All posts by Kristen Jeffers

Kristen Jeffers has always been interested in how cities work. She’s also always loved writing things. She went off to a major state university, got a communication degree and then started a more professional Blogger site. Then, in her graduate seminar on urban politics, along with browsing the urbanist blogosphere, she realized that her ideas should have a stronger, clearer voice, one that reflects her identity as a Black southern woman. And with that The Black Urbanist blog was born. Seven years, one Twitter account, one self-published book, two podcasts and a litany of speeches and urban planning projects later, here we are.

Weekly Newsletter–Week of June 26, 2018– Media Allied

Yes, this is activism. Not the only kind, but enough of a kind.

Last newsletter I spoke about the thunder and lightening of anxiety and depression. I’ve done this before, but the recent celebrity ones made me want to dig in a bit more.

This letter, I want to speak to one key thing that gets me into that place of dread or panic.

That key thing is feeling like I’m not doing enough. Especially as someone who has a heart for justice and abundance. 

It would be hard enough if it was just me sounding that call, but unfortunately, there’s always been an undercurrent of this in our progressive and activist spaces.

As of late, it was someone who I won’t name on my Twitter, who has a pretty big platform and role both on and offline. They were attacking two things. One, the idea that writing newsletters and producing other media in service of justice isn’t enough. Two, that we need to only take money from people who are with us 100%.

If you noticed my retweet about this, you know I think this is dead wrong. The first notion is absolutely abelist, as well as disabling to our movements. If we all got arrested or put ourselves on the front lines to be shot down or sprayed by protestors, we would be dead. Now, this doesn’t mean we don’t do street and public protest, nor does it excuse how so many law enforcement entities feel the need to bully folks (or worse) when they come to express their views in a public space. Nor does it mean that there aren’t justified moments when tearing down things and rebuilding them need to happen (like now).

What it does mean though is that you realize that there’s something in every occupation that needs to be bent towards justice. Even the protesters come back to the gathering spot and regroup. And the journalists recognize they literally speak truth to power when doing the work right.

Organizing, planning, taking action is not always a spur of the moment thing. Especially in neighborhoods that need to build up trust and coalition so things can be stable.

To the other point of money, yes, how money is spent matters. Yes, it’s appropriate to not even take money when it comes to a person coming in and creating a negative atmosphere or frankly just triggering people by being present. However, if someone wants to give me money with no strings attached, or even better set up a more permanent divestiture and reparations plan, as well as a personal development plan for themselves to be a better person, then, by all means, let’s get to work making that happen.

Again, though, this does not mean I like strings. We need to get away from the idea, especially when it comes to public good projects, that things need to always yield a financial return or even be perfect out of the gate. And this doesn’t even get into the financing of corporate projects.

Speaking of that, my latest on Greater Greater Washington is a primer for that. Check it out and scroll down for more from Detroit and the Allied Media Conference, my recs and shoutouts and a positive message before you go. Oh and just making this declaration has made me feel more positive about my work and the work of others allied together. Yes, this is a theme…

My Life as a Professional Urbanist

Despite having an aunt who’s been in Detroit for what feels like forever, this was my first time visiting as an adult and alone. The times I’ve been with family only, as well as CNU in 2016 and with family, were great and this time was no exception.

Also, I was unsure what to expect when I went to the Allied Media Conference for the first time, especially knowing that the conference is just getting around to having a design justice track, but I truly enjoyed it.

I included this picture of Wayne State University’s State Hall, because it really felt like being back in school, high school. Not only is the conference open to all ages, there was a real sense of justice and progress that flowed through the halls, much like you feel as a young organizer on campus. Plus, I believe every conference, especially ones where everyone gathers to compare notes, needs a quiet/relaxation space. It felt good just to be encouraged to quiet my mind and take notes. Also, I appreciated all the sessions on financing media and divesting from harmful sources.

I really enjoyed dancing (and holding down the table with the homie Jeffery Nolish) at MOCAD, sampling Detroit food at Cass Cafe, dubbed Dream Cafe for the course of the conference and the view of downtown from my AirBnB near Eastern Market!

I do wish I’d had time to eat at all of these places, but Detroit was fun and I’ll be back soon! 

Personal Urbanism, Shoutouts and Recommendations

More is forthcoming about how I do so much traveling and don’t go crazy, but here’s one piece of travel sanity, my Delsey roll on. This particular model has been discontinued, but I’m considering upgrading to this very similar one that has four(!) wheels instead of two. It is quite roomy for weekend trips and as advertised, it does, in fact, fit under the seat, so you get out of the way of everyone else trying to evade baggage fees and also help the plane take off sooner.

I really enjoyed getting to know Antionette Caroll in the brief time I saw her at ACD a few weeks ago and here’s her design resource. I really like how she emphasized that all of us are designers, much like I believe all of us are journalists and planners, some of us are just a bit more professional (or paid at it) than others. She’s also leading this design conference in August in St. Louis.

I want to give a shout out to the whole Spaces and Places squad. We all worked together on this recent Next City op-ed and I’m delighted to know I’m not alone and you all, who I’ve either met at conferences or known from online, are the real deal. I run into a lot of people, especially marginalized people, who are ready to give up on design and planning as a thing that can heal us. Thank you for reminding the world that we have very unique and very important tools to heal, despite the very real harm some of those tools have caused in the past.

One more person who isn’t in this squad directly, but is in my big urbanist global squad,  but who has also hit a milestone, celebrating 12 years of producing his local blog on June 26th). I said a little more about this on Twitter as well.

Happy to see Red Emma’s in Next City as well. If I have another birthday lecture (or any kind of lecture) there, I’ll be doing it at their new space in Mt. Vernon. The article zooms in on how they are one of many worker co-ops and one that employs marginalized people in sustainable ways.

