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Fast-Growing Black-Owned Tax Software Firm In Birmingham to Add 66 High-Paying Jobs

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SmartWiz, a rapidly growing Black-owned tax software technology company in Birmingham, is expanding its operations in Birmingham with plans to create 66 high-paying jobs. (Provided)

By Jerry Underwood | Made In Alabama

Alabama Commerce Secretary Ellen McNair announced Wednesday that SmartWiz, a rapidly growing Black-owned tax software technology company in Birmingham using advanced artificial intelligence to streamline the work of tax professionals, is expanding its operations with plans to create 66 high-paying jobs.

Founded in 2021 in Birmingham by a team of tech entrepreneurs and tax professionals, SmartWiz has quickly emerged as one of only 16 IRS-approved tax software providers worldwide.

Its innovative solutions are simplifying tax compliance for professionals across the country, and its growth in Birmingham will add to the city’s reputation as a rising hub for technology innovation.

The project represents a dramatic growth spurt for SmartWiz, which currently employs 10 people in Birmingham at its base in Innovation Depot.

The Fintech startup is the brainchild of five Auburn University students who discovered that preparing taxes was a miserable experience. They are Tevin Harrell, Olumuyiwa Aladebumoye, Jordan Ward, Justin Robinson and Bria Johnson.

“Over the next five years, our goal is to put our software in the hands of every tax professional, CPA, and accountant across the United States,” said Harrell, the company’s CEO.

“We plan to grow our team here in Alabama with some of the world’s most talented engineers, sales and customer support professionals, building the next unicorn tech company right here in our state.”

Through its expansion, the Fintech startup plans to invest $125,000 in equipment and add 66 new jobs over the next five years with an average annual salary of $81,136, excluding benefits, according to the Alabama Department of Commerce.

“SmartWiz’s decision to grow in Birmingham reinforces that Alabama has the talent, resources and supportive business climate that innovative companies need to succeed,” Secretary McNair said.

“This expansion not only brings high-quality jobs to Jefferson County but also strengthens our state’s growing tech ecosystem,” she added.

Support System

SmartWiz has benefited from Alabama’s robust startup support network, winning $50,000 in early seed funding through the EDPA’s Alabama Launchpad program and participating in the Birmingham Business Alliance’s Supplier Scale initiative (now known as the Small Business Intensive). In addition, the firm works out of Innovation Depot, the Southeast’s largest tech incubator.

An additional $500,000 in funding came from Innovate Alabama’s State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI), as did other investments from Techstars Los Angeles, Google and entertainer Pharrell Williams.

The company’s commitment to Birmingham was tested when it was offered the opportunity to relocate to Los Angeles with $3 million in funding for its latest investment round, but SmartWiz chose to remain and expand in Alabama.

Harrell said the decision to stay in Birmingham was based on the support of Innovation Depot and the ecosystem around the company, the ease of doing business and the access to networking in Birmingham, which has been invaluable.

“As a business owner, people are your biggest investment,” he added. “With support from the Birmingham Business Alliance, Jefferson County, the City of Birmingham and the State of Alabama to help offset training, we’re not only able to attract top talent to the Birmingham region but also strengthen our path toward becoming a billion-dollar company within the next five years.”

The growth project is being supported by the Alabama Department of Commerce, which is providing tax incentives tied to job creation milestones, and state workforce development agency AIDT, which is providing services valued at $780,000.

“This is the blueprint in action. Alabama is no longer just manufacturing; we’re engineering ecosystems that launch tomorrow’s leaders,” said Gary Walton, who headed project recruitment for Commerce. “Through strategic investments in talent development, startup capital and collaborative networks, we’re building the foundation for companies to thrive and strengthen our communities.”

Local Impact

Joining Commerce to support the project are City of Birmingham and Jefferson County, which are providing local job creation incentives totaling a combined $231,000.

The Birmingham Business Alliance (BBA), which was also involved in the project, estimates that the growth project will have an economic impact of $9.6 million over the next 20 years.

“SmartWiz is proving that you can achieve national success while staying rooted in Birmingham,” said Steve Ammons, President & CEO of the BBA. “We are proud to partner with their team as they grow, create jobs and strengthen our region’s reputation as a center for tech innovation.

Other local officials applauded the company’s growth project.

“Jefferson County has long been a hotbed of the entrepreneurial spirit, a fact that is highlighted in SmartWiz’s plans to grow their home-grown software development company,” said Jeff Traywick, the Jefferson County Commission’s Economic Development Advisor.

“We are proud of their success and excited about their plans to increase their workforce by 60 new high-paying jobs. We look forward to seeing what the future holds for this rapidly growing company,” he added.

“It’s amazing to see SmartWiz intentionally choose to grow here in Birmingham by bringing 70 news jobs, all paying livable wages,” added Coreata R. Houser, Interim Director of the City of Birmingham’s Department of Innovation & Economic Opportunity.

“This is evidence that tech companies can thrive in Birmingham, and we invite others to become a part of our growing tech and innovation community,” Houser added.

Jefferson County Courthouse Mural Celebrates Healing, Restoration and Hope

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From left: Jefferson County Commissioner Sheila Tyson; Deidre "Lady Dee: Green, founder VIRTUE, Inc; Brenda Hong, founder Brenda's Brown Bosom Buddies; Marie A. Sutton, Public Information Officer, City of Birmingham. (Sym Posey, The Birmingham Times)

By Sym Posey | The Birmingham Times

Community leaders, breast cancer survivors and advocates gathered inside the Jefferson County Courthouse Wednesday morning to unveil a mural during Breast Cancer Awareness Month that spotlights the journey of healing, restoration, and hope.

The Jefferson County Commission, partnered with VIRTUE, Inc., a local non-profit organization that focuses on issues like women’s health, leadership, and community empowerment, to feature a “Women on the Journey” mural in the downtown Courthouse.

The painting depicts vibrant images that represent the diverse experiences of women facing breast cancer and captures the emotional and physical challenges of their journey. Each figure in the mural stands as a testament to perseverance and support that can be found within the community.

“When I first viewed this masterpiece, I immediately felt each expression. I traveled down my own memory lane,” said Brenda Hong, a breast cancer survivor and founder of Brenda’s Brown Bosom Buddies (BBBB), a 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to supporting individuals with breast cancer, as well as providing education and promoting early detection of breast cancer in minority, low-income, and underserved communities.

