2 Developers, Former Judge on Ballot for Open JeffCo Commission Seat
By Solomon CrenShaw Jr.
Probate Judge James Naftel III used a 1971 Lipton TV commercial — Is it soup yet? — to address the ballot to fill the vacant District 5 position on the Jefferson County Commission.
“It is soup. It is,” Naftel said Thursday. “We have three official candidates and one who didn’t have enough signatures, so her name will not appear on the ballot. The ballots are being printed and delivered to the absentee (voting office) today.”
District 5 voters will choose from recently retired Alabama Supreme Court Justice Mike Bolin, Jeff O. Wise and David Silverstein.
“Evidently, retirement didn’t suit him,” Naftel said, “so he’s running for District 5.”
Silverstein and Wise are developers.
Silverstein is a principal with Bayer Properties and president of The FiveStone Group. He is a developer whose projects have included The Summit and the Pizitz building in downtown Birmingham.
Wise handles commercial and residential developments. One of his more recent projects is Letson Farms in McCalla.
“We had one potential candidate (Antiqua Cleggett) who filed right at the last minute on Tuesday (the qualifying deadline),” Naftel said. “It
See RACE, page 9
Natural Beauty
BH&G’s 2023 Inspiration Home Complements Vestavia Hills Neighborhood
Situated amid the natural beauty of Vestavia Hill’s Forest Creek neighborhood, created with the skill of a seasoned craftsman and refined by a strong attention to detail, Birmingham Home & Garden’s 2023 Inspiration Home lives up to its name.
SEE STORY PAGE 20
OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL u OTMJ.COM SPORTS OTMJ THURSDAY, JULY 13, 2023
SOCIAL
Crimson Home Photography
Top: Mike Wald
Mike Bolin
David Silverstein
Jeff O. Wise
Guest Column Inside
How to Help Your Dog Beat the Heat
By LiLLy LeJeune
Alabama is hot in the summer, and it’s only getting hotter. With temperatures on the rise, it’s important to take care of your furry friends to make sure they don’t get overheated. Here are some tips and tricks for keeping your pups safe in the summer heat!
PASSION FOR EDUCATION
Steele ‘humbled’ to take over as John Carroll’s principal PAGE 8
‘SIGNATURE PARK’
Groundbreaking kicks off Jemison Trail Project PAGE 10
A Fresh Summer Coat
If your dog is especially fluffy, they can get a summer cut to survive the heat. Shaving off all that warm, winter fur can keep a dog cool in summer. If they’re the double-coated type, brushing them out to get rid of extra fur can be helpful. Making sure your dog is properly prepared for the season is the first step to keeping a happy pup during the summer months.
Pay Attention to the Paws
heat. Try to walk your dog during the morning and evenings, when you don’t have to face the scorching sun. If you still want to walk during the hottest parts of the day, maybe cut that walk short so that everyone stays happy and safe.
Hydration
Dogs need water just as humans do. Make sure their water bowl is always full, but when outside in the sun, it can also be helpful to have a portable water source for your dog when they get thirsty. It’s easy to find and order a water bottle that your dog can drink out of, and it can make all the difference to your pet.
The After-Walk Cooldown
CELEBRATING INDEPENDENCE DAY
Vestavia’s I Love America Night, Homewood’s July Fourth Festival PAGE 12
ABOUT TOWN 3
PEOPLE 5
NEWS 8
LIFE 10
otmj.com
‘BRINGING PEOPLE TOGETHER’
First FOOD+Culture Fest celebrates city’s great tastes PAGE 20
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With everything that’s happening “Over the Mountain,” it can be difficult to keep up. That’s why we have launched the OTMJ newsletter.
Published every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday - we’ll give you a quick recap of the latest news, sports and social events as well as a heads up on upcoming events so you won’t miss any of the interesting and fun happenings in the Greater Birmingham metro area.
To sign up for our newsletter, visit otmj.com.
Follow us on Facebook and Instagram, @overthemountainjournal, for daily updates on what’s going on around town, too.
