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Archive for August, 2011

Jonathan Goins Fails His District, Fails Alexandria, and Kills His Own Political Future

Upperdate (to borrow a term from Jeffrey): The responses I have received from this post have run the entire gamut. People have e-mailed me personally to say, “Thanks for saying what needed to be said,” and others have publicly suggested that I was unnecessarily and unfairly targeting Mr. Goins.

I am not surprised in the least that Mr. Goins has his defenders; the man has nearly 5,000 friends on Facebook.

I remember the first time I met Mr. Goins. It was at a community meeting at the Broadway Resource Center. I was immediately impressed by him. He was young, confident, and obviously very intelligent. At that meeting, he recited a poem (I believe it was by Langston Hughes) from memory, not an easy task. In person, Mr. Goins has always been a consummate gentleman to me, and I had always respected him.

But I stand by what I wrote. I cannot respect him any more. Maybe that will make me the scourge of some people. So be it.

Jonathan Goins seeks to have it both ways, appeasing a very small but very vocal group of cynical opponents to anything and everything that has the Mayor’s imprimatur on it, while, at the same time, suggesting that he supported the initiative all along and that his opposition represented a “missed opportunity.

Lead or get out of the way.

On so-called “controversial issues,” he should be guided by his conscience. Apparently, though, when his conscience is in opposition with a small group of malcontents and cynics, he prefers to allow them to sway his decision-making process. As smart as he is, Mr. Goins, for some reason, cannot break free; even after considerable research and analysis on this particular issue, Mr. Goins, for some strange reason, could not vote his conscience. Yet, voters elected him to lead. They elected him because he was, seemingly, a smart and capable candidate. They elected him to research and analyze the issues. They did not elect him with the expectation that he would suddenly relinquish his own determinations, after his own careful deliberation, simply because less than a half a dozen residents showed up to a televised City Council meeting to express their opposition. That, to me, demonstrates a fundamental weakness, an inability to adequately serve all of those who entrusted him with their votes.

And yes, voters overlooked the fact that Jonathan Goins, for all intents and purposes, doesn’t actually live in the district. He claimed his grandmother’s house as his residence, while he spent the night in a gated apartment complex on the other end of town. I’m not breaking any news here. His residency was the subject of protracted litigation, and in my personal opinion, the judge ruled incorrectly. (I have to wonder what Congressman Cedric Richmond would think).

His living situation is relevant, because Jonathan Goins lives in exactly the same kind of apartment community that he opposed in his own district.

I am personally aware of other decisions that Councilman Goins has made that do not make for good government, and at least one of those decisions is even more pernicious and egregious than his vote on the stockyard.

A commenter on The Town Talk suggested I was being racist in my criticism. Obviously, the commenter and I belong to two vastly different generations. In 2008, President Obama said that America has “reached a racial stalemate.” Quoting from his historic speech:

Contrary to the claims of some of my critics, black and white, I have never been so naïve as to believe that we can get beyond our racial divisions in a single election cycle, or with a single candidacy – particularly a candidacy as imperfect as my own.

But I have asserted a firm conviction – a conviction rooted in my faith in God and my faith in the American people – that working together we can move beyond some of our old racial wounds, and that in fact we have no choice is we are to continue on the path of a more perfect union.

For the African-American community, that path means embracing the burdens of our past without becoming victims of our past. It means continuing to insist on a full measure of justice in every aspect of American life. But it also means binding our particular grievances – for better health care, and better schools, and better jobs – to the larger aspirations of all Americans — the white woman struggling to break the glass ceiling, the white man whose been laid off, the immigrant trying to feed his family. And it means taking full responsibility for own lives – by demanding more from our fathers, and spending more time with our children, and reading to them, and teaching them that while they may face challenges and discrimination in their own lives, they must never succumb to despair or cynicism; they must always believe that they can write their own destiny.

After several years in the front lines of Alexandria, I hope that we will all heed these wise words, though I worry that, far too often, we, whether white or black, “succumb to despair or cynicism.” Far too often, we fail to recognize our common humanity, our shared goals, and our interdependence.

