Charlotte's Black mayors reveal hopes for Charlotte's future — and issue a challenge
Advancing long-awaited transit plans and promoting private investment in the Black community are key to making Charlotte's economy equitable, current and former mayors said Tuesday.
Mayor Vi Lyles joined former mayors Harvey Gantt and Patrick Cannon at the Sarah Stevenson Tuesday Forum as part of its Black History Month series. Former Mayor Anthony Foxx also appeared via video call, which brought together every African American mayor in the city's history.
The group discussed their personal journeys and hopes for Charlotte's future.
The city 'has been moving the needle' on growing wealth in the African American community, said Gantt, elected in 1983 as Charlotte's first Black mayor. But he would've liked more 'progress' in the decades since he left public office.
'In many ways, I see y'all doing the same thing we were trying to do, the city that is, 30-some years ago. That's not progress to me,' Gantt said.
Lyles told attendees many of the city's ongoing initiatives, including efforts to overhaul the region's transportation system, will spur economic growth in communities of color and citywide, making Charlotte 'one of the stars across this country.'
Lyles, first elected in 2017 and now in her fourth term as mayor, advocated for the crowd to support the city's transportation plans.
If the General Assembly approves a bill crafted by local officials last year, voters will decide the fate of a ballot referendum to raise Mecklenburg County's sales tax to pay for transportation needs. The money would go towards expansion of train and bus services as well as road projects.
'There is a plan. There is a strategy,' Lyles told Tuesday's audience. '... I hope at some point I'll be able to say 'thank you for your support.''
Lyles said public transit is an integral part of the city's economic development strategy that can help more residents access high-quality jobs, education and health care.
'If we can actually have trains, perhaps we can build houses next to trains, and people don't have to spend $5,000 to buy a new car,' she said.
Gantt said Tuesday he wants to see more focus in the African American community on the private sector, not local government, driving economic growth.
'I think we should have gotten to the point where the city is not the major instrument by which we see economic improvement in our people,' he said.
The former mayor said he's proud to see Charlotte's Black population grow and more Black business leaders accumulate wealth. But he also wants to see those leaders investing more in their communities, both monetarily and with mentorship.
'What we need is an economy that, in fact, goes full force with an engine of private sector involvement by richer Black people in this community who are joining their resources to build solid businesses,' he said.
Cannon said the city needs to be 'more intentional to create some upward mobility.'
The former mayor, who resigned in 2014 after he was arrested on public corruption charges, noted that he focused on bringing back manufacturing jobs when in office. Charlotte's transition from a blue collar community to more white collar jobs created an economic 'imbalance,' he said.
Cannon called for current leaders to consider getting more involved again in job training programs and advocate to bring back events that have left Charlotte, such as the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association's basketball tournaments.
'Not in all things, but sometimes we should consider going backwards in order to go forward,' he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
an hour ago
- The Hill
Musk's xAI facility brings ‘opportunity' to Memphis, mayor says
(NewsNation) — The mayor of Memphis, Tenn., believes Elon Musk's xAI supercomputer facility will help 'a community that is desperately in need of investment,' though some residents say otherwise. The project will occupy an empty Electrolux factory located on the city's south side. It runs gas turbines, which release chemicals like formaldehyde and nitrogen oxides, in the process of powering his AI chatbot, Grok. Some Memphians have said the tech facility is polluting the air and water in a historically Black, working-class neighborhood and have joined the NAACP to call for its closure. 'We are urging you again to ensure that xAI stops operating its unpermitted turbines in violation of clean air and open meeting act laws and to order xAI to pay penalties for operating in violation of the law,' the NAACP told county officials in a letter. But Memphis Mayor Paul Young sees it as an 'opportunity for us to benefit as a city.' The project is forecasted to generate $15 to $20 million in property taxes annually and is expected to create more than 300 jobs. 'It's in a community where 75 of the properties on the list for condemnation are located in that community — the second highest in our city,' Young told NewsNation. '[There's] one grocery store. So, there are some conditions in that community that require investment.' Those unpermitted turbines, according to Young, are a work in progress. 'Well, they have 365 days to get the temporary turbines permitted, and they filed for the permits in January,' Young said. 'They're expected to have those permits by September.' Musk also wants to build a second, even more powerful data center about 10 miles away. Young told NewsNation he welcomes the investment, even with the billionaire's controversial name attached. 'My goal is to separate the project from the person and really look at what the value proposition is for our community,' Young said, adding: 'I certainly believe that the visibility that he has contributes to a lot of the pushback that we're seeing.' In February, a man was arrested and charged with an act of terrorism for saying he was 'going to burn down' the facility.