Jefferson County Commissioner Sheila Tyson said the mural brings awareness to those “that are often overlooked when it comes to the illness that attack women.”

VIRTUE, Inc.’s founder, Deidra “Lady Dee” Green, said her organization’s mission is to foster holistic well-being and restoration. The group also wants to keep a promise to an administrative assistant who worked for her husband [Pastor Steve Green of More Than Conquerors Faith Church].

Her name was Robin, and she was newly married with kids when she was diagnosed with a very aggressive form of breast cancer. “We, [her church family], made a promise to her that we would do what we can to raise awareness of this disease, [even though she lost her battle with it], and promote early intervention as it relates to breast cancer. And that’s what we’ve been doing,” Lady Dee has said.

VIRTUE, or Vessels Imparting and Restoring Temples to Uncontestable Excellence, was founded in 2005, just before Robin’s diagnosis.

“We made a promise to Robin that we would continue to lift up early detection, being aware of the importance of knowing your numbers, your family history, and having you testing done,” said “Lady Dee” Green. “And we’ve done just that … out of prayer, the Lord spoke to me about creating a mural because we wanted to touch more people, expand our reach, and what was birthed out of that was ‘Women on a Journey.’”

The mural was painted by Jamie Bonfiglio, who is known for her expressive style, and commitment to creating murals that celebrate African Americans.

The unveiling drew attention to the ongoing need for breast cancer awareness, early detection, and support for survivors, like Marie A. Sutton, Public Information Officer for the City of Birmingham. The painting represents, “a monument of a journey hard fought, and for me, a journey won,” Sutton said.

For more information about Breast Cancer Awareness Month events and the “Women on the Journey” mural, visit the Jefferson County Courthouse or VIRTUE, or Vessels Imparting and Restoring Temples to Uncontestable Excellence for resources and support.

PEOPLE, PLACES & THINGS

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Macy Gray brings her “On How Life Is 25th Anniversary Tour” to Iron City. (Provided)

By Gwen DeRu | The Birmingham Times

ENJOY THIS WEATHER!!! Have Fun at Magic City Classic, this weekend AND ENJOY HALLOWEEN WITH THE FAMILY!!

TODAY, OCTOBER 23…

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

**WEEK DAYS – IRONDALE SENIOR ACTIVITY CENTER has activities starting at 8 a.m. with a Hot Lunch served for Seniors Monday – Friday, 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.  Call 205-951-1418 for details about the FREE program.

**MONDAYS – THURSDAYS – CFJS CARES RESPITE PROGRAM, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. Call 205-278-7113 for more info.

**AAF October Luncheon, 11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m. at the AmFirst Community Room on 4th Avenue North. Speak is WAYNE REID, Executive Director of Alabama Public Television. Register at www.aafbham.org.

**BLUES JAM EVERY 3rd THURSDAY, 7- 10 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

**FREE – GOLPE, SIKM, REFUSE TO THRIVE, BORN & ACUTE EFFECT with SKLKM, REFUSE TO THRIVE, BORN, ACUTE EFFECT at Saturn.

**JAZZ IN THE MAGIC CITY HAPPY HOUR featuring Alabama State’s own Jose Carr and his band, 4:30-7 p.m. at the Carver Theatre. FREE. EVERY THURSDAY!

**NATIONAL NIGHT OUT, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m. at The Hill, 5415 Beacons Drive, in Irondale. FREE.

**NIGHT 1: DAIKAIJU with TV COP at The Nick.

**COMEDIENNE EUNICE ELLIOT at the StarDome Comedy Club.

** at Avondale Brewing Co.

**KARAOKE KICKBACK EVERY THURSDAY, 5 – 9 p.m. at Jazzi’s on 3rd, with Happy Hour 5-6 p.m. FREE. There is a weekly Cash Prize hosted by Loretta Hill

**BLUES JAM EVERY 3rd THURSDAY, 7- 10 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

**THAT’S MY JAM THURSDAYS KARAOKE MINGLE, each week with Karaoke at 8 p.m., Spin to Win ‘til 9 p.m. and Happy Hour ‘til 9 p.m. with Sounds by DJ SLUGGA and hosted by JIRUS HORTON at Tee’s on 2nd.  FREE, Entry all night.

**3rd THURSDAY at the Nick with RAMBLIN’ RICKY TATE at The Nick.

**JOSE CARR EVERY THURSDAY, 5-7 p.m. at the Carver Theatre, Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame, at 1631 4th Avenue North.

**FILMMAKER NETWORKING NIGHTS, 5 p.m. at 1821 2nd Avenue North

**EVERY THURSDAY- THAT’S MY JAM THURSDAYS, 7 p.m. at Platinum of Birmingham with DJ Slugga.

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

**FILM at Sidewalk Film.

**KARAOKE, 7 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24…

IT IS FRIDAY…the weekend starts…

**4TH AVENUE FLICKS with the movie BLACK PANTHER, 6 p.m. at 1500 4th Avneue North. FREE.

**NIGHT 2: DAIKAIJU with MY NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOR at The Nick.

**LATE NIGHT at The Nick “A NIGHT OF HORROR – AN IMMERSIVE BURLESQUE AND VARIETY EXPERIENCE.”

**SCARE YOUR FACE OFF FEST XV BY DIY BIRMINGHAM at Saturn.

**JOHNNYSWIM – THE WHEN THE WAR IS OVER TOUR at Iron City.

**ROCKY HORROR MASQUERADE BALL at Avondale Brewing Co.

**GOOD PEOPLE & GOOD MUSIC WITH GOOD PEOPLE BREWING at Dave’s, 6 p.m. at Dave’s Pub.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25…

**PINK POWER WALK in IRONDALE, 7 Registration, 8 a.m. Opening Ceremony and 8:30 a.m. two-Mile Walk at Irondale City Hall, 101 20th Street South. Free Donations appreciated. Register at www.irondalecommunityfoundation.com.

**BILLY RAFFOUL with PETER RAFFOUL at Saturn.

**THE OPTICS with SOL MUSICAL at the Nick.

**JASON BOLAND & THE STRAGGLERS – THE LAST KINGS OF BABYLON TOUR at Iron City.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26…

**FREE – HALLOWEEN CEREAL BRUNCH, 9 a.m. at Saturn.

**SINGO BINGO EVERY SUNDAY, 1 p.m. at Cahaba Brewing Company.

**JOSE CARR performing at JAZZ IN THE GARDEN SUNDAYS, Every 1st and 3rd Sunday, 5-8 p.m. at Denim on 7th, 2808 7th Avenue Suite105.

