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July 18, 2024

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By multiple measures, the Birmingham area has seen dramatic declines in unemployment since the pandemic. (Adobe Stock)
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Employment
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UTILITY COORDINATOR
BJCC, is recruiting for a Utility Coordinator; for information & to apply visit https://www.bjcc.org/jobs/ or send resume to careers@bjcc.org /fax resume 205-458-8530.
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TALENT ACQUISITION AND
DEVELOPMENT MANAGER
BJCC, is recruiting for a Talent Acquisition and Development Manager; for information & to apply visit https://www.bjcc.org/jobs/ or send resume to careers@bjcc.org /fax resume 205-458-8530.
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LEGAL
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CASE NO. 01-CV-2023-904620
THE BIRMINGHAM LAND BANK AUTHORITY, a Public Corporation,
NOTICE OF FINAL HEARING BY PUBLICATION
TO: RUTH B. BRACKETT, DECEASED; ERIC L. GUSTER; J.T. SMALLWOOD, JEFFERSON COUNTY TAX
COLLECTOR; JEFFERSON COUNTY, ALABAMA; CITY OF BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA; and any and all other
unknown heirs, claimants or interested parties claiming any right, title, estate, lien, or interest in the real estate
described herein.
TAKE NOTICE that on December 21, 2023, the Birmingham Land Bank Authority filed the above-styled Complaint and the Land Bank asserts that it has recorded notice of a pending quiet title and foreclosure
action in the Probate Court of Jefferson County, Alabama concerning the rights and/or interests in the following
real property:
That parcel of real property located at 1013 11th Place North, Birmingham, Alabama 35204 and having a legal
description of:
A Part of Block 3 of the J.M. Ware Survey, as recorded in Deed Book 158, page 131, in the Office of the Judge
of Probate of Jefferson County, Alabama, being more particularly described as follows:
Commence at the intersection of the west line of 12th Street with the North line of 10th Avenue North; thence
run in a northerly direction along the west line of 12th Street for a distance of 80 feet; thence turn an angle to
the left of 90° and run in a westerly direction a distance of 200 feet to an alley; thence in a northerly direction
along the west side of said alley a distance of 40 feet to the Point of Beginning; thence continue a distance
of 40 feet along the west line of said alley; thence turn an angle of 90° to the right and run in an Easterly direction
92 feet; thence turn 90° to the right and run in a southerly direction 40 feet; thence turn in a westerly direction
and run a distance of 92 feet to the Point of Beginning, a/k/a a PART OF THE E 1/2 BLK 3 J M WARE DESC AS COMM AT NE INT 10TH AVE N & 11TH PL N THENCE NW 120 FT S TO POB THENCE NE 92 FT S NW 40 FT S SW 92 FT S SE 40 FT S TO BEG 3/120
ANY PERSON WITH A PROPERTY INTEREST IN THE ABOVE PROPERTY IS HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT
THEY MAY LOSE SUCH INTEREST, IF ANY, AS A RESULT OF THE ABOVE- REFERENCED QUIET
TITLE AND FORECLOSURE ACTION. The final hearing on this quiet title and foreclosure
action is hereby set for August 16, 2024, at 9:15 a.m. in Room 340, 716 Richard Arrington, Jr. Boulevard North,
Jefferson County Courthouse, Birmingham, Alabama 35203. The judgement of the Court may result in title to the property vesting in the Birmingham Land Bank Authority. Any person who proves to the Court’s satisfaction a rightto redeem the property pursuant to Alabama Code §§ 40-10-73 (1975) et seq. or Alabama Code §§ 40-10-83 (1975) et seq. may redeem the property pursuant to those statutes within five (5) days after the appropriate
Order on Final Hearing is issued. FAILURE TO REDEEM THE PROPERTY AND PRESENT PROOF OF
REDEMPTION TO THE CIRCUIT COURT WITHIN THE 5-DAY PERIOD MAY RESULT IN A LOSS OF
THE RIGHT OF REDEMPTION.
The address of the Birmingham Land Bank Authority is City Hall, 710 North 20th St., Birmingham, AL 35203.
The Birmingham Land Bank Authority may be contacted care of Greer B. Mallette, Christian & Small, LLP,
505 20th Street North, Suite 1800 Financial Center, Birmingham, AL 35203 at (205)795-6588.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED by the undersigned Clerk of Court that publication of this notice be made once a week for three consecutive weeks in The Birmingham Times, a newspaper of general circulation in Jefferson
County, Alabama, and that all persons to whom this notice is addressed and any and all persons claiming any titleto, interest in, or lien or encumbrance on the above-described land or any part thereof are hereby directed to
plead, answer or otherwise respond to the Complaint in this cause before the hearing date or a judgment by
default may be rendered against them it being intended that this notice shall be used to perfect service against
all parties who cannot be personally served with a copy of the Complaint.
Dated this the 1st day of July, 2024.
Jacqueline Anderson Smith, Circuit Clerk
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CASE NO. CV-2024-902025
THE BIRMINGHAM LAND BANK AUTHORITY, a Public Corporation,
NOTICE OF FINAL HEARING BY PUBLICATION
TO: TIMOTHY ABNER; CHRISTOPHER B. ANDERTON; ESTATE OF MATTIE HARRIS; CITY OF BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA; J.T. SMALLWOOD, JEFFERSON COUNTY TAX COLLECTOR; AND JEFFERSON COUNTY, ALABAMA, and any and all other unknown heirs, claimants or interested parties claiming any right, title, estate, lien, or interest in the real estate described herein,
TAKE NOTICE that on May 20, 2024, the Birmingham Land Bank Authority filed the above-styled Complaint and the Land Bank asserts that it has recorded notice of a pending quiet title and foreclosure action in the Probate Court of Jefferson County, Alabama concerning the rights and/or interests in the following real property:
The North forty feet of Lots 7 & 8, Block 16, in P. Rising’s Survey, called Compton, as recorded in Volume 1, Page 83, in the Probate Office of Jefferson County, Alabama.
It appears said legal is the same as that certain legal described in Inst. No. 201512300122429 as follows: N 40 FT LOTS 7&8 BLK 16 COMPTON RISING
and assigned Parcel ID No. 29-00-04-2-023-016.000
ANY PERSON WITH A PROPERTY INTEREST IN THE ABOVE PROPERTY IS HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT THEY MAY LOSE SUCH INTEREST, IF ANY, AS A RESULT OF THE ABOVE-REFERENCED QUIET TITLE AND FORECLOSURE ACTION. The final hearing on this quiet title and foreclosure action is hereby set for September 5, 2024, in Room 360, Jefferson County Courthouse in Birmingham, Alabama at 10:30 a.m. The judgment of the Court may result in title to the property vesting in the Birmingham Land Bank Authority.  Any person who proves to the Court’s satisfaction a right to redeem the property pursuant to Alabama Code §§ 40-10-73 (1975) et seq. or Alabama Code §§ 40-10-83 (1975) et seq. may redeem the property pursuant to those statutes within five (5) days after the appropriate Order on Final Hearing is issued.  FAILURE TO REDEEM THE PROPERTY AND PRESENT PROOF OF REDEMPTION TO THE CIRCUIT COURT WITHIN THE 5-DAY PERIOD MAY RESULT IN A LOSS OF THE RIGHT OF REDEMPTION.
The address of the Birmingham Land Bank Authority is City Hall, 710 North 20th St., Birmingham, AL 35203. The Birmingham Land Bank Authority may be contacted care of Jake A. Kiser at (205) 918-5037.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED by the undersigned Clerk of Court that publication of this notice be made once a week for three consecutive weeks in The Birmingham Times, a newspaper of general circulation in Jefferson County, Alabama, and that all persons to whom this notice is addressed and any and all persons claiming any title to, interest in, or lien or encumbrance on the above-described land or any part thereof are hereby directed to plead, answer or otherwise respond to the Complaint in this case before the hearing date or a judgment by default may be rendered against them it being intended that this notice shall be used to perfect service against all parties who cannot be personally served with a copy of the Complaint.
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CASE NO. 01-CV-2024-901912.00
NOTICE OF FINAL HEARING BY PUBLICATION
TO: HAMILTON PERKINS, JR., DECEASED; MARJORIE COLLINS PERKINS; DOROTHY PERKINS WHITE; LINDA PERKINS KING; JOHN HAMILTON PERKINS 111; MARJORY PERKINS ISRAEL; CHARLES BELGRAVE PERKINS; NORA PERKINS SOPRANI; JOHN HIGHTOWER, DECEASED; ESTHER HIGHTOWER, DECEASED; J.T. SMALLWOOD; JEFFERSON COUNTY TAX COLLECTOR; JEFFERSON COUNTY, ALABAMA; CITY OF BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA; and any and all other  heirs, claimants or interested parties claiming any right, title, estate, lien, or interest in the real estate described herein,
TAKE NOTICE that on May 10, 2024, the Birmingham Land Bank Authority filed the above-styled Complaint and the Land Bank asserts that it has recorded notice of a pending quiet title and foreclosure action in the Probate Court of Jefferson County, Alabama concerning the rights and/or interests in the following real property:
That parcel of real property located at 1021 1Ith Place North, Birmingham, Alabama 35204 and having a legal description of:
Begin at the Northwest corner of 12th Street and 10th Avenue North and run for a distance of 200 feet along the North side of 10th Avenue North, thence turn at a 90° angle in a northwesterly direction being the East side of alley or Alice Street for a distance of 200 feet to a point of beginning, thence Northwest along the East side of Alice Street (or Alley Street) a distance of 45 feet, thence turn at a 90° angle In an Easterly direction for a distance of 92 feet, thence Southeast at a 90° angle a distance of 45 feet, thence 90° in a Southwesterly direction a distance of 92 feet to the point of beginning, as surveyed by A. W. Meade, as being a survey of Lot 4, Block 3, in the J.M. Ware Survey, as recorded in Deed Book 158, page 131, in the Office of the Judge of Probate of Jefferson County, Alabama a/k/a PART OF LOT 4 BLK 3 JM WARE DESC AS COM AT NW INTERSECT OF 10TH AVE NO & 11 TH PLACE NO TH NW 200 FT TO PT OF BEG TH CONT NWLY 45 FT TH NE 92 FT TH SE 45 FT TH SW 92 FT TO POB SEC 35 TWP 17 R 3
ANY PERSON WITH A PROPERTY INTEREST IN THE ABOVE PROPERTY IS HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT THEY MAY LOSE SUCH INTEREST, IF ANY, AS A RESULT OF THE ABOVE-REFERENCED QUIET TITLE AND FORECLOSURE ACTION. The final hearing on this quiet title and foreclosure action is hereby set for September 12, 2024, at 10:00 a.m., in Room 340,  716 Richard Arrington, Jr., Boulevard North, Jefferson County
Courthouse, Birmingham, Alabama 35203. The judgment of the Court may result in title to the property vesting in the Birmingham Land Bank Authority. Any person who proves to the Court’s satisfaction a right to redeem the property pursuant to Alabama Code §§ 40-10-73 (1975) et seq. or Alabama Code §§ 40-10-83 (1975) et seq. may redeem the property pursuant to those statutes within five (5) days after the appropriate Order on Final Hearing is issued. FAILURE TO REDEEM THE PROPERTY AND PRESENT PROOF OF REDEMPTION TO THE CIRCUIT COURT WITHIN THE 5-DAY PERIOD MAY RESULT IN A LOSS OF THE RIGHT OF REDEMPTION.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED by the undersigned Clerk of Court that publication of this notice be made once a week for three consecutive weeks in The Birmingham Times, a newspaper of general circulation in Jefferson County, Alabama, and that all persons to whom this notice is addressed and any and all persons claiming any title to, interest in, or lien or encumbrance on the above-described land or any part thereof are hereby directed to plead, answer or otherwise respond to the Complaint in this case before the hearing date or a judgment by default may be rendered against them it being intended that this notice shall be used to perfect service against all parties who cannot be personally served with a copy of the Complaint.
Dated this the 15th day of July, 2024.
Jacqueline Anderson Smith, Circuit Clerk
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NOTICE OF COMPLETION
In accordance with Chapter 1, Title 39, Code of Alabama, 1975, as amended, notice is hereby given
that GKL Companies, Contractor, has completed the Contract for renovation of Harris Early Learning
