The Commercial Appeal

Lakeland’s mayor, vice mayor clash at meeting

- Katherine Burgess Memphis Commercial Appeal USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE

An occasional­ly tense meeting devolved into a spat between Lakeland Mayor Mike Cunningham and Vice Mayor Josh Roman Thursday, with Cunningham ultimately threatenin­g to have a sheriff ’s deputy remove Roman from the room.

“I’m running the meeting and if you don’t think so, I can have that gentleman remove you,” Cunningham told Roman, pointing toward a sheriff ’s deputy.

“I object to the decision of the chair,” Roman replied.

“Too bad,” Cunningham said in response.

How the argument began

Thursday’s meeting was one of several in which commission­ers have clashed over when to build a high school and how to fund it.

The quarrel occurred during a discussion on when and how Lakeland ought to finance a high school, since the city’s high school students currently attend Arlington Community Schools through an agreement between the two districts.

Kyle Wright, the city’s director of finance, had just presented on potential property tax increases using four different funding mechanisms, ultimately concluding that building a high school would require an increase in property taxes if the city did not reduce services or operations.

Cunningham, who campaigned on a platform of waiting to build a high school, thanked Wright for a “common sense approach,” then asked him whether a 55-cent tax increase in 2015 was enough to fund a $50 million bond for a joint middle and high school. Those plans for a high school stalled after voters rejected the $50 million bond referendum and a lawsuit was filed.

“That’s a loaded question,” Roman said, cutting off Wright’s response.

Roman is one of three members of the board of commission­ers who advocated to begin the process of building a new high school.

That’s when Cunningham said he could have “that gentleman,” a sheriff ’s deputy, remove Cunningham.

Wright ultimately answered Cunningham’s question by saying he could not “agree or disagree” with the board’s 2015 decision.

Earlier in the meeting, Roman pushed back against Wright’s calculatio­ns, calling them a “worst case scenario.”

“I would not characteri­ze this as

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