**JAZZ ON $TH WITH UAB JAZZ ENSEMBLE, 5 p.m. at the Carver Theatre Sunday Series – Jazz on 4th.  FREE for UAB Students and Faculty with UAB ID.

**EASE BACK 4th SUNDAYS, 5 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

**2ND SUNDAY FREE SHOW with ZACH AUSTIN at The Nick.

**SUNDAY FREE SHOW with KYLE KIMBRELL at The Nick.

**STEVIE TOMBSTONE at The Nick. FREE.

**4th SUNDAY FREE SHOW with TAYLOR HOLLINGSWORTH at The Nick.

**FOUND FOOTAGE FEST: PORCELAIN VHS TREASURES at Saturn.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 27…

**WEEK DAYS – IRONDALE SENIOR ACTIVITY CENTER has activities starting at 8 a.m. with a Hot Lunch served for Seniors Monday – Friday, 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.  Call 205-951-1418 for details about the FREE program.

**MONDAYS – THURSDAYS – CFJS CARES RESPITE PROGRAM, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. Call 205-278-7113 for more info.

**MONDAYS – GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP, 10-11:30 a.m. at CJFS Conference Room. Open to survivors who have experienced loss within the past 2 years. Call 205-278-7101 to sign up.

**MONDAYS – DEMENTIA CAREGIVER VIRTUAL SUPPORT GROUP, 3 p.m. and/or Tuesday at 7 p.m. on Zoom. Call 205-278-7113 for more info.

**BIRMINGHAM BANDSTAND at The Nick.

**THE MOTH BIRMINGHAM STORY SLAM: MASKS at Saturn.

**MACY GRAY – ON HOW LIFE IS 25th ANNIVERSARY TOUR at Iron City.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28…

**MONDAYS – THURSDAYS – CFJS CARES RESPITE PROGRAM, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. Call 205-278-7113 for more info.

**TACO TUESDAY R & B NIGHT, EVERY THURSDAY at Hemings on 2ND Avenue.

**PODCASTING 101 at CREED63, EVERY TUESDAY at 5:45 p.m. Learn how to launch and create your own podcast at 1601 5th Avenue North, Birmingham 35203.

**JOSE CARR EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT at True Story Brewing.

**SONGWRITER’S NIGHT EVERY TUESDAY at The Nick.

**SUPERSTAR KARAOKE LATE NIGHT TUESDAYS at The Nick.

**NICK SHOULDERS with CHRIS ACKER at Saturn.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29…

**MONDAYS – THURSDAYS – CFJS CARES RESPITE PROGRAM, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. Call 205-278-7113 for more info.

**PARENTING WITH PURPOSE – A SPACE- Informed Workshop for Parents, 5:30-7 p.m. at N.E. Miles Jewish Day School Register by October 17. Call 205-278-7101 for more.

**REAL FUNNY COMEDY WEDNESDAYS at True Story Brewing. Sign up at 7:30 p.m.

BAD YEAR with AUDIOPHILE at The Nick.

**OPEN DECK with SUNDROP EVERY WEDNESDAY at The Nick.

**KITCHEN DWELLERS with FIRESIDE COLLECTIVE at Saturn.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30…

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

**BLUES JAM EVERY 3rd THURSDAY, 7- 10 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

**TRAUMA RAY at Saturn.

**Q DOT & JAXXXON + FRIENDS ALL HALLOW’s EVE at The Nick.

**KACIE BELL, VIA VICARY & SAM HOLT – A HALLOWEEN SHOW TO DIE FOR at Avondale Brewing.

 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31….

**DRAG NIGHT at The Nick with BLOOD MOON RIOT + COSTUME CONTEST.

**COMEDIAN MIKE EPPS at the StarDome Comedy Club.

**MILK & HONEY – FREAK (HALLOWEEN) at Saturn.

**THE REVIVALISTS – ALL IN THE FAMILY: 10 YEARS OF MEN AMONGST MOUNTAINS at Avondale Brewing Co.

MAGIC CITY CLASSIC UPDATES…

**PASTOR MIKE, JR. is the Official Ambassador, DJ TRACIE STEELE is the In-Game Emcee AND JERMAINE DUPRI’s Special DJ set is at 1 p.m. at the Amazon Tailgate Area.

NEWS TO KNOW AND USE – PEOPLE, PLACES AND THINGS TO WATCH…

**TODAY – FOOD SUPPORT – DROP OFF LOCATION, 11 a.m. – 4 p.m. at Birmingham Municipal Court, 601 17th Street North, For more info., andrian.penn@bulldogs.amu.edu and mirandaonaaj@birmhml.gov.

FOR WOMEN…

**TODAY – OPERATION: BEAUTY RESCUE – GRACE KLEIN COMMUNITY is hosting an evening of relaxation with facials, massages and more as you learn how to distribute rescued beauty, hygiene and health and wellness items to those in need.  JOIN GRACE KLEIN, 5-7 p.m. at Pinnacle Financial Group, 2020 Cahaba Road (English Village), in Mountain Brook. Enjoy a relaxing evening with friends featuring facials, massages and more. Register and learn about all kinds of valuable items that are thrown out from dermatology offices, salons and even your own bathrooms. Learn how to help spread the word about this exciting new initiative called OPERATION BEAUTY RESCUE. Interested in becoming a vendor, contact marnie131@gmail.com. For more on Operation Beauty Rescue, go to: operationbeauty.org.

THINGS TO DO IN OCTOBER...

…FOR HALLOWEEN and FUN THINGS…

TOMORROW…

**SCARE YOUR FACE OFF FEST XV BY DIY BIRMINGHAM at Saturn.

**ROCKY HORROR MASQUERADE BALL at Avondale Brewing Co.

SATURDAY…

**HOWL-O-WEEN PUP-KIN PATCH PAWTY, 10 a.m. – Noon at Tails by the Rails at Ellard Park, 2420 Ruffner Court, in Irondale with Pumpkin Patch Pictures, Costume Contest and Treats.

**CASPER, a Flick Among the Flowers, at Sunset at the Birmingham Botanical Gardens on the Formal Lawn.

OCTOBER 29…

**TRACKS & TREATS HALLOWEEN NIGHT, 5-7 p.m. with S’Mores, train rides and Candy Galore at The Tracks at Irondale City Hall, 101 20th Street South.