Ctr- Replace Shingle Roofing 22-381 at 1413 7th Ave North, Birmingham, AL 35203, for the State of
Alabama and the City of Auburn, Owner(s), and have made request for final settlement of said Contract.
All persons having any claim for labor, materials, or otherwise in connection with this project should
immediately notify Stephen Ward & Associate, 128 Jetplex Circle, Madison, AL 35758.
GKL Companies, Inc
(Contractor)
112 Rainbow Industrial Drive
Rainbow City, AL 35906
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NOTICE OF COMPLETION
In accordance with Chapter 1, Title 39, Code of Alabama, 1975. Notice is hereby given
that Avery Landscape & Associates, LLC, Contractor, has completed the contract for the
improvements to Rocky Ridge Sidewalk, City of Vestavia Hills, Alabama, Jefferson County,
Engineer Project No. COVH0006 and have made request for final settlement of said contract.
All persons having any claim for labor, materials, or otherwise in connection with this project
should immediately notify P.O. Box 746, Hamilton, Alabama 35570.
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NOTICE OF COMPLETION
In accordance with Chapter 1, Title 39, Code of Alabama, 1975, notice is hereby given that Williford Orman Construction LLC , Contractor, has completed the Contract for Construction of Renovations to C-Wing and Band Storage Building at Pelham High School at Pelham, AL for the State of Alabama and the City of Pelham, Owner(s), and have made request for final settlement of said Contract. All persons having any claim for labor, materials, or otherwise in connection with this project should immediately notify Lathan Associates Architects PC.
Williford Orman Construction LLC
Contractor
PO Box 1985
Pelham, AL 35124
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NOTICE OF COMPLETION
In accordance with Chapter 1, Title 39, Code of Alabama, 1975, notice is hereby given that
Comfort Systems USA Mid South, Inc. has completed the Contract for
Homewood Middle School Chiller Replacement at Homewood Middle School for the State of
Alabama and the City of Homewood, Owners, and have made request for final settlement of said Contract.
All persons having any claim for labor, materials, or otherwise in connection with this project should
immediately notify Bernhard TME, LLC, 3332 Old Montgomery Highway, Suite 103, Birmingham, AL  35209, Architect.
Comfort Systems USA Mid South, Inc.
3100 Richard Arrington Jr Blvd N
Birmingham, AL  35203
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NOTICE
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
IN THE COURT OF FAMILY COURT
SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
COUNTY OF YORK
Latasha Brown Baird VS Lamont J. Baird
Case No.: 2024-DR-46-0237
SUMMONS FOR LAMONT J. BAIRD
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint filed in Family Court of York County, and to serve a copy of your answer to said complaint upon the subscriber, Tawana Burris-Alcide, Esq. at her office at The Burris Legal Group, 204 Johnston Street, Rock Hill, SC 29730, within thirty (30) days after the service thereof, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint.
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NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed bid packages for Bid 24-12-08- “Precast Concrete Vaults” will be received in the Purchasing Department of the Birmingham Water Works Board, located at 3600 First Avenue North, Birmingham, Alabama 35222, until 10:00 a.m. (CST), Thursday, July 25, 2024, at which time and place they will publicly open and read. All potential bidders must receive an executed copy of the applicable “Receipt of Bid” Sheet, with a time stamp, from the BWW Purchasing Department before their bid package may be considered responsive. The bid packages must be delivered or mailed to the BWW Purchasing Department, which is located at 3600 First Avenue North, Birmingham, Alabama 35222, by 10:00 am. The bid packages must be directed to the attention of the Purchasing Superintendent and marked in the lower left-hand corner of the envelope as follows: “Bids for 24-12-08: Precast Concrete Vaults.” Bid packages may be obtained through our website at www.bwwb.org or by emailing Delerda.Abrom@bwwb.org.
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INVITATION FOR BIDS
ITB #44-24” HVAC WATER TREATMENT SERVICES”
Bids will be received by the Jefferson County Commission Purchasing Agent Michael D. Matthews, Ph.D.,
C.P.M. , until 4:00 PM (CST) p.m. on August 14, 2024. The bid opening  for ITB #44-24 “HVAC WATER TREATMENT SERVICES”  will be held on August 15, 2024, at 10:00 AM (CST) and a mandatory pre-bid conference will be held on August 7, 2024, at 10:00 AM (CST).
All Solicitation information including forms, and specifications are available for download free at https://jeffcobids.jccal.org/Search.aspx
The Jefferson County Commission’s Department of General Services desires to enter into an agreement with a Contractor(s) for HVAC water treatment services for the operation of boilers, cooling towers, condensers and associated circulation systems in Jefferson County buildings.
Interested parties must meet bidder requirements and qualifications as specified in the bid documents on or before the date that the bids are due.
A performance bond will be required in the amount of 100% of the contract price.
All questions must be submitted in writing to procurementservices@jccal.org.  Attention: Joy McDowell.
Both the mandatory pre-bid conference and the bid opening will be held at 716 Richard Arrington Jr. Blvd. N,  Suite 830, Birmingham, AL 35203 in the Jefferson County Main Courthouse and virtually through Microsoft TEAMS.
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INVITATION FOR BIDS
ITB #49-24” BOILER INSPECTIONS AND MRO SERVICES”
Bids will be received by the Jefferson County Commission Purchasing Agent Michael D. Matthews, Ph.D.,
C.P.M., until 4:00 PM (CST) p.m. on August 26, 2024. The bid opening  for ITB #49-24 “Boiler Inspections And MRO Services” will be held on August 21, 2024, at 10:00 AM (CST) and an optional pre-bid conference will be held on August 7, 2024 at 2:00 PM (CST).
All Solicitation information including forms, and specifications are available for download free at https://jeffcobids.jccal.org/Search.aspx
The Jefferson County Commission’s Department of General Services desires to enter into an agreement with a Contractor(s) for boiler inspections and MRO Services to perform inspections, testing and miscellaneous repair for boilers in Jefferson County buildings.
Interested parties must meet bidder requirements and qualifications as specified in the bid documents on or before the date that the bids are due.
A performance bond will be required in the amount of 100% of the contract price.
All questions must be submitted in writing to procurementservices@jccal.org. Attention: Joy McDowell.
Both the optional pre-bid conference and the bid opening will be held at 716 Richard Arrington Jr. Blvd. N,  Suite 830, Birmingham, AL 35203 in the Jefferson County Main Courthouse and virtually through Microsoft TEAMS.
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REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
The Birmingham Airport Authority (“BAA” or “Authority”) is soliciting Request for Proposal (RFP) from qualified contract security companies (company) to provide staffing to screen aviation workers that access Secured or Sterile areas within the Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport (BHM) airport terminal to detect unauthorized weapons, explosives, or incendiaries and other prohibited items, as appropriate, each workday to enhance insider threat deterrence and detection. Copies of the RFP can be obtained by visiting the Airports Website at http://www.flybhm.com or via email request sent to eseoane@flybhm.com.
A non-mandatory pre-submittal meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, July 23 at 10:00 AM CST in the airport terminal Meeting Room A, located on the lower level of the terminal building by doors 4L. This meeting is non- mandatory.  All attendees who plan to attend the meeting must RSVP with Ed Seoane, Vice President of Purchasing at eseoane@flybhm.com by 2:00 pm (local time) on Monday, July 22, 2024.
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ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID
The Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center Authority will be accepting sealed bids for:
Sheraton Atrium Room Refresh
Bid information, requirements, plans and specifications may be downloaded at www.bjcc.org (under Vendor Information). There is no charge for downloading bid documents. They may also be examined at the
Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center Purchasing Office, 2100 Richard Arrington Jr. Blvd N, North Exhibition Hall, 3rd Floor, Birmingham, AL 35203.
General Scope of Work: The project is a cosmetic renovation of approximately 111 Sheraton Hotel guest rooms, including interior demolition/removal, paint, wallpaper, carpet, fixtures, and other miscellaneous items of work.  There is no structural, HVAC, or major electrical renovation. The start of construction is anticipated to be September 4, 2024, with a project completion date of December 31, 2024.
A Mandatory Pre-Bid Conference will be held on Wednesday, July 24, 2024, at 1:00 p.m. in the Forum Building, 2nd Floor, Meeting Room E, located at 950 22nd Street North, Birmingham, AL 35203.
Bids must be received for public opening on Tuesday, August 13, 2024, at 1:00 p.m. in the Forum Building, 2nd Floor, Meeting Room E, located at the above stated address. All bids received after 1:00 p.m. on the bid date will be retained in the file unopened.
Questions should be emailed to Sharon.Proctor@bjcc.org and Jerry.Reece@bjcc.org. Telephone inquiries are not accepted.
Sharon Proctor
Purchasing Manager
Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center Authority
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ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
Sealed proposals will be received by Birmingham City Schools at the office of Edward McMullen, Purchasing Department, 2015 Park Place North, Birmingham, Alabama 35203 until 2:00 p.m. local time Friday, August 2, 2024 for the Synthetic Track Surfacing Systems, at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read.
A non-mandatory pre-bid conference is scheduled for 2:00 p.m., Monday, July 22, 2024 at: Birmingham Board of Education, 2015 Park Place North, Birmingham, Alabama 35203.
Birmingham Board of Education has adopted a policy designed to encourage the participation of MBE/DBE firms in construction projects.
A cashier’s check or bid bond payable to Birmingham City Schools in an amount not less than five (5%) percent of the amount of the bid, but in no event more than $10,000.00, must accompany the bidder’s proposal.  Performance and Payment Bonds and evidence of insurance required in the bid documents will be required at the signing of the Contract.
Bid documents may be obtained and are available on the Districts website at https://www.bhamcityschools.org/page/itb-rfp-rfq-and-addendums.
Bids must be submitted on proposal forms furnished by Birmingham Board of Education Purchasing Department or copies thereof. All bidders bidding in amounts exceeding that established by the State Licensing Board for General Contractors must be licensed under the provisions of Title 34, Chapter 8, Code of Alabama 1975, and must show evidence of license before bidding or bid will not be received or considered by the Birmingham Board of Education: the bidder shall show such evidence by clearly displaying his or her current license number on the outside of the sealed envelope in which the proposal is delivered. The Owner reserves the right to reject any or all proposals and to waive technical errors if, in the Owner’s judgment, the best interest of the Owner will thereby be promoted.
Owner:
Birmingham City Schools
2015 Park Place, North
Birmingham, Alabama    35203
Attn: Edward McMullen
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INVITATION FOR BIDS
The Jefferson County Commission will receive bids for the Center Point Community Center (CD22-03E-01-CPCC) at Room A-420 meeting room of the Jefferson County Courthouse until 10:00 a.m. local time on Tuesday, August 13, 2024, at which time and place all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud.