OVER THE MOUNTAIN JO U RNA L July 13, 2023
Publisher & Editor: Maury Wald
Copy Editor: Virginia Martin
Features Writer: Donna Cornelius
Staff Writers: Ana Good, June Mathews, Anne Ruisi
Photographer: Jordan Wald
Sports Editor: Rubin E. Grant
Contributors: Emil Wald, Marvin Gentry, Lee Walls, Bryan Bunch
Advertising Sales: Julie Trammell Edwards, Tommy Wald, Gail Kidd
Vol. 33, No. 23
Over The Mountain Journal is a suburban bi-weekly newspaper delivered to Mountain Brook, Homewood, Vestavia Hills, Hoover and North Shelby County areas. Subscriptions for The Journal are available for $24 yearly. Mail to: Over the Mountain Journal, P.O. Box 660502, Vestavia Hills, AL 35216. Phone: (205) 823-9646. E-mail the editorial department at editorial@otmj.com. E-mail our advertising department at mwald@otmj.com. Find us on the Web at otmj.com.
Copyright 2023 Over The Mountain Journal, Inc. All rights reserved. The Journal is not responsible for return of photos, copy and other unsolicited materials submitted. To have materials returned, please specify when submitting and provide a stamped, self-addressed envelope. All materials submitted are subject to editorial review and may be edited or declined without notification.
When humans go out for a walk on sidewalks, they wear shoes to protect their feet, but dogs often don’t have shoes, or they don’t want to wear them.
Concrete and asphalt can absorb heat and often be hotter than the actual temperature that day. When dogs walk on surfaces that are too hot, they can burn their paws.
Before you take your dog out for a walk, place the back of your hand on the sidewalk or asphalt. If you can’t stand to have your hand on the surface for 5 seconds, neither can your dog. It would be best to wait for a cooler time to take that walk. If you’re halfway through a walk and your dog starts prancing and picking up its paws, it is worth performing the test again to make sure that the surface hasn’t warmed up too much.
Take Shorter Walks During Hotter Days
Every dog loves a long walk, but on days when the weather is too warm, longer walks can cause dogs to over-
Over the Mountain Views
After a walk, it’s important to make sure your dog cools down properly. Applying damp towels to the pup’s paws and stomach can help them cool off. If your dog won’t accept you rubbing a towel on their paws, just lay the damp towel out on the floor and let them lay on it to cool off. Make sure the pup has plenty of water, and occasionally, on very hot days, you might give them a piece of ice or another soft frozen treat to chew on.
Lilly LeJeune is a summer intern at Hand in Paw. Founded in 1996, Birmingham-based Hand in Paw’s professionally trained volunteer handlers and animal Therapy Teams help improve people’s day-to-day lives in several medical centers, schools and human service organizations throughout North Central Alabama and Tuscaloosa. Hand in Paw volunteer teams make thousands of visits through community events and participating facilities each year, helping countless children with special needs, at-risk youth, struggling students, and people with chronic and terminal illnesses. Hand in Paw does not charge for its services.
BBQ, Games and Sales Draw Celebrants to OLS
2 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL OPINION/CONTENTS
SOCIAL
HOME
FOOD
SPORTS
Journal photo by Maury Wald
Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church held its 74th Annual Fourth of July Festival at its Homewood campus. The event is a local family favorite, with a dunking booth, doll booth, hot wheels and a cake walk. Festivalgoers also had plates of barbecue pork, chicken and turkey in the parish hall or ordered smoked meat in bulk to take home. The festival’s Trash and Treasure rummage sale attracted bargain hunters who scooped up their finds in the Our Lady of Sorrows School gym. Many returned on July 5 to scope out treasures among the leftovers at the rummage sale’s Half Price Sale. Above left, Brooks
Beech, Kristen and Eliza Reid. Above right, Owen McCarthy and Debra Megges
Journal photos by Jordan Wald
Shop European-Style
Market Day Returns to Mountain Brook July 15
A shuttle will be available to carry shoppers around Mountain Brook Village and Lane Parke during the 22nd Annual Mountain Brook Market Day, taking place July 15.
The Mountain Brook Chamber of Commerce is hosting the all-day shopping event. Off-site parking will be available at Shades Valley Presbyterian Church, at 2305 Montevallo Road, and shuttles will take shoppers around to the sale loca-
Through July 22
Treasure Island
The Robert Louis Stevenson classic is adapted for the stage and will be performed at parks around Birmingham, thanks to Birmingham Children’s Theatre and the Birmingham Parks and Recreation Board. When: Various times Where: Various city park venues
Tues., July 18
Greater Birmingham Auburn Club
Auburn Athletics Kick-off
This family-friendly event will feature coaches, former AU greats, Aubie, cheerleaders, a silent auction, kid’s zone and more. Keynote speakers will be Hugh Freeze, AU head football coach, prominent football players, Coach Carnell “Cadillac” Williams
When: 5 p.m. Where: Trussville Civic Center
Wed., July 20
Artist’s Reception at Sloss Furnaces
Meet artist Ken Boyd at the opening reception for a display of his work, “A Photographic Tribute to Historic Sloss Furnaces.” When: 5:30-7:30 p.m.