Someone wrote to me and said, “You’re just mad because your Mayor lost on his project.” No, I’m upset because the City– the entire community– lost, and I’m upset because some people, including the person who wrote me, believe this is just a zero-sum political game. I’m upset because Alexandria continues to be infected by the disease of racial bias, a disease that cuts both ways and hurts everyone.

Again, lead or get out of the way. We don’t need or deserve this type of “leadership” in Alexandria. We need and deserve men and women of conscience, men and women who have the courage and the integrity to vote their conscience. Anything less is an abdication and a dereliction of duty.

Update: I need to make a few things clear. I understand I was implicitly mentioned on the local talk radio show this morning in Alexandria, and that the host, Fred Rosenfeld, assumed I had been principally tasked with locating commercial developers at the stockyard. In fact, I had been doing exactly what Fred Rosenfeld criticized the City for not doing– seeking out the opinions and expertise of real estate professionals, particularly people with experience and knowledge of this type of development. But it wasn’t just me, of course. There are many others who worked on this project. I only wrote about my experience, and I think it is worth sharing. It’s also worth mentioning to Mr. Rosenfeld that, although I may be young, I am a graduate of Louisiana Real Estate School, and I worked in residential and commercial property management for a year before joining the Mayor’s Office. Moreover, as he should be aware, both of my parents operated the most successful real estate brokerage firm in Central Louisiana for many years. After my father’s death, the firm was sold and then sold again, and currently, no one in my family is affiliated anymore. But throughout my life, as a result of my education, my work experience, and the network of professionals that were cultivated by both of my parents and my grandparents, I’ve had the opportunity to meet and befriend many real estate development experts. I was, in no way, attempting to give credit to myself and myself alone for bringing some of these professionals to assess the stockyard’s commercial feasibility; I was simply reporting what these people told me and others. By the way, Mr. Rosenfeld, the City has always had on staff a licensed real estate agent who managed mega-million dollar commercial leases before he joined the administration. Additionally, there are at least two attorneys who work for the City who have extensive experience contracting with mega-million dollar retail and service industry tenants.

I agree with Rod Noles, who said this morning that the City should consider placing another sign on the front of the property that says, “Closed for Business.” And I am dismayed and disappointed by one of the callers to Bob Madison’s and Fred Rosenfeld’s show who seemed to attack Mr. Noles’s involvement on the basis of hearsay (which was ridiculous, by the way) and on the basis of his skin color.

Unfortunately, race seems to be percolating right beneath the surface. Amazingly, I received a comment (which I deleted for a violation of my editorial standards) that suggested I was simply angry because the Mayor had been defeated. This is what is wrong with the thinking in Alexandria. I haven’t asked the Mayor whether or not he wanted this project, though considering he is a reasonable human being who cares for the City and wishes to see increased economic activity in struggling, inner-city neighborhoods, I cannot imagine why he would not want it. But the Mayor wasn’t defeated by the City Council; the developer was defeated; the neighborhood was defeated.

Still, I think the comment is illustrative of the major problem plaguing Alexandria. Why did Jonathan Goins vote against a project he supported? Was it really because eight people, three of whom didn’t even live in that neighborhood, showed up to get on a television show? Really? Or was it because it represented a net-benefit for the community? When you hear people who own rental properties complain about plans for a new apartment complex, it shouldn’t be difficult to connect the dots, which Mr. Noles also mentioned on his radio show. I can only conclude that those who complained and protested lacked any legitimate counter-argument. I watched the whole meeting on video, and half of the complaints were actually pictures of construction projects being undertaken to correct those very issues. Indeed, the site is still somewhat of a construction zone, so it shouldn’t be much of a surprise that there are still oddly-placed dumpsters or dirt-overturned on the sides of the road (to prepare for ditch closures, no doubt).