**WOODFIN’S ROUND-UP HARVEST FESTIVAL, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m. at Birmingham City Hall for ages 2-12. FREE. There will be carnival rides, inflatables, games, food trucks, with safe family fun. Costumes encouraged.

**VIKINGS M/C HALLOWEEN HAUNTED HOUSE, 6-9 p.m. at 2501 South Park Dr. S.W. FREE and Free refreshments.

OCTOBER 31…

**SPOOKTACULAR, 5:30 – 6:30 p.m. at the Vulcan Park and Museum.

**CELEBRATE THE MAGIC OF WICKED, 5:30 p.m.  at the Carver Theatre/Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame with a special Sing-Along Screening. Costumes are encouraged.  Dress as your favorite character and enter the Wicked Costume Contest

AROUND TOWN…

**OCTOBER 24 – YOUTH FILMMAKERS SYMPOSIUM, 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. at Velvet Studios, 501 Huffman Road (REAR ENTRANCE) for Students grades 4-12.  There will be breakfast and registration begins at 9 a.m. Lunch will be provided. For more info and to register, call 205–370-7805.

**OCTOBER 25 – FLICKS AMONG THE FLOWERS, 5:30 p.m. on the lawn of the Birmingham Botanical Gardens. The movie featured is CASPER. There is also a Costume contest. Bring your blanker or lawn chair, find your spot and enjoy.  FREE. Donations are appreciated.

FOR COMMUNITY EFFORTS…

**TEN AWARDS CALL FOR ENTRIES with AAFBIRMINGHAM – Nominations are open for the 2025 Ten Awards. These awards shine a spotlight on the excellence of sales, service and leadership in advertising that often goes unrecognized in the world. Celebrate the unsung heroes and visit aafbham.org/the-ten-awards to submit your nominations ASAP.  For more about the organization, go to info@aafbirmingham.com

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

“We’ve got to stay level-headed and just play the game. We have to treat it like a regular game.”

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JALEN WRIGHT, ALABAMA A&M LINEBACKER ON THE UPCOMING 84TH ANNUAL MAGIC CITY CLASSIC AT BIRMINGHAM’S LEGION FIELD ON OCT. 25; THE BIRMINGHAM TIMES, OCT. 23.

More Than a ‘Hot and a Cot’: Plans Underway to Build $4.4M Shelter for Birmingham’s Homeless

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The City of Birmingham has pledged $1 million to help Jimmie Hale Mission open a new facility. (File)

The Jimmie Hale Mission plans to build a $4.4 million emergency shelter in Birmingham.As Birmingham and the entire metro area continues to struggle with persistent homelessness and encampments on public property, one of the city’s oldest missions has designs for a new project.

“We hope to break ground next year in 2026,” said Perryn Carroll, executive director of the Jimmie Hale Mission. The plan calls for a 98-bed facility, which will be built at 3401 Second Ave. North, across the street from the current Jimmie Hale Mission men’s rehabilitation center east of downtown.

The mission is hoping to secure a commitment of $1 million over the next four years from the city of Birmingham and plans to do additional fundraising to pay for the rest of the project.

“We have just started our fundraising,” Carroll said. “The city of Birmingham has committed $1 million over a four-year period to help fund the shelter.”

Construction could start “as soon as we get the money,” Carroll said.

“It’ll be a new facility and be open year-round, to provide not just a hot and a cot to those in need, but services and resources to help them change their situation,” she said.

The facility would include two family rooms, showers, laundry facilities, dining room, and consultation rooms for mental health counseling and other medical treatment and social work services.

“We want to get them into a more longer-term program to increase their chance of success,” Carroll said.

Last week, Homewood passed an ordinance that will allow that city to crack down on homeless encampments in public parks.

A crackdown on the homeless in Homewood may have a ripple effect in neighboring cities, most likely in Birmingham, where homelessness remains rampant.

“You can expect, when you make it illegal for homeless to be in one area, that they will migrate to adjacent areas,” Carroll said.

“Do I think that this will help the problem? Maybe for the residents of Homewood, but it’s not going to help homelessness.”

Mountain Brook, Hoover and Vestavia Hills have routinely brought the homeless in their cities to Jimmie Hale, she said.

A crackdown on the homeless in Homewood may have a ripple effect in neighboring cities, most likely in Birmingham, where homelessness remains rampant. (File)

“That’s what I’d rather they do – connect those in need with resources that can help them to escape that situation,” Carroll said.

“Criminalizing homelessness does not meet any goal,” she said. “It’s not good for the individual and it’s not good for the city. That’s not an appropriate use of your jail, of your city funds. It doesn’t do anything to help the problem.”

In Birmingham, “different providers are working more collaboratively than in the past, and we’re working very hard,” Carroll said. “We do not currently have the resources available to address the magnitude of the issue.”

The Homewood ordinance was approved with an 8-0 vote with little debate and it drew applause from many in attendance at the Oct. 13 City Council meeting.

It was modeled on a similar ordinance in Mountain Brook.

The ordinance will ban camping on public property without a permit, or storing personal property on public property.

In 2022, Jimmie Hale Mission took over the role of providing a warming station for Birmingham’s homeless on cold nights, at the request of the City of Birmingham.

For years, the city had opened Boutwell Auditorium to the homeless on cold nights.

Now on cold nights, Jimmie Hale Mission offers emergency shelter at its Shepura campus in the old Thomas School, 3420 Second Ave. North.

Jimmie Hale vans offer transportation from Linn Park, Brother Bryan Park, Kelly Ingram Park and the Faith Chapel Care Center downtown on warming station nights.

Jimmie Hale Mission has a history of offering emergency shelter to the homeless of Birmingham, but in recent decades had shifted to formal programs to treat the root causes of homelessness, such as addiction. The historic mission and non-profit ministry was founded in 1944 to serve Birmingham’s homeless.

The downtown men’s shelter moved from Third Avenue North downtown to the campus near Sloss Furnace in 2007, with an increased emphasis on long-term rehabilitation.

Birmingham is tackling the homeless problem with several strategies, including purchasing tiny-home emergency shelters to be set up at Faith Chapel Care Center and hiring a non-profit agency, Urban Alchemy, to deploy teams of counselors to meet the needs of homeless people on the streets.

Fifteen new tiny pallet homes, or micro-shelters, should be set up by the end of this year in downtown Birmingham, ready to house homeless people by January.

