ReportWire

Tag: andre dickens

  • Ciara, Mayor Dickens Announce $500K Food Security Donation

    The announcement was made at the Southwest Atlanta Cares Hub inside the fellowship hall of Saint Peter Missionary Baptist Church, a longtime anchor in Atlanta’s West End area. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens joined Grammy-winning artist and philanthropist Ciara Princess Wilson on Tuesday, December 23, to announce a $500,000 donation aimed at strengthening food access for families across Atlanta and Georgia, directing major support to the Atlanta Community Food Bank and Southwest Atlanta Cares.

    The announcement was made at the Southwest Atlanta Cares Hub inside the fellowship hall of Saint Peter Missionary Baptist Church, a longtime anchor in Atlanta’s West End area. The location highlighted the city’s reliance on neighborhood-based institutions as food insecurity continues to rise across metro Atlanta and North Georgia, particularly during the winter months.

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Ciara said the donation, made through the Why Not You Foundation she shares with her husband, New York Giants quarterback Russell Wilson, reflects both her personal ties to Atlanta and the broader need facing families throughout Georgia. She described Atlanta as a city that helped shape her values and sense of purpose. Though born in Fort Hood, Texas, Ciara spent her teenage years in College Park, a suburb of Atlanta, where her family ultimately settled after moving across the country as part of a military upbringing. She attended North Clayton High School before graduating from Riverdale, and said her connection to metro Atlanta remains central to how she understands community and responsibility. Ciara added that the region’s ongoing struggles with hunger, particularly among children and working families speak to the need for sustained, local investment rather than one-time relief.

    “One in six children goes to bed hungry, and that has to change,” Ciara said while announcing the $500,000 contribution. She said the gift is intended to expand food security efforts while empowering families and young people across Atlanta to pursue their goals with stability and dignity.

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Dickens said the donation builds on recent citywide efforts to address food access, including the launch of ATL Cares, an emergency response initiative created after delays in federal SNAP benefits disrupted households throughout Atlanta. Those delays, he said, exposed how quickly families across Georgia can be pushed into crisis when safety nets falter.

    The mayor credited the Atlanta Community Food Bank and its partners for stepping in during that period, providing emergency food distribution at a time when demand was already elevated. He said sustaining those services requires long-term investment and collaboration between city government, nonprofit organizations and private donors.

    “This donation means more meals on tables for people who otherwise wouldn’t have access,” Dickens said, adding that food security remains a cornerstone of Atlanta’s broader approach to economic stability and public health.

    Kyle Waide, president and CEO of the Atlanta Community Food Bank, said the donation will help provide more than one million meals across metro Atlanta and North Georgia through the organization’s network of roughly 700 partner agencies. Those partners include faith-based organizations, community centers, and food pantries serving urban, suburban, and rural parts of the region.

    Waide said the need has grown sharply in recent years. The number of people served by the food bank has increased by about 70 percent over the past three and a half years, a trend he attributed largely to inflation, rising housing costs and broader economic pressure affecting families throughout Georgia. During the holiday season, he said, that strain is compounded as children lose access to school-based meals.

    While the event drew elected officials and a globally recognized entertainer, its impact was rooted in the everyday work happening inside the church and throughout southwest Atlanta. Kevin Bibbs,71,  a lifelong West Atlanta resident and longtime member of Saint Peter Missionary Baptist Church, said the presence of high-profile figures matters less than the consistency of service.

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Bibbs, who has been part of the church for more than six decades, helps with maintenance and day-to-day operations to ensure food distributions run smoothly. He said his role has always been about service rather than recognition, describing the work as an extension of the church’s mission to care for the community. “I came to serve,” Bibbs said.

    He added that knowing families will be fed during the holidays carries special meaning in a city and state where economic gaps remain wide. “If we can help anybody, on any level, that’s a good thing,” Bibbs said.

    Dickens said initiatives like Southwest Atlanta Cares reflect a model the city hopes to replicate across Georgia’s urban centers in the coming years. Sustaining and expanding food pantries into 2026, he said, will depend on continued momentum, with residents, businesses and organizations contributing funding, volunteer hours and expertise to address hunger at the neighborhood level. “People are already stepping up and asking how they can be part of the group project,” Dickens said.