Finally, I want to to make this abundantly clear as well: I have always been impressed by Jonathan Goins. When he wants to, he can deliver a great speech. He’s confident. He’s a young and educated attorney who returned to Alexandria after law school and hung up his own shingle. But I think this decision that he made– a decision for which he will ultimately be responsible not just to his district but to the entire City (it affects ALL of our tax base)– will follow him. My respect for him evaporated, and I am severely disappointed. You don’t arbitrarily or capriciously deny a $12M project that you “supported” based on the whims of the same small and recycled group of malcontents and “neighborhood leaders” who had the ability, presumably, to take off work on a Tuesday afternoon so that they could stand behind a lecturn in a televised meeting and ramble through, often incoherently, a series of half-truths, exaggerations, and attacks against the very people who are actually investing their own hard-earned money in Alexandria. Something tells me that the 45-50 people currently on the waiting list for Phase One of the apartments had other obligations that afternoon.

I will always think that Councilman Goins made a colossal mistake, something that will not soon be forgotten. As that property continues to sit vacant for the next several years (as it almost certainly will do), every single time one of his constituents drives by, she should consider what might have been and what almost was.

It takes far less energy to cooperate than to continually obsfucate. When you’re basing your decisions by attempting to best answer “How can I hurt the Mayor’s agenda?”, what happens when your goals align with his? As the vote on the stockyard site demonstrates, it means destroying the very thing your constituents need the most, simply because the Mayor also recognizes its need. Such a strategy may have worked for some of these people in junior high school, when the stakes were much lower, but in City Government, it’s completely inexcusable; it’s a dereliction of duty.

Alexandria can never move forward when some of its leaders tend to relish in the festering underbelly of retrograde, personalized, tit-for-tat politics.

Either way, like Mr. Noles, I hope I will be proven wrong, but it sure seems to me that the Alexandria City Council royally screwed up and effectively drove away any development leads for the next five to ten years. But considering the opponents of this project are all hard-working businessmen with extensive contacts and experience in commercial real estate…. oh, sorry, I was describing the team of people who were set to actually manage the new development.  The City Council has more experience in video production and the local television business.

************

To Alexandria City Councilman Jonathan D. Goins:

You are forever responsible for depriving your district– one of the most impoverished and blighted areas in Alexandria– from receiving the benefit of a mega-million dollar mixed-use development. You also proved that your word is meaningless and that your allegiances are illusory. You are not trustworthy. You are dishonest. You even lied to the local media.

For the last several months, I have heard from multiple people that you do not plan to run for re-election. Sir, if this is true, please do the entire City of Alexandria a giant favor and immediately resign from office.

Alexandria and, in particular, the people of Lower Third do not deserve and should not tolerate the kind of representation that you offer. Because of your actions, Alexandrians are now deprived a $10M- $12M mixed-use development. Because of you– and you alone– the residents of Lower Third are denied increased police protection, more quality housing, and a million dollar retail facility. You should be ashamed. There are significantly more people on the waiting list for the apartment complex in contention than those who showed up at yesterday’s televised spectacle of a City Council meeting.

Here’s the kicker, Mr. Goins: You don’t really live in your district. You live in a gated apartment complex in the Lakes District, one of the newest and most affluent areas in Alexandria. The apartment complex you live in is currently being expanded, and no one ever opposed this expansion. Your attorney once said that you don’t feel comfortable taking your clients to the very neighborhood that you purport to represent.

Home of City Councilman Jonathan D. Goins

People in the area in which you actually reside recognized that more rooftops lead to more retail.

My heart aches for the good people of Lower Third. It aches for Alexandria. You, Mr. Goins, had the opportunity to lead, and instead, you naively followed a small contingency of narrowly-minded racists (Let’s not be afraid to call a spade a spade).

You’ve also forfeited the right to ever claim that your district is being “held back.” As you clearly demonstrated yesterday, it’s not being held back; it’s being held hostage.

Resign now. You’re hurting more than helping. You’re hurting good people– families– who are trapped on a waiting list for an apartment in their neighborhood. To think: I once respected and defended you. Never again.

Enjoy your luxury apartment in the Lakes District. I hear there’s a waiting list.

- Lamar

PS: If you want to know why young professionals are not flocking back to Alexandria, then all you need to do is look yourself in the mirror.

Hodges-Podges

1.