On any given day, Birmingham has more than 350 homeless people on its streets.

Bound Together: Threads of Remembrance Unites During Community Day at BCRI

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Seamstress Wilhelmina Thomas. a member of the Bibb & Tucker Sew Op, working on a new piece. Thomas was one of the featured panelists at the Bound Together: A Day of Community gathering at the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. ( Reginald Allen, for the Birmingham Times.)

By Reginald Allen | The Birmingham Times

Create Birmingham, in partnership with the Jefferson County Memorial Project (JCMP), Bib & Tucker Sew-Op, The Black Cherry Tree Project, and the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute (BCRI), on Saturday, October 18 host Bound Together: Day of Community at the BCRI.

The event marked the culmination of the Jefferson County Memorial Quilt, a community-based initiative honoring the 33 African Americans who were lynched in Jefferson County between the mid-19th and mid-20th centuries. Through art, education, and collaboration, the project promotes dialogue, remembrance, and reconciliation.

“This history is really important to preserve, making sure that we’re honoring these people who have had their lives tragically lost,” said Carey Fountain, Co-Founder of Black Cherry Tree Project, on the importance of events like this. “History repeats itself if you let it. It’s important to preserve these and art is a powerful way to capture that history and continue the conversation forward.”

The Bound Together: Threads of Remembrance exhibit features various quilts and other forms of textile-based artwork on display at the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. (Reginald Allen, for the Birmingham Times.)

Said attendee Wilhelmina Thomas: “The importance of today’s event is about how textiles preserve history. It shows joy and resilience within the Black community and how we can use that as a way to teach history going forward”

The day also featured live performances, art-making, a panel discussion, local organization tabling  and free admission to BCRI.

“Just telling the story of so many of us that was not told” is important, said Edmond “Barry” Johnson, founder of the Sahi On Ko Djony West African Cultural Enrichment Program. “It’s this community being bound together … for healing and for education and for enlightenment,”

Road Closures Scheduled Around Birmingham for Magic City Classic Events

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The City of Birmingham will temporarily close certain roads across the city for the 84th Annual Magic City Classic. (Provided)
birminghamal.gov

The City of Birmingham’s Department of Transportation will temporarily close certain roads as activities take place across the city for the 84th Annual Magic City Classic.

On Wednesday, Oct. 22, the following roadway adjustments will take place:

  • The outside lane to eastbound traffic of Graymont Avenue will be closed.
  • Legion Field bus stop bike racks will go up.
  • Concrete barricades will be moved to close roads leading to Graymont Ave. from 3rd St. West to 6th St. West.
  • Concrete barricades will be moved to close roads leading to 8th Ave. West from 3rd Ave W to 7th Ave. West.

Please see the following timeline for the remaining road closures scheduled to place.

Friday, Oct. 24

  • 11 p.m. – No parking will be allowed on streets that are part of the parade route. Any cars found parked on the parade after 11 p.m. will be towed.

 Saturday, Oct. 25 – Game Day

  • 2 a.m. – Roads that are part of the Magic City Classic parade route will begin to close, including Park Place. 

No parking will be allowed on streets that are part of the parade route. Any cars found parked along the parade route will be towed.

  • 6 a.m. – 8 a.m. – Any neighboring roads to the Magic City Classic parade route will begin to close.
  • 6 a.m. – 8 a.m. — Graymont Avenue closes from Arkadelphia to Center Street once all parking lots are full at Legion Field.
  • 4 a.m. – 6 a.m.– Birmingham Department of Transportation barricades will move into place for transportation lane and parade.
  • 8 a.m. – Eighth Avenue West closes from Arkadelphia to Center Street.  No one setting up a tailgate may enter after 8 a.m.
  • 8 a.m. – Parade begins.
  • 9 a.m. – Birmingham CrossPlex game day shuttle route begins.
  • 12 p.m. – Boutwell Auditorium and Phillips Academy shuttle routes begin.
  • 2:30 p.m. Game day kickoff at Legion Field.
  • 10 p.m. – Shuttle routes end.

Sunday, Oct. 26

  • 8 a.m. – All street barricades will be removed.

Downtown parking, Shuttles and More!

  • Game day shuttles will be available at the CrossPlex, Boutwell and Phillips Academy. Tickets are $5, and may only be bought with a credit or debit card. No cash.

Parking in the Boutwell is free on game day. The Boutwell deck will open at 6 a.m.

Motorists may access the Boutwell deck from 19th Street North and Rev. Abraham Woods Jr. Blvd.

The Boutwell deck is the only Birmingham Parking Authority Deck that will have free parking on game day.

Please be aware of “No Parking’’ yard signs along the parade route, on Graymont Avenue and on Eighth Avenue West near Legion Field. Violators will be towed by Weil Wrecker.

Starting at 4 a.m. on game day, motorists coming off I-65 or 59 East onto 17th Street North, must turn right or left. They will be unable to go straight.

For more information, visit www.birminghamal.gov/classic

‘I had the Ring Boxed up in Several Boxes … and When She Finally Got to the Ring I Got Down on One Knee’

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BY JE’DON HOLLOWAY-TALLEY | Special to the Birmingham Times

JESSICA & DAMON MURRAY

Live: Pleasant Grove

Married: Oct. 8, 2022

Met: Winter 2021, at Damon’s cousin Donnell’s home in the Green Acres community on Birmingham’s west side. Damon was there for their Friday night hangout when Jessica, who had been longtime friends and former neighbors with Donnell, stopped by.

“It’s [hanging out at Donnell’s] just something we always did at the end of a long week, but that particular night, I didn’t know Jessica was going to come by …,” Damon remembered. “I had known of her for a long time because she used to live next door to him … [Over the years], I had seen her in passing, but either she was in a relationship, or I was in a relationship, so Donnell [never introduced us]. At this point, I had just gone through a breakup and she was single, so we were finally formally introduced.”

“I always thought Damon was fine,” Jessica laughed, “and finally I had a chance to be in his presence so why not get to know him?” she said. “We got a chance to talk and exchange numbers and it went from there.”

First date: March 6, 2021, for dinner and bowling in Tuscaloosa. They dined at Southern Ale House and went to a nearby bowling alley for fun at the arcade.

“I wanted to get her out of the city,” Damon said. “COVID was still lingering and I was apprehensive about going anywhere, and I was very adamant about that, but Damon said, ‘come on, just ride and let me take you out,’” said Jessica.