I’m going to admit that I’d not been scanning my colleague Chuck Marohn’s site Strong Towns (which is really more than a site, but a movement at this point), as much, partly because I’ve felt over the last couple of years, that I can’t relate to the conservative parts of the urbanist movement at all. However, I really appreciated this recent post on why governments can or can’t be run as businesses and why malls are shutting down, which highlights just how much local retail, local service retail, has disappeared, along with the places that promised and gave us so many of our major life memories, such as buying prom clothing. 

This video on what Portland’s (and several cities, but Portland was highlighted) doing to rebuild black neighborhoods is worth watching. However, I want to say that if you watch this and your city has even stronger ties in their black communities, that hasn’t had extreme gentrification happen yet, this is the time to start planning.

Oh, and apparently, this collective of black businesses that still operate in Brooklyn, many that are indistinguishable from their white-hipster-owned counterparts is only four months old! Check the New York Times article and their website directory which is full of all kinds of black folks (still) making things happen in Brooklyn! 

I’d been wondering what was up with this black-led alternative to Uber and Lyft.

Finally, I meant to squeeze this in last week, but check out New York City in all kinds of love with each other.

Twitter‘s always the best place to see what links I think are noteworthy and read what I think, but I’m going to keep including the best right here.

One Last Thing

I told the woman at the AMC booth that had these that I would put this somewhere where it could be seen. Here it is! Taking this to heart and I hope you are too!

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The Black Urbanist Weekly Newsletter–Week of June 11, 2018–Seeing Through the Clouds

Our cities, our lives, are depressing sometimes.

Trigger warning for discussion of depression and how folks cope with it, namely me.

Those of you who have followed my work over the years know that I’m no stranger to the struggles of anxiety and depression. Or maybe you didn’t know and wondered why I would disappear offline for weeks. Why I’m not at a particular conference or being friendly at the ones I do attend (including this weekend). Why this newsletter is called a weekly, but sometimes shows up as a monthly. Travel helps, but sometimes it shakes up the routine that keeps me from falling too far on the deep end.

Last month was National Mental Health Awareness Month and I linked to my article,The Continuous Quest to Mentally Cope With Modern Civic Life as a Young Black WomanProfessional. I wrote the article in an especially dark place for me last spring, on coping with being someone like myself, a lover of vibrant cities and creating things, with more introversion and depression than I like to admit, as I adjusted to my third city in three years. (And it’s now up to four and could be more…)

And of course, many of us have seen and been shocked by the deaths of Kate Spade and Anthony Bourdain. I, unfortunately, had not had the chance to really watch Bourdain’s work, but everything I heard was great and I’m sad that there’s a clear period to it.

Meanwhile, when I still lived in Kansas City, Spade came to Halls at the Crown Center to debut her new line. I readthe article about this in the Starand learned that she was a Kansas Citian who seemed to have all the right connections for the town: white, straight, cis, wealthy from birth and even more so now, husband and kid, Catholic school growing up, now a store that bore her name on the Plaza and even though she’d sold that version of the business, she still had the courage to start another.

Unlike me at the time, who couldn’t put my finger on the fact that what I had was depression, sometimes of the manic nature, but almost always an idea of hopelessness. I was guilty of doing what Brene Brown has called creating a “dangerous” story on what her life must have been like, in the midst of me coming to terms with not having a city, one city, any city, as well as this hobby, turned profession meet everything that I could possibly need.

Now I know that she may have been doing similar things and she even mentioned being afraid that her brand would suffer because people would know that she struggled, if she went to treatment.

I look back and even as I was a child drawing pictures of Apricot Preserves jars taking Amtrak, I was also dealing with a natural propensity to think the worst and assume the worst, so it didn’t just start.

Hearing about her struggle and end has me doing more evaluation and realizing that one, I can’t assume things and two, I need to do what I can to be grateful about where I am and what I have done. Oh and I need to give myself space to be negative, but understand that there’s lots of joy left in this world.

That’s not always easy when you’ve made it your career, and often been forced,  to critique and call out harmful systems. You want to make sure the system knows that its time is up and that in order for all of us to be free of pressure, shame, harm, and violence, we have to let go.

But that’s just it, we all have to examine ourselves, let go and be open to light. For some of us, that’s taking breaks from the work and mentoring others. For others, it’s deciding to shift some of the power and resources to a better good. And for others, it’s both.

You’ve seen this number  a lot of places, but here it is again:

National Suicide Prevention Lifeline
Call 1-800-273-8255
TTY at 1-800-799-4889

I have called this number several times myself and it’s not just for when you want to end it all, but for any time you feel like you’re at the deep end and just need someone to talk you through. The website also has a ton of resources too.

In my Personal Shoutouts this week, I’m going to include several more tools I use to get myself through the doldrums and as I mentioned before, as we come to the middle of the year, I’m taking more time to assess where I am and where I need to be and how I can get stronger.

Now, on to my professional life, and some other fun things.

My Life as a Professional Urbanist

I had this newsletter ready to go on Friday, but by the time I got down to the Association for Community Design’s annual conference, which was literally right down the street, I realized that meeting and greeting so many of you who were there was going to be the order of the day. That and doing our Baltimore Complete Streets panel. It was great to have this conversation again and also good to see so many of the folks I connected with when I was in Minneapolis two years ago. And yes, you can still find the Minneapolis presentation book online.

I’ll also be at theAllied Media ConferenceFriday-Sunday of this week and I’ll be in LA at the end of July. More details forthcoming about that. Also, still working on the very special live career questions episode, as well as more new regular episodes as well as a few other writing projects.