Any bid to be delivered by hand or mail prior to the above time or at a different place shall be at the full risk of the bidder. Such bids may be delivered or mailed to the Jefferson County Department of Community Services, at 716 Richard Arrington Jr. Blvd N, Suite A-430, Birmingham, Alabama 35203. If for any reason such bid does not reach Room A-420 meeting room of the Jefferson County Courthouse prior to the opening, it may be rejected. No bids shall be accepted after the time stated for receipt of bids. This requirement shall not be waived.
All bids must be submitted on bid forms furnished, or copy thereof, and must be in a sealed envelope. The outside of the envelope should contain the following:
(1) “SEALED BID”; (2) “DO NOT OPEN”; (3) PROJECT NAME AND NUMBER; (4) PROJECT OFFICER: “Alfonso Holt”; (5) CONTRACTOR’S NAME AND ADDRESS; (6) ALABAMA GENERAL CONTRACTORS LICENSE NUMBER (7) DUNS #.
Bids are invited upon the following work, but not limited to, as follows:
Interior Finish and HVAC Replacement at the Center Point Community Center. The scope of work includes general construction, selective demolition, HVAC and interior finish work for a complete project constructed under a single prime contract. Contractor shall provide the standard labor warranty for installation of project components.
Bids must be accompanied by a certified check or bank draft payable to the order of Jefferson County, Alabama negotiable U.S. Government Bonds (at par value) or a satisfactory Bid Bond executed by the bidder and an acceptable surety, in the amount equal to five percent (5%) of the total of the bid amount but not to exceed $10,000.00, for the construction of Center Point Community Center (CD22-03E-01-CPCC).
The bid security is to become the property of the owner in the event that: (1) the bidder fails to meet any of the qualifications required in the bid specifications stated herein; (2) the bidder misrepresents or falsifies any information required to be provided by the owner; (3) for any reason that the bidder fails to qualify, causing his bid to be withdrawn or rejected and such withdrawal or rejection results in delay or substantial additional expense to the owner; (4) the contract and bond are not executed within the time set forth, as liquidated damages for the delay and additional expense of the owner caused thereby.
Bid documents are on file and will be available for examination at the JEFFERSON COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY SERVICES, 716 Richard Arrington Jr. Blvd N, Suite A-430, Birmingham, Alabama 35203; at the BIRMINGHAM CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY AUTHORITY, 601 37th Avenue South, Birmingham, Alabama 35222; at the Office of CCR Architecture, LLC.
General Contractor Bidders may obtain two (2) sets of hard copy drawings for each project and specifications from the Architect upon receipt of deposit check in the amount of $ 200 per set made payable to CRR Architect. General Contractors will then be placed on Official Bidders List. Deposit will be refunded in full on the first two sets issued to each General Contractor Bidder upon the return of documents in reusable condition within ten (10) days after receipt of bids. Additional sets of drawings/ specifications and digital copies will be available to General Contractors for purchase directly from the documents printer:  Alabama Graphics. Addenda and other proposal information will be issued only to holders of drawings and specifications distributed by the CCR Architecture and Interior and on the Official Bidders List. Release of contract documents to the bidder does not imply acceptance of the bidder’s qualifications by the Owner or Architect.
General Contractors who obtain drawings and wish to withdraw from the Bidders List must do so in writing to the office of the Architect prior to bid date, otherwise deposit will be forfeited. Deposit will be refunded in full on sets issued to each General Contractor Bidder submitting a bonafide bid, upon the return of documents in good, reusable condition within ten (10) days after receipt of proposals.
Bids received from General Contractors who are not on the Official Bidders List may not be accepted or opened. CRR Architect makes no guarantee for plans and specifications obtained by Contractors and Vendors from sources other than the printed contract documents provided by their firm. Contractors and Vendors who base their pricing from contract documents obtained from other electronic sources, either in part or whole, do so at their own risk.
Bids must be submitted on proposal forms furnished by the Architect or copies thereof, issued either with the original contract documents or by addendum. General Contractors shall not use Proposal Forms other than those provided in the contract documents.
All bidders bidding in amounts exceeding that established by the State Licensing Board for General Contractors must be licensed under the provisions of Title 34, Chapter 8, Code of Alabama, 1975. The Bidder must display current General Contractor’s License Number on the outside of the sealed envelope in which the proposal is delivered or it will not be considered by the Architect or Owner. The Owner reserves the right to reject any or all proposals and to waive technical errors if, in the Owner’s judgment, the best interests of the Owner will thereby be promoted.
Bidders are advised that submitted bids bind the bidders to the “Bid Conditions Setting Forth Affirmative Action Requirements for all Non‑Exempt Federal and Federally‑assisted Construction Contracts to be awarded in Jefferson, Shelby and Walker Counties, Alabama, “also known as the Birmingham Hometown Plan.
Attention is called to the fact that not less than the minimum salaries and wages as set forth in the contract documents must be paid on this project, and that the contractor must ensure that employees and applicants for employment are not discriminated against because of their race, color, sex, age, religion, national origin, disability, or veteran status.
All bidders be advised that this contract is subject to Section 3 of the Housing and Urban Development act of 1968, as amended, (12 USC l701U) which if it is in excess of $100,000, requires that to the “greatest extent feasible”, opportunities for training and employment be given lower income residents of the project area and contracts for work in connection with the project be awarded to business concerns which are: (1) 51 percent or more owned by section 3 residents; or (2) Whose permanent, full-time employees include persons, at least 30 percent of whom are currently section 3 residents, or within three years of the date of first employment with the business concern were section 3 residents; or (3) That provides evidence of commitment to subcontract in excess of 25 percent of the dollar award of all subcontracts to be awarded to business concerns that meet the qualifications set forth in paragraphs (1) or (2) in this definition of “section 3 business concern.”
The Jefferson County Commission reserves the right to reject any or all bids or to waive any informalities in the bidding.
This project will be funded in its entirety (100%) with Federal Community Development Block Grant Funds.
No Bid may be withdrawn for a period of sixty (60) days from the date of the opening of bids to allow the Jefferson County Commission to review the bids and investigate the qualifications of bidders, prior to awarding the contract.
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ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
Sealed proposals will be received by Coty Jones with the University of Montevallo at the Holland Floyd Physical Plant, 75 College Dr. Montevallo, AL, until 2:00 PM, CDT Tuesday, August 27, 2024 for
PROJECT: BEAM REPAIR AT CENTRAL PLANT
UNIVERSITY OF MONTEVALLO
at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read. General Contractor’s License number and type must be on the envelope.
A cashier’s check or bid bond payable to the University of Montevallo in an amount not less than five (5) percent of the amount of the bid, but in no event more than $10,000.00, must accompany the bidder’s proposal.
Performance and Payment Bonds and evidence of insurance required in the bid documents will be required at the signing of the Contract.
The Owner intends to award the contract for this work to a pre-qualified General Contractor. The Owner will accept proposals only from firms which demonstrate their experience and ability to perform the work necessary for this project. Interested General Contractors must submit a Contractor’s Qualification Certificate. Minimum Qualifications to be certified by prospective bidders include: 1) statutory licensure requirements, 2) bonding capacity in excess of $1,000,000 dollars, 3) minimum of five (5) years successful history as an approved, authorized or licensed General Contractor, 4) minimum annual income of $750,000 dollars in construction value for the past three (3) years, and 5) successful current and recent experience in work for commercial construction with scope similar to this Project within the specified schedule. Joint venture arrangements must qualify solely on the strength of the principal firm’s qualifications.
Bid Drawings and Specifications will be available and can be requested digitally or examined at the office of the Architect on and after July 19, 2024.
Name of Architect: Jim Hartsell / Skylar Howard Name of Company: Davis Architects, Inc.
Address: 120 Twenty Third Street South, Birmingham, Alabama 35233
Phone No.: (205) 322-7482
Bid Documents can also be reviewed at F.W. Dodge Plan Rooms, Birmingham Construction Industry Authority Plan Room, Construction Market Data Plan Room and obtained from Alabama Graphic Digital Plan Room. Cost of printing plans and specifications are non-refundable.
General Contractor Bidders may obtain a digital copy of the documents from Davis Architects, Skylar Howard– showard@dadot.com. Hard copy sets of drawings and specifications will be available to General Contractors bidders and others for the cost of printing and handling directly from the documents printer: Alabama Graphics (2801 Fifth Avenue South, Birmingham, Alabama 35233; phone 205/252-8505). Addenda and other bidding information will be issued only to holders of drawings and specifications distributed by the Architect.
Release of the Bid Documents to the bidder does not imply acceptance of the bidder’s qualifications by the Owner or Architect.
Bids must be submitted on proposal forms furnished by the Architect or copies thereof. All bidders bidding in amounts exceeding that established by the State Licensing Board for General Contractors must be licensed under the provisions of Title 34, Chapter 8, Code of Alabama, 1975, and must show evidence of license before bidding or bid will not be received or considered by the Architect; the bidder shall show such evidence by clearly displaying his or her current license number on the outside of the sealed envelope in which the proposal is delivered. The Owner reserves the right to reject any or all proposals and to waive technical errors if, in the Owner’s judgment, the best interests of the Owner will thereby be promoted.
Alabama law (section 41-4-116, code of Alabama 1975) provides that every bid submitted and contract executed shall contain a certification that the vendor, contractor, and all of its affiliates that make sales for delivery into Alabama or leases for use in Alabama are registered, collecting, and remitting Alabama state and local sales, use, and/or lease tax on all taxable sales and leases in Alabama. By submitting a response to this solicitation, the bidder is hereby certifying that they are in full compliance with Act No. 2006-557; they are not barred from bidding or entering into a contract pursuant to 41-4-116, and acknowledges that the Owner may declare the contract void if the certification is false.
Nonresident bidders must accompany any written Bid Documents with a written opinion of an attorney at law licensed to practice law in such nonresident bidder’s state or domicile, as to the preferences, if any or none, granted by the law of that state to its own business entities whose principal places of business are in that state in the letting of any or all public contracts.
A Mandatory Pre-Bid Conference will be held at University of Montevallo L. Holland Floyd Physical Plant at 75 College Drive, Montevallo, AL on Tuesday, August 13, 2024 at 2:00 PM CST. The project site will be visited. Attendance by General Contractor, Bid Conference and the site visit is mandatory.
Awarding Authority:
University of Montevallo
Susan Hayes, Chief Financial Officer
Architect:
Davis Architects, Inc.
Jim Hartsell, Principal in Charge