Jessica agreed and said they had a good time. “On the ride to Tuscaloosa we talked and listened to music, and I’m an old school music person, but he loves music of all kinds, and he introduced me to a lot of R&B that I had never heard, and different artists I’d never paid attention to like Ella Mai, SiR, Summer Walker, and Eric Bellinger… it was a vibe. I enjoyed his company. But on the way back I did end up nodding off,” she said.

Damon wanted to do something different, “[that’s why] I said, ‘let’s go out of town’ … and I thought going to the bowling alley arcade would give us a chance to do something fun … we got to laugh and have a good time. And I won’t say I didn’t take COVID serious, but it was pretty odd being at a restaurant that had [the patrons separated] by plastic dividers,” Damon laughed.

The turn: A few weeks later, at Jessica’s place in Green Acre’s on Birmingham’s west side. Damon recalls sitting in her den watching TV when the conversation deepened and they defined their relationship.

“…we were trying to make sure we were on the same page with what we wanted,” Jessica said. “[Whether] we wanted to be exclusive, and if we were both dating for the purpose of marriage, and we both agreed that was what we wanted.”

“In the conversation, we talked about things that we did not like from previous relationships and what we wanted for future relationships … what we wanted from our relationship and what it would take to reach marriage. I was previously married, and she had been engaged before, so she was hesitant to bring [marriage] up to me because she wasn’t sure if I wanted to be married again. And initially, I didn’t. [After my first marriage ended], I figured I would just date or be single for the rest of my life, but Jessica showed me something different and I saw that maybe I could have the marriage I wanted the second time around,” he said.

Jessica and Damon Murray met in 2021 at Damon’s cousin’s home. The couple marred in 2022. (Provided)

The proposal: On Jessica’s birthday, Aug. 15, 2021, at Big Whiskey in Hoover. Damon said he had had the ring for two months, and was waiting for the perfect timing to pop the question. After dating only a few short months, Jessica had no idea that this birthday dinner would mark the beginning of their future with their closest family members there to witness.

“We were on such a high in our relationship and were enjoying each other so much and I didn’t want to let the moment in time slip away,” said Damon. “So that morning, I called her mom and talked to her about my intentions, and then I asked her father for his permission. I felt like I wasn’t getting any younger and knew what I wanted so I planned out how I would propose.

“After we ate dinner and sang ‘Happy Birthday’, a couple of gifts were passed around and then I gave her my gift. I had the ring box boxed up in several boxes, one inside the other, and when she finally got to the ring I got down on one knee and gave her a long drawn out proposal,” Damon laughed. His speech essentially broke down the timeline of their short courtship, special moments, trials they had overcome, and at the end he said, “I don’t want to let that go, and I want more of those moments and asked her to be my wife’.”

“I knew we had been discussing our future, and seeing all those boxes, I knew something was going on, but I wasn’t expecting him to propose on my birthday,” Jessica said. “It started with one big box and I was shaking them one by one, and when I finally got to the ring box and opened it up, I was in shock. Of course, I started crying tears of joy because not only was that special, but I got a ring, and I was about to marry someone I truly love. I was so happy, and I said ‘yes’.”

The wedding: At the Bessemer Civic Center, officiated by Pastor Regina Sheffield, of Church of The Living God, in Birmingham. Their colors were burgundy, navy blue, and ivory.

Most memorable for the bride was the amount of joy in her heart and her dream coming true. “I must say I was a crybaby all day. I cried all morning, and all the way there. I was so happy and couldn’t believe I was getting ready to marry the love of my life; that was the highlight for me. I was already overly excited, but the moment that really hit me was when I got to the Civic Center to start getting ready for the wedding. That’s when it all set in. And, we had a videographer who recorded us giving messages to one another, saying how we were feeling in the moment and that was a dream come true.”

The groom shares similar sentiments. “Getting ready with my groomsmen and family was memorable … It was the conversations we were having and preparing for what was about to happen. Also, seeing her come down the aisle did it for me. It was amazing seeing her in her dress and seeing how everything came together because we worked on our wedding together. And seeing Jessica smiling and being happy was everything. I could tell she was a little nervous [but more than anything] I could see her happiness and it was a great moment in time,’ Damon said.

The honeymooned on a cruise to the Bahamas. “It was Jessica’s first cruise and first time out of the country … There is nothing like being out on that big blue sea, and having the sun shining down on us. It was amazing,” Damon said.

Words of wisdom: “I believe that your business is your business and not anyone else’s; keep your problems in the house,” said Damon. “You should also make allowances for your spouse, because in our case, we got married kinda fast, so we were still learning each other. Don’t drag disagreements out. Resolve them in a healthy and constructive manner.”

“Put God first and keep people out of your business. Whatever struggles you have, keep it amongst yourselves because people love to see your downfall. So whatever internal struggles you have, pray about them and work them out,” Jessica said.

Happily ever after: The Murrays attend Greater Emmanuel Temple Holiness Church, in East Lake, and are a blended family with four children: Landon, 10, from Jessica’s previous relationship, Martell, 24, and Mohaganie, 22, from Damon’s previous relationship, and Lance, 1, from their union.

Jessica, 40, is Green Acres [Birmingham’s west side] native, and A.H. Parker High School grad. She attended Lawson State Community College where she earned an associate’s degree in child development/early childhood education, and Athens State University [Athens, Ala], where she obtained a bachelor’s degree in early instructor education, with a minor in early childhood education. Jessica works as a pre-kindergarten teacher for Birmingham City Schools.

Damon, 45, is a Smithfield native, and South Panola High School [Batesville, Mississippi] grad. He attended Ole Mississippi University, where he studied litho-graphic printing before joining the US Army, where he served in the 69th battalion at Fort Jackson, South Carolina. Damon works as a truck driver for Jefferson County.

“You Had Me at Hello’’ highlights married couples and the love that binds them. If you would like to be considered for a future “Hello’’ column, or know someone, please send nominations to Barnett Wright bwright@birminghamtimes.com. Include the couple’s name, contact number(s) and what makes their love story unique.

