The New Tri-State Defender - May 11-17, 2023

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May 11 - 17, 2023

VOL. 72, No. 19

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Residency issue still a muddled picture in the mayor’s race by James Coleman

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

The already-serpentine pending lawsuit over how long a person must live in Memphis to be eligible to run for mayor took another loop this week when the Shelby County Election Commission was dropped as a defendant. The subtraction leaves the city administration and Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland as the only defendants in the residency dispute. Memphis City Council Attorney Allan Wade filed notice with the Chancery Court on Monday (May 8) asking the Election Commission to be “non-suited.” The commission will officially be dropped after Chancellor JoeDae Jenkins, who has jurisdiction over the lawsuit, signs the notice. Wade’s action came after attorneys for the lawsuit’s original complainants, Memphis Chapter NAACP President Van Turner Jr., and Shelby County Sheriff Floyd Bonner Jr., asked that the Election CommisMemphis City sion be dismissed. Council Atty. Bonner and Tanner are Allan Wade seeking to become mayor of Memphis. Neither meets the five-year requirement. Jenkins brought the city into the lawsuit last week after Jennifer Sink, the city’s chief legal advisor, said the city’s position is that the fiveyear residency requirement still is in effect. Sink’s opinion concurred with an opinion by private attorney Robert Myers, a former Election Commission chairman. The issue took another twist Monday when Wade filed a “cross complaint,” saying that a 1996 ordinance ended the five-year residency

SEE MAYOR ON PAGE 2

State Rep. Antonio Parkinson addresses community residents who came to hear elected officials as well as be heard by them. (Photos: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises/The New Tri-State Defender)

Sharon Mourning, also known as “Mama Dee,” urges decision-makers to use mental health funding for the facilities that are already operating.

Town Hall amplifies concerns about guns, crime, safety, mental health

by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

A town hall meeting on crime and gun reform Tuesday (May 9) night gave community residents an opportunity to share their concerns with elected officials. “I wanted our constituents to understand what we are up against in Nashville with some of the crazy gun measures being proposed,” said State Rep. Antonio Parkinson, the event’s organizer. Parkinson added, “But mental health and crime were on many peoples’ minds. They had a chance to speak out, and we needed to hear some things.” Sharon “Mama Dee” Mourning made her feelings known when she asked, “So, ask for more money, and then what? We’re trying to get more money, and for what? What about

“Instead of trying to get something new, fund what we already have in place. Make sure those places have the money to treat our loved ones who need help.” — Sharon “Mama Dee” Mourning all the millions and millions of dollars we’ve gotten in grants for mental health, and nothing ever changes. “Instead of trying to get something new, fund what we already have in place. Make sure those facilities have the money to treat our loved ones.” Mourning is the organizer of “Ride of Tears,” a nonprofit that arranges a symbolic,

rolling memorial with a hearse and vehicles following through a neighborhood, where a child has been killed by a stray bullet. Mourning was among the nearly 200 attendees at the Breath of Life Christian Center in Raleigh determined to have their say. “We’ve been getting grants and funding over the years,” Mourning said. “So where is the money going? Year after year, we’ll just keep asking for more and more. But nothing changes. “I took my son into a facility, and they told me they were going to send him back home in a cab. They could clearly see he was a danger to himself and to others. We don’t know what else to do when they won’t keep them for treatment. It’s frustrating” Mourning’s son is a recovering heroin addict. But the memory of him being turned

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MSCS to reset timeline for new superintendent by Laura Testino Chalkbeat

Shining stars... Earth, Wind & Fire, the iconic band founded by the late Maurice White, who was born in Memphis, put on a crowd-pleasing performance at the Memphis in May Beale Street Music Festival. (Photo: Warren Roseborough/The New Tri-State Defender) For more on the festival, see Lifestyle & Culture, Page 6.

The search for a new leader for Memphis-Shelby County Schools looks like it won’t be done anytime soon. The school board, which met Tuesday amid sharp divisions over how to complete the selection of the district’s next superintendent, is scheduled to meet again on Friday to discuss a revised timeline for the search. Board member Joyce Dorse-Coleman, who is now co-leading the search with Stephanie Love, said the continued pause through the final weeks of the school year would allow the board to focus on its budget, student testing, and graduations, and to address community concerns about the search process. “I emphasize that we are not stopping the search for superintendent,” Dorse-Coleman said. The board had once planned to have a successor to former Superintendent Joris Ray

chosen by the spring and on the job this summer, before the start of Joyce Dorsethe 2023-24 school year. Coleman But it is unlikely to meet those deadlines. The search got derailed last month, when several board members raised objections about how the process was wrapping up, just as the outside search firm presented its initial slate of finalists. Board Chair Althea Greene decided Stephanie to halt the process while Love board members ironed out their differences. That decision led to a shuffling of the top contenders, but none of the remaining candidates have been publicly interviewed, and no

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