I understand I was a close runner-up for this year’s Ashley Morris Award at the annual Rising Tide conference. As I said today on the Twitter, holy moly, it’s just an honor to be mentioned in the same sentence as Ashley. I stuck the Greg Peters-designed and Dirty Coast-produced FYYFF sticker on the front of my desktop. Every single time I write a post on this website, I am confronted with Ashley’s simple and sagacious words of defiance. Months before he passed, I exchanged a couple of e-mails with Ashley; he added my website to his blogroll. I will always be grateful. He opened the door for me in the Louisiana blogosphere. And I am totally floored by the nominations I received for the award named in his honor. Thank you, thank you.  I didn’t even realize I was on y’all’s radar.

2.

For the bargain basement price of $10,000, you can become a platinum sponsor of this year’s Louisiana Family Forum Awards Banquet. Unfortunately, it’s not clear whether or not this donation would be tax-deductible, as it has been in years past. This year, the LFF is saying that the “Louisiana Family Forum Action,” their 501c4 (not tax-deductible), “is writing the next chapter of Louisiana history.”

What did Jesus say about potentially skirting tax laws to support your own religious agenda?

“Well, then,” Jesus said, “give to Caesar what belongs to Caesar, and give to God what belongs to God.” His reply completely amazed them. (Mark 12:17)

I could be way off-base, but I think that when Jesus was talking about Caesar, he was referring to the government.

Either way, I hope the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the Internal Revenue Service will keep a close eye on any and all “donations” given to the LFF’s … I mean the LFFA’s upcoming awards banquet for state legislators.

3.

Not surprisingly, back in Alexandria, revisionist history seems to be en vogue. I won’t pretend to understand what, on earth, motivates people like Sandra Bright to call people like Greg Aymond, but obviously, she doesn’t have the best judgment. (By the way, Sandra, Greg Aymond considers you to be a good friend, and a few paragraphs later, he refers to African-Americans as “darkies.” With friends like him, who needs enemies, right?).

In all seriousness, the debate about the Hodges Stockbarn in the Lower Third neighborhood may be the best example I have ever encountered of myopic and heavily-politicized stupidity.

Here’s the story: Lower Third is an historically African-American neighborhood in the heart of Alexandria. For decades, it has suffered from crime, blight, disinvestment, and neglect, and in 2007, it looked like conditions could have been exacerbated. A 14-acre tract of property (the former Hodges Stockbarn) in the middle of Lower Third and in a key location on Louisiana Highway 1 almost became a junkyard. Residents complained and begged the City to intervene, which it did. The City bought the property, with the intention of redeveloping the site as a mixed-use PUD (Planned Unit Development).

I know this story because I was there; I helped write the Request for Proposals. The City also had in its possession a comprehensive study of the neighborhood, a study conducted by J-Quad (which, not that it really matters, is a minority-owned business). And the J-Quad study, which was based on extensive research and interviews (with, among others, Sandra Bright), clearly said: Lower Third needs more housing options. The neighborhood needs a better mix of housing types; it needs apartments, condos, and patio homes.

Then, amazingly, someone stepped up to the plate: New Horizons, one of the top 100 multi-family developers in the country. They secured money from the Bush Administration, and they proposed building 56 moderate-income apartment units on the back six acres of the property. Wow, right? It was the biggest development ever proposed in thirty years in Lower Third.

But guess what happened? A couple of rich slumlords (my word)– people who had long dominated the rental market in that particular neighborhood– stood up in opposition. No, no, they said, not so fast. We want a commercial-only development. They were loud and vocal, and they convinced other people to rally behind them. It was all insidious. It was wrong. It was stupid. And it was an impediment. They very nearly convinced the Alexandria City Council to reject millions of dollars in grant money, and for some reason, no one ever disclosed the ulterior motive.

Thankfully, though, despite the opposition of their own district Councilperson, the project went forward. Today, there’s an $8 million apartment complex on the property, and before it even opened its doors, there was a waiting list.

So, fast forward: The new apartment complex is open, and the developer wants to expand. He has a waiting list, after all. Obviously, there is market demand. But it gets better: The developer also wants to build a commercial component– two restaurants, an insurance office, a pharmacy, a nail salon, and room for a police substation. This will be huge for that neighborhood. It’s awesome. It should be a cause for celebration.  Yet, somehow, for some strange reason, it’s yet another opportunity for people to attack and criticize the Mayor and his administration.