Where: Sloss Furnaces Visitor Center
July 21-Aug. 13
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat
The Biblical story of Joseph comes to vivid life in this Webber & Rice classic, with musical styles spanning country-western to bubblegum pop to rock n’ roll. When: Showtimes vary.
Where: Red Mountain Theatre
Sun., July 23
Le Tour de Cahaba
Cahaba Cycles will host its annual race, including six route options: 65 miles, 45 miles, 35 miles, 20 miles, 10 miles and the Slow Your Roll Family Ride (less than 5 miles). A post-ride cookout will be hosted at the Homewood store. In addition, $3 from each $30/$40 registration will be donated to BUMP (Bicycle Urban Mountain Pedalers) When: 6 a.m.
Where: Cahaba Cycles Homewood
tions between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.
“The addition of the shuttle this year is intended to make parking and shopping easy and enjoyable for all,” chamber Executive Director Emily Jensen said in a statement.
The event gives visitors an opportunity to experience a European-style sidewalk sale with merchants discounting their merchandise and offering special sales. In addition to sales inside their stores, many merchants
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In addition to sales inside their stores, many merchants will also set up outdoor tents and displays. A shuttle will be available to carry shoppers around Mountain Brook Village and Lane Parke.
will also set up outdoor tents and displays.
“Not only does Market Day give our merchants a chance to clear their inventory before the holiday season, but it also offers shoppers an opportunity to find great sales while exploring our beautiful village,”Jensen said. For more information, visit mtnbrookchamber.org.
CONGRATULATIONS RW DEVELOPMENT, builders of this year’s Birmingham Home & Garden’s Inspiration Home in Forest Creek!
Thursday, July 13, 2023 • 3 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL ABOUT TOWN Journal file photo JUL 13 - JUL 27
MIKE WALD HAYDEN WALD STACY MITCHELL KATIE LARUSSA 205.541.0940 205.919.5535 205.994.5903 205.447.5154
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Otey’s Fest is moving to the green space between the Otey’s Tavern parking lot and O’Neal Library. Pictured are Scout Campbell, Noah Bishop, Crossan Ryals at last year’s event.
‘Elevate the Energy’
Robert Randolph Band Headlining Otey’s Fest
Crestline Village will be hopping July 15 as Otey’s Fest Shindig returns for its 14th year.
The location for the event has been changed slightly to allow the event to grow. It will be held in the green space between the Otey’s Tavern parking lot and O’Neal Library.
Headlining this year’s festival will be the Robert Randolph Band, with Will Stewart, Gri Cashio and T.U.B. also performing for the crowd. Beverage and food tents also will be on-site.
Gates open at 6 p.m. Tickets are $125. People 20 and younger can enter free.
“We have had so much fun over the years with this event, and we wanted to see if there was a way we could elevate the energy level even more,” Otey’s Tavern owner and Otey’s Fest founder Will Haver said in a statement. “When we had the opportunity to bring someone like Robert Randolph to Otey’s, we just had to jump at it.”
The Robert Randolph Band plays a fusion of rock, funk and soul. Randolph himself is known for his skills on the pedal steel guitar. He grew up surrounded by gospel music, and his music infuses traditional gospel sounds with modern elements.
Proceeds from Otey’s Fest Shindig 2023 will benefit the Phoenix Club of Birmingham, an organization that provides developmental opportunities for young professional men to become social, business and philanthropic leaders in the community.
For more information and to buy tickets, go to oteysshindig.com.
Permission to Play
CSG Sets Aside the Grief and Focuses on Support With Beach Party
Community Grief Support will be raising money to pay for its programs through a casual and festive beach party July 27, 5:30-8:30pm, at Vestavia Country Club.
The 20th annual fundraiser, Lift Your Spirits, will include silent and live auctions with international and domestic travel experiences, jewelry, artwork, shopping sprees, kids’ packages, dining experiences and other items. There will be lawn games, a DJ, dancing, a festive buffet and signature cocktails befitting a summer beach party.