Birmingham Personal Injury Attorney | Guster Law Firm, LLC

Sherrel Wheeler Stewart, Birmingham’s Award-Winning Journalist and PR pro is Retiring – Sort of

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Sherrel Wheeler Stewart retired officially on Oct. 1, from her role as Strategy and Communications Officer for Birmingham City Schools BCS. (Marika N. Johnson, For The Birmingham Times)

By Javacia Harris Bowser | For The Birmingham Times

After 43 years as a communications professional who’s done noteworthy and award-winning work in both journalism and public relations, Sherrel Wheeler Stewart is retiring — sort of.

Though Stewart retired officially on Oct. 1, from her role as Strategy and Communications Officer for Birmingham City Schools (BCS), her story is far from over.

“This is the time to pursue my real passion, which is writing,” Stewart, 65, told The Birmingham Times during an interview on a cool, comfortable fall morning at her home in Hoover, Alabama.

Perhaps that’s why the first thing on her agenda is to buy a new laptop. She’s literally worn out the keys on her current computer.

Over the past four decades, Stewart has held numerous positions at various media outlets and other organizations, including The Birmingham News, The Tennessean, WBHM 90.3 FM, Southern Natural Gas, and others.

She’s been a leader of the Birmingham Association of Black Journalists (BABJ) and a visiting professor at the University of Alabama, in addition to mentoring countless emerging journalists and helping to recruit top talent.

In her role with BCS, she helped the school system navigate the tumultuous times of the COVID-19 pandemic and shape campaigns aimed at shifting the oftentimes negative narrative about public schools.

Success Starts Here

Stewart, a proud Birmingham native, grew up in the Riley neighborhood with her parents, the Rev. Herbert Wheeler and Veraneice Wheeler, and her three older siblings: Herbert, Vincent, and Clovia. As Stewart reflects on her childhood, she notes the positive impact of attending Riley Elementary and Jones Valley High School, both which were part of BCS.

“I can’t say enough about my education in [BCS],” Stewart said. “I had very good teachers from elementary school to high school who really encouraged me and who sought opportunities for me to grow.”

In fact, it was a counselor at Jones Valley High School that encouraged her to apply for an internship program with WBHM so she could learn more about news reporting. Stewart’s fond memories of her school days motivated her to want to work for the school district.

“That’s why I wanted that job,” she said, “because I got so sick and tired of hearing folks bash our school district.”

Stewart started at BCS in June 2020, at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“It was like baptism by fire,” she recalled. “There was so much to do. I had to think fast every day about getting messages out to parents and informing the public about what we were doing and why we were doing it. It was just a constant churn of information.

“After we got beyond COVID, I wanted to work on the perception of BCS because there are some people who assume it’s not good because it is an urban school district. Well, that’s a lie. BCS offers quality education for scholars and tremendous support for its employees.”

The Success Starts Here campaign is meant to shift the narrative. The initiative shares the message that BCS graduates are having “an impact on our state and our world,” Sewart said in a 2023 AL.com article about the program, to help increase enrollment across the school district and make BCS “the first choice in education for all students in this area.”

“There is just so much success that has come out of the school district,” she added. “We need to be reminded ourselves, and we need to make certain that the community knows that there is success produced every day in BCS.”

Sherrel Wheeler Stewart, and Birmingham City Schools Superintendent Dr. Mark Sullivan. (Marika N. Johnson, For The Birmingham Times)

A Storied Career

Stewart began her journalism career in August 1982 at The Birmingham News just after graduating from the University of Alabama. “I was a grunt,” she said with a laugh when asked about her first post-college job. “I was like the kid of the newsroom.”

There were no reporting positions open at the time, so Stewart was hired as an editorial assistant. But she was soon moved up to be a zone reporter covering communities north of downtown, including North Birmingham, Norwood, Fultondale, Gardendale, Kimberly, Morris, and Warrior.

She still remembers showing up to cover her first council meeting in Kimberly dressed in a pantsuit, pumps, and pearls. Everyone else at city hall — dressed in denim — thought she was a lawyer there to “get somebody out of jail,” she said.

No matter what community she covered, Stewart built relationships with people whose stories she wanted to tell. “I realized that we were different in many ways, but I still needed those relationships in order to get the news,” she said.

Eventually, Stweart started covering the Birmingham City Council for The Birmingham News before moving on to The Tennessean, in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1987 to serve as the education editor and to supervise the newspaper’s interns.

The Next Phase

Then she and her husband, William Stewart, were ready to have children, she took a job as communications coordinator at Southern Natural Gas in Birmingham.

“At the time, we were starting a family,” she said. “There are many women who are very strong and have been able to keep up the pace required for reporting and editing in a competitive environment, but, honestly, at that period of my life, I wanted that 9-to-5 so I could enjoy that next phase of my life.”

Stewart, a proud Birmingham native, grew up in the Riley neighborhood. (Marika N. Johnson, For The Birmingham Times)

Being out of the newsroom allowed Stewart to participate in other civic initiatives, such as a young professionals group assembled by then-Mayor Richard Arrington.

“We were like a quasi-cabinet,” she explained. “He would meet with us on a monthly basis, and we would sit around the table and talk about issues, things going on in the city, and give feedback. Most of us were in our early 30s, and I really appreciate him so much for that.”

Later, Stewart was called back to her alma mater, the University of Alabama, to serve as a visiting professor/professional in residence in the journalism department. During that time, she also worked as a writing coach for The Tuscaloosa News and the Alabama Press Association.

Future Draft Picks

In 1999, she returned to The Birmingham News as an investigative reporter and Saturday editor. She was also given an unexpected charge when her higher-ups asked her to help recruit and retain more Black journalists. “I was like, ‘Wait a minute. You’re telling me you want me to find Black folks? It’s on!’”

Stewart attended career fairs at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), such as Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University (FAMU), Jackson State University, and Howard University. She recruited at conventions of the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) and tapped a few students from her days at the University of Alabama. She called the folder of resumes she collected from top talent her “Future Draft Picks.”

Throughout Stewart’s career, mentoring younger journalists has always been a top priority.

“When I wanted to write, I really didn’t have anybody,” she said. “Until I got to The Birmingham News and met Ingrid Kindred, who became my mentor, I didn’t know any Black female writers. I just knew I wanted to write.”

Stewart left The Birmingham News in 2012 and, after freelancing for a year, went on to work at WBHM for five years before taking the position at BCS.

As Stewart looks back over her career, what she’s most proud of is, “the people I’ve been able to cheer,” she said.

“I said ‘cheer’ because the majority of the people I have mentored already had the skills, the ability, and the capacity. I’ve tried to be that person who just said, ‘You can do this!’”