Give me a break. Really.

I personally courted one of the country’s most experienced grocery store developers. Not going to happen, he said. You’d have to pay us to develop retail there. (Sorry, folks, it’s the truth). I also courted one of the country’s leading commercial appraisers. He looked at the property multiple times. Charming at day, he said, scary at night. (Again, sorry).

Regardless of what Fred Rosenfeld says on the radio about government involving itself in the real estate business (to be sure, I respect his opinion on this, considering he’s built his business on federal property), no one bit off more than they could chew. I know this, because I was there. And no one– and I mean NO ONE– promised a pharmacist that he’d be given a building on the property. That’d be illegal, a violation of Article Seven of the Louisiana State Constitution. You know what actually happened? The City said, “Give us a development proposal. Maybe we can assist with publicly-owned infrastructure.” And that proposal never arrived.

At the end of the day, if the Alexandria City Council decides to act righteously and in the best interests of the people of that neighborhood, they will be “saddled” with a multi-million dollar mixed-use development, a brand-new retail facility, and increased police protection. And the district Councilman, who acts as if he is merely attempting to make a “bad situation better,” will have at least 120 additional constituents.

But it’d be best not to acknowledge this, because, wow, that could make the Mayor look good.

I’m Leaving My Heart In Louisiana

On Saturday, I filled my car to the brim with as many of my worldly possessions as possible and left Louisiana for Texas, where I’ll spend the next three to four years as a student of law at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. But I didn’t go directly to Dallas.

I stopped first in Houston, a place that will always be special to me, and I reconnected with about two dozen of my best friends from Rice. We were all there to celebrate; my friends Andy and Danielle were tying the knot. A part of me will always be in Houston. The years I spent there were some of the happiest and most fulfilling in my life.

I don’t have any tattoos. But if I ever decided to get ink, I know, without a doubt, what I would want. I’d get an owl. It may sound cheesy, I realize. When I was a kid– about eight years old– my grandparents commissioned a mural for their house: It was of their grandchildren. There were about seven or eight of us at the time (now there are thirteen), and each of us was whimsically depicted as a cartoon animal. My cousin Paul was a frog, sitting atop a lilly, wearing his then-favorite t-shirt. My brother Mark was a squirrel, playing a saxophone. And in the middle of the mural, there was a giant tree, where I was perched, as an enormous (beautiful) owl, reading from a book of fairy tales. A decade later, I matriculated into Rice, and one day shortly thereafter, when I was back in their home in Alexandria, I realized how prescient the mural actually was, at least for me personally. A decade later, I was a Rice Owl, majoring in English.

Again, the years I spent at Rice were amazing, formative, and life-altering. Last weekend, I was reminded of how fortunate I was.

It was also somewhat bizarre, because here I was, in Houston, my car packed with all of my things, ready to move back to Texas and go back to college. And it just so happened that it was also the very first day of Rice’s freshmen orientation week. (By the way, I’d be remiss if I didn’t note how cool it was to see my friend Zack Kopplin that day on the Rice campus. Zack’s already made Louisiana proud, and I have no doubt he will be a force for good at Rice as well). It was a little disorienting, to be sure, because I can still see myself as the kid finally moving away for college for the first time (even if it was actually the second time I’ve moved away).

I stayed up the entire night in Houston reminiscing with old friends, and the next morning, I barreled down I-45 to Dallas. When the Dallas skyline came into view, it hit me, finally: I was leaving Louisiana.

Louis Armstrong famously sang “Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?”. It’s not just New Orleans, of course; the song is bigger than the political boundaries of a municipality. The song is about the spirit, the culture, and the resilience of the greatest and most complicated state in the entire country. Over the course of the last six years, I’ve grown to deeply love my home state– not just because it’s home, but because it’s the best.

I’ve traveled all over the world, and I’ve fallen in love with many places– Australia, South America, Europe, the South Pacific, Africa, the Caribbean. But nothing, nowhere beats Louisiana. The last night I was in New Orleans, I sat with a few friends on the balcony of the Blue Nile. Music was blaring inside the bar. Hipster kids were everywhere. Honestly, it was a little annoying. But directly across the street, as we sat outside, a brass band spontaneously began playing, and it was magnetic. And for a brief moment, it was magical. That doesn’t happen anywhere else in the world, but it happens in New Orleans; it happens in Louisiana.