The event is being sponsored by Dentons Sirote, Michael Hicks Services, Three Arbor Insurance, O’Neal Industries, Barbara Lummis/ARC Realty and Barlow Wealth Advisory Group.
For almost 30 years, Community Grief Support has provided free of charge individual, couples and family grief counseling; more than 20 loss-specific support groups annually in 11 communities; and grief education programs throughout the Greater Birmingham area.
“CGS’ mission is to improve the quality of life for bereaved adults who face the challenge of rebuilding their lives without their loved ones – finding hope, healing and even joy again,” a statement announcing the fundraiser read.
Tickets and tables at the event are being pre-sold through July 24 at communitygriefsupport.org/lys. You may also contact CGS with questions at 205870-8667.
Thurs., July 27
Top 50 Over 50 Gala
Positive Maturity’s annual list recognizing individuals 50 and older for their successes and/or lifetime achievements in their businesses, personal lives and civic engagement. Proceeds from this event will directly benefit the community through the programs of Positive Maturity, Inc. When: 6 p.m. Where: The Club
Fri., July 28
6th Grade Social
Join the Homewood Library in a social event exclusively for students who will be starting middle school. Registration is required.When: 6-8 p.m. Where: Homewood Public Library
Sat., July 29
Homewood Sidewalk Sale Merchants will line the sidewalks in front of their shops with merchandise discounted up to 75 percent. When: All day Where: Downtown Homewood
Alabama Law Enforcement Torch Run Golf Tournament
Cornhole Crazy
Vestavia Rotarians Look for Best Teams to Send to Statewide Tournament
If you’re good at tossing a square bag into a round hole, you might be interested in an upcoming Cornhole Competition.
The Vestavia Hills Rotary Clubs are hosting the communitywide event Aug. 5 at the Vestavia City Center to select two teams to represent Vestavia Hills in a statewide competition against 53 other Rotary Club Communities across central and north Alabama.
Teams are made up of two people. The Top 2 teams with the most total donations over $200 from their fans, family and friends will be recognized and rewarded with a Tailgate Package from Vestavia Hills restaurants, including Taco Mama and Davenport’s Pizza Palace.
Go to vestaviarotary.org for more information, including how to reserve your team for $50 in the 32-team bracket and support your team with a donation.
The event raised more than $13,000 last year.
The Statewide Rotary Competition will be Aug. 19 at Otey’s in Crestline Village during the Boiling N’ Bragging Tailgate event.
Proceeds from Vestavia Hills Rotary Cornhole Competition this year will support Vestavia Hills first responders; Vestavia Hills schools; student scholarships; math, debate and robotics teams; and Children’s of Alabama Critical Care Transport Team.
The 15th annual tournament to benefit Special Olympics is a four-person best shot (scramble). When: 10:30 a.m. Where: Robert Trent Jones, Oxmoor Valley
GBHS Alumni Reunion
This will be a fantastic family-friendly celebration for those who have adopted a pet or are thinking of adopting from GBHS and all animal lovers. When: Noon - 4 pm. Where: Cahaba Brewing
Mason Music Fest
The 11th Mason Music Fest offers performances by national, regional and local musicians, food, drinks and lots of fun as it raises funds for the Mason Music Foundation. When: Begins at 1 p.m. Where: Avondale Brewing Company
Tues., Aug. 1
Water Play Day!
What better way to mark the last week of the Summer Reading Program than with an inflatable water slide, mini pools and cool treats to celebrate?
The Homewood Library is offering this event for children in fifth grade and
younger. When: 10:30-11:30 a.m. Where: Homewood Library Parking Lot
Aug. 3-6
Disney’s Descendants the Musical
Based on the popular Disney Channel original movies, “Disney’s Descendants: The Musical” is a brand-new musical jam-packed with comedy, adventure, Disney characters, and hit songs from the films. When: Showtimes vary Where: Virginia Samford Theatre
Sat., Aug. 5
Magic City Carnival
Carnival games, fair foods, drinks, music, a silent auction and activities for children and pets are planned for the first Magic City Carnival. Admission is free to the event, a fundraiser for Pathways, which supports homeless women and children. It’s presented by the Pathways Junior Board. When: 5-8 p.m. Where: Cahaba Brewing Co.
