Council Quickies: Brookhill Village, Budget and Break Point

Ryan Pitkin, Monday, June 12, 2023

Charlotte City Council kept its meeting short and sweet on Monday, unanimously approving the Fiscal Year 2024 budget, hearing an update on Brookhill Village and moving forward with a few other notable projects.

On the Agenda:

  • Brookhill Village Update
  • Budget Adoption
  • Eastland and Project Break Point Funding
  • Affordable Housing Projects

Brookhill Village

Monday night’s meeting began with Brookhill Village, which hadn’t been discussed by council in over a year. A recommended city/county collaborative investment — $3.5 million each — would help fund extensive renovations at the site and retain housing for 78 currently occupied households.

Griffin Brothers Companies has not yet finalized the development plans for the parts of the property expected to include market-rate, mixed-use development, but city/county investment would ensure that 100 housing units remain affordable/transitional through 2049.

Seventy-eight of the 100 affordable units would be legacy housing for those currently living there, with rents currently averaging $466, and the remaining 22 would be transitional workforce housing run by The Harvest Center.

The city’s piece of the investment would come from ARPA funding.

Budget Adoption

The first order of business on Monday was to adopt the $3.3-billion FY 2024 budget. You can learn more about the details of the budget here.

Although there is no property tax increase, the adopted budget does include fee increases for solid waste, storm water, and water services. Increases for the typical customer equate to: Solid Waste ($0.72 monthly increase), Storm Water ($0.43 monthly increase), and Water ($3.10 monthly increase).

“This is going to be the last budget I vote on but it will be the first budget I vote against,” said Braxton Winston. He added that the pay raises for city employees were “nominal” and won’t match inflation. “It’s going to be harder for people to live in this city this year.”

Council approved the budget in a 9-1 vote; Winston was the only dissenter and Ed Driggs was not present at the meeting.

Continue reading the full story here.

Workers spoke. Did Charlotte listen? City will give some a big boost in pay

Genna Contino, Monday, June 12, 2023, 9:04 pm EDT

Charlotte City Workers Union members marched from Marshall Park to the government center to demand 12% raises last month.

It may have worked: The city agreed to a compromise this month to an initially proposed 6% raise and gave its final OK Monday.

As part of Monday’s $3.3 billion Charlotte city budget adoption, minimum salaries for city employees jump from about $40,000 to $46,200. The city’s lowest-paid employees will see fruits of the agreement beginning in January. People higher on the pay scale, though, will see shallower increases.

Mayor Pro Tem Braxton Winston, who’s running for NC labor commissioner, was the sole opposing vote for the budget beginning July 1 and covering the 2023-2024 fiscal year.

“This is going to be the last budget I vote on, but it’s going to be the first budget I vote against,” Winston said. “There’s more that we could’ve done this year, more that we should’ve done this year.”

The budget drops property taxes to a revenue-neutral rate, 26.04 cents per $100 in valuation, which means the city won’t bring in more money from property taxes than economic growth provides. Last week, Mecklenburg commissioners voted to hike the county’s tax rate 1.6 cents above revenue neutral for the upcoming fiscal year.

Councilwoman LaWana Mayfield supported the budget, but said she explored options with the city manager for a one-cent increase.

“What is that going to do for services when we still have almost 100 people a day moving to the city?” Mayfield said. “We worked hard on (the budget) and yes we can do better.”

City Manager Marcus Jones warned the council in May that future tax increases will come if the city wants to keep up its level of services and initiatives.

Each employee will receive at least a $3,600 per year pay increase in fiscal year 2024 under the new city budget, which includes adjustments for all full-time hourly employees.

The budget also includes pay for on-call Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department officers and maintains historical pay parity between police and firefighters — something fire employees requested during a public hearing.

Continue reading the full story here.

These 10 Black LGBTQ candidates could make history in this year’s midterms

Monday, February 14, 2022, 12:00 pm ET – 01:30 pm ET

The 2022 midterms could turn out to be the most historic election ever for Black LGBTQ candidates.

While the current number of out LGBTQ elected officials remains far below what would constitute fair or proportional representation (only 0.2% of elected officials nationwide are LGBTQ), there remains an even greater disparity for Black LGBTQ representation.

Related: It is time to start celebrating Black asexuality in media

According to LGBTQ Victory Institute’s Out for America map, which shows known out LGBTQ elected officials at every level of government, there are currently just 101 Black out LGBTQ elected officials in the United States. 17 states have zero Black out LGBTQ elected officials: Alabama, Connecticut, Idaho, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin, Wyoming, Utah and Vermont.

While there is a lot of work yet to be done, there is also tremendous hope – this midterm cycle, we have a historic number of Black LGBTQ candidates on the ballot.

