Wade on Birmingham

Wade on November 2009

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

A look back at all things and people and events 2009 …

Video: Mary Buckelew gets probation
instead of jail time: “Justice was served today.”

Nov. 2 | Our Vote 2009 resumed coverage as a special election for mayor of Birmingham was set. As each of the 14 candidates announced, as each forum and town hall emerged, we had the info. And still, the campaign continues …

Nov. 3 | Birmingham looks to Austin for a way to spur badly needed economic development. Can the city and the Birmingham Business Alliance match the Texas metropolis’ success?

Nov. 4 | Do Birmingham’s nonprofit organizations and their volunteers deserve awards? YP Roundtable thinks so, but we call it “selfishly egotistically uncharitable.”

Nov. 6 | A Wade on Birmingham exclusive: How Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival went from being in debt to $20,000 in the black. All it took was budget cuts, fast fund-raising and more ticket sales.

Nov. 6 | ABC’s “Supernanny” visits Hayden to help a family of five with discipline problems. One household down, many many more to go.

Nov. 12 | Speaking of discipline … Former Jefferson County Commission president Mary Buckelew escaped with a slap on the wrist, or 3 years probation and $20,000 fine for lying to a grand jury. She had faced 12 to 18 months in prison.

Nov. 18 | HealthSouth chief executive officer Jay Grinney says the way forward for the city and county is combined government, along with the Birmingham Business Alliance’s economic development plan. He was a keynote speaker at the Birmingham Economic Summit.

Nov. 18 | Birmingham took a big bite out of crime in 2009, with a 12 percent drop in the first three quarters. Despite the effort, the city still placed seventh nationally in city crime rankings.

Nov. 23 | Campaign oddity exhibit A: “Cooper Rap.” Exhibit B: Candidate arrested for disorderly conduct at a bar.

Nov. 24 | A council coup, of sorts. Roderick Royal becomes incoming city council’s new president and interim mayor, ending Carole Smitherman’s short tenure.

Nov. 30 | Two calendars, A Picture of Health and Brave Beauties, raise money for charity. Two weeks later, the cover model for “A Picture of Health” died from ovarian cancer.

See all of our November coverage.

• • •

Haiku flashback

the iron bowl in 17 syllables (Nov. 26)

Tradition, empty
malls, rivalry, crimson white,
orange blue, braggin’ rights.

• • •

365 days of Birmingham’s best and worst: Wade on 2009

Vote 2009: Last-minute thoughts on a hurry-up mayoral election

Monday, December 7th, 2009

Birmingham to choose from 13 candidates Tuesday

For the third time this year, Birmingham voters will visit the polls. Tuesday’s special election focuses on mayor, an office suddenly open after Larry Langford’s federal conviction in October.

Wade on Birmingham - Vote 2009We have found that 6 weeks is barely enough time to have an election, much less evaluate more than a dozen candidates.

Even though the winner will hold office for less than 2 years before the next election, much is riding on the outcome.

For starters, the city is in jeopardy. Bernard Kincaid seemed glacial in doing anything to move Birmingham forward. That stasis seems preferable to the rapid plunge into financial chaos and political embarrassment wreaked in just 2 short years by Larry Langford.

His reign of error ended only with the say of 12 jurors. But City Hall is in shambles, as is the public trust.

We’re building a dome, renovating Fair Park Arena and beginning to successfully fight crime. And yet, the budget has been criminally neglected (and perhaps, deliberately fudged). Carole Smitherman spent less than a month as interim mayor before the newly seated council tapped Roderick Royal as council president, thus taking over the interim mayoral duties.

In short, much confusion, little time and wary voters.

‘The candidates have failed
to distinguish themselves.’

The candidates have failed to distinguish themselves. The much heralded Patrick Cooper has raised (and spent) a lot of cash, but by doing so seems to be influenced by out-of-town interests. He missed high-profile forums, which has the odor of the artful dodge. While he made a splash in 2007 by receiving almost 30 percent of the vote, Cooper has done little since then to demonstrate his capacity for leadership.