Personal Urbanism, Shoutouts, and Recommendations

As I mentioned at the beginning of this email, there are things I do that get me back to 100%. Two of those things are Insight Timer and Shine Text.

Insight Timeris a free app of mediations, calming music and podcast episodes of folks who help you get in a good headspace. It also is trackable on your phone and devices and whenever I use it, my Apple Health app counts it as mindful minutes. Oh and the app lets you manually add the time you spent doing yoga or meditation outside the app. There’s one set by Sara Blondin, that was my go-to last spring and helped me re-emerge a bit this spring.

Shine Textis literally a text that comes to you daily (or an app that incorporates those texts), and there are motivational messages and blog posts from a variety of sources. I like this because it’s dedicated to centering marginalized voices and people, as peer leaders and writers. Several of those writers have excellent newsletters, websites, and counseling practices of their own, so be sure to check them out.

One last Kate Spade/mental health related post— Thereflections of the author of that articleI read on the process of writing that article, meeting here, processing her shock and also processing other grief with unsupportive friends.

On a happier note, it’s festival and Pride season folks. Whether it’s seeing your favorite bands while you sweat the afternoon away or showing your pride for who you are or how you love, or both, be sure to stay hydrated.

Cheerwine is probably not the best solution as its still a soda, despite its deceiving name. However, knowing that the Bed Bath and Beyond that’s also secretly a World Market store at Gallery Place has it is comforting. How I’m just now discovering this is odd, but yes, DC folks who need their Cheerwine fix, this is the exact shelf at the World Market where it is.

One of my favorite city-related projects this week is what’s going on in Chester, Pennsylvania. Chester has been a majority black city for many of its years after it was colonized by the Sweedish from the Lenape. However, this project described in Next Cityshows hope that there won’t be another colonization and a complete community process around this work.

If you’re in Florida and have black kids in your life who are interested in learning about planning, Gigi the Planner is holding two Future Black Planners of America events, one inWest Park and one in Boca Ratonat Florida Atlantic University, who is also co-sponsoring both events.

Those of you who are interested in keeping up with Spaces and Places, the events that have been held in conjunction with the American Planning Association national conferences to bring more local community members into those conversations, that initiative nowhas its own Facebook pageLook out for more information about the 2019 Oakland event in conjunction with San Francisco’s APA national conference.

Congrats to Toni Griffin, a longtime urban planner and consultant, who has won the contract to do transformative and equitable work in St. Louisin an area that greatly needs it.

This only touches on the Lower Broadway part of Nashville and how it’s changed, but trust me, Nashville is changing a lot and I learned so much in both my visits about how much that’s happening.

And howfriction of distancein our communities is something we all complain about but can be devastating for folks who already have a pile of issues.

Why the gig economyjust isn’t workingfor black folks in this town in rural Arkansas.

You may have seen the rap map, butAtlanta Studiesis a good spot for lots of things related to Atlanta, from social issues to the built environment.

Finally, Arlan Hamilton ofBackstage Capital is an inspiration. Listen to the series about her on Gimlet’sStartup Podcast, as well as her own podcastBootstrapped VC, which has reaction shows to the podcast episodes as well as interviews and reflections on entrepreneurship.

One Last Thing

Protest is so much part of D.C., even our statues do it.

That’s all for now. Remember, if you want to get this newsletter in your email, please share your information here:

 I will only use this email to send you this email at a maximum of four times a month and a minimum of once a month. New subscribers will get a digital copy of the first edition of my book A Black Urbanist. You can unsubscribe at any time.

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Weekly Newsletter–June 3, 2018–Halfwayish through 2018? More or Less Traveled?

So we are halfway(ish) through 2018!!!

Welcome to the blog post edition of my weekly newsletter! Right now, if you read both the email version and the blog version of this letter, you’ll notice that things are slightly different.

Namely this opening section and a few other things, like typos, misspellings, wrong information (like the fact that June 1 is midpoint and not July 1) and sometimes extra links that I forgot to put in the Friday edition. Expect the edition here to go out on Sunday mornings just in time to compliment your pre-brunch reading patterns. 

I’m doing a dual version because I want a copy of the letter on web space that I own, as well as the opportunity to bring you here to this page, as I begin to launch more content and goodies, and because the social sites can be so fickle.

Anyway, here we are and I thank you for coming back. You can thank me in an even bigger way via my Patreon on a monthly basis and through one-time Paypal.me or Cash app donations.

On the email, I went through some GDPR related information. Coming soon to this site, there will be new privacy notices and cookies information. Please don’t sue me for not having these things up and running by May 25th!

Also, I gave everyone on the email list a grace period to unsubscribe or open for the first time in a while, before I did a major purge. The list will be purged for the next email by next Friday, June 8. If you want to read this in email, are on the list currently and haven’t opened the email in the last two months use this box and re-subscribe/update your settings.

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If you are ok with this link being the only place you read the newsletter, then you don’t have to do anything. Also, you can re-subscribe on your own accord down the line if you decide you want to come back and be on the email list.

Anyway, like I mentioned in Friday’s version of this note, as we approach the halfway point of 2018, I’m doing a mid-year assessment based on this post.  I may or may not publish it publicly, as true to the post, but you will start to see a lot of changes to both this site and the greater Kristen Jeffers Media platform and me as a person over the next few weeks. And yes, I saw the pictures at the National Portrait Gallery. It was a wonderful Saturday afternoon excursion. 

My Life as a Professional Urbanist

As nervous as I was, I feel like I did great holding it down for the millennial generation (and let’s admit, a few other groups) at CNU 26 a couple of weeks ago.

Also, I’m so happy to be featured in Modacity talking about my work as its evolved over the years.

