**FILE** Courtesy of African American Mayors Association
**FILE** Courtesy of African American Mayors Association

Black mayors from across the country recently gathered in the District to meet with federal and congressional leaders and learn about opportunities and programs designed to help their cities face a laundry list of challenges, many of which they collectively share. 

For three days, April 27-29, the African American Mayors Association (AAMA) met, marking the first time theyโ€™ve gathered in person since the coronavirus pandemic started in March 2020.ย 

The Washington Hilton in Northwest served as the site of the event which had scores of mayors in attendance. 

โ€œOver the past year, we have watched communities struggle with uncertain healthcare options, unprecedented gun violence, historic natural disasters, crumbling infrastructure and an aggressive targeting of immigrants, among other troubling trends,โ€ said Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, the outgoing president of the association. 

โ€œDespite federal inaction to protect some of our most vulnerable community members, mayors have converted national and local leaders to develop innovative solutions to these challenges and create new opportunities,โ€ he said. 

The AAMA consists of Black mayors who preside over cities that range in populations as high as more than eight million in New York City to several thousands in villages and small towns. The organizationโ€™s headquarters sits in Ward 8โ€™s Navy Yard in Southeast.

โ€œOur organization represents 500 mayors,โ€ Turner said. โ€œOne-third of all cities (in the U.S.) are led by African-American mayors. [We] represent everyone and we want to make sure that people thrive.โ€

Mayors who attended the conference included: Eric Adams, New York City; Lori Lightfoot, Chicago; Randall Woodfin, Birmingham; Steven Reed, Montgomery; LaToya Cantrell, New Orleans; Brandon Scott, Baltimore; Andre Dickens, Atlanta; and incoming president and Little Rock, Arkansas Mayor Frank Scott. D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser hosted a reception for her colleagues on April 27.

Biden administration Cabinet officials including Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Marcia Fudge, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo and Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra spoke during the conference. 

Fudge, a former mayor of Warrensville Heights, Ohio, addressed the audience during a luncheon on April 28 and encouraged the mayors to continue their work.

โ€œItโ€™s not easy being a mayor, especially a Black mayor,โ€ Fudge said. โ€œAs Blacks, we find a way to make a way out of no way. Being a mayor is not for the faint of heart. You cannot go to church or to the grocery store without someone telling you, their problems.โ€

Fudge said the Biden administration wants to help cities confront problems like homelessness.

โ€œEven though Blacks make up 13% of the countryโ€™s population, we are 40% of the homeless,โ€ she said. โ€œBlack women are the fastest-growing segment of the homeless population. We are putting in federal dollars to help you with your homeless people and we are investing more in helping people to become homeowners.โ€

Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo pointed to efforts to double the size of the Minority Business Development Agency which promotes the growth of businesses of color. Raimondo also said closing the digital divide has become a priority for the Biden Administration.

โ€œYou need the Internet,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s not a luxury but a necessity. Thirty million people donโ€™t have access to the Internet and we want to close that gap. We are working to make it inexpensive, too. We want carriers to offer plans to people at a rate of between $10 and $30 per month.โ€ 

U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and House Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-S.C.) also delivered remarks at the conference.ย 

And in addition to assuming the helm of the AAMA, Scott said he attended the conference to learn more about the latest developments regarding public safety.

โ€œPublic safety is a priority,โ€ Scott said. โ€œWe are committed to supporting the police departments in our cities. However, we donโ€™t believe a lock them up approach works. We think a holistic approach works best along with prevention and intervention.โ€

Mount Vernon, N.Y. Mayor Shawyn Patterson-Howard said Black maternal heath has become an issue that mayors must address. She said the increasing rate of Black mothers dying while in the birthing process is โ€œvery disparaging.โ€

โ€œThis is not about class but about race,โ€ Patterson-Howard said. โ€œThe doctors are not listening to what we Black women have to say. Too many Black women are losing their lives. America is not a Third World country, yet some of those countries are beating us as far as having lower deaths.โ€

St. Paul, Minn., Mayor Melvin Carter said the conference had many productive moments and he liked the opportunity to network among his colleagues. 

โ€œConnecting with Cabinet members and the federal delegation was very important to me,โ€ Carter said. โ€œBut I really enjoyed meeting leaders from all over the country.โ€

James Wright Jr. is the D.C. political reporter for the Washington Informer Newspaper. He has worked for the Washington AFRO-American Newspaper as a reporter, city editor and freelance writer and The Washington...

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3 Comments

  1. So if there was a “White American Mayor’s Association” would that be ok? Or a “Asian American Mayor’s Association”? “Indian American Mayor’s Association”? Why do we need a separate association for any group of Mayors? Aren’t all Mayor’s worried about the same issues? Just imagine how much more productive this group of Mayors would be if all Mayors were involved, not just a select group identified by race – which is one of the issues I’m sure they are dealing with.

    1. Hey Gary Holfstra there is literally a UNITED STATES CONFERENCE OF MAYORS that host biannual events in which ALL MAYORS are apart that do the SAME thing you are talking about.. STFU

    2. I agree with you. It’s time for people to start showing some personal responsibility for their own actions. White does not mean you are born with a silver spoon in your mouth. I paid for my own education. I am responsible for following the law and I don’t need someone to tell me right from wrong. I only had children I could afford and raised them with respect. I don’t go around blaming others for my blunders. I think what the African American cities need to do is educate the people. Teach trades. As a community, get these young children off the streets who are out past curfew. Hold the parents, yes include these babies daddies, to be responsible for the lives they are bringing into this world. There also should be a time limit on welfare. It should not be a lifetime career.
      What I am saying here is not racist, it is plain common sense.

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