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Journal file photo by Jordan Wald
Vestavia Hills Mayor Ashley Curry and Vestavia Hills City Manager Jeff Downs participated in the 2022 Cornhole Competition put on by the Rotary Club of Vestavia Hills and Sunrise Rotary Club of Vestavia Hills.
Photo Courtesy Rotary Club of Vestavia Hills
Vestavia Hill’s Hollifield Earns Eagle Scout Status
Hamp Hollifield achieved the rank of Eagle Scout on March 9, 2023.
Homewood Rotary Elects Jennifer Kyle as President
Jennifer Kyle has been elected president of Homewood Rotary club for 2023-2024.
Kyle was installed at the club’s June 22 meeting by Rotary International 6860 district Gov. Carol Argo. She is a retired employee benefits professional and has served Homewood Rotary and Plaza Rotary in Kansas City, Missouri, in various roles for several decades.
Hamp Hollifield
Hollifield began his scouting career as a kindergartener. He earned the Arrow of Light as a Cub Scout. Since joining Troop 83, Hollifield has earned 25 merit badges and has held numerous leadership positions, including senior patrol leader, chaplain’s aide and patrol leader.
He is a member of the Order of the Arrow and has earned the Triple Crown by participating in three high adventure trips through Scouting.
For Hollifield’s Eagle project, he replaced more than 300 feet of fencing at a local dog park in Hoover. He raised the funds for the project and built the fence with the help of family and fellow Scouts during Christmas break. The fence serves as a visual safety barrier to prevent kids and animals from entering the street.
Hamp just graduated from Vestavia Hills High School. He looks forward to attending the University of Alabama in the fall.
His parents are Erin and Todd Hollifield, and Kathryn Hollifield. Hollifield and his family attend All Saints Episcopal Church in Homewood.
Other Homewood officers are Robert Holmes, president-elect; Rachael Dollins, secretary/presidentelect nominee; and Kathryn Henry, treasurer.
The leadership team also includes directors Mary Lou Reynolds, club service; Robert Sprain, community service; Mike O’Kelley, Rotary foundation; Mike Hathorne, youth services; Bo Duke, club foundation; J.R. King, fund raising; and Sandy Nelson, sergeant at arms. Gregg Wadsworth is immediate past president.
Homewood Rotary supports local, national and international projects through service and funding. For
instance, its annual college scholarship program has assisted hundreds of Homewood High School graduates since the 1980s. The club awarded scholarships totaling $25,000 in 2023.
It supports other projects and services that help fill needs for area residents of all ages. It’s best known fundraisers include the Chalk Art Festival at We Love Homewood Day and a St. Patrick’s Day dinner and auction, and it holds other fundraisers throughout the year.
Homewood Rotary meets most Thursdays at noon at Homewood Library. Learn more at homewoodrotaryal.org and @homewoodrotary on Facebook.
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AIN JOURNAL MOUNTAIN BROOK VILLAGE Market Day SATURDAY, JULY 15TH Off-Site Parking & Shuttles Available at Shades Valley Presbyterian Church 2305 Montevallo Road www.mtnbrookchamber.org MARKET WEEK 30-75% OFF clothing, accessories, jewelry, tabletop, holiday, & more monday - saturday To: Bezshan From: Over The Mountain Journal, phone 205-823-9646 Date: June This is your AD PROOF from the OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL for the July 13, 2023 issue. Please make sure all information is correct, Including address and phone number! Thank you for your prompt attention. 271 Rele Street • Lane Parke Mountain Brook • 205-871-1965 www.shopbprince.com Join us for Market Day Saturday, July 15th Saturday hours 8 to 5 with Early Bird Specials! (Shop Friday afternoon to get a head start!)
