For so many of us, the weekend is a time for rest, reflection, and faith. As I reflect on last night, I have faith that Nashville and Nashvillians can do better together. But the healing will be hard.
I came up in a protest movement, when America was waging unjust, preemptive wars. And the people I joined in protest were committed to non-violent resistance.
Non-violent resistance has an incomparable power.
I grew up in a city whose protest movement was non-violent. Sadly, this year’s “Walk in Love” event, commemorating the silent march to the courthouse in the wake of the bombing of Z. Alexander Looby’s home that showed the power of Diane Nash, was canceled because of #COVID19.
Last night’s violence was no walk in love.
The Justice for Jocques coalition occupied #MetroCouncil non-violently and made us more accessible and transparent.
The @OversightNow coalition organized and organized and organized some more and had their very work made all the more important by another officer-involved shooting as they continued to organize—non-violently.
The anger and pain people are feeling is unignorable, but it’s also clear that some people were ready to co-opt that anger and pain and simply destroy things.
I intend to go forward doing what I can to acknowledge the anger and pain—often derived from justifiable fear and profound injustice.
But with an awareness of what so many have accomplished through the power of non-violence, I can’t celebrate last night’s violent response to lingering injustices.
I hope to walk in love with the leaders, the organizers, and the people we all serve trying to build a more just, more equitable, more trustworthy Nashville.
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Like many Nashvillians, I just received this postcard reminding me of new water rates taking effect Jan 1, 2021.
The postcard implicates #MetroCouncil in approving this plan. That’s not the whole story, which is an important one.
#MetroCouncil actually serves as a local utility board for @NashvilleMWS, which has no separate independent board of directors. For _years_, MWS was informing mayors of increasing fiscal strain. And for years, mayors told them not to tell Council.
Meanwhile, @TNCOT was _also_ telling Nashville’s mayors about an increasingly severe issue with our utility’s finances. These messages _also_ never reached #MetroCouncil.
(We have since resolved this so this should not happen again.)
4 years ago, at a @NOAH_Action meeting, I asked @DaronHall7 if this was possible. He entertained my question in good faith and asked for time to explore it, which he and his staff did very responsibly.
Today is a huge moment: we have ended private prisons in Nashville.
En route, we made sure that any future contracts would have improved transparency and monitoring and that #MetroCouncil would be empowered to review future private contracts.
If you want to see how thoroughly @NashSheriff evaluated the transition process, they worked hard on a detailed report that assessed both cost and risk:
With yesterday’s departure of Audra Ladd from the mayor’s office, following the departure of ECD director Jamari Brown in December, we effectively have no @Nashville_ECD.
This is truly troubling to me in the middle of a pandemic.
I’m here to tell you that the single biggest thing I hear from anxious Nashvillians about what they want right now is income. Which means work. Which means jobs.
Right now, we have no one focused on attracting, recruiting, and retaining jobs in Nashville.
There are industries that are thriving. Does it make sense to try to recruit a specific industry or company to Nashville right now that would be a good short-term and long-term fit? I wish we had someone doing the analysis to make that determination!
Last week, our family decided, with full participation of our 9yo in the discussion, to return to school in person as soon as @MetroSchools offers it for 4th grade.
Why? A few reasons.
Principally, in a household with an evidence-based pediatrician, we’re attentive to the American Academy of Pediatrics recommendation:
The part in bold is this: “the AAP strongly advocates that all policy considerations for the coming school year should start with a goal of having students physically present in school.”
This #LaborDay, I’m thinking about Gustavo Enrique Ramirez, a 16yo who fell to his death on a Nashville construction site that lacked sufficient safety standards.
Over the past 5 years, we’ve had too many injuries and deaths on construction sites in Nashville, including in District 19. We can do better.
How do I know? Because last term, we passed the “Do Better” bill. Transparency, including safety records, with access to public dollars improves worker safety.