the business corridor, where do you think crime will spread if those arteries are watched?” asked Patrick Durkin, a Cooper-Young resident and adminstrator of the Preserve Cooper-Young Facebook page. “Is it out of the question that a would-be criminal may slink into the neighborhood and target residential streets because those in front of the businesses are being surveilled? Is 24/7 government-recorded surveillance that may force criminals onto our residential streets the answer to summertime crime upticks?”

WREG

The CYBA said the cameras will be placed at ”highly-utilized intersections on Cooper Street, Young Avenue and Central Avenue.” Durkin said he was told the cameras would be placed close to East Parkway and Young, Blythe and Young, Cooper and Young, Walker and Cooper, Evelyn and Cooper, Central and Cooper, and Central and Cox.

The CYBA said “these cameras will be pointed at the street. The video will only be used by detectives at Memphis Police Department to solve crimes. The CYBA will not have access to this video. Video will have a 30-day, continuous record.” Walker said she expected the cameras to be up in 30 days.

“How does this look to visitors to our neighborhood?” Durkin asked on Facebook. “Do you feel more comfortable living your best life under MPD’s microscope or is it a signal that you have now entered a crime-ridden neighborhood where at any moment you may become a victim?”

Before the cameras can be installed, the funds from the CYBA to the MPD for them must be approved by the city council. The council is slated to meet again on Tuesday, July 16th.

“If you have comments regarding this, please contact the CYBA at cyba@bellsouth.net or (Cooper-Young’s) councilwoman Jamita Swearengen, Jamita.Swearengen@memphistn.gov,” Durkin wrote. ”Cooper-Young: historically hip and now and forever blinking blue.”