Do you know what it means? Because I do.

I also know this: I’m leaving my heart in Louisiana. Louisiana owns me.

In Louisiana, we don’t pardon anyone’s French, so let me just tell it like it is: Over the last few years, as I worked to serve my community in a public service job, I dealt with a ton of bullshit. Piles and piles of it. No, it has nothing to do with the people I worked for or worked with; the bullshit inevitably comes from the ignorant interlopers; no matter where you are, there will always be a group of people who are embittered, hateful, and lonely.

I will always be grateful and appreciative of the good men and women who serve my hometown. My former boss, Mayor Jacques Roy, is the most brilliant human being I have ever met. (I’m not on his payroll anymore, by the way). I can only hope and pray that a person of his caliber will be the future of Louisiana. And he’s surrounded himself with great people: Daniel Smith, my best friend who is leaving for Princeton and Georgetown; Bill Hess, a man who always treated me with unbelievable kindness and who has single-handedly developed the film industry in Central Louisiana; Kay Michiels, an extraordinary woman with an extraordinary passion for Alexandria; T.W. Thompson, an exemplary public servant who lives and breathes Louisiana. And there are others: Chuck Johnson, Mike Marcotte, James Branch, Mike Wilkinson, Ann Lowrey, Darrell Bradley. Then the folks who have since moved on: Ken Juneau, Susan Patton, Melinda Anderson. The last five years of my life have been enriched invaluably by all of these people, and they continue to enrich Alexandria.

I will continue to contribute to the Louisiana blogosphere. No one is shutting me up. I know I’ll be busy with school, and I know I’ll no longer be afforded the proximity necessary for real insight. But, but, but: It is my honest and sincere hope that other people in the Gret Stet will step up, speak out, and reclaim Louisiana from the ignorant interlopers– whether they are entrenched politicos who treat my home state as nothing more than a stepping stone or bigoted bullies who traffic in racism and divisiveness.

I’ve been back in Texas for only a few days, and I am very happy to be able to pursue a degree in the law. Yes, I could have attended LSU or Tulane, but my family moved to Dallas. So here I am, with my family… and that is important. Period.

Still, guess what?

I’ll be back. I can’t survive without my heart.

The Weirdest Story in The Town Talk, 2011: A Sheriff’s Election, Politics, A Pot-Bellied Pig, A Stolen Dog, A Shot Dog, and “Hard-Core Porn” (Including Animal Porn)

HEY! Thanks Billy Gunn! This is INSANE!

Louisiana State Police will be asked to investigate a former sheriff’s detective’s claim that Rapides Parish Sheriff Chuck Wagner stopped a 2010 probe into the shooting and killing of a dog because the shooter is a close friend of the sheriff.

The accusation signals that this year’s campaign for sheriff might be a nasty affair.

Wagner’s office fired back, lobbing accusatory grenades of its own: The former detective, a backer of a Wagner opponent, was fired last year; animal pornography was discovered on his office computer; and his wife stole a pot-bellied pig and Wagner’s pet dog.

Read the story here, worthy of this:

Summer Interview Series (Part Seven): Christopher J. Tyson

Christopher J. Tyson, a Baton Rouge native, is an Assistant Professor of Law at the Paul M. Hebert Law Center at Louisiana State University. He earned his bachelors degree at Howard University, his masters degree in public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School and his law degree at the Georgetown University Law Center. During the last few years, Chris has emerged as an outspoken progressive advocate for a number of important issues.  He’s been particularly passionate about mass transit in Louisiana, previously serving as the President of the Board for Baton Rouge’s Capital Area Transit System.  In that role, he led a management and financial overhaul of the organization, and while he no longer serves on the Board, he remains an ardent supporter of mass transit in Baton Rouge.  He is also a mentoring advocate and, in addition to mentoring several young men, he sits on the Board of Baton Rouge Big Buddy and is Board President of the Baton Rouge Youth Coalition.  The day after Hurricane Katrina, Chris began working in Senator Mary Landrieu’s Washington, DC office, helping coordinate Congressional legislation related to disaster recovery efforts.