Thursday, July 13, 2023 • 7 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL MARKET DAY Now in Lane Parke! 370 Rele St., Mountain Brook | 659.599.9240 | tascPerformance.com Join Us for Market Day! Up to 50% off on select merchandise Responsibly made. Built to move. 2410 CANTERBURY ROAD | MOUNTAIN BROOK VILLAGE | 205-423-5443 JULY SALE! Shop Sale Early for Best Selections! Making room for new merchandise!! Market Day Sat., July 15th 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Normal hours Tuesday - Friday KNOT TO BE MISSED! ALL PILLOWS 1/2 PRICE SELECT STACKS WITH MARKET DAY PRICING 2814 PETTICOAT LANE MOUNTAIN BROOK VILLAGE | 205.877.3232 paigealbrightorientals.com MARKET DAY JULY 15TH 25%-75% OFF some exclusions apply, all sales final 2402 Montevallo Road | www.table-matters.com | 205.879.0125 202 3 July 10 - July 15 25% - 75% OFF some exclusions apply, all sales final 2402 Montevallo Road | table-matters.com | 205.879.0125 2406 Canterbury road • Mountain brook Village • 205.879.2730 Don't Miss Our Summer Linen Sale July 17-31! Market Day - July 15th Clearance sale! To: Chelsey From: Over The Mountain Journal, phone 205-613-2080 Date: March This is your AD PROOF from the OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL for the March 9, 2023 issue. Please make sure all information is correct, Including address and phone number! Thank you for your prompt attention. 921 Jemison Lane, Mountain Brook | 205-341-9595 mtnbrookeyes.com | @mtnbrookeyecare Market Day Sale July 15th 20% OFF sunglasses 25% OFF eye care supplements and more! IT'S HOT and that means MARKET DAY IS HERE! 20 - 75% OFF Join us July 15th, open at 8 a.m. C Chanristin terbury e’s on 2404 Canterbury Road • 205-871-8297 To: thecookstore@msn.com From: Over The Mountain Journal, PHONE: 205-823-9646 Date: December This is your AD PROOF from the OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL for the July 13, 2023 issue. Please make sure all information is correct, including address and phone number! Thank you for your prompt attention. 2841 Cahaba Road | Mtn. Brook Village • 879-5277 M-F 10-5 • Sat 10-4 www.thecookstoremtnbrook.com Lucy Says Stop, It's Market Day! 20% OFF Storewide Thursday - Saturday July 13-15 July 15, 8-10 am get an additional 10% OFF Some exclusions - see store for details
Steele ‘Humbled’ to Take Over as John Carroll’s Principal
By RuBin E. GRant
Ronald Steele laughed at the notion.
If Steele, John Carroll Catholic’s boys basketball coach, sends one of his players to the principal’s office for disciplinary reasons, he will be there awaiting their arrival.
That’s because Steele was named John Carroll’s principal in late June.
“It’s not something I planned, but God opened up the opportunity,” Steele said.
Former Principal Anthony Montalto was put on leave in April and Steele, who also was the school’s athletic director, began performing duties with Assistant Principal Banyon Allison to finish the school year. When the principal’s job was posted, Steele decided to pursue it.
“A few years ago, I got my administrative degree and when I became athletic director I began taking on other responsibilities,” Steele said. “I went through the application process and the interviews for the principal’s job.
“I’m both humbled and excited for the opportunity to serve as John Carroll’s principal. I intend to continue fulfilling John Carroll’s mission of infusing God in all areas of the student experience to educate the whole person. I am eager to partner with our students, families, staff and stakeholders in celebrating the legacy of John Carroll while leading its future. I want to thank our president, Father Jon Chalmers, Margaret Dubose, superintendent of schools and chair of the Catholic Schools Office, and the entire search committee for entrusting me with this exciting opportunity.”
Perhaps no one is more associated with John Carroll in the 21st Century than Steele. He graduated from John Carroll in 2004 after leading the Cavaliers’ basketball team to state championships in 2003 and 2004 under head coach Marty Smith. He was the first person in Alabama history to win the state’s Mr. Basketball twice and was a second team Parade All-American in 2004 before playing in college at the University of Alabama.
Steele coached the Cavs’ girls basketball team in 2015 and was named the school’s athletic director and boys basketball coach in 2017.
According to a statement from John Carroll, as athletic director, “Steele increased program quality and engagement while building out critical initiatives focused on education of the whole person, virtue development, and partner-school relationships.”
Steele will continue to coach the Cavs’ boys basketball team.
“I have a passion for athletics and a passion for education,” Steele said. “I made a commitment to this current group of players and my plan is to fulfill that commitment.”
Steele will relinquish his athletic director duties, but no replacement has been named.
“The AD job is going to be a group responsibility,” he said.
First Black Principal
Steele was ambivalent about becoming the first black principal in the school’s 76-year history.
“To be honest, I didn’t know I was until I saw a story about it,” he said. “It’s significant, but we already had a diverse school, racially and social-economically. I guess it’s something I should take pride in, but I’m trying to focus on the quality of the students we have and the staff. I’m happy to (be the) first one, I guess it’s a positive.” Steele holds an undergraduate degree from Alabama and a master’s of education in administration and supervision from Marymount University.