Hopefully, the third time is the charm with appearing on Black Kids in Outer Space. If you haven’t been watching, do check out that podcast. In fact, until I get another episode of my show out, go binge those.

Next week (June 8-9) is the Association for Community Design’s annual conference where I will be moderating a version of the Complete Streets in Baltimore panel I did in Nashville.

I decided to do my career questions and guidance podcast episode as a semi-live webinar. Hold the date for June 19 at 8 p.m. I did not actually make the Eventbrite, partly because I continue to brainstorm how I want to do this, where I want to do it and also, depending on if I can recruit some special guests, the date may change. But hold on to this date for now and know that you will be getting updates on this.

In the meantime, If you are interested in booking me for speeches, panel discussions, workshop facilitation or your podcast/media outlet for the summer, fall and next winter, this is a perfect time!

Personal Urbanism, Shoutouts, and Recommendations

To open this section, I want to say that Savannah was adorable. I mostly saw its sprawl, in conjunction with the historic district, but even the sprawl felt different. At least on the corridor, I was staying in, all the box stores, despite their parking setbacks, lined up nicely down the US highway corridor. There was also a clear path to the historic district and key scars of what happened when highway development came in.

But I opened this section with a photo of their local Mellow Mushroom’s menu. One, because Mellow Mushroom is yet another Georgian thing that is going national and two, not only does it allude to certain substances, I think some of those substances are in the pizza to make them so addictive. 

Also, true to most Mellow Mushroom trends, they tend to be in areas that are convenient to walk in and this one was no exception, sitting right next to the main conference hotel and right at the point in the walk between it and the Civic Center you might give up anyway. Anyway, enough about Mellow and its Kosmic Karma goodness. Here are some other things worth seeing.

From this profile of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, I learned that she is also a Baltimorean, having come here to figure out her writing and that she also longings for her homeland, where she also spends a good deal of time. 

If you want to keep up with everything that media outlets write on education, as well as some of their reporter’s tweets, add The Grade to your newsletter list. Don’t stop reading this newsletter, but definitely spend some time with it too. Also, note this specific article on how to better write articles about race and identity issues in our schools.

A friend of the newsletter Brandon T. Harden partnered with DJ Jazzy Jeff to school folks on how to throw a block party in Philly. While there’s some Philly specific stuff here, I want to say that the music and the food at your outdoor gathering— whether it’s a cookout, bbq, block party or something else altogether—matters to its success.

A new park in D.C. is holding a vote for potential names and one of them is after a black woman. Learn more about the life and times of Alethia Tanner.

Looking forward to seeing this equity map of Baltimore grow with more resources and tools.

Really excited to see Brian C. Lee, Jr. on Fast Company’s most creative list, along with Hannah Beachler who we have to thank for Wakanda. There are a lot of other dope folks on the list and number of them are black and from other marginalized groups.

I am going to amplify yet again, that Puerto Rico has been devastated and now we are seeing the death tolls rise. How major media outlets failed at covering the recent admonition that thousands have died and here’s a thread that honors some of those thousands. Also, how women especially are coping with the drama on the island.

And I just want to note here that there are several other islands that are still dealing with issues surrounding these storms, this is day 1 of hurricane season and being on a coastline of my own has me a bit nervous, especially after last Sunday and honestly this whole time I’ve been in Maryland and D.C. Oh, and a developer, in Houston, is already re-building on a floodplain

The last surviving witness to the 1921 Tulsa Race Riot, who went on to break some amazing barriers of her own.

One Last Thing

The bigger our love, the better we all are! Thanks for this lovely welcome sign, Virginia! This is at the rest area on Northbound I-85. They have a guestbook and a Virginia Is for Lovers sticker too!

That’s all for now. Remember, if you want to get this link in your email after next Thursday night, please update your information here:

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The Black Urbanist Weekly Newsletter–Graduation or Commencement?

I am writing this from the kitchen table of my teenhood home. Yes, I’m right back again on what was a planned trip home to celebrate one of my cousins who is following in my footsteps and graduating from the Department of Communication at N.C. State University.

I’m not going to lie. I miss it here. I’m finally realizing that you really can’t run away from both your own problems and people who have problems. Every place has something that it needs to overcome. We are often just better equipped to handle some systems better than others.

And that’s what a weekend like this forces me to think about. What am I doing, what have I done and how can I make what I’m doing better.

In the meantime, I’ve had not just one, but two conversations with people where we touch on how things have changed in unexpected ways, as well as how to manage expectations and our lists of perfect things.

I talked quality changes, as well as equity issues with autonomous vehicles on my latest The Black Urbanist Radio Show episode with Dr. Richard Ezike, a fellow Wolfpacker, who like myself has lived in many places and has found a good home in the D.C. area to be nerdy and explore both technical and quality-of-life issues related to urban planning, namely transportation and our new equitable future. That’s everywhere you can find podcasts, but you know that I’m pretty partial to listening on Radio Public.

Meanwhile, I dropped by and talked Parks and Recreation with the wonderful women of Waffles Friends Work. We talked about Season 4, Episode 12, Campaign Ad (for those who’ve seen it, it’s the episode of Lesile’s big list). As someone who tries and fails to operate with big lists, many that resemble this list as they go after how to make cities better, this was a good one I thought for me to swing through and talk about.

Oh and I wrote one of what will be more pieces on D.C. Metro station entrances.


My Life as a Professional Urbanist

Last Saturday I stepped in to facilitate a role-play exercise for the Every Voice Counts Transportation Academy at Impact Hub Baltimore, where I’m a resident co-worker.