He is a Senior Fellow with Louisiana Progress, a member of the 2009 Leadership Louisiana class, and is a 2010 Fellow of the New Leaders Council. He has been recognized as a member of the Baton Rouge Business Report’s 2010 Top 40 Under 40, the New Leaders Council’s 2011 Top 40 Under 40, and the National Bar Association’s 2011 Top 40 Lawyers Under 40. He was also awarded the Excellence in Activism Award by the National Bar Association and Impact. Before taking a job with Senator Landrieu, Chris had worked for two years as a volunteer teacher at a Boston-area prison.

Lamar: When I was a kid, my grandmother Joanne told me, “There’s no such thing as an overachiever.” She didn’t like the word “overachiever;” she thought it was a pejorative. You can achieve, but if you’re doing good work, you can never overachieve. What do you think about the word “overachiever”?

Chris: I’m not sure that I have strong feelings towards the word.  In my experience when someone is branded an “overachiever” there’s usually an undertone of cynicism.  That shouldn’t necessarily be the case.  Those who are able to “achieve” in the eyes of society are often providing an example for others whether they are aware or not.  While we should always strive to be humble and keep our achievements in context, we should also be ready and willing to mentor others to share how we actually achieved. Many of my mentees have never had direct acess to someone who has been to graduate school or traveled abroad, so it’s important that we tell our stories and help others make choices and access resources to achieve their goals. That being said, all of the young men and women I’ve been blessed to mentor are overachievers.  Everyday, they overcome incredible odds to advance their education and personal goals.  So there are overachievers all around us, and if we invoke that term, we should recognize that it applies to a range of people and experiences.

Lamar: So that was a softball. I know you’re particularly interested in the ways in which race influences and intersects with politics. Louisiana has the second-highest per-capita population of African-Americans in the country, the vast majority of whom are, historically, Democratic voters. Yet there is a persistent perception that it would be very difficult for an African-American Democrat to win a statewide election, at least in our current political climate. Considering registered Democratic voters outnumber registered Republican voters in Louisiana and that around 30% of Louisianans are African-American, do you think this “persistent perception” is fundamentally flawed?

Chris: No, I don’t think the perception is flawed, but understanding it requires understanding the way race and class have historically worked and how their impact on our politics continue to evolve.  For over a generation now, registered Southern Democrats– particularly in the South– have been voting Republican – mostly in national elections.  There are a number of explanations for this including substantive policy differences with national politics.  But we can’t ignore the role our shared legacy of race and class struggles have played.  This is a key political dynamic of the post-civil rights era.  Given the hyper-partisanship in national politics, African-American Democratic statewide candidates will likely continue to face challenges in the short-term.  I’m encouraged by younger voters, however, and I’m confident that in the near future African-American Democratic candidates will arise who can develop viable statewide campaigns.

Lamar: Is the Louisiana Democratic Party guilty itself of supporting institutional barriers for qualified African-American candidates? For what it’s worth, it’s an accusation I’ve heard more than once. Why do you think Representative Michael Jackson defected from the Democratic Party in order to challenge Don Cazayoux’s re-election to Congress? Jackson’s campaign was supported by at least one well-known Republican donor, and to many, his campaign seemed to be based on a cynical, almost insidious attempt to exploit race, that his real intent was to help Republicans reclaim that seat. After all, the day after the election, Jackson was photographed meeting with Bill Cassidy. Was Representative Jackson being exploited, exploitative, or do you think his campaign was earnest and honest? To me, at the very least, Jackson’s campaign is a fascinating case study, and I’m curious to hear your thoughts.

Chris: I’ve had the opportunity to work with Rep. Jackson and appreciate his leadership on a number of key issues, especially transit and redistricting.  I have not spoken with him about his 2008 campaign and wouldn’t speculate on his motives.  There has long been a discussion about whether the Democratic Party writ large takes the African-American vote for granted, however, and I suspect we’ll continue to have this conversation, especially in Louisiana where we have not elected an African-American statewide.  If we want African-American Democratic candidates who can run successful statewide campaigns, we have to make sure that we are cultivating a diverse class of progressive leaders. Creating meaningful opportunities for true intergenerational, cross-racial political mentoring is not only wise succession planning, but it allows for organic and authentic messaging around issues of race, class and identity. Without a commitment to this type of mentoring and engagement then all we have to talk about are get-out-the-vote strategies.  If this is the only time race, class and identity are discussed or acknowledged then sub-groups within the coalition will rightly feel as if they’re being taken for granted.