Skylar Howard, Project Manager
BT07/18/2024
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INVITATION FOR BID
Notice is hereby given that Jefferson State Community College will be accepting sealed bids for HVAC Services
for the Jefferson, Shelby-Hoover, St. Clair-Pell City and Chilton-Clanton Campuses.
JSCC Bid #24-015 for HVAC Services will need to be delivered on July 25, 2024, by 2:00 p.m. local time to
Jefferson State Community College, 2601 Carson Road, George Wallace Hall, Room 139, in
Birmingham, AL 35215.
A complete set of Bid Documents shall be available through the Jefferson State Community College
Purchasing Office.
By Mail: Jefferson State Community College
Purchasing Coordinator
2601 Carson Road
GWH 100
Birmingham, AL 35215
Phone: 205-856-8020
Bids must be sealed when received and submitted on Proposal Forms furnished in the Bid Documents or copies
thereof. The preceding is an abbreviated advertisement. The complete advertisement may be obtained via the
contact information or location listed above.
BT07/18/2024
_____________________________
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
Birmingham City Schools
BCS Playground Improvements
Sealed bids for the Playground Improvements Project will be received by the Birmingham City Schools, located at 2015 Park Place , Birmingham, Alabama 35203, until Tuesday, July 30, 2024 at 2:00 P.M. local time at which time the Bids received will be publicly opened and read.
A Pre-Bid Meeting will be held Tuesday, July 23, 2024 at 2:00 P.M. at 2015 Park Place, Birmingham AL. Attendance is not mandatory, however, bidders are encouraged to attend.
The Project includes the following Work: Upgrades to existing playgrounds, removing existing mulch surfacing and replacement with poured in place rubber with concrete border, installation of new play equipment
The Issuing Office for the Bidding Documents is HANSEN Landscape Architecture LLC, 104728th Street South Birmingham AL 35205,
Copies of the Bidding Documents may be obtained from the ARC printing. 3104 4th Avenue South, Birmingham, AL 35233. Partial sets of Bidding Documents will not be available from the Issuing Office. Neither Owner nor Engineer will be responsible for full or partial sets of Bidding Documents, including Addenda if any, obtained from sources other than the Issuing Office.
Bid security shall be furnished in accordance with the Instructions to Bidders.
The Owner reserves the right to waive any informalities, or to reject any or all bids, and to award the contract to the best and most responsible bidder. All bidders shall submit, upon request, a list of projects “successfully completed” in the last 2 years, having a similar scope of work and approximate construction cost as specified in this project. All bidders must comply with the requirements of the Contractor’s Licensing Law of the State of Alabama and be certified for the type of work on which the proposal is submitted. Each bidder must deposit, with his bid, security in the amount, form, and subject to the conditions provided in the Instructions to Bidders.
All Bidders bidding in amounts exceeding that established by the State Licensing Board for General Contractors must be licensed under the provisions of Title 34, Chapter 8, Code of Alabama, 1975, and must show evidence of license before bidding or bid will not be received or considered by the Engineer; the Bidder shall show such evidence by clearly displaying the license number on the outside of the envelope in which the Proposal is delivered.
No bidder may withdraw his bid within 60 days after the opening thereof.
Owner: Birmingham City Schools By:  Donald McCrackin
Title: Operations Officer
BT07/18/2024
_____________________________
INVITATION FOR BIDS
30-24 COMMERCIAL FOOD AREA HOODS CLEANING SERVICES”
JEFFERSON COUNTY, AL
Bids will be received by the Jefferson County Commission and Purchasing Association of Central Alabama Purchasing Agent Michael D. Matthews, Ph.D., C.P.M., until 4:00 PM(CST) p.m. on THURSDAY, AUGUST 1ST, 2024 for proposed 30-24 “Commercial Food Area Hoods Cleaning Services”. All Solicitation information including forms, and specifications are available for download free at https://jeffcobids.jccal.org/Search.aspx. Interested parties must meet bidder requirements and qualifications as specified in the bid documents on or before the date that the bids are due.
A pre-bid conference will be held on FRIDAY, JULY 26TH 2024, at 10:30 AM CST via MICROSOFT TEAMS. Our office is located at Suite 830 of the Jefferson County Main Courthouse. For special accommodations please call 205-325-5381. All questions must be submitted in writing to procurementservices@jccal.org attention Ericka Andrew, Principal Buyer.
BT07/18/2024
_____________________________
INVITATION FOR BIDS
ITB #41-24 GREENWOOD ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DEMOLITION
JEFFERSON COUNTY, AL
Bids will be received by the Jefferson County Commission Purchasing Agent, Michael D. Matthews, Ph.D., C.P.M., until 4:00 PM (CST) on August 7, 2024; and a virtual bid opening will be held on August 8, 2024, at 2:00 PM (CST) for ITB #41-24 “GREENWOOD ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DEMOLITION”. All
Solicitation information including forms, and specifications are available for download, free at https://jeffcobids.jccal.org/Search.aspx
The Jefferson County Commission Department of Development Services desires to enter into an agreement with a Contractor(s) for the demolition of the below structure.
Street Address 1219 School Road SE, Bessemer, AL 35022
Parcel ID 38 00 35 3 007 001.000
Asbestos Confirmed YES
Prequalification is not required.
Interested parties must meet bidder requirements and qualifications as specified in the bid documents on or before the date that the bids are due.
A performance bond will be required in the amount of 100% of the contract price.
BT07/18/2024
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FINAL PY 2023 (JULY 1, 2023-JUNE 30, 2024)
ACTION PLAN-ONE YEAR USE OF FUNDS SUMMARY
30 DAY COMMENT PERIOD
CITY OF BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
In accordance with 24 CFR Part 91, the City of Birmingham’s (“the City’s) Community Development Department is hereby publishing its Program Year (PY) 2024-2025 (July 1, 2024-June 30, 2025) Action Plan One Year Use of Funds Submission for citizen comments for a period of at least Thirty (30) calendar days from the date of this publication.  The summary is published in order to afford affected citizens an opportunity to examine the contents and to submit comments relating thereto.
All activities’ proposed allocations will be proportionally increased or decreased from the estimated funding levels to match actual allocation amounts.
Copies of the City’s Final PY 2024-2025 Action Plan-One Year Use of Funds are available for review in the City’s Community Development Department, 710 North 20th Street, Room 1000, Birmingham, Alabama from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, except legal holidays and is posted on the City website-Community Development Department webpage at www.birminghamal.gov/community-development.
All interested parties who desire to submit written comments regarding the City’s development of its Final PY 2024-2025 Action Plan-One Year Use of Funds submission may do so by mail addressing them to Dr. Meghan V. Thomas, Director; Community Development Department; 710 North 20th Street, 10th Floor City Hall; Birmingham, Alabama 35203 or by email at housingandcommunityinfo@birminghamal.gov. Persons needing special assistance (such as translated materials or a draft copy of the report) or a reasonable accommodation to provide comments, please contact the City of Birmingham at housingandcommunityinfo@birminghamal.gov or (205) 254-2309. Please include, “Action Plan Request”, in the e-mail subject line.
ALL WRITTEN COMMENTS MUST BE RECEIVED IN THE CITY’S COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT AT THE REFERENCED ADDRESS NO LATER THAN AUGUST 4, 2024, BY 4:00 P.M. TO BE CONSIDERED IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CITY’S FINAL PY 2024 ACTION PLAN ONE-YEAR USE OF FUNDS SUBMISSION.
RECOMMENDED ACTION PLAN BUDGET
July 1, 2024 – June 30, 2025
PY 2024 Community Development Block Grant
$  5,760,968.00
PY 2024 Anticipated Program Income:
$   50,000.00
CDBG Total:
$  5,810,968.00
PY 2024 HOME Grant:
$  1,122,100.00
PY 2024 Anticipated HOME Program Income:
$    100,000.00
HOME Total:
$  1,222,100.00
PY 2024 Emergency Shelter Grant (ESG):
$    518,372.00
PY 2024 HOPWA Grant:
$  1,788,325.00
TOTAL
$  9,339,765.00
PROJECT: COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT (CDBG)
PLANNING & ADMINISTRATION
Administrative Funds (20% cap)
$  1,122,193.60
One Roof
$  40,000.00
PROJECT: REPAYMENTS OF SECTION 108 LOAN
Section 108 Loan Principal
$  60,000.00
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Rev Birmingham
$  120,000.00
Urban Impact
$  220,000.00
Small Business Loan
$   250,000.00
Roebuck Revitalization YMCA
$   500,000.00
Façade Improvement Program
$   210,000.00
HOUSING REHABILITATION
Program Cost
$  890,000.00
Single-Family Rehabilitation Program
$  1,000,000.00
Christian Service Mission
$  170,000.00
House Proud
$  100,000.00
Power UP
$  47,129.20
Disability Rights and Resources
$  200,000.00
Acquisition
$  10,000.00
PUBLIC SERVICES (15% cap)
Homeless Programs:
Men
Cooperative Downtown Ministries
$   55,300.00
Women
First Light, Inc.
$  60,000.00
Pathways/Day Center
$  50,000.00
Pathways Stepping- Stones/Overnight Shelter
$  30,000.00
YWCA
$  50,000.00
Changed Lives Christian Center
$  25,000.00
Supportive Services:
Bridge Ministries
$  16,000.00
Jimmie Hale Mission
$  56,500.00
Other Public Services:
Employment and Housing Assistance
Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment Center
$  25,000.00
Birmingham Urban League
$  50,000.00
Fair Housing Center of Northern Alabama
$  45,000.00
Help 2 Others Foundation
$  29,142.00
Jefferson State Community College
$  35,000.00
Legal Services of Alabama
$  90,000.00
Food for Our Journey
$  25,600.00
Be Kind Birmingham
$  2,278.85
Children/Youth Development/Senior Citizens
Childcare Resources, Inc.
$  20,000.00
Children’s Village, Inc.
$  55,000.00
Girls Inc.
$  35,000.00
Pathway’s Early Learning Center
$  15,000.00
Positive Maturity, Inc.-East Lake
$  27,000.00
Rose Garden Adult Day Services, Inc.
$  25,000.00
PUBLIC FACILITIES & INFRASTRUCTURE
Broadband
$  10,000.00
Public Facilities & Infrastructure
$  39,824.35
HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM (HOME)
ADMINISTRATION- 10%
$  122,210.00
CHDO ACTIVITIES- 15%
$  183,315.00
Down Payment Assistance
$  500,000.00
Home Buyer/ Rental
$  416,575.00
PROJECT: EMERGENCY SOLUTIONS GRANT PROGRAM (ESG)
Street Outreach Essential Services & Maintenance Operation Emergency Shelter
Cooperative Downtown Ministries, Inc.
$   60,000.00
Pathways/Day Center
$    60,000.00
One Roof-Street Outreach
$    20,000.00
Pathways Stepping -Stones/Overnight Shelter
$    40,000.00
Pathways Early Learning Center
$  25,000.000
Pathways Warming Station
$   20,000.00
Family Connection
$   85,494.10
AIDS AL Way Station
$   30,000.00
First Light, Inc.
$  55,000.000
HOMELESSNESS PREVENTION
Bridge Ministries
$   50,000.00
RAPID RE-HOUSING
YWCA RR FVC & IHH
$  34,000.00
ADMINISTRATION (7.5%):
$  38,877.90
PROJECT:  HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES FOR PERSONS WITH AIDS (HOPWA)
AIDS ALABAMA, INC.
Rental Assistance/TBRA
$  410,000.00
Rental Assistance/STRMU
$   70,000.00
Supportive Services
$  538,598.00
Operating Costs
$  520,894.50
Resource Identification
$  70,000.00
Sponsor Administration (7%)
$  125,182.75
ADMINISTRATION (Grantee) (3%)
$   53,649.75
GRAND TOTAL
$  9,765,934.00
BT07/18/2024
_____________________________
PUBLIC NOTICE
In the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, Alabama
Barlow Barbara A., Plaintiff
v.
Barlow Harry, Defendant.
Case No.: DR-2023-000707.00
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Upon review by the Court, the Plantiff shall be allowed to serve the Defendant by
Publication pursuant to Rule 4.3 (b) of the Alabama Rules of Civil Procedure.
Harry Barlow whose whereabouts are unknown, is required by June 27, 2024, to
answer the Petition for Divorce and or other relief requested of Barbara A. Barlow, or
thereafter, default judgment may be rendered against Harry Barlow in case
DR-2023-707, Montgomery County Circuit Court.
Dome this 17th day of April, 2024.
/s/ Monica L. Arrington Circuit Judge
BT05/02/2024
______________________________