    Noah Washington

    Source link

  • Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens wins re-election campaign

    “The group project of Atlanta is unstoppable,” said Andre Dickens, still the 61st Mayor of Atlanta.
    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    At 9:23 p.m., Imara Canady, co-chair for Mayor Andre Dickens’ re-election watch party, took the stage inside the Hyatt Regency Atlanta to announce what the cheering crowd already expected: Andre Dickens had won a second term as Atlanta’s 61st mayor. 

    The Hyatt’s centennial ballroom glowed with celebration as supporters gathered around tables set with photos chronicling Dickens’ first term. A large screen replayed milestones from his administration, including the Moving Atlanta Forward agenda, affordable housing projects, and the mayor’s youth initiatives, serving as reminders of the groundwork laid since he was first sworn in as the city’s 61st mayor in 2022.

    Polls closed across Atlanta at 8 p.m., and by 8:13 p.m., the Associated Press projected Dickens as the clear winner. He went on to secure more than 50 percent of the vote, defeating challengers Eddie Andrew Meredith, Helmut Domagalski, and Kalema Jackson. 

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    The Victory Speech

    Standing before an ecstatic crowd, Mayor Andre Dickens opened his victory speech with gratitude and reflection. “Mercy, God, thank you,” he began, beaming as supporters chanted “four more years” across the ballroom. “I’m so proud and humbled to serve the greatest city in the world,” Dickens said, recalling his journey from Adamsville to City Hall. “At 16 years old, I dreamed of becoming mayor. I looked up to Mayor Jackson and Andrew Young, and I stand on the shoulders of those giants.”

    He thanked his campaign team, volunteers, and family, especially his daughter, who cast her first vote for him that day, “The group project of Atlanta is unstoppable.”

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    A Mandate from the People

    Moments after his victory speech, Dickens spoke with The Atlanta Voice, calling the night “an awesome moment, a landslide victory, and a mandate from the people.” 

    “They want four more years of what we’ve given them already, working together as a group project,” Dickens said. “Over the next four years, it’s going to be about bringing people together, unifying folks, and making sure our city’s growth is balanced, especially on the South Side. That means improving transit, healthcare, food access, and quality education all over the city, so we keep Atlanta safe and affordable.”

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Transformational Achievements

    Under Dickens’ leadership, Atlanta achieved its first-ever AAA bond rating, marking the city’s strongest financial position in history. His administration launched the Moving Atlanta Forward infrastructure program, a multi-billion-dollar investment organized around four pillars: One Safe City, A City of Opportunity for All, A City Built for the Future, and Effective & Ethical Government.

    A defining initiative of Dickens’ first term was his Year of the Youth campaign, launched in 2023 to expand mentorship, employment, and recreation programs for young Atlantans. The initiative created more than 3,000 youth job placements, extended recreation center hours, and funded new mental health and career readiness programs.

    A City in Motion

    With Atlanta preparing to host matches for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Dickens’ reelection signals continuity during a time of rapid growth. Co-chair of his re-election campaign, Ryan Wilson, co-founder and CEO of The Gathering Spot, called the victory “a pivotal moment” for the city.

    “We need a leader who understands Atlanta and works every single day to make sure we’re prepared for what’s ahead,” Wilson said. “This re-election wasn’t about fear, it was about telling the story of what’s been accomplished and why he’s the right person to lead us forward.”

    Among the attendees celebrating Dickens’ win was former Georgia Lieutenant Governor Geoff Duncan, who recently announced his campaign for governor as a Democrat. Duncan praised the mayor’s leadership and consensus-building approach.

    “He’s tackled the tough issues, from public safety to affordability, and built real consensus along the way,” Duncan said. “He’s doing a great job, and he’s going to be rewarded for it.”

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    The Legacy of Leadership

    Dickens’ reelection continues Atlanta’s six-decade tradition of two-term mayors. Since 1962, six of the city’s past eight mayors have won reelection, with Sam Massell being the last incumbent to lose, in 1973 to Maynard Jackson.

    As the crowd’s chant of “Four more years” filled the Hyatt, Dickens smiled and summed up the spirit of the evening:

    “This is about all of us,” he said. “Together, we’re going to keep building a city where everyone belongs.”