The academy is based off a guide published by the US DOT under its most recent prior administration that encourages people to learn how to advocate for themselves and teaches people, especially folks new to transportation advocacy, how to advocate for oneself.

I also got a chance to visit the US DOT and chat with a few employees about why I ride my bike in honor of Bike Month. That’s me right outside the door in the picture leading the newsletter. The picture leading this section is of the academy.

I’ll be in Savannah next week for CNU 26. I hope you’ll stay through Saturday and come to the morning plenary, a discussion where I’ll be talking about my generation and it’s relationship to urbanism with a Baby Boomer and a Gen Xer.

 

And I’ll be moderating the panel we did in Nashville again, in Baltimore, at the Association for Community Design’s annual conference in June.

I’m working on a couple of other events, but  in the meantime If you are interested in booking me for speeches, panel discussions, workshop facilitation or your podcast/media outlet for the summer, fall and next winter, this is a perfect time!


Personal Urbanism, Shoutouts and Recommendations

This week’s praise starts at the Shop Made in D.C. Six months ago, the D.C. government trusted craft and maker space expert Stacy Price and a few others to curate this awesome space of local food and local craft.

I’d met Stacy back at the CityWorksXPO in Roanoke where I gave a presentation back in the fall of 2016. I’d been meaning to catch up and was so thankful to walk right into the shop and spend an afternoon eating all the wonderful D.C. based food as well as check out some of my favorite and become acquainted with some of the new-to-me makers of D.C.

I also want to give a shoutout this week to my formerly of D.C. entrepreneurship friends Stephanie and Jeremy and their new New York City venture, Eche Verde. It opened last week with a paper flowers course and I hope to visit soon and maybe teach a course there myself.

I also tried out Blue Denim, a restaurant owned by a favorite chef here in Greensboro. It was good. Even the crab leg garnish.

Finally, my cousin Marcus Mintz, the graduate I mentioned above, has a budding video/photography business and he’s got his sights set on Atlanta later this summer. If you need video or photography, especially in North Carolina, Virginia and Georgia (and I’m sure anywhere else if you pay to bring him there), let him know.

One Last Thing

This Atlanta backyard dino is reminding me that zen and peace is something that should never go extinct. Plus, it’s so cute!

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The Black Urbanist Radio Show Episode 7–Dr. Richard Ezike– D.C. Based Transportation Equity Researcher and Fellow Wolfpacker!

Dr. Ezike and I started our conversation with the usual “elevator pitch” introduction, then because I could, I wanted to talk about N.C. State University, where we both did our undergraduate studies, because I could and because this episode is coming out on the eve of me attending my cousin’s commencement ceremony from N.C. State, and a lot of other folks’s graduations as well.

Also, we discuss our towns where we grew up, the merits of Ann Arbor, Michigan where he did his graduate study, how D.C. is basically an adult college town, and not just for those who went to universities there and finally, we get back to the very important work he’s doing right now, making sure all voices are heard and considered if and when we bring autonomous vehicles (a.k.a driverless cars) to the market.

You can find him @drrcezike on all the major socials (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram), just like you can find me on all the major socials @blackurbanist.

And here’s his more formal bio from the Union of Concerned Scientists and that blog post he mentioned on the show about new mobility and transportation equity, a report of his on transportation equity from his time at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation and how the F.A.S.T Act will affect African-American communities.

Richard Ezike is the Mobility and Equity Kendall Science Fellow with the Clean Vehicles program at the Union of Concerned Scientists. His interests lie in the intersection of equity, accessibility, and providing opportunity for every person to a robust transportation system.

Prior to joining UCS, Dr. Ezike taught chemistry at Northern Virginia Community College, and served as a transportation fellow for the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, where he studied opportunities for improved access to transit for African Americans. Dr. Ezike has also worked as an environmental consultant and a patent analyst. His doctoral research focused on developing catalysts to reduce dangerous emissions of nitrogen oxides from diesel-powered cars. Additionally, he worked on developing catalysts to convert carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide to potential alternative fuels.

Dr. Ezike earned his B.S. in chemical engineering from North Carolina State University, and his Ph.D. in chemical engineering from the University of Michigan. He serves on the Riders Advisory Council of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority and on several advisory committees for the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments.

And finally the Brookings article on the future of work and the Center for Global Policy Solutions article on the same thing, but with a larger transportation focus.

Listen via Soundcloud

https://soundcloud.com/kristen-jeffers/dr-richard-ezike-dc-based-transportation-equity-researcher-and-fellow-nc-state-wolfpacker

Libsyn (note, this is set to autoplay, hit pause, to well, pause)


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Weekly Newsletter, April 29, 2018 — A Tour of Cities, A Gratitude for For You

Hello From Where it All Began, But The End of this Journey…

Also known as my teen-hood home (but it’s 9 p.m. Monday so I’m technically back in Baltimore). I thought I’d be writing this from the plane home from my excellent and life-changing speaking tour and you’d get this on Wednesday the 25th. And I planned on being home in the second week of May and basking in all of what that means.

But almost like that time I was in New York and got a call, I got a call in Atlanta.

When my dad died, I had a temporary acceptance. Dad had been struggling for a while. But he was winning again in small ways and I’d hoped that he’d have a chance to naturally pass. But I had that temporary acceptance that he was not suffering, even if he couldn’t be an active part of my life.

It’s different this time. Five years have passed. This nephew of his and cousin of mine was only in his 40s. Of all my “big” cousins, Derek was one of most vibrant, goofy, fun-loving people I know.

One of the last times I’ve spent with my Dad’s family before my big move was with Derek and his young family at his house in the Cary/Morrisville/Maybe Durham side of things. Yes, in the suburbs, but this is when it makes sense to have one of those kinds of houses, because your family is there to fill it with all the love your heart can hold and then some.

