AC Worton for Mayor

AC Worton for Mayor

 
Wharton Receives Prestigious Honor from Chile PDF Print E-mail
Written by STAFF   
Thursday, 28 May 2009 05:40

Highest Commendation for Non-Chilean Citizens bestowed upon Mayor Wharton

During the Memphis in May International Festival Gala celebration to the Republic of Chile on May 7th, Shelby County Mayor AC Wharton received the Orden de Bernardo O'Higgins, Grado Comendador, Chile's highest commendation for non-Chilean citizens.

The award was bestowed upon Mayor Wharton by His Excellency Ambassador Jose Goni in a show of appreciation and gratification to Mayor Wharton and the
Memphis in May International Festival and its international mission.

The award was established in 1956 named for
Chile's Founding Father and first President. The Order of Bernardo O'Higgins is an honor conferred on foreign citizens for their outstanding contribution to the field of arts, education, industry, commerce or humanitarian and social cooperation. It is conferred by the President of Chile at the proposal of the Minister of Foreign Affairs.

The award acknowledges the significant role played by
Memphis in May International Festival in the area of international relationships. James L. Holt, festival President & CEO commented: "Our congratulations to Mayor Wharton on the honor bestowed upon him last night. We are very proud to have a member of the Order of Bernardo O'Higgins as a leader of our community. The award also acknowledges the dedication and hard work of the Memphis in May International Festival in the area of global exchange and relationships."

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 11 August 2009 23:41 )
 
Unity Prayer Breakfast Lives Up to the Name PDF Print E-mail
Written by STAFF   
Thursday, 28 May 2009 05:23

Just over 1500 gather to celebrate

On Saturday, May 2, 2009, the Unity Prayer Breakfast hosted by Mayor A C Wharton truly lived up to its billing as a unity event by gathering just over 1500 citizens from across Memphis and Shelby County. Although rain punctuated the day, the spirit of the day and the enthusiasm of those participating were in no way dampened. In fact, the diversity of the attendees, the soaring musical renditions from the Unity Choir, and the prayers and words of local pastors conspired to create a perfect storm of inspiration that overshadowed the showers.

Dr. Fred Bennett, founder of Christ the Rock Church, offered a heartfelt introduction of Mayor Wharton that drew on their years of association and his personal knowledge of Wharton’s heart for service.

In his remarks to the full audience, the Mayor stressed the importance of us finding more ways and opportunities to work together in addressing common problems.  And while the comments from Mayor Wharton and all of the program participants helped to lift the spirit, the day’s greatest inspiration came from the crowd whose diversity and togetherness truly reflected the unity in the word, definition, and at the heart of community.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 11 August 2009 23:42 )
 
Jericho breaks walls for mentally ill inmates PDF Print E-mail
Written by STAFF   
Sunday, 15 March 2009 18:38

Prison program helps inmates rebuild lives

 

The Commercial Appeal 

By Alex Doniach 

March 6, 2009

Kim Dunlap nursed her bipolar disorder with powder cocaine, an addiction that eventually led her to crime and later to jail.

But while serving time on charges of forgery and identify theft four years ago, Dunlap, 45, received a lifeline.

A Shelby County public defender introduced her to a county-run, decade-long program called Project Jericho that helped her access the medications, treatment and counseling she needed to get out of jail and get well.

Dunlap seized the opportunity and on Thursday she told a conference of local and state government, law enforcement and public health officials that Project Jericho saved her life.

"I can't tell you where I'd be today if it wasn't for this," she said.

Hosted by Shelby County Mayor A C Wharton, the Jericho Conference at the University of Memphis was designed to boost area awareness about the project and to build support for more local and state funding.

The conference was also designed to launch the Jericho Initiative, created to extend Jericho's reach to other parts of the criminal justice system.

The project, which diverts mentally ill inmates to supervised treatment programs and other alternatives to prison, helps about 100 people a year. The county funded it with $500,000 this year.

Stephen Bush, a supervising attorney with the public defender's office, helped start Jericho along with Wharton and coordinates arrangements with judges and prosecutors.

Bush said reception has been positive because it provides remedies for the sick and breaks cycles of continuous re-arrests. Inmates with mental illness tend to stay in jail two to five times longer than regular inmates.

Statistics show success. Overall, more than half of Jericho graduates have no further arrests. About a quarter wind up back in jail, but overall, people in the program spend 99 fewer days in jail a year.

Sheriff Mark Luttrell said the project is one of four methods a recent jail consultant study endorsed to keep the county's jail population down and prevent the county from building a $400 million jail. Luttrell estimates expanding these programs, which also include the drug court, could save at least 185 jail beds a year.

George M. Little, commissioner for the Tennessee Department of Corrections, pointed out that it costs $60 a day, or $22,000 a year, to keep someone incarcerated in the state prison system. Mentally ill inmates can cost almost twice that.

Wharton said the initiative is about building the network, in and out of government, to help people with mental illness lead more productive lives.

-- Alex Doniach: 529-5231

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 11 August 2009 23:42 )
 
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