“In these rapidly changing times, I am confident that our leadership team, led by Mr. Steele, will steward John Carroll’s proud legacies and ensure that our school remains boldly Catholic, academically excellent and rooted in truth,” Chalmers said.
John Carroll also announced the hiring of 1996 alum Dr. Katie King as director of curriculum and instruction.
Steele officially took over as principal on July 1, although he was already engaged with the duties the position requires.
“So far, it’s been busy,” he said. “I’m trying to get it together cause school is right around the corner. Aug. 3 is the first day of school.
“I’m doing a lot, but it’s not like it’s a new situation. The staff has been here for a while and I know the teachers, so that makes the transition easier. There’s a lot of history here and I feel I can continue to grow it.”
‘Celebrate the Arts’
Vestavia Hills Arts Council Revived to Showcase All Forms of Art
By annE Ruisi
Vestavia Hills has revived its arts council after 18 months of planning and preparation.
Its mission is to “celebrate and promote the great things that are already happening in Vestavia with the arts and hosting a few signature events,” said Faith Lenhart, executive chair of the Vestavia Hills Arts Council.
“We want to celebrate the arts in our city,” said Lenhart, who is director of arts education for the Vestavia Hills School System. “There will be more opportunities for students and community members to showcase their artwork, including visual art, theater, dance and music.”
Promoting communication, cooperation and mutual support among artists and arts organizations in the city, advocating for the arts and community support, and providing educational opportunities for and about the arts are among the arts council’s purposes, as outlined on its website, vhal.org/community/arts-council.
The city once had an arts council years ago, but Mayor Ashley Curry was interested in “reviving and reimagining it,” Lenhart said.
So, a few years ago she asked Curry about restarting the arts council. It’s taken about 18 months to do so, including setting up bylaws and organizing a board of directors.
“Getting the board members organized was really important. We wanted people that actually wanted to be there and were going to contribute. The board has really stepped up and is the reason the council is off to a great start,” Lenhart said.
Looking for Variety
It was important to get members from different fields within the artistic community, as the arts council wants to focus on visual and performing arts, she said. So, board members include working artists and artistic-related businesses. Besides visual arts, dance, theater and music are also represented.
Placing representatives from the city’s varied neighborhoods, such as Liberty Park, Cahaba Heights and “old” Vestavia, established areas that formed the city’s core before Liberty Park and Cahaba Heights were annexed, was also important.
A few Vestavia Hills city employees are also on the board, such as Assistant City Manager Cinnamon McCulley.
Reviving the arts council involved plenty of research on how other arts
councils in the state and region work.
“You want to do it right the first time,” she said, adding the research included how other arts councils were structured and operated. The arts council’s board meets once a month and will hold an annual meeting that will be open to the public.
The annual meeting will be Sept. 19 from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. at City Hall, Lenhart said.
The annual meeting for the public will help the arts council promote its first signature event, the month-long Artstober, which is slated for October.
The idea is to present a full slate of artistic activities, such as an exhibit of two-dimensional art created by residents that will be displayed at City Hall. The board is still organizing other events and activities for Artstober.
Board members and city officials want residents to know about the arts council and Artstober. Recently, the board set up a table at Vestavia’s I Love America Night in June, with information about Artstober. It also offered giveaways, such as personal artwork by three board members and a coloring sheet created by another member, Lenhart said. Board members manning the table wore T-shirts with a QR code that linked to the arts council’s website.
Those who want to join the arts council’s mailing list can do so through a link on the council’s website.
Artstober Applications
Artists in Vestavia Hills who want to display their work during Artstober this fall need to apply by Aug. 21, according to the artist prospectus from the city’s Arts Council. Each artist is allowed to submit two works, and those selected will be on exhibit at City Hall throughout October.
Applicants must be Vestavia Hills residents and at least 18 years old. Other requirements include:
• Two-dimensional works only.
• Paintings must be the sole original work of the artist.
• Giclees or prints are not allowed.
• Artwork on canvas should be framed or edge painted.
• Artwork on paper should be matted and framed, with plexiglass suggested.
More information is available by going to vhal.org/community/ arts-council and clicking on the link next to “City Hall Art Gallery” or by contacting Arts Council board members Walt Costilow at wtcostilow3@gmail.com or Judith Hand at jhand@bsc.edu.
