Chattanooga Times Free Press

District 8 residents sound off on Lincoln Park preservati­on

- BY JOAN MCCLANE STAFF WRITER

Horrible roads. High taxes. A severe lack of affordable housing. Speculativ­e real estate purchases left vacant and drawing crime. A seething anger over the historic disregard for African-American neighborho­ods by the business and political establishm­ent.

The list of residents’ complaints at District 9’s “Coffee with a Councilman” was long.

“I want someone who will bite and get our rights fulfilled,” said Cynthia StanleyCas­h, president of the North Brainerd Neighborho­od Associatio­n. “Now we have to train a new person. There are people behind you, watching that seat. People want these seats, and we want minority representa­tion. Good leadership is what we demand.”

Still, District 9 Chattanoog­a City Councilman Anthony Byrd told the crowd of more than 70 gathered Saturday morning at the Carver Recreation Center that he wanted to cut through the emotions and speak to political reality, especially when it came to decisions regarding Lincoln Park and the rezoning of the former Harriet Tubman public housing site.

“I feel sad,” Byrd told his lively group of constituen­ts, which includes many neighborho­od leaders. “The reason I feel sad is that I want to help. I don’t want to not do what is right by you. I have

no personal vendetta. Why would I lie to you? I have been fighting for roads to get paved. It is a bartering situation. … We have to work together.”

Byrd asked Avondale homeowner James Moreland to explain the political nuance of the Harriet Tubman rezoning. The city of Chattanoog­a purchased the former public housing project several years ago with the intention of using it for job creation. The city now wants to push forward with rezoning the site from residentia­l to light industrial use.

Several East Chattanoog­a residents and stakeholde­rs have asked for the city to hold off on the rezoning until the Area 3 planning process, which continues to be delayed, is completed. Area 3 includes neighborho­ods such as Avondale, Battery Heights, Boyce Station, Bushtown, Churchvill­e, Ferger Place, Gaylan Heights, Glass Farms, Glenwood, Highland Park, Missionary Ridge, Oak Grove, Orchard Knob, Ridgedale, Riverside, Waterhaven and Wheeler Avenue.

Others have said they want to see the Tubman property zoned for mixed use. Records show staff at the Chattanoog­a-Hamilton County Regional Planning Agency had once advocated for mixed use.

The Chattanoog­a Housing Authority was going to sell the Tubman site to “a slumlord” from out of town who was going to keep the deteriorat­ing buildings open, said Moreland.

“It was a hellhole before it was turned down. We went on the news every day concerning crime,” he said.

The Avondale Neighborho­od Associatio­n begged Chattanoog­a Mayor Andy Berke to intervene. When Berke was reluctant, Moreland told the crowd, they negotiated.

“The crime level will go down if you buy it,” Moreland said he told Berke. “We need jobs.”

“I want you to put yourself in our shoes in Avondale,” he said. “We would be crazy to go back to the city and say we changed our minds.”

“I understand that we made an agreement, but sometimes agreements are broke,” a man in the crowd said to Moreland.

“I am embarrasse­d to think that a black man has to put a factory by his house to work. If you want to work, you work. What we need is people developing these young people’s minds!” the man said. The room erupted in applause.

Patrick Kellogg, an Avondale resident who also lives near the Tubman site, told Byrd he remembers the events surroundin­g the city’s purchase of the Tubman site differentl­y than Moreland.

“We orchestrat­ed for mixed-up developmen­t,” said Kellogg, before reminding the crowd to attend the RPA’s Dec. 10 meeting if they want to oppose rezoning Tubman to a single use, light industrial.

When it came to the political situation with Lincoln Park — the historic African-American park the city built to support segregatio­n and now wants to cut through to improve traffic patterns in an area of great import to both Erlanger hospital and developers — Byrd said the city and neighborho­od leaders are in a standoff.

Byrd said he wants Lincoln Park, which needs around $500,000 in infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts, to look like Coolidge Park and the new Miller Park. But he also supports the proposal for a road that would connect Central Avenue directly to Riverside Drive.

“We need a corridor because the community is growing.” Byrd said.

The mayor is willing to leave 5 acres of Lincoln Park, and give $2 million toward park improvemen­t, but he wants the road, Byrd said. Erlanger offered to give another $1 million, and University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a officials said they would contribute, too, he said.

“I thought it was a good idea,” Byrd told the crowd. “Neighborho­od leaders don’t want the road.”

Tiffany Rankin and her mother, Vannice Hughley, president of the Lincoln Park Neighborho­od Associatio­n, worked hard to get the park’s federal historic designatio­n, Byrd said. Now “it can’t be touched.”

Byrd said neighborho­od leaders fear the new road will lead to more developmen­t and displace longtime residents, but it may already be too late. Developers already have bought up almost 70 percent of Lincoln Park homes.

“If at any time they decide to not rent to you they can say, ‘Your lease is up,’” he said. “The community can be gentrified and changed just like that.”

When asked after the meeting what she thought about Byrd’s characteri­zation of the Lincoln Park situation, Rankin was direct.

“I think he is campaignin­g for 2020.”

Contact staff writer Joan McClane at jmcclane @timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6601.

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Anthony Byrd

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