    Noah Washington

    Source link

  • ‘I Want to Do Right By the City’: Kalema Jackson wants to be the next Mayor of Atlanta

    Former Atlanta Police Department officer Kalema Jackson visited WAREhouse Studios on the campus of The Atlanta Voice to discuss his campaign for mayor. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Former Atlanta Police Department officer Kalema Jackson wants to be the next mayor of Atlanta, and he is not allowing the fact that he doesn’t know how to do that to stop him. 

    Jackson is one of three men running against the current Atlanta Mayor, Andre Dickens. Last week, he participated in the Atlanta Press Club Loudermilk-Young debate series. The debates, which were not televised live but aired on YouTube and WABE, were Jackson’s first opportunity to speak to Fulton County voters. He was nervous and hesitated to listen to or watch a replay. His mother texted him and let him know he did well. 

    “That’s when I decided to take a look, and I gave myself a B-,” Jackson said with a laugh. 

    Jackson has not allowed his lack of political experience to keep him from believing he can run the city. He believes his time on the street as a police officer helped him understand what the people of Atlanta need from its leaders. Jackson served the city for 13 years, most in Zone 3, and wants to return to continue his service, this time from City Hall, he said.

    “I want to do right by the city,” said Jackson, 50, who is unmarried and without children. “I am proud of my career as a police officer. I wanted to make a contribution to this community, and I want to do it again.” 

    Jackson, 50, has no prior political experience, but believes he can win this election. “I want to do right by the city,” he said. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Jackson was born and raised in Dothan, Alabama, and moved to Atlanta in 1996 to attend college. He recalled that the city he encountered when he arrived had changed for better and worse. After graduating from art school, Jackson saw an Atlanta Police Department recruitment advertisement in the newspaper and decided to see what it was about. 

    In 2002, Jackson completed his Atlanta Police Department academy training and joined the force. For the next 13 years, he patrolled the streets and cemented relationships, not with major players in the halls of City Hall, but with people who live, work, and play within the communities of Atlanta. 

    When asked if he misses working as a police officer, Jackson, who retired in 2015, said, “Kind of.” 

    “I am proud that the community would call on me, and I’m proud that I had that type of impact,” Jackson said. “I took every case and call seriously.” 

    Voting turnout for the mayoral elections in Fulton County has routinely been low. Just under 50% of the nearly 900,000 registered voters participated in the 2024 general election, so turnout was low among Atlantans, too. Jackson believes voters want a candidate whom they can be excited about.  

    “I have been watching the progress of the current administration, and I think I can do a better job,” said Jackson. “I feel I have a lot to offer.” 

    Jackson told The Atlanta Voice that he wants to bring more development to the city’s southside and provide more job fairs for residents. 

    “Have companies there that are actually hiring,” Jackson said of the job fairs. 

    The underdog mayoral candidate has done little campaigning, with only three weeks until Election Day, November 4. Asked what his campaign plans are, Jackson said it was to get out amongst the people more.

    “I’d like to get a little more exposure, get more support, because I want to just do right for the people,” he said.

    Donnell Suggs

    Source link

  • Georgia judge to toss landmark racketeering charges against ‘Cop City’ protesters

