Knoxville may expand festival locations and get a better handle on traffic - here's how to have a say
Local leaders will make decisions related to summer fun this week, but let's start with some inside-baseball politics news.
There's an effort from some Knoxville Democrats to encourage Knoxville Mayor Indya Kincannon to run for term-limited Knox County Mayor Glenn Jacobs' seat in 2026. Democratic donor Phil Lawson and Tennessee Democratic Party Executive Committee member Dana Moran are promoting a petition to draft Kincannon and plan to present it to her.
Moran told me she hasn't spoken to Kincannon about the petition, and a spokesperson for Kincannon told me while the mayor is flattered, she isn't pursuing the office. The effort is interesting because it's such a public effort to encourage a candidate.
"I think it has a lot to do with where we all are on every level (of government)," Moran told me. "We're trying to fight extremism and work in a bipartisan way and we're trying to lead by example from the ground up."
In the meantime, two Republican candidates are running for county mayor: Larsen Jay and Betsy Henderson.
Local government is where you can make a difference, and The Key is a weekly guide to having a say in decisions that shape your life.
In February, Knox News reported that a new K-8 school serving 1,600 students will be built on the site where Rule High School once stood west of downtown Knoxville. The school is for students in the Beaumont, Lonsdale and Mechanicsville communities.
Knox County Schools will close Beaumont Magnet Academy and Maynard Elementary School and turn those buildings over to Knox County in exchange for the vacant Rule High site. The Rule High School closed in 1991.
Tonight, the county will approve the property agreement with KCS. We don't know what the county will do with the Beaumont and Maynard buildings.
Important date: The commission will vote on the agreement at 5 p.m. March 31.
Where to go: The commission meets in the main assembly room at the City-County Building, 400 Main St.
What you can do: You can sign up to speak until 4 p.m. today on the commission's website, commission.knoxcountytn.gov/public-forum-request-to-speak, by emailing commission@knoxcounty.org or calling the office at 865-215-2534.
Study up: The county commission agenda includes information about the deal. Click the "agendas" link on the commission's webpage at commission.knoxcountytn.gov. Choose the "COMMISSION" option for March 31. You can download the material for this decision, which is number 7 in the agenda.
If you love festivals, this one's for you!
City laws outline specific areas where festival hosts are allowed to request special event beer permits. They're limited to Market Square, the Old City, the Cumberland Avenue Corridor District and a few others.
The city council this week will consider a proposal to allow festivals anywhere in the city (pending approval, of course). Organizers must go through safety requirements and and a permitting process.
Important date: The council will discuss and vote on the changes at 6 p.m. April 1.
Where to go: The council meets in the main assembly room at the City-County Building, 400 Main St.
What you can do: Contact your council member or sign up to speak at council meetings.
Deadline: If you want to speak in front of the city council, make sure you sign up by 4 p.m. the day of the meeting by emailing wjohnson@knoxvilletn.gov or by calling the office at 865-215-2075.
Study up: The city council agenda includes information about the application. Click the "agendas" link on the city council's webpage at knoxvilletn.gov/government/city_council. Choose the "HTML" option for April 1. You can download the material for this decision, which is 9A in the agenda.
Opening Day for the Knoxville Smokies is April 15 in the Old City, and Kincannon will ask the council on Tuesday to approve a $75,000 contract with traffic control provider Superior Traffic Control.
The contractor will provide flaggers, electronic signs and barricades for special events.
"Effective traffic management is essential to ensure public safety, minimize disruptions for residents and businesses, and maintain efficient transportation flow throughout the City. Existing public resources are increasingly stretched during these high-impact events resulting in the need for additional specialized support, which this contract will provide," the resolution says.
Important date: The council will discuss and vote on the changes at 6 p.m. April 1.
Where to go: The council meets in the main assembly room at the City-County Building, 400 Main St.
What you can do: Contact your council member or sign up to speak at council meetings.
Deadline: If you want to speak in front of the city council, make sure you sign up by 4 p.m. the day of the meeting by emailing wjohnson@knoxvilletn.gov or by calling the office at 865-215-2075.
