The New Tri-State Defender - August 3-9, 2023

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August 3 - 9, 2023

VOL. 72, No. 31

www.tsdmemphis.com

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Justice Dept. set to probe Memphis police practices after Tyre Nichols death by Adrian Sainz and Jonathan Mattise The Associate Press

The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating the patterns or practices of the police department in Memphis, nearly seven months after the violent

beating of Tyre Nichols by five officers after a traffic stop. Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Civil Rights Division made the announcement in Memphis last Thursday (July 27). Federal authorities will use the investigative tool to look collectively at the Memphis Police Department’s use of force

and stops, searches and arrests, and whether it engages in discriminatory policing. She said that in even in the majority Black city of Memphis, the police department may be disproportionately focusing its traffic enforcement on

SEE JUSTICE ON PAGE 2

Kristen Clarke, the Assistant U.S. Attorney General for the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division, speaks during a news conference on Thursday, July 27, 2023 in Memphis, Tenn. The U.S. Department of Justice said Thursday it is investigating the patterns or practices of the Memphis Police Department, seven months after the violent beating of Tyre Nichols by five officers after a traffic stop. (AP Photo/Adrian Sainz)

Inside Region One Health’s decision to close Guthrie Primary Care

Gear Up Day signals new MSCS school year is near

by James Coleman

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

TSD Newsroom Back in the day it simply was Registration Day. Now it’s Gear Up Day and the aim is to help families prepare with the first day of the new school year on the horizon. At Treadwell International Community School on the middle school side, Brandon Hill is the principal. He was ready for Gear Up Day on Tuesday. “We had an opportunity … for our parents to be able to come in and (for us to) reassure our children what we want to do. We wanted to put a twist to it … make it into a community block party, where our families can receive the services they need as well,” said Hill. That meant multiple agencies on site “to support our families, our students, to provide them shots, dental care, healthcare, all the way to assisting our parents with jobs and things of that magnitude,” said hill. “We also have free haircuts, food trucks, bounce houses, all the different components that’s needed for our families. And why is this important for us? “Because we know our students come in for academic achievement, but if we don’t service the entire child, then we ain’t gonna have success for this student to be a well-rounded citizen later on and down the road. So, on this day here, we have an opportunity to really put forth our best effort and not only support our children, but our families as well, our community.” Hill said it’s important that “all of our stakeholders have opportunity to come meet each other often. … because we actually (have) a community school where we have a community resource center and a grocery store that also assists our families on a daily basis. And so, we are just here to really make sure we continue to motivate, uplift,

SEE SCHOOL ON PAGE 2

Jason Carr, the principal of the elementary side of Treadwell International Community School, was fully engaged on Gear Up Day. Gear Up Day at Treadwell International Community School also provided services such as free haircuts. (Photos: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises/ The New Tri-State Defender)

Topic priorities for the 2023 school year See Perspective Page 4

Despite the protests and pleas of North Memphis residents at Monday’s (Aug.31) Shelby County Commission meeting, the epitaph for the Regional One Health’s Guthrie Primary Care facility was sealed. Once an anchor in an underserved community, the location’s Klondike community operations are being consolidated three miles further east with Hollywood Primary Care at 2500 Peres Rd. The closure was the decision of the Shelby County Healthcare Corporation. Its members are nominated by commissioners. “There’s actually a broader array of services available at Hollywood Primary Care. We have adult services, we have pediatrics, we have a very robust women’s health services there, that includes a nice compliment of midwives,” offered Regional One’s chief administrative officer Tish Towns. “When you look at the two sites and the proximity, the robust offering at Hollywood is much more significant than what we’re able to offer at Guthrie.” Although the commission has no oversight regarding the decision, the residents’ sentiments were emblematic of the frustration residents in underserved neighborhoods face daily regarding a lack of basic services, or services closing or moving further away. The closure boils down to numbers. Traffic at the Guthrie facility at 1064 Breedlove St. dwindled over the years. With 190-200 current patients, its three providers averaged three patients per day. Along with their providers, most patients affected by the closure are expected to transition to the Holly-

SEE CLINIC ON PAGE 2

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