UPI
an hour ago
- UPI
Former Biden press secretary says she left the Democratic Party
Former White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre leads a December 12 press briefing at the White House and says she has left the Democratic Party after it replaced President Joe Biden as its candidate in a book to be released in October. File Photo by Bonnie Cash/UPI | License Photo June 4 (UPI) -- Former White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre says she left the Democratic Party and urges more Americans to become independents in a book to be released this fall. The book is attributed to Jean-Pierre and is titled "Independent: A Look Inside a Broken White House, Outside Party Lines." "Jean-Pierre didn't come to her decision to be an independent lightly," the book's teaser says. "She takes us through the three weeks that led to Biden's abandoning his bid for a second term and the betrayal by the Democratic Party that led to his decision." The book is slated to be released on Oct. 21 and offers insights from the first Black and openly lesbian woman to become the White House press secretary. Jean-Pierre succeeded Jen Psaki, who left the position in 2022 and joined the staff of MSNBC. In the book, Jean-Pierre says the United States has a broken two-party system, but independents account for the largest voting bloc, with about 43% of voters identifying as independent in 2023, Axios reported. "We need to stop thinking in boxes and think outside of our boxes and not be so partisan," Jean-Pierre said in a video posted on social media. "If you are willing to stand side by side with me, regardless of ... how you identify politically, and as long as you respect the community that I belong to and vulnerable communities that I respect, I will be there with you," Axios reported her saying. She also said her book offers hope for Americans who are upset by the Trump administration and explains how she is following her own compass while moving forward. Prior to working for Biden, Jean-Pierre was a spokeswoman for MoveOn. While she was the White House press secretary, Jean-Pierre defended Biden's mental acuity, saying she couldn't "keep up with him" and at one point called video evidence of his mental decline "cheap fakes." She has accused Democrats of putting Biden before a "firing squad" and forcing him out of the presidential race in July after a bad debate performance. "I had never seen a party do that in the way that they did, and it was hurtful and sad to see that happening," she said.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
DOJ seeks early end of Lakeland's redlining consent order
This story was originally published on Banking Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Banking Dive newsletter. The Justice Department has moved to terminate a 2022 redlining consent order against New Jersey's Lakeland Bank more than two years ahead of schedule, court documents show. Lakeland Bank, which was acquired by Provident Financial Services last spring, agreed to pay more than $13 million to settle redlining allegations in September 2022. The DOJ ordered the bank at the time to invest $12 million in a loan fund for Black and Hispanic residents, spend $750,000 on advertising, outreach and consumer education; and dole out $400,000 to develop community partnerships geared toward increasing minority access to residential mortgage credit. Lakeland entered into a five-year consent order set to dissolve in September 2027, save modifications proposed by either party and approved by the court. When Provident acquired Lakeland, it assumed responsibility for the requirements of the consent order; and on May 28, the DOJ advised the court that the bank 'has demonstrated a commitment to remediation and has reached substantial compliance with the monetary and injunctive terms of the Consent Order.' 'As part of its motion, the DOJ further states that Provident has committed to continuing its disbursement of the mortgage loan subsidy fund and to provide the United States confirmation of that disbursement upon completion,' Provident spokesperson Keith Buscio told Banking Dive via email. 'Provident acknowledges the benefit of the mortgage loan subsidy to underserved communities and, in the event the DOJ's motion is granted, will commit to spending the remaining amount under the subsidy.' The DOJ's move to terminate the consent order follows its action late last month to terminate another redlining consent order – against Jackson, Mississippi-based Trustmark Bank. The DOJ looks to be following in the footsteps of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which said in April it would shift its focus away from fair lending cases based 'solely on statistical evidence and/or stray remarks that may be susceptible to adverse inferences.' The CFPB will only pursue lending law matters with 'proven actual intentional racial discrimination and actual identified victims,' it said. Economic justice nonprofit New Jersey Citizen Action Executive Director Dena Mottola Jaborska said Monday that the motion to terminate the consent order in the Lakeland case is 'yet another example of how the Trump administration has no respect for the law or the needs of low-and moderate-income communities, and in particular the needs of people of color.' 'It's unconscionable that the Department of Justice would vacate its own consent order to a bank that violated the law by denying black and brown families equitable access to homeownership and other critical financial tools,' Jaborska said in a prepared statement. NJCA sister organization New Jersey Citizen Action Education Fund filed an affidavit for an amicus brief in federal court to halt the termination Monday. Recommended Reading City National Bank to pay $31M redlining settlement