Lynn Towe McGuffey passed away on June 23, 2024 at her home in Birmingham, Alabama surrounded by her family.  Lynn was diagnosed with Progressive Supranuclear Palsy in 2010.   She is survived  by her husband, Bryan McGuffey, identical twin daughters, Anne Hulsey (Widowed), Seneca, SC, Beth Wilkie (Christopher) Thornton, NH, brothers Mark Towe (Doris) Paradise Vally, AZ, Tyler Towe (Roni) Scio, Ohio, granddaughters, Elizabeth Rayne Pearson, Madelyn Gray Pearson, Kathryn Lauren  Pearson, grandsons, Camden Hulsey, Noah Hulsey,  Ewan Lawrence Wilkie, nephew, Ryan Towe (Katy) Dallas, TX, and niece, Mary Catherine Fischer (Brian) San Diego, CA.

Lynn was born in Glasgow, KY on August 31, 1945.  She was 78 years old. Her parents were Robert Towe, Owen Yates and Marjorie Towe Yates, Scottsville, KY. Her grandparents were Roy Towe and Toncie Dodd Towe, Scottsville, KY, and Warren Weaver and Mary Stephens Weaver, Scottsville, KY.

Lynn grew up in Scottsville, KY, graduating from Scottsville High School as Valedictorian of the Class of 1963. She was not only a gifted student, but also active in several clubs and a cheerleader. Lynn graduated from Western Kentucky University Suma Cum Laude with a BA and MA in English.  She held a second master’s degree achieved as a Fulbright Scholar.  Lynn was a career English teacher and a lifelong student.  She was the English Dept. Chairman at Homewood High School and taught AP English. She was Homewood and Alabama Teacher of the Year.  She was an avid supporter of both men’s and women’s basketball at Homewood, showing up at school wearing a pair of Chuck Taylor High Tops on game days.

Lynn was Director of the Sunday School at St. James Episcopal in Warrenton, VA and active at The Episcopal Church of the Ascension after moving to Birmingham.  Lynn “wore many hats” but her favorite was Mother.  She was mother to Anne and Beth and countless troubled or lost students over the years.  She had the ability to make students believe in themselves and made everybody around her better.  Her influence on so many is confirmed by the hundreds of responses from former students, friends, neighbors and coworkers.

Lynn enjoyed the beach on Assateague Island with her family, friends, and a good book.  She loved reading, traveling, her home, sports, and her two dogs.  To say she will be missed is an understatement.

Reverend Emily Collette officiated Lynn’s funeral at The Episcopal Church of the Ascension on June 27.  Readers were Bitsy Goldmeier of Greensboro, GA, Susan Doughton, Homewood, AL and Beth Wilkie, daughter.  A second service officiated by Reverend Ashley Tackett-Evans was held on June 29 in the Chapel at Crescent Hill Cemetery in Scottsville, KY.

The family thanks Lynn’s dedicated caregivers allowing her to remain in her home and HOSPICE. Please direct any gifts of remembrance to The Episcopal Church of the Ascension on HOSPICE.

BT05/02/2024
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DeJuana Thompson, President/CEO of BCRI, is Stepping Down to Focus on Fall Elections

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DeJuana Thompson will step down as president and CEO of The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute to focus on voting rights activities and community organizing in advance of the national political elections in the fall. (Provided)

By Barnett Wright | The Birmingham Times

DeJuana Thompson will step down as president and CEO of The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute to focus on voting rights activities and community organizing in advance of the national political elections in the fall, the institute has announced.

Thompson, who was named to lead the BCRI three years ago told The Birmingham Times on Thursday it was “an honor to serve the institute” and she plans to continue that work.

“The work is critical now more than ever to revisit our history and to draw from both the strength and the strategies as we fight for [the future],” Thompson told The Times. “I am excited to take what I’ve learned from that experience into the next phase.”

Thompson is turning her attention on leading Woke Vote, the 501c3 voter education and advocacy organization she founded in 2017, to solve voting rights issues. She intends to start a nationwide engagement tour aimed to inspire action across the country, particularly among Black and brown communities.

“Given the current state of the country, we must both protect institutions like BCRI and safeguard our democracy,” Thompson said via a news release. “My work with Woke Vote will allow me to directly address these threats, train new organizers, and engage our communities in the fight for our fundamental rights.”

Isaac Cooper, the BCRI board chairman, will take over as interim president and CEO. Thompson joined the BCRI in 2021 and has been president and CEO since May 2022.

“BCRI is grateful for Ms. Thompson’s leadership during a difficult time,” Cooper said in a statement. “She came in at a critical juncture in our history, steadied the ship and helped us expand our reach. We wish her all the success in the future as she returns to her first love of community activism and empowering people across the country.”

Thompson, a Birmingham native and founder of her own social impact firm, Black Equity Strategy and Trust, was no stranger to the BCRI having first volunteered in 1999 as a youth guide.

As founder of Woke Vote, Thompson’s organization mobilized African American voters in the South through campus and faith-based outreach, strategic media outreach, culturally relevant GOTV efforts and training. The program engaged over two million Black voters nationwide and has trained over 5K new leaders.

Thompson got her start working in municipal politics as a Committee Assistant to the Birmingham City Council before becoming the Special Projects Coordinator and Council Neighborhood Liaison working on engagement and programming with Birmingham’s 99 neighborhood presidents.

Thompson obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree in Speech Communication with a minor in African American studies from Berea College and a Master’s Certificate in Effective Project Management from Rockhurst University. She has completed course work toward a Master of Political Management from George Washington University.

Updated at 10:55 a.m. on 7/19/2024 to clarify founding of firm.

U.S. News & World Report: UAB Hospital Claims No. 1 Ranking as Best in Alabama; Birmingham Metro

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UAB has once again secured a place as Alabama's top-ranked hospital on Newsweek’s prestigious list of the World’s Best Hospitals 2026. (UAB File)

UAB Hospital was once again named the best hospital in Alabama by U.S. News & World Report in its 2024-2025 Best Hospital rankings, released last week. University of Alabama at Birmingham Hospital also claims the No. 1 ranking as the best hospital in the Birmingham metro area.

“UAB Hospital’s recognition as the best hospital in both Birmingham and Alabama by U.S. News and World Report underscores the exceptional expertise of its physicians and care teams within UAB Medicine,” said Dawn Bulgarella, CEO of UAB Health System. “The quality of care provided here is unmatched, and the inclusion of numerous specialties and procedures in this year’s rankings reaffirms our commitment to excellence and innovative therapies.”

Seven adult specialties are ranked among the best in the nation, including rheumatology at No. 10 and obstetrics and gynecology at No. 18. Other ranked specialties are ear, nose and throat at No. 23; cancer at No. 40; neurology/neurosurgery at No. 42; ; geriatrics at No. 45; and cardiology/heart surgery at No. 50.

Six specialties — cancer, pulmonology/lung surgery, diabetes/endocrinology, urology, orthopedics and gastroenterology/GI surgery — were classified as high-performing, the highest classification.

U.S. News rates hospitals in adult procedures/conditions. UAB Hospital was rated as high-performing in 15 areas: abdominal aortic aneurysm repair, aortic valve surgery, COPD, colon cancer surgery, gynecologic cancer surgery, heart attack, heart bypass surgery, heart failure, kidney failure, leukemia, lymphoma, myeloma, lung cancer surgery, pneumonia, prostate cancer surgery, stroke, and transcatheter aortic valve replacement or TAVR.

UAB Medicine continues to expand its presence throughout the state to improve access to health care for Alabamians, and in 2023 welcomed nearly 2 million visitors.

After Nursing for 30 Years, Brenda Sampson Fully Embraces Dream of Becoming An Artist

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Even while serving as an emergency room nurse for more than three decades, Brenda Sampson never gave up on her dream of becoming an artist. (Amarr Croskey, For The Birmingham Times)

By Sym Posey | The Birmingham Times

Even while serving as an emergency room (ER) nurse for more than three decades, Brenda Sampson never gave up on her dream of becoming an artist.

Sampson, who has worked at both the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Medical West Hospital in Bessemer, Alabama, and Princeton Baptist Medical Center in Birmingham, said, “I did some art on the side, and the ERs … allowed me to put my artwork on the walls [of the facilities].”

When she retired in 2019, Sampson created a website and did artwork where she would sell from a pitch tent, the most recent of which was set up for this year’s Juneteenth National Independence Day.

“Looking at artists from the past, I would think I could draw it better than they did,” she said.

Introduction to Art

Sampson, born and raised in Bessemer, always wanted to be an artist, but she knew her mother wouldn’t approve of it.

“My mother wasn’t going to allow her young baby daughter to be an artist and starve to death. My sister and I both went to nursing school,” said Sampson, who attended J. S. Abrams Elementary School and graduated from Jess Lanier High School in 1973. (Jess Lanier closed in 2009, and students in the area now attend Bessemer City High School.)

Growing up during the height of the Civil Rights Movement, Sampson’s artistic start came as a result of school integration.

“I was in the third grade when [the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.] came to Birmingham,” she said, recalling the Children’s Crusade of 1963, when students took to the streets to protest segregation in the city—an event that eventually led to significant federal Civil Rights legislation.

“The school kids got let out and went [downtown] Birmingham to march with Dr. King,” she said. “I was too young, so I had to go home. … When I got there, all my brothers and sisters were there, except for my oldest brother.”

Sampson remembers being in a segregated school until 1971, when a brand-new school was built for Black and white students.

“That’s when I was introduced to art,” she said. “[The integrated school had] an art teacher, which we did not have in the Black school. Then, when I went to Lawson State [Community College] to take up nursing, they also had art programs, so I started drawing more.”

Though Sampson was in the art program on the side while studying nursing, she “didn’t do a lot of drawing until 2019.”

Most of Sampson’s pieces are inspired by whatever she finds interesting, she said: “I pull from anything I see. I pull from people’s faces. I might like their eyes, or I might like their nose, and I’ll mix it up and put it on a canvas or something like that.”

Of her chosen art mediums, Sampson said, “[I] love using acrylic art. I do oil paint and a lot of sketches.”

She added, “I like controversy, … to get [people] talking.

“When you come up to a piece of art, it’s different for everybody. A lot of people [may not understand] our inspiration or may look at it and ask, ‘What is that?’ They are going to buy something to match their living room or their walls. But people that have [a greater appreciation of art] will stand in front of the canvas, look to the left, look to the right, examine the brushstrokes, stand back and see what the artist was thinking.”

Eye of the Beholder

One of Sampson’s pieces that gets people talking is her painting of a woman with a banana. Describing the image, she said, “I made a girl, and I call it ‘Delicious.’ … What she is doing is sucking on a chocolate-covered banana, and the chocolate is running down her mouth. You can obviously see that it’s a banana, and I have these beautiful colors in the background like she’s enjoying this banana. The guys see something else, but they won’t say exactly what.”

In addition to being an art creator, Sampson is an art collector with about 100 pieces. One of her favorites—”Three for the Groove,” a painting by Marcus Glenn, a contemporary artist out of Detroit, Michigan—came from an art auction she attended while on a cruise.

“I bargained on that and spent $1,200,” she said. “I was looking for something that would stick to me. There were hundreds of pieces, and they let us look through them before starting the auction. None of the other pieces [spoke] to me, [but Glenn’s piece] was showing his love for music. I didn’t even know he was a Black artist.”

Sampson’s favorite artists are “the greats,” including Pablo Picasso, the renowned Spanish artist whose works include paintings, prints, drawings, sculptures, ceramics, theater sets, and costumes, and Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh, known for his vivid portraits and dramatic still-life and landscape pieces.

Tropical Fish

When she is not creating, Sampson enjoys spending time with her husband, George, who is a tropical fish enthusiast.

“We have 14 fish tanks,” she said. “[George] can tell you when something is wrong. If they’re pregnant, he’ll move them to the pregnancy fish tank and raise them.”

Sampson and her husband also enjoy traveling: “We love islands. We’ve been to Hawaii, [where] we remarried about 21 years ago, … right as [our] cruise ship was in front of a volcano.”

The couple currently resides in Fairfield, Alabama. They have been married for 31 years, and they have four children and five grandchildren.

To browse Brenda Sampson’s artwork, visit keepsakeartwork.com.

Birmingham Began the Month with 5 Homicides in 5 Days – and it Got Worse

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Despite mixed reviews on the technology, Birmingham City Council members decided Tuesday to renew the city's subscription for ShotSpotter. (Adobe Stock)

By Barnett Wright | The Birmingham Times

After one of the most violent starts to a month in Birmingham in recent memory, Mayor Randall Woodfin this week began one of the most intense anti-violence messaging campaigns of his two terms in office.

Across 24 hours on Saturday, a man, woman and 5-year-old child were killed in a triple homicide and four died in a mass shooting at a birthday party. Nearly a dozen more were injured in the shootings.

Those came after five homicides in the first five days of July.

After the shootings on Saturday the mayor met with law enforcement agencies that included the FBI, the U.S. Secret Service, the U.S. Marshals Service, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms. They later gathered on Sunday for a press conference.

The city will be more aggressive collaborating with federal law enforcement “to be extremely aggressive in going after” all crimes, the mayor said, “small things that turn to gun violence,” including credit card scams, auto thefts and gun trafficking.