    A Georgia judge on Tuesday said he will toss the racketeering charges against all 61 defendants accused of a years-long conspiracy to halt the construction of a police and firefighter training facility that critics pejoratively call “Cop City.”Fulton County Judge Kevin Farmer said he does not believe Republican Attorney General Chris Carr had the authority to secure the 2023 indictments under Georgia’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations law, or RICO. Experts believe it was the largest criminal racketeering case ever filed against protesters in U.S. history.The defendants faced a wide variety of allegations — everything from throwing Molotov cocktails at police officers, to supplying food to protesters who were camped in the woods and passing out fliers against a state trooper who had fatally shot a protester. Each defendant faced up to 20 years in prison on the RICO charges.Farmer said during a hearing that Carr needed Gov. Brian Kemp’s permission to pursue the case instead of the local district attorney. Prosecutors earlier conceded that they did not obtain any such order.“It would have been real easy to just ask the governor, ‘Let me do this, give me a letter,’” Farmer said. “The steps just weren’t followed.”The case is not over yetFive of the 61 defendants were also indicted on charges of domestic terrorism and first-degree arson connected to a 2023 “night of rage” in which masked activists burned a police car in downtown Atlanta and threw rocks at a skyscraper that houses the Atlanta Police Foundation. Farmer said Carr also didn’t have the authority to pursue the arson charge, though he believes the domestic terrorism charge can stand.Farmer said he plans to file a formal order soon and is not sure whether he would quash the entire indictment or let the domestic terrorism charge proceed.Deputy Attorney General John Fowler told Farmer that he believes the judge’s decision is “wholly incorrect.”Carr plans to “appeal immediately,” spokesperson Kara Murray said.“The Attorney General will continue the fight against domestic terrorists and violent criminals who want to destroy life and property,” she said.Defense attorney Don Samuel said the case was rife with errors. Defense attorneys had expected to spend the whole week going through dozens of dismissal motions that had been filed. During an impassioned speech on Monday, the first day of the hearing, Samuel called the case “an assault on the right of people to protest” and urged Farmer to “put a stop to this.”“We could have spun the wheel and seen which argument was going to win first,” Samuel told The Associated Press after Farmer announced his decision from the bench.The long-brewing controversy over the training center erupted in January 2023 after state troopers who were part of a sweep of the South River Forest killed an activist, known as “Tortuguita,” who authorities said had fired at them while inside a tent near the construction site. A prosecutor found the troopers’ actions “objectively reasonable,” though Tortuguita’s family has filed a lawsuit, saying the 26-year-old’s hands were in the air and that troopers used excessive force when they initially fired pepper balls into the tent.Numerous protests ensued, with masked vandals sometimes attacking police vehicles and construction equipment to stall the project and intimidate contractors into backing out. Opponents also pursued civic paths to halt the facility, including packing City Council meetings and leading a massive referendum effort that got tied up in the courts.Carr, who is running for governor, had pursued the case, with Kemp hailing it as an important step to combat “out-of-state radicals that threaten the safety of our citizens and law enforcement.”But critics had decried the indictment as a politically motivated, heavy-handed attempt to quash the movement against the 85-acre project that ultimately cost more than $115 million.Environmentalists and anti-police activists were unitedEmerging in the wake of the 2020 racial justice protests, the “Stop Cop City” movement gained nationwide recognition as it united anarchists, environmental activists and anti-police protesters against the sprawling training center, which was being built in a wooded area that was ultimately razed in DeKalb County.Activists argued that uprooting acres of trees for the facility would exacerbate environmental damage in a flood-prone, majority-Black area while serving as an expensive staging ground for militarized officers to be trained in quelling social movements.The training center, a priority of Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens, opened earlier this year, despite years of protests and millions in cost overruns, some of it due to the damage protesters caused, and police officials’ needs to bolster 24/7 security around the facility.But over the past two years, the case had been bogged down in procedural issues, with none of the defendants going to trial. Farmer and the case’s previous judge, Fulton County Judge Kimberly Esmond Adams, had earlier been critical of prosecutors’ approach to the case, with Adams saying the prosecution had committed “gross negligence” by allowing privileged attorney-client emails to be included among a giant cache of evidence that was shared between investigators and dozens of defense attorneys.As the delays continued, defendants said their lives had been wrecked by the charges, with many unable to secure steady jobs or housing.Three of the defendants, organizers of a bail fund that supported the protesters, had also been charged with 15 counts of money laundering, but prosecutors dropped those charges last year.Prosecutors had previously apologized to the court for various delays and missteps, but lamented the difficulty of handling such a sprawling case, though Farmer pointed out that it was prosecutors who decided to bring this “61-person elephant” to court in the first place.Defense attorney Xavier de Janon said Farmer’s decision is a “victory,” but noted that there are other defendants still facing unindicted domestic terrorism charges in DeKalb County, as well as numerous pending misdemeanors connected to the movement.“The prosecutions haven’t ended against this movement, and I hope that people continue to pay attention to how the state is dealing with protests and activism, because it hasn’t ended,” de Janon said. “This is a win, and hopefully many more will come.”