Here are some of the most exciting candidates to keep an eye on this cycle.

 

Malcolm Kenyatta

As the first out LGBTQ person of color and one of the youngest members elected to the Pennsylvania General Assembly, Kenyatta has championed proposals to address generational poverty, workers’ rights and health care.

Now, he hopes to make history once again and become the first out LGBTQ person of color elected to the U.S. Senate.

 

Everton Blair Jr.

Blair is currently Chairman of the Gwinnett County Board of Education, Georgia’s largest school system. He is the son of Jamaican immigrants and taught in Georgia’s public schools before running for office.

He is currently running for Georgia State School Superintendent. If elected, Blair would be the first out LGBTQ person ever elected statewide in Georgia.

 

Keturah Herron

Herron is running in a special election for the Kentucky State House of Representatives. She would be the first out LGBTQ person ever elected to the Kentucky House.

Before deciding to run for public office, she was a policy strategist for the Kentucky ACLU. During her time at the ACLU, she successfully advocated for a variety of pieces of legislation, including achieving bipartisan passage of Breonna’s Law, which bans no-knock warrants in the city of Louisville.

 

Erin Maye Quade

Now running for the Minnesota state Senate, Maye Quade is a former Minnesota state Representative who was first elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives in 2016. While there, her record as a social justice advocate grew after she held a 24-hour sit-in on the House floor to protest inaction on gun violence.

She would be the first out LGBTQ woman and first Black woman ever elected to the Minnesota state Senate.

 

Venton Jones

Jones is currently the Founder and CEO of the Southern Black Policy and Advocacy Network, an organization working to improve health, social and economic conditions impacting Black communities in the South. Given the sobering reality that Black Americans are still disproportionally impacted by HIV, Jones has been a long-time advocate for HIV prevention. In 2011, he was recognized by President Barack Obama for his HIV advocacy.

He is currently running for the Texas House of Representatives for District 100, which is located in Dallas and is a Black-majority community. Jones would be the first out LGBTQ Black man ever elected to the Texas legislature.

 

Jolanda Jones

An experienced member of the Houston city council and the Houston independent school board, Jones is running for the Texas state House of Representatives. She’s an attorney who worked to reform the criminal justice system.

She will be the first out Black LGBTQ woman elected to the Texas legislature.

 

Pat Spearman

Spearman began her career with the U.S. Army, where she served for nearly three decades. In 2012, she ran for office and was elected to the Nevada state Senate representing Las Vegas. While in the Senate, she has held various leadership roles, including Chief Majority Whip, Chair for the Committee on Commerce and Labor, and Vice-Chair of the Committee on Health and Human Services.

Now, she’s running to be the next North Las Vegas Mayor. She would be the first out LGBTQ mayor of North Las Vegas, and one of the few Black out LGBTQ mayors in the country.

 

LaWana Mayfield

Mayfield is a seasoned activist with experience fighting to end racial bias and homophobia in Charlotte, North Carolina and nationally. In 2011, she was first elected to the Charlotte City Council. She is currently running for an at-large Charlotte City Council seat.

If elected, she would be the first out LGBTQ person ever elected citywide in Charlotte.

 

Michele Rayner

Civil rights and social justice attorney Michele Rayner made history in 2020 when she became the first out LGBTQ Black woman to be elected to the Florida legislature. Before joining the state legislature, she was a public defender in Hillsborough County.

Now, she is running for the U.S. House of Representatives. She would be the first out Black woman and first out LGBTQ member of Congress from Florida.

 

Mike Simmons

Simmons is currently running for reelection to the Illinois state Senate. During his tenure, he worked to pass a variety of pieces of legislation with a strong equity and equality lens, including the Jett Hawkins Act, which prohibits schools from discriminating against Black students based on their hair.

When he was appointed to the Senate in 2021, he became the first out gay state Senator in Illinois history, the first ever Black state Senator to represent the north lakefront, and the first Ethiopian-American to serve in either chamber of the Illinois General Assembly. If he wins this year, he will continue to be a strong voice for LGBTQ citizens in Illinois and nationally.

LGBTQ Victory Fund works to achieve and sustain equality by increasing the number of openly LGBTQ elected officials at all levels of government while ensuring they reflect the diversity of those they serve. Since 1991, Victory Fund has helped thousands of openly LGBTQ candidates win local, state and federal elections.

Ensuring Equality in 2017

The lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender, or LGBT, community experienced unprecedented attacks in the 2016 state legislative sessions, yet momentum toward full legal and lived equality continues to build. With popular support for nondiscrimination protections for LGBT people cutting across political lines, and yet with the reality of a more challenging federal and state legislative landscape

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