With Smitherman and William Bell, we have two seasoned politicians who have served as interim mayor, albeit briefly, and lost in a combined five campaigns for the top office. Smitherman, a self-described mother figure, voted with Langford on many budget busters and wants to continue his projects, even as the city goes broke.

Bell, who picked up Langford’s unsolicited endorsement, also seems enmeshed in old school ways, both in campaigning and in office. He needs to continue and finish his work on the Jefferson County Commission: fixing its $3 billion sewer debt calamity.

Steven Hoyt is serving in his second term on council and recently was voted president pro tempore under questionable circumstances (the new acting mayor Royal voted, even though he was not allowed). When given the chance to fix things, he declined. Imagine what he’d do with real power.

Scott Douglas, one of the outsiders, has a good record of service to the city. And while his green platform might work in a more progressive and more solvent city, he seems to have no solution on getting the city’s finances back on track.

Emory Anthony ran twice against longtime mayor Richard Arrington in the early 1990s and lost. The defense attorney wants to bring the city’s finances in order, with transparency and accountability. The question is: Can he back it up?

We aren’t certain. We’re picking a mayor at gunpoint Tuesday, and chances are, we’ll still end up taking a bullet or two.

• • •

Voting takes place from 7 a.m. till 7 p.m. A runoff, if needed, will take place Jan. 19.

Q: Where do I vote?

A: The answer is a call away. Jefferson County: 325-5550.

Or try AlabamaVotes.gov and click on “Search for My Polling Place.”

Join us Tuesday for election results
on Wade on Birmingham.

Remember, if you have problems at your polling place:

  • Notify a poll worker immediately.
  • Obtain a complaint/evaluation form (or download jpgs of pages 1 and 2). Print it, fill it out, copy and mail it.
  • Call the state attorney general at 1-800-831-8814 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and Wednesday or fill out this online form.
  • Call the secretary of state at 1-800-274-VOTE (8683) or visit her site, StopVoterFraudNow.com.
  • And tell the probate court for Jefferson County (325-5203).
  • Leave a comment below.

Q. Who’s running for mayor?

A. The 13 candidates …

Emory
Anthony
William
Bell
T.C.
Cannon
Patrick
Cooper
Scott
Douglas
Steven
Hoyt
Stephannie
Huey
Edith
Mayomi
Carole
Smitherman
Jimmy
Snow
Jason
Sumners
Jody
Trautwein
Harry “Traveling
Shoes” Turner

Note: Ernie Dunn died on Thursday.

Also:

  • Birmingham News editorial board endorsement: “(Emory) Anthony brings a regional approach to governing that has been in far too short supply.”
  • Kyle Whitmire of the Birmingham Weekly on the financial crisis: “Few candidates in the special-called mayoral election have demonstrated an understanding of what faces the city.”
  • One blogger’s take? None of the above.
  • Patrick Cooper leads fund-raising, but also campaign debt.
  • Pavo Magazine podcast discusses the candidates.
    [audio:http://www.pavomag.com/sites/default/files/audio/Mayoral%20Race%2012_2_09%20Edit%201.mp3]

Are you voting? Who has your vote? Vote in the poll above, and leave a comment below.

• • •

More Vote 2009 coverage.

Vote 2009: Up close with Jimmy Snow

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Running for mayor of Birmingham is Jimmy Snow, owner of Green Door Health Foods in Mountain Brook and cook at Franklin’s Homewood Gourmet.

Video: NBC 13 interview

Video: CBS 42 interview

More video interviews with all the candidates will be added daily. Election Day is Tuesday.

• • •

More Vote 2009 coverage.

Vote 2009: Campaign scoreboard – 14 candidates, 1 arrest

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

We’re not sure whether to file this under Vote 2009 or Crime Watch

Jimmy Snow - arrest mugshotJimmy Snow, candidate for mayor, was arrested for disorderly conduct Saturday night. Snow says he was campaigning at a Lakeview bar, denies any wrongdoing and claims the police used unnecessary force when arresting him.

Also, he also admits to drinking but says he wasn’t drunk. Snow added that someone was trying to sabotage his campaign.

OK, new rule if you’re running for mayor of Birmingham: If you’re going to get arrested, try to wait until after you’ve been in office awhile.