“What we’ve got to do is turn the heat up on everybody,” said Woodfin, first elected in 2017.

On Monday, the mayor was on the Chris Coleman Radio Network (V94.9 WATV AM/FM) to talk about the lives lost over the weekend and challenges of getting residents with information to come forward.

Also on Monday, Woodfin posted on social media — “I really want to implore those dating people in the game to not ride with them. Don’t be in the same car. Don’t allow your children to ride with them. Don’t say yes when they say come with me or take me to make this lick.”

“It’s always supposed to be “no women, no children” but y’all don’t have a code. Too many of y’all are down with killing women and children. The only thing worse than that are the people who are giving safe harbor for those who kill women and children.”

On Tuesday, during his report to the City Council the mayor handled an AR-15 rifle and a Micro Draco handgun while calling for a crackdown on military-style weapons.

And, he returned to his warning that citizens need to steer clear of drug dealers. “Do not ride with them, do not be in the car with them … People are not protecting women and children in this community like they’re supposed to,” Woodfin said. “It is not safe. The lifestyle you think you may be getting from whoever this person is in drug activity, whether it’s money or clothes or paying your bills, or providing your children with clothes and shoes, it’s not worth it.”

Meanwhile, City Councilors on Tuesday addressed gun violence that shook city over the weekend

Councilor Clinton Woods said, “Every time you see a headline there is so much behind that; it ripples outward and so many people have to figure out how to move forward after these incidents. My kids are growing up in the same neighborhood I grew up in. You have to explain to them what a gunshot is. This weekend was especially difficult because we didn’t have enough time to process one tragedy after another.”

Birmingham City Councilor LaTonya Tate, chair of the City Council’s Public Safety Committee, issued a statement that said she was “heartbroken” after the weekend’s violence.

“Birmingham has experienced an appallingly violent 24 hours, and I, like many in our city, feel grief-stricken. We’ve said it too many times: these acts of violence are senseless. They must stop. We cannot become desensitized to this public health crisis. We all want–and envision–so much more for our city.”

“As Chair of Public Safety,” Tate continued, “I’ve also said this many times: we can’t police our way out of this. We need everyone’s help and commitment — from our neighborhood leaders, our churches, our businesses, elected officials — everyone has a part to play. We all have to work together to make the changes that we so desperately need in our communities.”

Tate will be holding a 10 a.m. press conference this Friday, July 19 in front of the building where the four murders took place in North Birmingham. The address is 3427 27th St N, Birmingham, AL 35207.

“I’ve had many conversations with our neighborhood leaders – I see the neighborhood president and secretary here with us today – about these business owners that come into these neighborhoods and do not want to comply with our laws,” Tate said. “I ride the streets of North Birmingham every day. I know some of the people who were shot – grew up with them. But I’ll be damned if we let these people and businesses come into our neighborhoods and do whatever they want to do. Not on my watch.”

Anyone with information in the triple and quadruple homicides can upload evidence by following this link or contacting Crime Stoppers at 205-254-7777.

EJI Memorials Draw Millions, Drive Growth in Downtown Montgomery

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Bryan Stevenson, founder and executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative, during the dedication of the National Monument to Freedom last month in Montgomery. (Amarr Croskey Photos, For The Birmingham Times)

By Mike Cason | mcason@al.com

Six years after the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) opened its groundbreaking National Memorial for Peace and Justice and its Legacy Museum on the same day, the organization is expanding its footprint in Montgomery with projects that are bringing tourists and construction crews to stagnant pockets of the old downtown.

The latest installation is the Freedom Sculpture Park on the Alabama River, a trail of art and exhibits that describe the experiences faced by the men, women, and children trafficked by riverboat and railroad to the city’s slave auctions.

The new park adds layers to the stories told at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, which recognizes more than 4,000 victims of lynching, and the Legacy Museum, which connects history from the transatlantic slave trade through Jim Crow to mass incarceration.

Travelers are coming to see and hear those hard lessons.

“It’s a lot to take in,” said Lindsey Winand, who teaches high school biology in Baltimore, after visiting the three sites last month. “It’s very emotional. But it’s worth it. Most people need to come and see it. You need to learn the history. You need to learn what’s going on to understand how we got from back in the day to where we currently are now.”

Winand was part of a group of teachers from Baltimore that organizes annual visits for educators and students.

Brenda Tarrant, a teacher at Baltimore City College, the nation’s third oldest public high school, toured the Legacy Museum for the fourth time.

“I’m never any less impacted by how profound the story of African Americans in this country are told by this museum,” Tarrant said.

“The more I learn, the more hurt I become,” Tarrant said.

Two new hotels are rising behind the expanded version of the Legacy Museum, which opened in 2021. (Provided)

New Construction

Two new hotels are rising behind the expanded version of the Legacy Museum, which opened in 2021. Across the street, EJI is developing two new restaurants by the Legacy Plaza, which opened in 2022 to give people a place to sit in the shade or stroll by the sights and enjoy the views of downtown, including new statues of Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr.

Atop Cottage Hill, near EJI’s National Memorial, construction crews are turning a long-abandoned shell of a building into a hotel and meeting place for EJI visitors.

Those projects follow several other new hotels, including the Springhill Suites and the Trilogy Hotel on Coosa Street just across from the original site of the Legacy Museum, now called the Legacy Annex.

EJI turned an old Montgomery Water Works facility on Court Street into Legacy Hall, a stately brick building where groups can meet or enjoy a meal.

“We can get several hundred people in there and provide a meal in the middle of the day and do all the things that allow a successful meeting to take place over the course of a day or two,” EJI Executive Director Bryan Stevenson said.

Stevenson, who started EJI in the 1980s as a not-for-profit law firm to represent death row inmates, did not expect all the growth when the National Memorial and the Legacy Museum opened in 2018.

“We were really just trying to create a space where we could talk about parts of our history that I don’t think have been adequately addressed,” Stevenson said. “I had no idea that things would evolve in the way they’ve evolved over the last several years. I’m really excited about it. And it’s very energizing to imagine creating this place where hundreds of thousands of people are now visiting to have this immersive experience.”

Stevenson said when he moved to Montgomery in the 1980s that he was struck by the absence of any acknowledgement of slavery in the city that was a hub of the slave trade and the first capital of the Confederacy.

The Legacy Museum connects history from the transatlantic slave trade through Jim Crow to mass incarceration. (Provided)

“We had all of these markers and monuments and streets and schools and statues dedicated to leaders of the Confederacy,” Stevenson said. “And I didn’t think it was accurate to talk about that period in Alabama history and American history without acknowledging the role of slavery and the burden of enslavement for so many people.”

The National Memorial grew out of EJI’s work to document the deaths of thousands by lynching between 1877 and 1950. Stevenson said the museum was intended as a space to provide more context.

“But the ambition at that time was relatively small,” Stevenson said. “And I’ve been blown away by the response. I did not imagine that we’d see a half-million people a year want to come to these sites.

“And the growth since then has largely been a consequence of trying to manage and accommodate the level of interest that those initial sites generated.”

Stevenson said the original museum had limited capacity, so some visitors who came for the day did not get in. That led to the new museum, which has more capacity and content.

“But now that we can accommodate a couple of thousand people a day, that creates new demands with moving people,” Stevenson said. “So we had to get shuttles, because we need to do transportation, and now we have a restaurant. And we’re going to open two more by the end of the year because people need a place to eat. And so a lot of what we’re doing is just trying to create an infrastructure that allows the visits that people have to be meaningful and comprehensive and complete.”

“Somebody flies all the way from the West Coast or from another country to be here, we want them to be really inspired by their time in Montgomery.”

Crime A Threat To Tourism

David Bronner, as CEO of Retirement Systems of Alabama for more than 50 years, has spearheaded changes in downtown Montgomery for decades, leading the development of RSA office buildings, the Renaissance Hotel complex and performing arts center, and ongoing projects, including the construction of a new State House for the Alabama Legislature. Bronner has high praise for what Stevenson and EJI have built.

“It’s really fantastic,” Bronner said. “It’s rather disturbing, to say the least, but at the same time fantastic to recognize history as it was. These are real people with real facts. Not just, ‘Let’s forget about it.’ I think he’s done an unbelievable job.”

Bronner said he has only talked to Stevenson once or twice and told him there is so much to see in the exhibits that it is hard to take them all in.

“The stories and the cruelty to fellow man was quite unbelievable,” Bronner said.

Bronner said the EJI projects amount to reclamations of three areas of downtown and said they complement the RSA’s developments, as well as the establishment of Montgomery Whitewater, a park for rafting and outdoor recreation that was supported by the city of Montgomery and the Montgomery County Commission.

While projects like the EJI sites and Montgomery Whitewater are bright spots, Montgomery is dealing with growing alarm over a rise in gun violence. Nine people were injured by gunfire at a large party in north Montgomery in June. A father, son, and a third man died in a shooting at an Hispanic grocery store in early June. A 43-year-old wife and mother was badly injured by stray gunfire while stopped at a traffic light on a busy stretch of the Atlanta Highway on an early afternoon in April. The police department is understaffed and has had problems hiring and keeping officers.

“The danger to tourism is that the city becomes so rough with the lack of enforcement that you do lose the tourists,” Bronner said. “You can’t have gun battles in the city all the time without putting tourism at a serious risk.”

Montgomery Mayor Steven Reed has called for more spending on public safety, including pay raises for police to improve hiring and retention.

“You’ve just got to make Montgomery for law enforcement salary-wise and staffing-wise as good as there is in the state,” Bronner said. “If you’re going to keep tourism to the level that tourists want to come, they have to feel safe.”

The dedication of the National Monument to Freedom last month included musical performances and highlighted several days of events during EJI’s Juneteenth Celebration. (Amarr Croskey, For The Birmingham Times)

Not Just Fireworks And Hotdogs

Lee Sentell, director of Alabama Tourism Department since Gov. Bob Riley’s administration, said the quality and scope of EJI’s projects is hard to match.

“I can’t think of another organization in the last 20 years that has come into the state and developed such an amazing footprint within a downtown of any city in the state,” Sentell said. “They have generated high quality educational destinations that any state in the country would be happy to host.”

“They have done an amazing job in bringing people to Alabama who probably never had a specific reason to visit,” Sentell said.

Justin and Rachel Lonas of Chattanooga stopped in Montgomery on their way to the beach last Sunday and toured the Legacy Museum with their four daughters, ages 6 to 14.

Lonas said he was familiar with EJI’s work but it was his first chance to tour the museum.

“It’s incredibly well done,” Lonas said. “You really appreciate how they manage to tell a single story. From the slave trade, through enslavement, through Jim Crow, through mass incarceration, it’s just one long story. And it’s really well articulated.”

Lonas said the museum carries important lessons for his daughters and other young people.

“I just hope they know the whole story of America, that it’s not all fireworks and hot dogs,” Lonas said. “It’s a complicated history that’s full of evil and injustice as well as the good things.

Tracy V. McGee points to her family name on a wall that displays 122,000 surnames of enslaved people emancipated after the Civil War, a wall that is a central exhibit in the Equal Justice Initiative’s Freedom Monument Sculpture Park on the Alabama River. (Amarr Croskey, For The Birmingham Times)

“If we’re going to grow into the country that’s better than we are it requires everybody’s participation and work together, and knowing the past is part of that,” Lonas said.

His oldest daughter, Canaan Lonas, 14, said the unvarnished truths presented by the museum were not easy to take but are important.

“They said the whole thing, from the transatlantic slave trade to the actual enslavement period and all the different kinds of injustice that have gone on as long as America has been around,” Canaan said. “And it was very raw, very honest. And I appreciate that because you don’t hear those stories as often as you probably should. It’s hard to take. It’s hard to take learning all of that about America.”