    A Georgia judge on Tuesday said he will toss the racketeering charges against all 61 defendants accused of a years-long conspiracy to halt the construction of a police and firefighter training facility that critics pejoratively call “Cop City.”

    Fulton County Judge Kevin Farmer said he does not believe Republican Attorney General Chris Carr had the authority to secure the 2023 indictments under Georgia’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations law, or RICO. Experts believe it was the largest criminal racketeering case ever filed against protesters in U.S. history.

    The defendants faced a wide variety of allegations — everything from throwing Molotov cocktails at police officers, to supplying food to protesters who were camped in the woods and passing out fliers against a state trooper who had fatally shot a protester. Each defendant faced up to 20 years in prison on the RICO charges.

    Farmer said during a hearing that Carr needed Gov. Brian Kemp’s permission to pursue the case instead of the local district attorney. Prosecutors earlier conceded that they did not obtain any such order.

    “It would have been real easy to just ask the governor, ‘Let me do this, give me a letter,’” Farmer said. “The steps just weren’t followed.”

    The case is not over yet

    Five of the 61 defendants were also indicted on charges of domestic terrorism and first-degree arson connected to a 2023 “night of rage” in which masked activists burned a police car in downtown Atlanta and threw rocks at a skyscraper that houses the Atlanta Police Foundation. Farmer said Carr also didn’t have the authority to pursue the arson charge, though he believes the domestic terrorism charge can stand.

    Farmer said he plans to file a formal order soon and is not sure whether he would quash the entire indictment or let the domestic terrorism charge proceed.

    Deputy Attorney General John Fowler told Farmer that he believes the judge’s decision is “wholly incorrect.”

    Carr plans to “appeal immediately,” spokesperson Kara Murray said.

    “The Attorney General will continue the fight against domestic terrorists and violent criminals who want to destroy life and property,” she said.

    Defense attorney Don Samuel said the case was rife with errors. Defense attorneys had expected to spend the whole week going through dozens of dismissal motions that had been filed. During an impassioned speech on Monday, the first day of the hearing, Samuel called the case “an assault on the right of people to protest” and urged Farmer to “put a stop to this.”

    “We could have spun the wheel and seen which argument was going to win first,” Samuel told The Associated Press after Farmer announced his decision from the bench.

    The long-brewing controversy over the training center erupted in January 2023 after state troopers who were part of a sweep of the South River Forest killed an activist, known as “Tortuguita,” who authorities said had fired at them while inside a tent near the construction site. A prosecutor found the troopers’ actions “objectively reasonable,” though Tortuguita’s family has filed a lawsuit, saying the 26-year-old’s hands were in the air and that troopers used excessive force when they initially fired pepper balls into the tent.

    Numerous protests ensued, with masked vandals sometimes attacking police vehicles and construction equipment to stall the project and intimidate contractors into backing out. Opponents also pursued civic paths to halt the facility, including packing City Council meetings and leading a massive referendum effort that got tied up in the courts.

    Carr, who is running for governor, had pursued the case, with Kemp hailing it as an important step to combat “out-of-state radicals that threaten the safety of our citizens and law enforcement.”

    But critics had decried the indictment as a politically motivated, heavy-handed attempt to quash the movement against the 85-acre project that ultimately cost more than $115 million.

    Environmentalists and anti-police activists were united

    Emerging in the wake of the 2020 racial justice protests, the “Stop Cop City” movement gained nationwide recognition as it united anarchists, environmental activists and anti-police protesters against the sprawling training center, which was being built in a wooded area that was ultimately razed in DeKalb County.

    Activists argued that uprooting acres of trees for the facility would exacerbate environmental damage in a flood-prone, majority-Black area while serving as an expensive staging ground for militarized officers to be trained in quelling social movements.

    The training center, a priority of Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens, opened earlier this year, despite years of protests and millions in cost overruns, some of it due to the damage protesters caused, and police officials’ needs to bolster 24/7 security around the facility.

    But over the past two years, the case had been bogged down in procedural issues, with none of the defendants going to trial. Farmer and the case’s previous judge, Fulton County Judge Kimberly Esmond Adams, had earlier been critical of prosecutors’ approach to the case, with Adams saying the prosecution had committed “gross negligence” by allowing privileged attorney-client emails to be included among a giant cache of evidence that was shared between investigators and dozens of defense attorneys.