Lamar: You’re a champion of mass transit. After Hurricane Katrina, there was a small but vocal effort to create a commuter rail line between New Orleans and Baton Rouge, and based on the reports I’ve read, it would have been relatively inexpensive to create and maintain this line. But before the project could even get off of the ground, Governor Bobby Jindal made it abundantly clear that he wouldn’t support commuter rail. If Governor Jindal decided to give you the chance to make the case for commuter rail and mass transit, what would you tell him?

Chris: Thanks for asking this question!  I think this is such an under-appreciated issue for Louisiana’s economic development future.  Just to be clear, it is far from an inexpensive proposition.  But transit is an investment in infrastructure - a necessary pre-condition for economic development.  Federal funds have been made available for states willing to make serious investments in mass transit, which, as I understand the issue, Jindal has refused to apply for.  I teach local government law and focus on these urban development issues.  For the state to be globally competitive going forward, we have to adopt metropolitan strategies to connect entire regions to attract investment and grow our local economies.  The state’s two largest metropolitan regions - Baton Rouge and New Orleans – together contain less than half the populations of the Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, San Antonio or Austin metropolitan regions.  If we’re serious about economic development statewide then we have to be serious about regional planning, which requires being serious about developing real regional infrastructure.  Transit is infrastructure.  Great cities are usually transportation hubs and are connected to sophisticated transit networks.  We can make real progress on poverty, higher education and reversing the brain drain by investing in infrastructure for a Baton Rouge-New Orleans metropolitan region.  This is why the rail is so important and why there’s bi-partisan support throughout south Louisiana for high-speed rail between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. 

Lamar: If you were elected Governor tomorrow, what are the first three things you would do immediately after taking the Oath of Office?

Chris:  First I would lead the development of a participatory, collaborative and transparent strategy for creating a 21st century higher education delivery model.  Second, I would establish an entity devoted to implementing innovative and effective poverty reduction best practices here in Louisiana.  My third focus would involve establishing statewide land use planning that would incorporate transit, disaster mitigation and inter-regional cooperation.  All goals would be directed to transform Louisiana into an innovation laboratory for higher education, poverty reduction, and regional land use planning.

Lamar: Do you have hope for the future of Louisiana? If so, what gives you hope? What makes you optimistic?

Chris: I have tremendous hope and excitement for the future of our great state!  This is an amazing time to be in Louisiana – we’re really building something great.  I’m encouraged simply by the people who are here.  Its a choice to stay here – for young people its very easy to escape to one of the major regional hubs where there are more and higher paying jobs, diverse populations and tons of lifestyle options. While I think Louisiana has a lot to offer in these regards, we have to do more to attract new talent.  But those who are here are bright, visionary, dedicated and persistent.  We’re building a great state.  The future is incredibly bright!

Lamar: You’re a college professor. If you had to write a syllabus of required reading for every single Louisiana citizen, what would you include?

Chris:  This is a hard question because there’s so much to include.  A short list would include A People’s History of the United States, Inside the Carnival: Unmasking Louisiana Politics, Edwin Edward: An Authorized Biography, and The Great Reset.  There’s so much to recommend that its hard to answer this question without feeling woefully inadequate.  But this is a start….

AUDIO: Steve Coco’s Deposition

I know, it shouldn’t be much of a surprise, but local blogger Greg Aymond is not telling the truth. I didn’t “misquote” Rapides Parish Police Juror Steve Coco. I quoted him accurately.

Download here. (Skip to the 24 minute mark for the actual quote).

Forgive me, but I don’t have the time or the inclination to explain the entire back story here; it’s stupid. Still, I want to make it clear: I didn’t misquote Juror Coco; if anything I under-quoted him.