Anthony Fowler of Montgomery walked through Legacy Plaza last Sunday to see the new statues of Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. Fowler, 56, who grew up in New Jersey, said the opening of the National Memorial and the Legacy Museum six years ago came on his wife’s birthday, April 27. Fowler remembers the concert that night on the riverfront, where Stevie Wonder, Kirk Franklin, Usher, the Roots, Brittany Howard and others performed.

“There is a lot of history in our city, history that people might not have known about,” Fowler said. “Even people that live here, grew up here, might not have known about some of the history. Things you might not learn in school, you can learn across the street.

“And how everything was connected, from slavery, to the lynching and to mass incarceration. I didn’t know how it all fit in. But it tells you in there how it all comes together. And it’s something. It’s something.”

Affordable And Easy Access

Stevenson said the National Memorial and Legacy Museum were on pace to attract about 500,000 visitors a year when the pandemic came, shutting down the sites and bringing travel and tourism to a halt.

He said the rate of visitors has returned to the pre-pandemic pace and possibly exceeded it, with the Sculpture Park providing a third major installation.

Stevenson said the expansion has mostly been funded by growing donations to EJI. As for revenue from the legacy sites themselves, he said the goal has been to operate them at close to cost.

Tickets to the sites are $5 for adults and free for children 6 and under. The EJI provides free shuttle service between the three sites.

“We have always wanted access to the sites to be easy,” Stevenson said. “And so we’ve never had an admission price that would allow us to make money on the sites.

“It has exposed us, the work of EJI, to a larger audience. And many of those people have become donors of our work because they value the work. And we’ve been able to increase our resources that way. We see it as public education work more than as revenue generating.”

Stevenson’s book, “Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption,” published in 2014, was developed into a movie starring Michael B. Jordan and Jamie Foxx.

“We have benefited by more people learning about our work,” Stevenson said.

Stevenson said the economic benefits of the EJI sites are exciting.

“I’m really happy that we’ve been able to contribute to creating jobs for hundreds of people, either directly or indirectly, is something I love to see,” Stevenson said.

For more on the EJI memorials, visit www.eji.org

EJI’s New Monument to Freedom Dedicated to Those Who Endured Slavery

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The Equal Justice Initiative, a criminal justice reform nonprofit, invoked last month’s Juneteenth holiday as it dedicated its National Monument to Freedom. (EJI)

Associated Press

Dr. Michele R. Williams and her mother, Barbara Y. Williams, scanned the rows of names last month on Juneteenth, looking for their family surname, Murdough.

“There’s a story connected to every single name and the families that they represent,” Michele Williams said. Their ancestor, a man named Moses, is believed to have lived in one of the two slave cabins that were taken from an Alabama plantation to become an exhibit at the sculpture park.

Two slave cabins were taken from an Alabama plantation to become an exhibit at the sculpture park. (EJI)

“It was just heart-wrenching, but also super-moving,” Michele Williams said of seeing the cabin.

Thousands of surnames grace the towering National Monument to Freedom in Montgomery, representing the more than 4 million enslaved people who were freed after the Civil War.

The Equal Justice Initiative, a criminal justice reform nonprofit, invoked last month’s Juneteenth holiday — the day that commemorates the end of slavery in the U.S. —as it dedicated its National Monument to Freedom.

The National Monument to Freedom honors the people who endured and survived slavery. (EJI)

The monument, which honors the people who endured and survived slavery, is the centerpiece of the new Freedom Monument Sculpture Park in Montgomery, Alabama, where art and historical artifacts tell the story of enslaved people in the United States.

During the dedication ceremony, Equal Justice Initiative founder Bryan Stevenson recounted how enslaved people endured unspeakable horrors, but also left a legacy of perseverance and strength.

“Enslaved people in this country did something remarkable that we need to acknowledge, that we need to recognize and that we need to celebrate. Enslaved people resisted. Enslaved people were resilient. Enslaved people found ways to make a way,” Stevenson said.

Juneteenth is a day to confront the brutality of slavery and its impact, but he said it is also a day to celebrate the dignity and strength of people who managed to love and survive despite what they faced.

“They never stopped believing. They never stopped yearning for freedom. This morning, as we leave here this Juneteenth morning, I hope we will be hopeful,” Stevenson said.

Juneteenth commemorates June 19, 1865, the day enslaved people in Galveston, Texas, found out they were free after the Civil War. The news came two months after the end of the Civil War and about 2 1/2 years after the Emancipation Proclamation.

Stretching four stories into the sky, the National Monument to Freedom is inscribed with 122,000 surnames that formerly enslaved people chose for themselves, as documented in the 1870 Census, after being emancipated at the Civil War’s end. Those last names represent the more than 4 million enslaved people who were set free after emancipation.

The Equal Justice Initiative created the park to tell the story of enslaved people with honesty. The sculpture park is the third site created by the organization. The first two sites — the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, a memorial to people slain in racial terror killings; and The Legacy Museum: From Enslavement to Mass Incarceration — opened in 2018.

The Equal Justice Initiative created the park to tell the story of enslaved people with honesty. (EJI)

Adding Protection to Your Pool to Help Keep Everyone Safe

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As we continue to discuss water safety this month, it’s important for homeowners to have the necessary tools to keep pools fun and most importantly safe. Last week we reviewed the safest colors of swimwear to wear so it can be easily recognized in water to help prevent drowning. This week the water safety focus will be on additional property protections to help prevent swimming pool drownings. The informational source comes from the National Drowning Prevention Alliance.

It’s important for homeowners to have the necessary tools to keep pools fun and most importantly safe. (Adobe Stock)

Gates and Latches
All gates to residential and public swimming pools or spa areas should be self-closing and self-latching with a locking device. Gates should open away from the pool and should never be propped open. Gates must also be double-checked to confirm that the latching mechanism is securely fastened. For safety reasons the latch release should be out of the reach of children, at least 54 inches from the ground. If a locking latch is used it should be kept locked when the pool is not in use. Be sure to store the key out of children’s reach and make sure all adults know where it is kept and understand the importance of keeping it out of the hands of children. This cautionary protection should be emphasized to any teen living or visiting the home. Use professionals when making any lock or latch adjustments or repairs

Fence Climbing Prevention
Children can be very ingenious when it comes to getting something they want. Children of all ages can be very clever. Even toddlers will use chairs, tables, storage bins, or anything else that they can find and use as a ladder to get over the fence. These types of items, along with others, should be kept at least 4 feet away from the pool area and secured in place. It is equally important to make sure that the children and/or animals are not able to dig soil loose from the pool fence.

Fence Maintenance
It’s important to routinely check the entire perimeter of the pool fence and gate for compromises and/or damage, such as loose or broken fence slats, that could lead to a breach. Adjust the hinges or spring if the gate is not self-closing properly. Shift in soil can cause the latches to misalign or not close.

House Doors
All doors providing direct access from the house to the swimming pool should be equipped with a self-closing, self-latching device with a release mechanism placed no lower than 54 inches above the floor. Self-closing devices are available for use on sliding glass doors but will require more frequent maintenance to keep the track clean and the closing mechanism in proper working condition. This frequent safety check is well worth your loved one’s safety.

Pool ownership and water safety precautionary measures should always be aligned when Keeping an Eye on Safety for family, friends and guests.

Let’s Talk More About Mental Health Awareness

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At least the conversation on mental health matters is happening more often. I am encouraged when I see the City of Birmingham putting resources behind efforts to bring mental health matters to the forefront.

Mental Health Awareness Day (July 12 at Linn Park) was packed with organizations sharing information and resources to help people understand how to navigate this sometimes-difficult arena.

City leaders, medical professionals and other community leaders joined forces to shine light on the subject. And let’s face it, talking about mental health challenges has not been seen as a particularly easy task in the African American community.

I would say there has been an unwarranted stigma associated with mental illness. But please help me understand how someone, who’s been broken by life, work or another traumatic circumstance, is not allowed time to heal, reflect and regain strength with the help of another?

If we were being truly honest, we’ve all been there – challenged and broken by a life circumstance. And we’ve all needed to rely on the strength of someone else to help pull us through a difficult situation. So how can we look down on someone who’s smart enough to reach out for help when they need it?

And, in this moment, as a certified life coach, I am compelled to do a quick mental health check.

How are you dealing with your life challenges right now? Do you feel overwhelmed or are you managing these stressors on your own? And … who could and would you call to help you navigate through it all?

The most important thing that I could remind you is that you are not alone on this journey called life and don’t try to carry your heavy boulders by yourself. Allow others who are gifted in the mental health arena to help you.

Be vulnerable and open to share what you are going through with a trained, licensed or certified professional, so you don’t have to cave under the pressure of the challenge. Being open to receiving help can be one of the most empowering things you will ever do.

Keisa Sharpe is a life coach, author and speaker. Her column appears each month online and in The Birmingham Times. You can contact Keisa at keisasharpe@yahoo.com and visit http://www.allsheanaturals.com for natural hair and body products.

PEOPLE, PLACES & THINGS

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Eunice Elliott (Provided)

BY GWEN DERU | The Birmingham Times

TODAY…

**READ THE BIRMINGHAM TIMES. Catch up on the news!

**ALABAMA BLAZIN BINGO, 6 p.m. at Overtime Grill and Bar.

**FILM – 7 p.m. at the Sidewalk Film.

**3RD THURSDAY BLUES JAM, 7 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

**LACEY STURM with ISLANDER, and AMETHYST at Saturn.

**AN EVENING WITH ALEXA FONTAINE & BO LEE at the Nick.

**3RD THURSDAY BLUES JAM, 7 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

**JUST FOR KICKS with EUNICE ELLIOTT at the StarDome Comedy Club.

**REAL FUNNY BHM COMEDY OPEN MIC, 7:30 p.m. at True Story Brewing Company.

**THIRST TRAP THURSDAY, 5 p.m. at 2400 7th Avenue South.

**KIKSTART at Water Mark in Bessemer with Free Food Boxes, 9 a.m.

**COMPUTER CLASSES AT THE FIVE POINTS WEST LIBRARY every Tuesday and Thursday.

**EACH AND EVERY THURSDAY HAPPY HOUR, 5-8 p.m. at D’ZIRE with SPECIALS.

**THIRSTY THURSDAYS at D’ZIRE Bar and Lounge.

**KARAOKE, 5-9 p.m. at Courtyard Alabaster Bar and Grill.

**THIRD THURSDAY BLUES JAM, 7 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

**TASTEMAKER THURSDAY – Every Thursday at Blaze Ultra Lounge, 228 Roebuck Plaza Drive, 8 p.m. – 12 a.m. with DJ Ace Twon (95.7 JAMZ) in the mix hosted by Audio Life and GMC Promo.

**THIRSTY THURSDAY at Hookah 114 17th Street No.

**TEQUILA THURSDAY at the Vibe Bar & Lounge.

**THROW BACK THURSDAY at Tha Vibe Bar & Lounge, 3801 Richard Arrington, Jr., Blvd.

**FILMMAKER HAPPY HOUR- Every 3rd Thursday, at Sidewalk Film Fest. Meet with other filmmakers and discuss your newest projects.

**EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT KARAOKE, 6:30 at Ruth’s Place hosted by LADY WOO and with DJ SHAY.

FRIDAY…

**HYDRATE THE CITY with Birmingham Water Works, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at Kellly Ingram Park. Learn how  to infuse your own water and enjoy fresh fruit-infused water. AND next Friday, July 26, at Rickwood Caverns State Park.