    As the delays continued, defendants said their lives had been wrecked by the charges, with many unable to secure steady jobs or housing.

    Three of the defendants, organizers of a bail fund that supported the protesters, had also been charged with 15 counts of money laundering, but prosecutors dropped those charges last year.

    Prosecutors had previously apologized to the court for various delays and missteps, but lamented the difficulty of handling such a sprawling case, though Farmer pointed out that it was prosecutors who decided to bring this “61-person elephant” to court in the first place.

    Defense attorney Xavier de Janon said Farmer’s decision is a “victory,” but noted that there are other defendants still facing unindicted domestic terrorism charges in DeKalb County, as well as numerous pending misdemeanors connected to the movement.

    “The prosecutions haven’t ended against this movement, and I hope that people continue to pay attention to how the state is dealing with protests and activism, because it hasn’t ended,” de Janon said. “This is a win, and hopefully many more will come.”

    Source link

  • Atlanta City Councilmember Overstreet announces plans to run for City Council presidency

    Overstreet (center) is a native of Atlanta and an alumnus of Atlanta Public Schools. Photo by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice

    In a press conference on the steps of City Hall, Atlanta City Councilmember Marci Collier Overstreet announced she is running for City Council president. Overstrteet, an Atlanta native, represents District 11.

    “I am so excited to be your next president in Atlanta because I am exactly what the city needs right now,” she said. “We’re doing the work and I’ll be the only one on the ballot that is ready. Ready is important in the city of Atlanta. Our mayor said he needs a partner ready to go on day one and that’s me.”

    A supporter of Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens on the steps of Atlanta city Hall on Tuesday, August 19, 2025. Photo by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice

    The qualifying period for mayoral candidates in Atlanta is Aug. 19-22. However, individuals raising funds to run for office are required to declare their candidacy earlier. As of now, seven candidates had officially declared their intention to run, including Andre Dickens (incumbent), Helmut Domagalski, Kalema Jackson, Marcus Lamar, Eddie Meredith, Walter Reeves, and Larmetria Trammell.

    Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens has also formally qualified to seek a second term as Mayor of the City of Atlanta. Dickens said he filed his official paperwork at the City of Atlanta Municipal Clerk’s Office.

    The next Atlanta mayoral election is scheduled for Nov. 4. If necessary, a run-off election will be held on Dec. 2.


    Avatar photo

    Born and raised in Stockbridge, GA, Isaiah always knew he wanted to become a voice for the voiceless. He graduated from Savannah State University in 2019, and since then, he’s worked for The Marietta Daily…
    More by Isaiah Singleton

    Isaiah Singleton

    Source link

  • NBCDI hosts “Creative Gathering” at ZuCot Gallery

    NBCDI hosts “Creative Gathering” at ZuCot Gallery

    “These words have impact, they can make and change anything,” said Thomas Anthony Waller, Board Chair Emeritus of the National Black Child Development Institute (NCBDI), when addressing a room full of donors, poets, writers, and activists at the 2024 “Creative Gathering.” Held on October 17, 2024, at the ZuCot Gallery in Atlanta, Georgia, the event brought together a community dedicated to improving the quality of life for Black children and families through literature. The annual gathering, hosted by NCBDI, featured a keynote speech delivered by renowned poet and author Kwame Alexander, whose personal story highlighted the theme of legacy, creativity, and empowerment.

    Recalling his father, Dr. E. Curtis Alexander’s role in co-founding NCBDI in 1970, Alexander expressed the significance of speaking at an event tied so closely to his family’s history. “This is full circle for me,” Alexander remarked. He fondly remembered how his father pushed him to aim high and never settle for less, sharing his father’s words, “Nobody lowers my son’s goals. He doesn’t know he can’t make it,” Alexander told.

    Kwane Alexander (left) with Dr. Leah Johnson, President & CEO of NBCDI. Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    In an exclusive conversation with The Atlanta Voice, Alexander shared a message he would give to his younger self, a boy growing up with aspirations, which would be realized, “Remember that you are the greatest, not because you are better than anyone, but because no one is better than you,” said Alexander. 