Stewart mentored Staci Brown Brooks, who after a long career at The Birmingham News and AL.com went on to work in communications at Alabama Power Company and currently serves as president of the Alabama Power Foundation and vice president of Alabama Power Charitable Giving.

“When I met Staci, she was 19 years old, and she already had drive and initiative and was intelligent,” Stewart said. “Same with Joseph Bryant, [who is currently the government reporter for AL.com]. Joseph was already on fire. He just needed somebody to say, ‘You got this! Go for it!’”

Testimonies

Bryant said, “Very few people have played a major role in seemingly every aspect of my life more than Sherrel Stewart. In fact, she had a part in most of my major career moves, beginning when she drove a van full of college students to a job fair where I landed my first internship to eventually serving as my editor in my earliest days at The Birmingham News.”

He added, “She checks all the boxes as a mentor, boss, and friend. Sherrel has touched countless people and delivers her own brand of wisdom, wit, and passion to everything and everyone she touches. When you call, she’ll answer. If you’re in need, she’ll deliver.”

Brooks said, “Sherrel was one of my journalism instructors in college, and it was a special delight to end up working with her at The Birmingham News so many years ago. I wish her well in her retirement, but we all know Sherrel doesn’t really know how to stop working.”

Brooks added that Stewart has a heart for the Birmingham community “and especially a heart for children, [so] I know she will continue to serve. Hopefully her projects will just be spaced out by some fabulous trips.”

In fact, that’s exactly what Stewart has planned. She promised someone special that she would take a break.

In 2024, Stewart’s husband of 37 years passed away. “I had promised [William] that I would retire, slow down, and enjoy life,” she said. “I’m going to keep that promise.”

Among the excursions she has in mind are a trip to Mount Rushmore in South Dakota and an African safari, as well as a trek to the Mediterranean Sea and the South of France. She’s also planning more visits to see her daughter Alexandria, a 31-year-old physical therapist who lives in Charlotte, North Carolina, and she wants to spend more time with her son BJ, 34, who has special needs and lives at home with Stewart.

“A News Nerd Forever”

The Birmingham Times met with Stewart in her “happy place” — the backyard patio of her home, which complete with a fire pit and plush outdoor furniture. Also adorning the space is a luscious Japanese maple tree that “sets the tone,” Stewart said. It’s the perfect place to relax or to write.

“But I also have a television,” she said, pointing to the flat screen mounted on the side of the house. “I’m a news nerd forever.”

Always in mentor mode, Stewart stressed the importance of being well read for any young person considering a career in journalism. “Find other writers and journalists you like, emulate some of their approach to storytelling, and then find what works for you,” she said.

The veteran journalist and PR pro also offered this advice: “You don’t do it because you’re trying to get rich. You will make enough to eat if you do it well, but journalism is something you do because of your passion and your purpose.”

During retirement, Stewart has plans to freelance write and report, which she has done consistently over the course of her career. She has freelanced for The Root, Black America Web, Reuters, the BBC, and other media outlets. In the future, she hopes to do some feature writing centered on education. But she also has book ideas and has dreams of writing a television series and pitching it to Netflix.

“The challenge is for me to slow down,” Stewart admits with a laugh.

Joe Minter, Renowned Birmingham Sculptor, to be Honored at City’s Classic Week ‘AWAKEN’ Event

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“Art as Resistance — Awakening Justice Through Creativity” and will honor Joe Minter. (File, The Birmingham Times)

birminghamal.gov

The City of Birmingham will present its annual AWAKEN event in celebration of local changemakers who use creativity, advocacy, and service to advance social justice and community progress.

This year’s program theme is “Art as Resistance — Awakening Justice Through Creativity” and will honor Joe Minter, a world-renowned sculptor, community historian, and founder of African Village in America, whose visionary art chronicles the Black experience and the struggle for freedom, justice, and unity. The event, which is orchestrated by the Division of Social Justice and Racial Equity, will take place on Friday, Oct. 24, at 9 a.m. at the Birmingham Museum of Art.

“Art has always been a language of liberation,” said Mayor Randall L. Woodfin. “Through AWAKEN, we celebrate artists and advocates like Joe Minter who remind us that creativity is not only an act of expression, but also an act of resistance—a tool to awaken justice in all of us.”

AWAKEN, held each year during Magic City Classic Week, was created to spark meaningful dialogue, reflection, and education around Birmingham’s enduring legacy of activism and leadership. Each year, it serves as a bridge between Birmingham’s historic struggle for civil rights and the city’s modern movement for equity—bringing together artists, activists, and community leaders who continue to push for justice through creative expression.

As part of the program, Mayor Woodfin will present the Putting People First Award to Minter, recognizing his vision that embodies Birmingham’s ongoing pursuit of equity and justice.

Joe Minter is an artist and cultural historian living in the Titusville neighborhood, surrounded by his magnum opus, a sprawling didactic artwork that he has dubbed the African Village in America. He recently exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts in London, Mana Contemporary, and the Minneapolis Institute of Art. His work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at the Alabama Contemporary, Atlanta Contemporary, James Fuentes Gallery, and Tops Gallery, and he was featured in the 2019 Whitney Biennial, curated by Rujeko Hockley and Jane Panetta. Minter’s work is in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C., and many others.

The program will also feature a musical performance by trumpeter Nathaniel Bagley, poetry by Birmingham Poet Laureate Salaam Green, and spoken word by Quang Do, president & CEO of Create Birmingham. There will also be a panel discussion on “Art as Resistance” featuring storyteller and craftivist Wilhelmina Thomas, visual artist Willie E. Williams, Jr. and arts administrator John Fields, senior director of UAB Abroms-Engel Institute for the Visual Arts. Gina Mallisham, the executive director of the Jefferson County Memorial Project, will moderate the conversation.

Since its inception, AWAKEN has honored Birmingham’s trailblazers who continue to shape the city’s story of resilience and reform.

Past Themes & Honorees:

  • 2024 – Staying Woke in Voting Rights: Honoring Judge U.W. Clemon
  • 2023 – Lifting Voices: Changing History: Honoring The Carlton Reese Memorial Unity Choir
  • 2022 – Family Reunion: Stories Never Told: Honoring Dr. Shelley Stewart
  • 2021 – Building the Beloved Community: Honoring Odessa Woolfolk
  • 2019 – Hope for the World: Honoring Mayor Richard Arrington
The event is free, but registration is required.