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OSCAR H. BLAYTON: THIS WAY TO ‘THE GREAT EGRESS PAGE 4 DAYTONATIMES.COM
NOW UPDATED DAILY!
YOUR VOTE COUNTS!
YOUR BALLOT MUST BE RETURNED TO THE VOLUSIA COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF ELECTIONS OFFICE ON OR BEFORE MAY 21 BY 7 P.M. TO BE COUNTED.
@DAYTONATIMES
MAY 9 - MAY 15, 2019
YEAR 44 NO. 19
www.daytonatimes.com
Time to move Daytona Beach forward BY CHARLES W. CHERRY II DAYTONA TIMES PUBLISHER
VOTE
FOR
HALFPENNY SALES TAX
Forward ever, backward never. – Kwame Nkrumah, the founder of modern Ghana, West Africa Your humble writer has spent weeks advocating for passage of the half-cent sales tax that I believe is critically important to the city’s future. I stepped into the so-called “lions’ dens” of local radio talk shows and online to make the case that it is time to fix infrastructure in Volusia County’s Black communities that have been ignored and neglected for more than a century. I’ve pointed out the disproportionate pain Black Daytonans and Volusians continue to suffer as a consequence of inconvenient local historical facts.
And what’s been the response from some (but not all) of our mostly beachside fellow citizens? I’ve been accused of playing the “race card,” making it a “Black or White issue” when one doesn’t exist. I’ve been accused of being a “carpetbagger’’ who doesn’t even live or vote in Daytona. (I live and vote here.) I’ve been called “a race baiter” and other names, then banned from a local Facebook group whose purported goal is to openly discuss issues affecting our county. (Free speech and independent thinking must be more dangerous in Volusia County than I thought. It must be terrible to be so mentally and emotionally fragile.) There are historical reasons that we find ourselves where we
DAYTONA TIMES / 40TH ANNIVERSARY
Kirksey recognized, LPGA protest
are in 2019, some facts that many of our beachside friends (and some enemies) are unable or unwilling to recognize and accept: • Northern transplants must understand that Daytona is a Southern town with a Southern history that affects them, whether they like it or not. Florida was just as racist as Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia and other notorious Southern states. Racial segregation was REAL in the lives of any Black person 60 years old or older in Volusia County. Don’t let Florida’s sunshine, “The World’s Most Famous Beach,” and the occasional orange blossom fragrance fool you. Just one example. To our beachside friends, ask your neighbors about how and why the Volusia County School Board fought school desegregation for
almost a decade before putting the burden of school “equality’’ on the backs of Black families here by splitting communities between Mainland and Seabreeze High Schools after shutting down Campbell High. That’s just one way that previous elected officials made decisions decades ago that affect our lives today. There are too many other historical decisions to count, so I’ll only list a few. Blacks all over the South were forced to live only in flood-prone, undesirable areas. Example: Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune built Bethune-Cookman College (now University) 115 years ago on Daytona Beach’s former city dump. (The university now injects $251 milSee TAX , Page 2
Centenarian Jessie Corbitt shares life experiences BY ANDREAS BUTLER DAYTONA TIMES
Jessie Corbitt smiled, sat and jumped around a little in his home on Tuesday morning, just two days after his 100th birthday. His family threw him a birthday party in the Joe Piggotte Community Center in South Daytona on May 3 with over 200 people in attendance. Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood, Daytona Beach Zone City Commissioners Danette Henry (Zone 5) and Ruth Tragor (Zone1) attended, and the City of Daytona Beach gave him a proclamation. “I feel good. I feel like I am 16 years old. I work in my garden. I can do what I need to do. I can drive my car to Walmart, church, etc.,” Corbitt told the Daytona Times.
Cab driver, entrepreneur Corbitt was born on May 5, 1919 in Abbeville, Alabama.
“I was a country boy. We lived on a farm out in the country. We were farmers. I had friends who lived downtown,’’ he noted. Corbitt is a retired businessman, cab driver and builder/construction worker. He owned his own cab business called “Lucky Star Cabs” from 1946-1994. “I enjoyed driving the cab. I was first on Second Avenue for many years. I made many friends too,” said Corbitt. He recalled what it was like driving decades ago in Daytona Beach. “When I first drove cabs in Daytona, Black drivers could take White passengers anywhere but we couldn’t be stationed on the beach side. Blacks couldn’t really go beach side unless working,” he reflected.
Building days Corbitt mentioned how he See 100, Page 2
PHOTO BY DUANE C. FERNANDEZ SR./HARDNOTTSPHOTOGRAPHY.COM
Jessie Corbitt, center, celebrates his 100th birthday with loved ones on May 3 at the Piggotte Community Center in South Daytona.
Clergy host informational meeting on proposed sales tax
Twenty-two years ago in 1997, the Daytona Times reported on Daytona Beach native Dr. Otis Kirksey receiving the Teacher of the Year award from Florida A&M University, and a protest at a Ladies Professional Golfers Association tournament protesting lack of diversity in donations and on the LPGA board.
ALSO INSIDE
BY ANDREAS BUTLER DAYTONA TIMES
Office mailed out the ballot for the special election on May 1.
Residents in Daytona’s Black community got one last spiel on a proposed countywide half-cent sales tax. The Daytona Beach Black Clergy Alliance hosted a meeting on Monday where city officials explained the tax to the public at Allen Chapel A.M.E. Church. The tax is designed to raise revenue for capital improvement projects, including roads, bridges, sidewalks, stormwater projects, etc. The Supervisor of Elections
‘Very informative’ Registered votes are to fill out the ballot in favor of or against; sign it and mail back to the elections office no later than May 21 at 7 p.m. Ballots can be dropped off at any city or town hall across the county and the Supervisor of Elections Office. Voters can have someone drop off ballots for them. If a registered voter did not receive a ballot in the mail, the
COMMENTARY: DR. E. FAYE WILLIAMS: IMAGINE A NATION OF EQUALITY, JUSTICE FOR ALL | PAGE 4 SPORTS: DAVID HOWARD RETURNS TO SPRUCE CREEK AS HEAD BASKETBALL COACH | PAGE 5
See MEETING, Page 2