    In addition to the keynote, the evening featured performances that honored Black creativity. Poet Ariana Francesca performed for the audience with her spoken word performance of “Black Abundance”. Atlanta Mayor, Andre Dickens, also contributed to the evening with pre-recorded remarks, adding his voice in support of NCBDI’s mission.

    Attendees of the gathering were given a special “Toy Box”which contained children’s books by Black authors. Titles included “How to Write a Poem” by Kwame Alexander, “Leaves to My Knees” by Ellen Mayer, and “Born Driven” by Wendell Scott. The box also included a puzzle. 

    Kwame Alexander was honored alongside Terri-Nichelle Bradley, founder of Brown Toy Box, an educational toy company producing and curating STEAM toys, media, and experiences for celebrating Black children. Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    Dr. Leah Austin, CEO and President of NCBDI, took the stage to address the ongoing societal challenges impacting the organization’s mission. In light of the 2024 election and the growing wave of book bans across the nation, Dr. Austin emphasized the critical role NCBDI continues to play in advocating for Black children. “The National Black Child Development Institute has been around for 54 years, and unfortunately, many of the issues we were originally trying to dismantle persist,” said Dr. Austin to The Atlanta Voice, “Book bans targeting Black and Brown literature are not just attacks on books; they are attacks on identity. It’s a diminishing of people. It’s a dehumanization,” Dr. Austin continued.

    As book bans and efforts to silence Black voices escalate, NCBDI remains steadfast in its commitment to advocacy, organizing, and movement-building cited Austin, “We’re not just a direct service organization,” she explained. “We’re about advocating, organizing, and movement building. This fight will continue, regardless of who is in the White House.”

    Kwame Alexander, too, addressed the recent efforts to restrict access to Black literature. In his message to parents and educators, he urged them to empower children by allowing them to explore the world of books freely. “Books are amusement parks, and kids ought to be able to choose the rides,” said Alexander. “Let your child choose the book they want to read. To teachers, let your students choose the books. It’s not enough to get kids to read; let’s get them to want to read.”

    During the evening Allyson Smith, Event Host and Vice President of Community Mobilization at NCBDI, gave a “call to action,”  urging the audience to use their creativity to shift narratives for Black children. “Whether it’s your music, your spoken word, your visual arts—whatever creative expression the divine has given you—we are using that to shift narratives about Black children,” Smith said. “Drawing from the wisdom we learn from our ancestors, we know that changing the narrative can indeed create change in the world.”

    Smith spoke to the core values of NCBDI, particularly the concept of Afrofuturism—a reimagining of a future where Black identity, agency, and freedom thrive. “Afrofuturism is a movement that envisions a liberated future for Black communities,” said Smith. “Through the stories we tell, the myths we break, and the new visions we create, we honor this legacy with our creativity and our commitment to justice.”

    Noah Washington

    Source link

  • Prayers Up! Explosion Reportedly Involving Delta Plane Results In Multiple Deaths Near Atlanta Airport

    Prayers Up! Explosion Reportedly Involving Delta Plane Results In Multiple Deaths Near Atlanta Airport

    Two people have died, and a third person has reportedly been seriously injured after a Delta plane tire exploded near Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.

    RELATED: Desiigner Charged With Indecent Exposure Following Recent Airplane Incident

    More Details On The Delta Plane’s Tire Explosion In Atlanta

    According to WSBTV, the incident occurred during the early morning hours of Tuesday, August 27. A tire on a Boeing 757 plane was reportedly being worked on in a maintenance shop near the airport, per The Guardian. Amid the operation, the tire allegedly exploded. Furthermore, it killed “a Delta employee and a contractor.”

    Additionally, a third person, who was another Delta employee, allegedly sustained a “major injury.” However, WSBTV notes that the identities of the victims have not been publicly released.

    How Has The Airline Responded?

    According to the outlet, the airline confirmed the deaths of the two individuals and the second employee’s injury on Tuesday, August 27.

    “The Delta family is heartbroken at the loss of two team members and the injury of another following an incident this morning at the Atlanta Technical Operations Maintenance facility (TOC 3),” the airline’s statement reads per the outlet. “We have extended our full support to family members and colleagues during this incredibly difficult time.”