**EVERY FRIDAY – STORYTIME AT THE GARDENS, Every Friday, 10 – 11 a.m. FREE at BIRMINGHAM BOTANICAL GARDENS.

**FRIDAY NIGHT WRITES, 8 – 11 p.m. at 7611 1st Avenue North.

**DRAG NIGHT at The Nick.

**BE YOUR OWN PET with SICK FUCKS, and NOWHERE SQUARES at Saturn.

**EVERY FRIDAY – STORYTIME AT THE GARDENS, Every Friday, 10 – 11 a.m. FREE at BIRMINGHAM BOTANICAL GARDENS.

**FRIDAY NIGHT WRITES, 8 – 11 p.m. at 7611 1st Avenue North.

**DRAG NIGHT at The Nick.

**EVERY FRIDAY, R&B at The Chandelier, 212 Cahaba Valley Road in Pelham with DJ MANISH mixing live. FREE Entry.

**EACH AND EVERY FRIDAY HAPPY HOUR, 5-8 p.m. at D’ZIRE with SPECIALS.

**LIT FRIDAYS WITH RIPCORD, 8 p.m. – 2 a.m. at 4501 Gary Avenue in Fairfield.

**AFRO CARIBBEAN NIGHTS (Every Friday Night) at Ash’s on 2nd, 7 p.m. until with Reggae, Afro Beats, Dancehall and Top 40 Hits.

**FIREBALL FRIDAY at Tha Vibe Bar & Lounge.

**FRIDAY NIGHT RAP, Every 1st and 3rd Friday at Crescent Cultural Center, 1121 Tuscaloosa Avenue, SW.

SATURDAY…

**BESSEMER FARMERS MARKET, 9 a.m. at 100 14th Street Highway 150.

**EVERY SATURDAY at BIRDSONG FARMERS MARKET, 9 a.m. – 12 p.m., 2824 5th Avenue South, at Automatic Seafood.

**WINE DOWN HAPPY HOUR, 4 p.m. – 9 p.m. at Saferoom Lounge Bar.

**EACH AND EVERY SATURDAY HAPPY HOUR, 5-8 p.m. at D’ZIRE with SPECIALS.

**EVERY SATURDAY SOLD OUT – THE SATURDAYS JUMP OFF, 10 p.m. at Onyx of Bham, 615 8th Avenue West.

**BURLESQUE NIGHT with BELLA DONNA at The Nick.

**LATE NIGHT with JOE BRANTLEY & THE DAMN RITES at The Nick.

**RUN IT BACK SATURDAYS at Platinum of Birmingham.

**EMO NIGHT BROOKLYN at the Saturn.

SUNDAY…   

**WORSHIP AT THE SIXTH, 9:30 a.m. at Sixth Avenue Baptist Church.

**EVERY SUNDAY – SOUL FOOD SUNDAYS, 1-5 p.m. (Every Sunday) at 1918 Catering, 197 Vulcan Road.

**SUNDAY FUN DAY at DZIRE BAR AND LOUNGE, 4120 3rd Avenue South. Call 205-266-2594 for more.

**SUNDAY FUNDAY for the grown Folks Kickback at Tha Vibe Bar & Lounge.

**EVERY 3rd SUNDAY JAZZ JAM SESSION, 4-8 p.m. at the Ferus on 41st.

**CITY WIDE PRAYER MEETING, Every 4th Sunday, 4 p.m. for one hour at Birmingham Easonian Baptist Bible College. The Lord’s Supper will be served and hosted by the Knights of Pythias & Court of Calanthe.

**BITCOIN BEBOP, BUKO BOYS, CANNIBAL KIDS & DINNER TIME at The Nick.

MONDAY…

**BIRMINGHAM BAND STAND at The Nick.

**RNB MONDAYS, 10 p.m. at Onyx of Bham, 615 Eighth Avenue West.

TUESDAY…

**KIKSTART at Water Mark in Bessemer, 9 a.m. with Free Food Boxes…until gone.

**COMPUTER CLASSES AT THE FIVE POINTS WEST LIBRARY every Tuesday and
Thursday.

**DIAPER GIVEAWAY every Tuesday, 10 a.m. at the Titusville Library.

**EVERY TUESDAY SPECIAL TUESDAYS with Food, Drinks Specials at 1918 Catering, 197 Vulcan Road.

**EVERY TUESDAY – TUESDAY NIGHT TRAILS 5:45 p.m. at Red Mountain Park.

**EVERY TUESDAY is SOUL CAFÉ Happy Hour introducing the Soul Café Happy Hour, 5:30-9:30 p.m. with Soul Goodies, Soul Spirits and Soul Music including $5 Titos and Redmont, at The Vault.

**JOSE CARR’S JAZZ JAM, 7:30 p.m. at True Story Brewing Co. 5510 Crestwood Blvd.

**CARIBBEAN NIGHTS with Reggae, Caribbean and Island Vibes, 9 p.m. – until… with DJ Serious Mixing and hosted by KJ and MANNY at The Vault, downtown.

**TASTY TUESDAYS at Platinum of Birmingham.

**BIRMINGHAM SONGWRITER’S ROUND with Host SUSANNAH SEALES at the Nick.

**WAND with JODY NELSON at Saturn.

WEDNESDAY…

**INTERFAITH NOONDAY PRAYER SERVICES, every Wednesday, at Linn Park, in Downtown Birmingham.

**WORKOUT WEDNESDAY at Five Points West Library at 10:30 a.m. for chair yoga and other chair exercises.

**WEDNESDAY NIGHT POOL TOURNAMENT AND KARAOKE NIGHT, 5 p.m. at
Carter’s Hookah Lounge and Grill, hosted by Jo Sweetz with the Pool Tournament, at 7 p.m. and Karaoke at 8 p.m.

**EVERY WEDNESDAY, YOU, ME & RNB, 6 p.m. at 2206 Bar & Lounge, 2206 31st Street, with DJ You, Me & Playlist.

**D’ZIRE WEDNESDAYS, EACH AND EVERY WEDNESDAY with Free Mimosas, 8- 10 p.m. with DJ GORGEOUS in the Mix at 4120 Third Avenue South.

**REAL FUNNY BHM COMEDY OPEN MIC, 7:30 p.m. at True Story Brewing Company, 5510 Crestwood Blvd. Food until 9 p.m., Music until 10 p.m. and Drink until 11 p.m.

**EVERY 4th WEDNESDAY at FACE’S LOUNGE KARAOKE hosted by ARETTA, 6:30 p.m. at 7070 Aaron Aronov Dr. in Fairfield.

**SUBSTRATE BINGO at Saturn.

NEXT THURSDAY…

**READ THE BIRMINGHAM TIMES. Catch up on the news!

**ALABAMA BLAZIN BINGO, 6 p.m. at Overtime Grill and Bar.

**FILM – 7 p.m. at the Sidewalk Film.

**3RD THURSDAY BLUES JAM, 7 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

**GLADYS IMPROV at Saturn.

**TRASHY ANNIE at The Nick.

**OPEN MIC THURSDAY with EUNICE ELLIOTT at the StarDome Comedy Club.

NEXT FRIDAY…

**HYDRATE THE CITY with Birmingham Water Works, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at
Rickwood Caverns State Park. Learn how to infuse your own water and enjoy fresh fruit-infused water.

**EVERY FRIDAY – STORYTIME AT THE GARDENS, Every Friday, 10 – 11 a.m. FREE at BIRMINGHAM BOTANICAL GARDENS.

**FRIDAY NIGHT WRITES, 8 – 11 p.m. at 7611 1st Avenue North.

**JACK THE ELBOW, THE HIGH FIDELICS, MORBID ORCHID and TIME BEING at The Nick.

**EVAN HONER – NOWHERE FAST TOUR with LEON MAJCEN at Saturn.

FOR FILM AND MOVIE LOVERS…

**26th ANNUAL SIDEWALK FILM FESTIVAL opens August 23. The Opening Night Pre-Party begins at 5 p.m., the Opening Night Film begins at 7 p.m. and the Opening Night After-Party begins at 9 p.m. at 1800 Block of 3rd Avenue in front of the Alabama Theatre. The Film is EXHIBITING FORGIVENESS with director TITUS KAPHAR and Bessemer Native ANDRE HOLLAND. The film is about a journey that Tarrell (Played by Holland) a successful Black artist whose life is disrupted by the unexpected return of his estranged father, La’Ron (John Earl Jelks) a recovering addict seeking reconciliation. As Tarrell prepares for a galley show, he struggles with traumatic memories of his childhood and the unresolved pain inflicted by his father. While his mother, Joyce (Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor) has forgiven La’Ron, Tarrell grapples with the challenge of forgiveness. Both Holland and director Kaphar will be in attendance of the film. The festival is August 19-25 in the Downtown Birmingham’s Historic Theatre District.

FOR OUTDOORS LOVERS…

**NEXT SATURDAY OUTING, Meet 9:45 a.m. with Southeastern Outings Lake Gathering: Swimming, Boating, Picnic, Other Lake Activities at Smith Lake – DETAILS: The center of activities will be the shore of a secluded cove on the lake. You can swim, float, kayak, canoe, and probably go for motorboat rides courtesy of the Adamys.  Bring your swim things, river shoes, picnic lunch, drink, towel, and a change of clothes.
Headquarters at the Adamys during the day will be the comfortable, airy, screened in porch of their house.  Optional dinner afterwards. Meet 9:45 a.m. at Jack’s at Exit 284 off of I-65 North of Birmingham. Depart at 10 a.m. Well-behaved, carefully supervised children age 10 and older welcome, but parents are responsible for all risks to their children. Reservations: Not required. More Info: Dan Frederick, email southeasternoutings@gmail.com or call 205/631-4680.

AROUND TOWN…

**TASTY TUESDAYS – ALUMNI S2N JULY LINEUP at Platinum of Birmingham on
TUESDAY – West End, THURSDAY – Jess Lanier and July 30 – McAdory.

IN FLORIDA…

**AUGUST 23 – JAZZ AND THE WORLD at Palladium featuring Diego Figueiredo Tito Puente, Jr., Fred Johnson, Jose Valentino, Ona K and La Lucha with a Side Door VIP Preshow featuring Sokoloski Trombone Project.

**SEPTEMBER 19 – EVY’S ROOTOP CONCERT EXPERIENCE at Evy’s Terrace Bar & Bistro on Clearwater Beach featuring Ashley Smith & The Random Occurrence with Trace Zacur Band featuring Songbird Shella.

**OCTOBER 17-20 – ON THE GREEN IN COACHMAN PARK – BACK TO OUR ROOTS 45th Anniversary with several areas open to the public at No Charge including 15 additional performances on two side stages.

HAPPENINGS AT SIXTH AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH…

**WORSHIP SERVICE every Sunday.

**EVERY MONDAY MORNING MEDITATION WITH PASTOR CANTELOW, 7:15 a.m. Contact the church at (205) 321-1136 or (205) 321-1137.

**CHILDREN’S CHURCH & COLLISION CHURCH, each First Sunday at 9:30 a.m. for K-5th (Children’s Church), 6-12th (Collision).

AT GIFTED CITY CHURCH… EVERY SUNDAY!

**GIFTED CITY CHURCH, Sunday Worship is 10 a.m. at 228 Second Avenue North in the Downtown, City Center. Join the one-hour service with children’s service and complimentary coffee and tea. For more: info@thegiftpad.org.

COMING SOON…

**SEPTEMBER 13 – ZOO GALA SAFARI SOIREE – A black-tie event that is a Safari Soiree for an unforgettable evening filled with elegance, entertainment, exceptional cuisine and majestic animals. SAVE THE DATE!

**SEPTEMBER 28 – MAXWELL: THE SERENADE TOUR at the Legacy Arena.

**OCTOBER 5 – THE REUNION TOUR 2024 with KIRK FRANKLIN, YOLANDA ADAMS, FRED HAMMOND, MARVIN SAPP & THE CLARK SISTERS with special guest KIERRA SHEARD-KELLY at the Legacy Arena.

**OCTOBER 13 – 85 SOUTH: BIG BUSINESS COMEDY TOUR at the Legacy Arena.

Well, that’s it. Tell you more ‘next’ time. People, Places and Things by Gwen DeRu is a weekly column. Send events, your things of interest and more to: gwenderu@yahoo.com and thelewisgroup@birminghamtimes.com.