If you’ve seen my most recent presentation live (and if not, here it is in the Boise version), I talk about how much the Jeffers Thanksgiving Tradition has created a sense of home and place in my life. Derek was a huge part of that, as we often had Thanksgiving at his parents’ house and all of us younger (Gen X, Millennial and younger) would retire to the basement after the main family meal and cheer on the sport teams, dance (in my case horribly) to the latest jams and play (also in my case horribly), the latest video games on the latest systems.

I could go on, but I’ll leave these two memories here and let my family, especially his immediate family step in here and add more.

One of the key reasons I do what I do, in the way that I do,  is because I want it to not be a choice to come home to family. Thanks to tours like I just did, as well as the potential in the podcast and the re-release of my book, I have some flexibility, but even more resilience. I hope to have more, as I help other folks and communities build the same.

And before I get into the rest of the email where I talk about the planned part of the trip, I did release an episode this week!

This is the first of two episodes I’m calling the Atlanta House Episodes and it features Nedra Deadwyler of Civil Bikes.

We talk a lot in the industry about the sense of place. But what about the sense of home?

We sat in Nedra’s home in Atlanta, Atlanta proper, on the East side, and we talked about growing up southern, getting out and why we’ve come back to our homes.

Also, we touch on her inspiration for bikes, who gets to come home, The Chef and the Farmer, the Cooking Gene and food. Lots of food.

Learn more about Civil Bikes and participate in one of their Atlanta-based tours.

The show is live on Radio Public, Patreon, TuneIn, Apple Podcasts, SoundCloud, Stitcher and at its hosting home on Libsyn, or you can plug in the RSS feed into whatever podcast reader you’d like. (right click and copy the link location if you want to listen that way). I am actively adding and working on getting approval in other places.

Radio Public and Patreon also provide ways for you to support me financially. And on the other platforms that allow it, rating and reviewing also helps me get heard by more folks.

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My Life as a Professional Urbanist

In addition to this week’s podcast  episode in which we talk about our sense of home, I’ve just completed two conference presentations on fair housing.

As we continue to learn almost daily (and sadly live), fair housing is not a human right for many, but it should be. Listen to me talk about my own struggle and my own desire and my own inspirations when it comes to housing (and yes, why I tie that into transportation advocacy,) as I presented it in Boise.

And I want to highlight my quote here from the Chattanooga Times Free Press:

Jeffers said she wants to challenge landlords and developers to rethink service provision and what it means to provide a good home for someone.

“A lot of people use homes as investment vehicles and not as providing shelter or a service,” she said. “People have options and you still have to provide good services — not just make money off the backs of other people.”

Jeffers urges communities to develop a better balance between how we develop and how we maintain an area. For people who want to stay in a neighborhood, it’s about educating them on the things they need to know to stay in that home and that community, she said. For people moving into a neighborhood, it’s about supporting the current “ecosystem.”

“Do your best to come into that ecosystem in a way that doesn’t disrupt it,” she said. “Get to know your neighbors. Say hello. Be a part of the community as much as possible.”

Also, thanks again to the Idaho Business Review, Nooga.com and the Chattanooga Times Free Press for coverage and to the Intermountain Fair Housing Council and the City of Chattanooga for hosting me for these conversations.

Personal Urbanism, Shoutouts and Recommendations

The best part about doing this right after a big trip is that there’s so much to recommend and so many people to shout out. Let’s go in order of cities/states.

Boise

The Boise Airport is small, but has so much pride for its city and it knows exactly what its people need in an airport. First, there’s a nod to rail history with two rail benches from the Boise Depot. Then, there’s a large waiting area for folks who are meeting passengers with glass windows and mirrors (and arcade machines) so that people can see folks approach and get excited, but still satisfy security requirements.

Basically, the airport knows it’s a big deal for folks to come and go and that people still want a place to have those meet-at-the-airport moments. Also, the library has a branch there, that offers computers to rent e-books and also do other online business. And at the Smashburger, a local burger chain, I had the best tater tots ever, a nod to the potato legacy. Lots of souvenirs were potato themed as well, including the Spuddy Buddy I picked up and put into my suitcase (after I paid of course).

Then, when my Uber pulled into the Modern Hotel, I had my doubts. From the outside, it looked like a normal motel. And considering what most normal motels look like, I didn’t know what I had in store. However, after rolling my things into the office, hauling them up the stairs and walking into the enclosed part and then my room, I found a wonderful mid-century modern jewel. I quickly retired to the bed to finish my presentation, got some amazing bread pudding via room service and the following evening, had even more of said bread pudding and let the bed grab me and help me rest until my next destination. Oh and I really enjoyed my loaner bike. More on that in a second, but you can see my on it at the beginning of this letter.

Gordy’s Breakfast Bistro is probably the only place on earth that will scramble just about anything into an egg, cut up your sweet potatoes into hash browns and still slide you a pancake. If you’re like me, you’ll eat that and instead of falling asleep, you’ll still have enough power to give a speech. It also helped that it was right across the street from the venue and for locals and visitors, this is centrally located to a lot of important things, like the convention center and the state capitol.

The Boise River Greenbelt was an absolute jewel. Because of the winter we’ve had, I’ve barely seen spring blooms and leaves on the trees. This was my first opportunity to do so. After taking time on the course (as well as enjoying being able to easily pedal and lock the bike around town), I popped into the Boise Art Museum and just barely missed the Idaho Museum for Black History. There’s an amazing exhibition by Jo Hamilton, a crochet portraitist. Yes. you read that right. It’s only there until May 13th, so hurry up and swing by.

