Alvin Brown calls for Duval school tax referendum in 2019
Former Jacksonville Mayor Alvin Brown for HUD Secretary? Some say it is possible.

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"Voters should decide," Brown said. 

Ahead of his inauguration last week, Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry said he wanted to collaborate with advocates for a sales tax for Duval County Schools.

The School Board has identified a 10-year, $1.9 billion capital program. Many counties have seen school boards approve taxes for capital needs, and have them moved to the ballot without incident. However, Curry’s City Hall, via the city’s lawyer, has contended that the City Council can and should vet the proposal before voters see it.

And while the School Board wants a 2019 vote, City Hall would like to slow the tempo, similarly to what the Clay County Commission voted for Tuesday night.

Curry has offered to “lead the charge for a 2020 referendum … bring every political skill, talent, winning strategy … to pass that referendum, if they put together a plan with the clear things that are needed.”

He said he would even work with them on that plan, which would need to address debt service and priorities to meet his muster.

With Curry slated to meet with Superintendent Diana Greene and School Board Chair Lori Hershey Friday, it remains to be seen whether the two sides can align.

However, a former Jacksonville Mayor has a message:

Let the people vote. And let it be in 2019.

Not 2020.

Alvin Brown, Democratic Mayor from 2011 to 2015, was on hand at a Tuesday evening meeting, led by the Jacksonville NAACP, at Florida State College at Jacksonville.

“Voters should decide,” Brown said.

Brown, who branded as an education mayor, said the capital funds would be the “key to a 21st century school district,” and offered words of assurance for those who think charter schools would get short shrift.

“Charter schools are public schools,” Brown said, expressing confidence that the Superintendent felt the same way.

The goal: to demonstrate support, to keep the pressure on.

While some members of the Jacksonville City Council were there, most members of Rules and Finance (the two committees that will have to vote for the re-referred bill, offering amendments ahead of an eventual floor vote) were not.

The bill, as it stands, is on a six-week cycle, meaning committees will hear it at the end of July, and a vote would be no earlier than August.

Notable: Republican City Councilman Sam Newby, a traditional ally of Lenny Curry who is on Rules, was in the audience.

A.G. Gancarski

A.G. Gancarski has written for FloridaPolitics.com since 2014. He is based in Northeast Florida. He can be reached at [email protected] or on Twitter: @AGGancarski


3 comments

  • Frankie M.

    July 9, 2019 at 7:33 pm

    We can’t all be like St. Johns. Looks like Clay got the memo from MC Lenny lima charlie. Well at least we won’t be the only arse backwards district around. We’re in good company. MC Lenny isn’t worried about the additional $$M that will be incurred by putting off much needed capital improvement projects in our schools. The same guy that wants to see cranes downtown doesn’t want them for our kids. Could that be because his own children won’t be impacted with their schools that have 100% PTAs and their own 501c3’s? When does he start caring about every kid and not just his own?

  • patricia

    July 10, 2019 at 6:55 am

    Bye Alvin…he is a washed up want to be politician who is jumping on a bandwagon that so many people have spoken up for already….Johnny come lately…we know we need this don’t need to hear from Alvin.

  • Lynn Coleman

    July 12, 2019 at 6:23 pm

    Why is Alvin Brown failed Mayor using the school board issue to stay in the limelight? This man treated employees and some citizens like crap. He showed how much he disliked employees with his first act after the budget by firing the very people who worked all night to get him through his 1st budget. Well apparently he is has a good friend at Fl. Politics Jax, as this article has no benefit!

Comments are closed.


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