    Furthermore, the airline’s statement expressed gratitude for “the quick action of first responders and medical teams on site.”

    “We are now working with local authorities and conducting a full investigation to determine what happened,” the statement concluded.

    In addition to Delta’s statement, the mayor of Atlanta, Andre Dickens, has also spoken out about the incident.

    “I offer my deepest condolences to the family and loved ones of the deceased Delta employees,” Dickens stated. “My thoughts are also with those who were injured, and I hope for their swift and full recovery. AFRD, APD, and HJAIA teams are on the scene, working diligently to address the situation.”

    Here’s What Has Been Reported About The Delta Tire Explosion

    According to WSBTV, the plane tire has been linked to a Delta flight that arrived from Las Vegas on Sunday, August 25.

    As the investigation into the incident unfolds, Delta’s TechOps, or its maintenance and repair sector, has reportedly vowed to “make counselors available” to assist staff members as they work through the tragedy, per CBS News.

    “We’re all in this together, and we’ll get through this by supporting each other,” TechOps President and Delta Executive Vice President John Laughter reportedly stated.

    RELATED: Woman Accused Of Stabbing Taxi Driver, Police Officer, & Delta Employee At Atlanta Airport

    What Do You Think Roomies?

    Jadriena Solomon

    Source link

  • OPINION: Atlanta wins with solid policy like the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law…we need congress working together again

    OPINION: Atlanta wins with solid policy like the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law…we need congress working together again

    Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens delivers a speech during the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW), Local Union 613’s annual Martin Luther King, Jr. celebration on Friday, January 12, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia. Photo: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice

    Like many, I will be watching the President’s State of the Union Address. While he will cover many topics that are indeed important to Atlantans, there are some that will probably not be mentioned that have a real impact on our daily lives. 

    On a snowy January afternoon in Washington D.C., I joined a bi-partisan group of mayors from across the country for a meeting with President Joe Biden. A late add to my agenda was an invitation to the Oval Office for a one-on-one conversation with the President to discuss how the federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Law has impacted Atlanta. 

    With limited time, I used the expansion of Concourse D at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport as an example. Atlanta received $40 million from BIL for that project, which will widen and modernize Concourse D and make it more accessible—especially ADA accessible. 

    Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens

    Source link

  • Pure Positivity: Restaurateur Ebony Austin Enlists Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens For Nouveau Bar Grill’s 4th Annual Holiday Toy Drive

    Pure Positivity: Restaurateur Ebony Austin Enlists Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens For Nouveau Bar Grill’s 4th Annual Holiday Toy Drive

    An Atlanta restaurateur recently blessed families for the holidays during an annual toy drive.

    Source: Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive 

    Ebony Austin, along with various partners and volunteers, blessed deserving families just in time for the Christmas Holiday through her Hiz Creations Foundation and her Nouveau Bar and Grill.

    The philanthropist invited families to Atlanta’s historic Cascade Skating Rink where she teamed up with Mayor Andre Dickens, rapper Hurricane Chris, Mz. Shyneka, Yandy Smith, and Dr. Contessa Metcalfe to gift over 2,000 Atlanta area families with presents.

    Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive

    Source: Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive 

    A press release reports that a variety of gifts were given out including computers, gaming consoles (X Boxes, Playstations), bicycles, dirt bikes, Beats by Dre headphones, cash, gift cards, clothes, and shoes.

    Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive

    Source: Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive 

    Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive

    Source: Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive 

    This year’s theme for the giveaway was “Recreating Christmas” as Ebony and her team gave four children of Breast Cancer survivors the Christmas of their dreams, loaded with gifts and prizes as well as priority gift selection.

    Educators were also honored during the toy drive as Ebony gifted several of them payment of their rent, car note, and utility bills.

     

    Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive

    Source: Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive / Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive

    “Being an educator is a job that so crucial to our community and they don’t get the credit that they deserve,” said Austin. in a statement “I’ve been blessed with such a wonderful foundation that allows me to go above and beyond with helping people who are often overlooked.”

    What do YOU think about this ATL entrepreneur giving back for the holidays?

    Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive

    Source: Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive / Nouveau Bar & Grill Holiday Toy Drive

    Danielle Canada

    Source link