Study up: The city council agenda includes information about the application. Click the "agendas" link on the city council's webpage at knoxvilletn.gov/government/city_council. Choose the "HTML" option for April 1. You can download the material for this decision, which is 11B in the agenda.
Allie Feinberg reports on politics for Knox News. Email her: allie.feinberg@knoxnews.com and follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter, @alliefeinberg.
This article originally appeared on Knoxville News Sentinel: Knoxville may expand festival locations and get a better handle on traffic
Hashtags

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

14 minutes ago
US governors are divided along party lines about military troops deployed to protests
California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom is calling President Donald Trump's military intervention at protests over federal immigration policy in Los Angeles an assault on democracy and has sued to try to stop it. Meanwhile, Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott is putting the National Guard on standby in areas in his state where demonstrations are planned. The divergent approaches illustrate the ways the two parties are trying to navigate national politics and the role of executive power in enforcing immigration policies. In his live TV address this week, Newsom said that Trump's move escalated the situation — and for political gain. All 22 other Democratic governors signed a statement sent by the Democratic Governors Association on Sunday backing Newsom, calling the Guard deployment and threats to send in Marines 'an alarming abuse of power' that "undermines the mission of our service members, erodes public trust, and shows the Trump administration does not trust local law enforcement.' The protests in Los Angeles have mostly been contained to five blocks in a small section of downtown; nearly 200 people were detained on Tuesday and at least seven police officers have been injured. In Republican-controlled states, governors have not said when or how they're planning to deploy military troops for protests. Since Trump's return to office, Democratic governors have been calculating about when to criticize him, when to emphasize common ground and when to bite their tongues. The governors' responses are guided partly by a series of political considerations, said Kristoffer Shields, director of the Eagleton Center on the American Governor at Rutgers University: How would criticizing Trump play with Democrats, Republicans and independent voters in their states? And for those with presidential ambitions, how does that message resonate nationally? Democratic governors are weighing a number of considerations. 'There probably is some concern about retributions — what the reaction of the administration could be for a governor who takes a strong stance," Shields said. And in this case, polling indicates about half of U.S. adults approve of how Trump is handling immigration, though that polling was conducted before the recent military deployment. On other issues, Democratic governors have taken a variety of approaches with Trump. At a White House meeting in February, Maine Democratic Gov. Janet Mills told Trump, ' we'll see you in court ' over his push to cut off funding to the state because it allowed transgender athletes in girls' school sports. Michigan's Gretchen Whitmer, a possible 2028 presidential candidate, publicly sparred with Trump during his first term but this time around, has met with him privately to find common ground. Initially, Hawaii Gov. Josh Green referred to Trump as a 'straight-up dictator," but the next month he told a local outlet that he was treading carefully, saying: 'I'm not going to criticize him directly much at all." Apart from their joint statement, some of the highest-profile Democratic governors have not talked publicly about the situation in California. When asked, on Wednesday, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul's office pointed to a Sunday social media post about the joint statement. Whitmer didn't respond. The office of Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who is set to testify before Congress on Thursday about his state laws protecting people who are in the country without legal status, reiterated in a statement that he stands with Newsom. The office said 'local authorities should be able to do their jobs without the chaos of this federal interference and intimidation.' Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, in an interview Wednesday in The Washington Post, said Trump should not send troops to a weekend protest scheduled in Philadelphia. 'He's injected chaos into the world order, he's injected it into our economy, he is trying to inject chaos into our streets by doing what he did with the Guard in California," Shapiro said. As state attorney general during Trump's first term, Shapiro routinely boasted that he sued Trump over 40 times and won each time. As governor he has often treaded more carefully, by bashing Trump's tariffs, but not necessarily targeting Trump himself. Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis has often clashed with Newsom, a fellow term-limited governor with national ambitions. Newsom's office said DeSantis offered to send Florida State Guard troops to California. 'Given the guard were not needed in the first place, we declined Governor DeSantis attempt to inflame an already chaotic situation made worse by his Party's leader,' Newsom spokesperson Diana Crofts-Pelayo said in an email to The Associated Press. Speaking on Fox News on Tuesday, DeSantis said the gesture was a typical offer of mutual aid during a crisis — and was dismissive of the reasons it was turned down. 'The way to put the fire out is to make sure you have law and order,' he said. Protests against immigration enforcement raids have sprung up in other cities — and a series of 'No Kings' demonstrations are planned for the weekend — with governors preparing to respond. In Connecticut, Democratic Gov. Ned Lamont said he has spoken with his public safety commissioner to make sure state and local police work together. 'I don't want to give the president any pretext to think he can come into Connecticut and militarize the situation. That just makes the situation worse,' said Lamont, who called Trump "a little eager to send federal troops and militarize the situation in Los Angeles.' It is unclear how many Texas National Guard members will be deployed or how many cities asked for assistance. In Austin, where police used chemical irritants to disperse several hundred protesters on Monday, the mayor's office said the National Guard was not requested. San Antonio officials also said they didn't request the Guard. Florida's DeSantis said law enforcement in his state is preparing 'The minute you cross into attacking law enforcement, any type of rioting, any type of vandalism, looting, just be prepared to have the law come down on you,' DeSantis said Tuesday. 'And we will make an example of you, you can guarantee it.' ___ Associated Press reporters Nadia Lathan and Jim Vertuno in Austin, Texas; Sophie Austin in Sacramento, California; Isabella Volmert in Lansing, Michigan; Andrew DeMillo in Little Rock, Arkansas; Susan Haigh in Hartford, Connecticut; Anthony Izaguirre in Albany, New York; Marc Levy in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Kate Payne in Tallahassee, Florida; and Sophia Tareen in Chicago; contributed.


Boston Globe
29 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
Terry Moran's tweet was a mistake — and a strong statement
Perhaps it's only a coincidence that Moran's post appeared just a short time after the CNN live stream of the Broadway production of 'Good Night, and Good Luck.' As the play made perfectly clear, CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow stood up to Senator Joe McCarthy while fully aware of the potential consequences of doing so. Several months into the second Trump administration, college presidents and heads of major law firms and corporations have learned what their silence has gotten them. Trump only demands more. The people in these positions know one another professionally, and each must understand the challenges the others face. It's time for them to recognize that they have true power only by banding together to confront what is clearly a national crisis. 'Good Night, and Good Luck' pointedly quotes from Shakespeare's 'Julius Caesar': 'The fault ... is not in our stars but in ourselves.' Advertisement David Howell Mashpee


Newsweek
38 minutes ago
- Newsweek
David Hogg Takes Multiple Swipes at Democrats: 'Asleep at the Wheel'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. David Hogg took multiple swipes at Democrats as he announced that he will not fight to hold onto his leadership role in the Democratic National Committee. Hogg decried "a serious lack of vision from Democratic leaders, too many of them asleep at the wheel" in a lengthy thread on X on Wednesday night, adding that three Democratic House members have died this year after being reelected in November, giving Republicans an expanded majority. The Democratic National Committee (DNC) had voted to nullify the February 2025 elections that appointed Hogg as vice chair, citing procedural violations. In his Wednesday posts he also criticized the "crisis of competence and culture" that protects complacency and rewards seniority. It "has already cost us an election and millions of Americans their rights. Let's not let it cost us the country," he said. "We must change the culture of our party that has brought us here and if there is anything activism or history teaches us it's that comfortable people, especially comfortable people with power, do not change. In this moment of crisis, comfort is not an option." David Hogg attends the Fast Company Innovation Festival 2024 at BMCC Tribeca PAC on September 17, 2024 in New York City. David Hogg attends the Fast Company Innovation Festival 2024 at BMCC Tribeca PAC on September 17, 2024 in New York City. Eugene Gologursky//Getty Images for Fast Company This is a breaking news story. Updates to follow.