Finally, before we leave Boise on this email, thank you again to the staff of the Intermountain Fair Housing Council and it was great to meet a fellow black urbanist photographer North Carolinian, Lauren Branch! Keep holding it down out there!

Chattanooga

When I return to a city, it’s always nice to see what’s changed, what hasn’t and what new things and folks I can run into. This trip was heavy on the new things and new people.

For starters, food. I hung out with the lovely Beth Bennett and Josiah Golson at The Social. Maybe it was a Friday thing, but we got a chance to chop it up over free chicken wings and amazing faux cocktails. We did it again the following day at the City Diner, where I would like to thank Josiah for allowing me the joy of seeing fried okra on a plate again after so long. I’m also looking forward to that third conversation we’re going to have and everyone should check out your book, visual art (I especially love the parade sketch and if you’re missing Beychella, you will too) and work in Chattanooga. Folks who were in Nashville and in their panel, you already heard about some of it, but I look forward to reading the whole book! And Beth, thanks for just being you. Keep doing more of that. Also special note for Jaleesa Monroe for our chat on being black business owners, women business owners and southern business owners. Plus, I love my lotion sample!

Finally, to James McKissic, first, for recognizing my work way back in my Greensboro days, in front of my mayor, and now allowing me to grace some of your colleagues and friends with a message of not just how to do fair housing, but why it’s so important. And Kerry Hayes for getting the word out, having the mayor’s ear and for introducing me to The Bitter Alibi, its owner and it’s brunch!

Y’all know I’m coming back to see you, so hang tight! And I hope to stay in the Dwell next time, but the Chattanoogan was decent too.

Atlanta

So Atlanta. Let’s start with how most folks encounter you and that’s your airport. I’m forever thankful to former mayor Maynard Jackson, Jr. for having the vision to create an airport that pretty much can take you anywhere in the world, sell and provide just about everything you need in house and make it easy to connect to downtown (hey MARTA hey!) and to getting a rental as needed. And to the Atlanta History Center for helping travelers and locals alike take a moment in the Terminal B to Terminal C tunnel to reflect on this and so many other key moments in Atlanta history!

Meanwhile, Kevin Hamak was one of my first CNU friends and he told me I just had to meet his then girlfriend (now wife) Wanona Satcher. That was in 2011 and in 2013 we made that meetup happen on the streets of Durham at a long community table.

Five years later, it was a joy to return to your West End home and crash after an already long, but amazing trip. Thank you for all that food (especially those cookies and the Sublime Donuts). Thank you for allowing me to see in real life, a place that’s captured my literary imagination for so many years. Thank you for making sure I connected with some of my ATL urbanist squad, namely Ryan Gravel, Marion Liau and Bithia Rathsamy who are pictured at the very beginning of the shoutout section (Ebrik Coffee Room too!) .

And of course, as I said above, for providing a calm space to get another vat of bad family news.

And of course, we are enjoying one of Atlanta’s brightest young  residents right now, but I really enjoyed getting to know more of bungalow Atlanta thanks to Kevin and Wanona and King Williams.

King, thank you for telling me what I needed to hear and I’m looking forward to the world seeing your documentary soon! And introducing me to the best sorrell (S/O to the 640 West Cafe) and showing me just how simple Stankonia started (or maybe re-started, I know there was an actual basement involved at first). The art is not easy, but it’s worth it and the stories can be told (and I can afford to eat and know where I’m laying my head too). Thank you, just thank you.

And if you’ve not had a chance to check out and support Wanona’s efforts to reuse shipping containers for affordable housing, get over there and do that.

North Carolina

The skies parted just right so I could say good evening to Raleigh in just the right way. To honor thy hallowed shrine, much like I am in two weeks on commencement day when I celebrate the graduation (from my own deparment), of my cousin Marcus who’s going to become my absolute favorite ATLien very soon.

But for now, it was time to say farewell and I’m thankful that in this farewell time, I got to see so much of my living family and friends and to feel their love and pride in me.

Thank you mom for keeping my bedroom and desk the way it was when I got this idea.

To my Jeffers family, we will miss them. We will honor them. And know that they continue to love and support us from beyond. And yes, I’m going to be at Thanksgiving this year. Maybe host in the future. And again, thank you all for telling me to keep going, for encouraging me to do what makes me the most happy and praying that it all gets done.

To the Mintz side, Lauren especially, thank you for reminding me to dream and believe. I do miss our Friday nights at Europa and I’m glad we had a bit of that (with Maxie B’s Cake!). And thanks always to my Uncle Phil for being on airport duty and for taking me to Harbor Inn even though I know we eat there too much. Thank you to that family for keeping that as a Burlington institution onward through our generation.

Greensboro as a whole, I hated that I couldn’t get to the concert, but I can see that despite all the sad that’s hit us over the past few weeks, we are still resilient. We are strong.

Traona and everyone at Masterminds Design Studio for making sure I didn’t look a hot mess. No matter your texture or length or how you like to look, they will take good care of you!

And finally, Mitchell and Cat, thank you for blessing me to see how bubbly, smart and wonderful Cameron is. And yeah, y’all made a tiny human. But you’re both about to do big things in your careers and I can’t be more proud of you. Thank you both for your friendship and ear over the years.

And with that, that’s all. I know it’s long. I think I got excited because this started on the blog first and you’re reading it there or in email. Plus, I truly had weeks worth experiences in about 12 days, so here you go.  And if you’re on the blog and want this in your email next time, drop your info below:

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The Black Urbanist Radio Show Episode 6– Nedra Deadwyler of Atlanta’s Civil Bikes on Coming Back South, Biking as Healing and Food

We talk a lot in the industry about the sense of place. But what about the sense of home?