Snow’s background hasn’t been clear, that is, until the Birmingham News seemed to stumble upon his profession: a cook at Franklin’s Homewood Gourmet who makes the restaurant’s Pound Cake with Key Lime Cream from his mom’s recipe. He’s also owner of Green Door Health Foods in Mountain Brook.

Update: From the police arrest report:

The incident happened at 11:45 p.m. Saturday at Joe’s on Seventh. Snow entered without paying cover charge.

A police officer working off-duty at the club told Snow he would have to show identification and pay the cover. Snow then grabbed hold of the bar and began screaming, “I don’t have to pay. I’m running for mayor, and I don’t have to go anywhere.”

Officers had to wrestle Snow to the ground where he was handcuffed. Police took Snow first to UAB Hospital “because he stated he was crazy,” but he was evaluated and released. He was then taken to Cooper Green Mercy Hospital, where he refused treatment for minor scrapes on his arm.

Update Nov. 25: Two days before his arrest, the police were called to intercede in another incident involving Snow

On Thursday night, at the Hot and Hot Fish Club on Southside, a restaurant em­ployee claimed an intoxicated Snow struck him. The victim, an acquaintance, said Snow twice tried to talk to him while he was on the phone, and said that when he didn’t respond, Snow used an open hand to hit the phone, causing “severe pain to the ear.”

(Favorite comment from the AL.com site: “If only there were an herb of some sort that could calm him down …”)

• • •

More Vote 2009 coverage.

Vote 2009: And two more candidates for mayor make 14

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Two more candidates are in the race for mayor of Birmingham bringing the total to 14.
Wade on Birmingham - Vote 2009

  • T.C. Cannon — retired bar owner and former president of the Southside neighborhood association. He placed eighth in the 2003 mayoral election.
  • William Jason Sumners — no information available.

Also, Natalie Davis, political science professor at Birmingham-Southern College, and André Natta, publisher of the Terminal, discuss the candidates and themes so far in this election.

Here’s the final list of candidates:

The election takes place Dec. 8.

• • •

More Vote 2009 coverage.

Vote 2009: Carole Smitherman running for mayor

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Carole Smitherman, who has been serving as interim mayor for the past 2 weeks, wants a shot at the real thing.

Carole SmithermanSmitherman announced today her intent to enter the race, after having run unsuccessfully in 2003 and 2007. She said her official announcement is coming, but only after she takes care of more city business.

And she has been busy. As city council president, she automatically became mayor with former mayor Larry Langford’s conviction in October. She fired chief of staff Deborah Vance-Bowie and accepted the resignation of finance director Steve Sayler, all related to the city budget which may be missing $20 million.

Vance-Bowie countered Smitherman’s claim that Vance-Bowie was partially responsible for the city’s budget problems, sharing a series of e-mails between her and Sayler to illustrate Sayler’s lack of cooperation.

Smitherman, an attorney, has served on the council since 2001. Before that, she served as a circuit court judge, municipal court judge and prosecutor for the City of Irondale.

Her candidacy makes for a field of six, including Emory Anthony, Patrick Cooper, Stephannie Huey, Edith Mayomi and Jimmy Snow.

Her campaign site, SmithermanforBirmingham.com, from her 2009 council bid is still online.

The election takes place Dec. 8.

• • •

More Vote 2009 coverage.

Vote 2009: Also running for mayor

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Also running for Birmingham mayor, besides Emory Anthony and Patrick Cooper, are …
Wade on Birmingham - Vote 2009

  • Stephannie Sigler Huey, who ran for mayor in Denver, and also finished in 14th place running for mayor of Birmingham in 2003. Huey is a teacher in the Birmingham school system and a pastor with the God’s Holy Tabernacle Church. She wants to reduce crime and make schools safer.
  • Edith Mayomi, an employee at Jefferson State Community College.
  • Jimmy Snow, an Avondale resident who wants to reform City Hall. He told the Birmingham News: ”I really do not care to be mayor, but I am willing to do what needs to be done.”

The election takes place Dec. 8.

• • •

More Vote 2009 coverage.