Chattanooga Times Free Press

ON YOUR NEXT MAYOR’S AGENDA

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In two and half weeks, Chattanoog­ans will know either the name of their next mayor or which two contestant­s will be in an April runoff for the city’s top elected post.

No two of the 15 candidates offer the same experience or hold the exact same position on the various issues that face our city.

And none of the candidates advocates maintainin­g the status quo. That’s not a shot at the outgoing Andy Berke administra­tion, which brought its own set of new ideas to the office eight years ago, but a sense that the city is ready for new, outof-the-box thinking.

Perhaps it’s COVID fatigue — the desire we’ve all had for 11 months to return to the active, engaged life we once enjoyed — but the candidates envision the city’s emergence from the virus with fresh eyes.

The candidates have their specific plans, but we’ve been interested to see some of the same themes bubble up from the different campaigns. Three of the areas in which those ideas coalesce are affordable housing, education and workforce training, and the role of the city’s youth and family developmen­t centers. We’ll look at more next Sunday.

› Affordable housing: It’s not the city’s job to provide housing for each of its citizens, but most of the mayoral candidates say the city should be involved in the process to create more of it. That ranges from housing for the homeless to those who don’t own their houses to those who own their houses but can’t afford to improve them.

Both Chris Long and Elenora Woods, for instance, envision a multi-acre site in which the city would partner to create a dormitory-like center where basic amenities would be available for homeless individual­s. But, depending on the candidate’s plans, the facility also might have mailboxes, internet availabili­ty and presence of other profession­als to enable those who stay there to get back on their feet.

For those already in their homes, various candidates suggest rent-to-own programs. Meanwhile, many candidates say public/private partnershi­ps with developers are the key to building new affordable housing. Tim Kelly says that could involve the city’s already existing but little-used land bank. Long suggests special zoning and the reduction of certain regulation­s could help. Robert Wilson proposes a tax-forgivenes­s program. Kim White and Erskine Oglesby stress the importance of getting vacant properties the city owns back on the tax rolls.

Woods would bring in pre-fabricated houses, while Long recommends that local employees manufactur­e micro-housing to help fill the bill.

Unfortunat­ely, said Wilson, “all we do is talk about creating affordable housing.”

The city’s new mayor should find a way to turn “talk” into action.

› Education/training: With an eye toward building a stronger and more diverse middle class, many candidates advocate either a partnershi­p with the Hamilton County Schools district to build a robust trades center or one the city would develop with other partners.

Long, in particular, sees the need for both a partnershi­p with the schools and a separate training center the city might run with private partners. It is imperative, he believes, to have such training so county residents will be able to take future jobs when Volkswagen ramps up its electric car program.

Though the city is not in the school business per se, several candidates emphasize the need to strengthen education of the youngest minds.

White would continue the Berke administra­tion’s Office of Early Childhood Education and expand seats and scholarshi­ps, as well as explore options for more flexible schedules in current centers and for workplace child care. Wade Hinton also would expand early learning scholarshi­ps and would like to see an early learning curriculum standardiz­ed across the city. Similarly, Oglesby says he’d go further than Berke in pushing the importance of programs for children from pre-natal to first grade. Kelly would like to see a local expansion of the federal Head Start program.

“We have to improve [education] by any means necessary,” Kelly said.

› Youth/Family Developmen­t Centers: Many of the candidates say the centers renamed from recreation centers by Berke are underutili­zed. Monty Bruell said the changed name “wrung all the fun out of parks and recreation” and wants to see a return to more recreation. Oglesby said the centers should help “wean [children, teens and young adults] from being on the couch.”

Various candidates eye the centers for training, summer camps, and nutrition, apprentice­ship, tutoring, STEM, and youth policing programs. White would like to see the centers’ reading program align better with that in Hamilton County Schools. “We have to be intentiona­l about solving our issues,” says Woods. Since this is the broadest, most diverse, most experience­d field of mayoral candidates perhaps in the city’s history, we hope whoever is the next mayor will sit down with some of his or her opponents, listen and take seriously their out-ofthe-box ideas for improving the city. Because more than the Biden presidenti­al administra­tion and more than the Lee gubernator­ial administra­tion, the next mayoral administra­tion will have a bigger influence on your future.

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