We sat in Nedra’s home in Atlanta, Atlanta proper, on the East side, and we talked about growing up southern, getting out and why we’ve come back to our homes.

Also, we touch on her inspiration for bikes, who gets to come home, The Chef and the Farmer, The Cooking Gene and food. Lots of food.

Learn more about Civil Bikes and participate in one of their Atlanta-based tours.

Listen On of the Following Platforms

https://soundcloud.com/kristen-jeffers/episode-6-nedra-deadwyler-of-atlantas-civil-bikes

And your other favorite podcast players. My current one is Radio Public, but that’s because I can get money off listens there. 

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The Black Urbanist Radio Show Episode 5–LaKeisha Henderson of Baltimore’s Bike and Brunch Tours on Cycling, Childhood Influences and Career Building in Design

It’s my pleasure this episode to present the conversation I had back in the early winter with LaKeisha Henderson of Bike and Brunch Tours.

As I said on the audio, we met thanks to the power of the internet and since then, we’ve worked on helping each other out as much as we can to take both of our ventures to the next step.

We talk about our childhood influences on our careers, cycling and what’s made us choose how we’ve structured our careers.

Here’s more about LaKeisha from her official bio:

LaKeisha is an architect, planner, creative problem solver, and founder of Bike & Brunch Tours. She holds a Bachelor of Architecture from Virginia Tech and Masters Degree from Morgan State University’s City and Regional Planning program. During her 15 plus years of experience in the architecture and planning profession she sought to simultaneously translate these skills into ways to support her community. Bike and Brunch Tours was borne out of her love for her community in West Baltimore, desire to see its history and legacy preserved and uplifted, and to counter negative stigmas with positive references and experiences, and connect with others doing the same.

Over the course of her nearly 20 years living in the community, LaKeisha has noticed the disparity of perceptions between those outside the community and the story of the community told by its residents. This was made even more apparent in her personal experiences as a member of the community, in the death of men like Freddie Grey, and the disconnect between resources and solutions provided in contrast to the resources needed. As mass demolition, with no clear post demolition plans, leveled block by block of the community while speculation grew from outsiders she wanted to do something. This something became Bike & Brunch tours. Bike & Brunch Tours offers group tours and private tours to everyone from the solo visitor to reunion, conferences, or corporate groups.

The tour gives riders the opportunity to get to know and engage with Baltimore City and its African American community on a more intimate level. Beyond tours the company builds bridges to connect the cycling community, local organizations, businesses in the community featured in the tour, build relationships with other cycling groups. It also aims to increase the number of people biking in underrepresented communities and make cycling a normalized and accessible mode of transportation for everyone. The company’s event, Maintenance & Mingle, where Happy Hour meets bicycle maintenance brings together people from the bicycle community, adjacent community organizations, and aspiring bike riders. Through cycling she hopes to help build greater respect for and preserve the legacy of forgotten places, promote engagement with the community as partners not saviors, gets people moving and active…preferably on bikes, encourage supportive cycling infrastructure in under resourced communities, offer a fun time, and …of course have brunch.

Also, if you’re reading this before April 21st, it’s not too late to register for the first Bike and Brunch Tour of the season.

The show is live on Radio PublicTuneIn, Apple Podcasts,

SoundCloud,

https://soundcloud.com/kristen-jeffers/the-black-urbanist-radio-show-episode-5-lakeisha-henderson-of-bike-and-brunch-tours

Patreon, Stitcher and at its hosting home on Libsyn,

or you can plug in the RSS feed into whatever podcast reader you’d like. (right click and copy the link location if you want to listen that way). I am actively adding and working on getting approval in other places.

Radio Public and Patreon also provide ways for you to support me financially. And on the other platforms that allow it, rating and reviewing also helps me get heard by more folks.

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The Black Urbanist Radio Show Episode 4–Taffy Gwitira–Baltimore Food Justice and Transportation Advocate

 

Join me this episode as I talk with another Baltimore friend, Taffy Gwitira, on food justice, transportation justice and real life on the African continent. And, yes, there are Wakandan elements to the actual continent of Africa and there have been for a while.

Learn more about the co-working space where I’m a resident (as of April 2018) and she’s on the board of–www.http://baltimore.impacthub.net/

Learn more about the conference we attended together in Nashville and the National Complete Streets Coalition.–https://www.completestreetsconference.org/

You can listen via:

Radio Public

(which helps pay for the production of the show)


SoundCloud

https://soundcloud.com/kristen-jeffers/episode-4-taffy-gwitira-baltimore-food-justice-and-transportation-advocate

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 or on TuneIN, Stitcher, Apple Podcasts and wherever else you can plug in the RSS Feed.
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The Black Urbanist Radio Show Episode 3: Jerome Horne of IndyGo and NUMTOT

https://soundcloud.com/kristen-jeffers/episode-3-jerome-horne-of-indygo-and-numtot

When I recorded this episode with Jerome Horne, once we got done talking, I knew this had to be my first new episode of the show in about 4 years.

We talked about identity, Baltimore, Indianapolis and music and you’re welcome to listen in.

You can find out more about the IndyGo Transit Plan at www.indygo.net/transitplan

You can find Jerome by searching for Jerome Alexander Horne on Facebook, @jahorne on Instagram and @horne_jerome on Twitter.

I’m @blackurbanist on Instagram and Twitter and The Black Urbanist on Facebook.

For more episodes and places to listen to the show, head over to the main podcast page. Also, for notifications on when episodes are posted, you can subscribe, listen and donate  to keep the lights on Patreon or to my Mailchimp newsletter below:

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And even though this is technically episode one of a new round of shows, I’m honoring the original shows and continuing the original numbering.