8 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL NEWS
Courtesy John Carroll Catholic
“I intend to continue fulfilling John Carroll’s mission of infusing God in all areas of the student experience to educate the whole person,” Ronald Steele said.
Vestavia Hills Arts Council board members at “I Love America Night” recently, from left Judith Hand, Jessica Garrison, Kelly Love and Jody Pannell.
‘There will be more opportunities for students and community members to showcase their artwork, including visual art, theater, dance and music.’
Courtesy Vestavia Hills Arts Council
Riverwalk Village Plans Would Bring Elevated Health Care to Hoover
A health care and wellness-focused development is being planned for the Riverchase area of Hoover.
Riverwalk Village is to be a mixeduse community that includes medical offices, walking trails and green spaces, as well as housing and retail areas.
“The city of Hoover is excited to unveil this project. It will be a significant development for the metro area,” Hoover Mayor Frank Brocato said in his announcement, made with Regions Bank and Healthcare Resources.
“Riverchase is a beautiful, Class A office park (that) has been an important part of our city’s development,” Brocato said. “As the global economy changes, it is smart planning to reimagine what these areas can become. Riverwalk Village’s combination of wellness, business, residential and clinical care will help propel Hoover into our next chapter.”
The new development will be on a 90-acre tract near Riverchase Parkway that includes 450,000 square feet of existing corporate offices. It will include the Riverwalk Health & Wellness Center, which will offer a wide range of health care services for all stages of life, from pediatrics to geriatrics.
“Providing high-quality access to health care is a defining metric in a city’s mission to building and sustaining a high quality of life for its residents and visitors,” Hoover City Council President John Lyda said. “Riverwalk Village will be a transformative project for the Riverchase area of Hoover that will offer additional, state-of-the-art access to care and serve as a catalyst for commercial and residential investment through the creation of Hoover’s first health and wellness-centered development.”
Development company Healthcare Resources is under contract to purchase the site.
The Hoover Health Care Authority, which was established by the city in 2021, is working on the project. The authority’s vision is to create, develop
RACE
From Page One
took Wednesday to review the signatures on that candidate’s petition and determine that there were not enough signatures from District 5 voters for her to qualify.”
Each aspiring candidate had to submit a petition signed by at least 100 persons who live in the district they hope to represent.
The election to fill the seat left vacant by former Commissioner Steven Ammons, who stepped down to become CEO of the Birmingham Business Alliance, will be July 18. A runoff, if needed, will be Aug. 8.
The new commissioner will serve almost a full term – through the end of Ammons’ term in fall 2026.
The district includes much of southside Birmingham and Mountain Brook, eastward to include the Grants
and promote a forward-looking innovative medical district in the city where health care providers, health research companies and clinical educators can thrive with knowledgeable and motivated partnerships, according to the statement. It also said the authority anticipates more announcements in the coming weeks about major initiatives to complement the Riverwalk Village project.
“Hoover needs enhanced health care opportunities to keep pace with our continued growth. The Hoover Health Care Authority is excited to have great partners as we expand the availability of innovative wellness, diagnostic, treatment and restorative services for our residents and visitors,” authority Chair Alan Paquette said. “This unique campus will elevate the quality of life across our city and neighboring communities.”
The project represents an expansion and re-imagining of Regions Bank’s North and South Buildings. Regions, one of the largest employers in Shelby County, will maintain a significant presence in the new development.
“We’re proud to build on our longterm commitment to Hoover while helping strengthen the community by supporting these additional services and public greenspaces,” Brett Couch, head of Regions Corporate Real Estate and Procurement, said in the statement.
While health and wellness will be a prime focus at Riverwalk Village, the development also will include a central greenspace with a variety of other amenities and community spaces in a parklike setting to enhance the quality of life in Hoover and surrounding areas. Developers also are talking about working with the city to create miles of trails to improve walkability and connectivity, linking the northern and southern parts of Hoover.
“We are excited about Riverwalk Village, what it will offer to current Hoover residents and the potential for what it can become,” Christy Roddy of Healthcare Resources said. “The future
Mill area and Leeds.
Most District 5 polling places are the same for the special election as regular elections, but five were changed.
Hoover Senior Center is under renovation, so those persons will vote at Hoover Recreation Center, which is basically next door. Fullness Christian Fellowship is hosting Vacation Bible School; its voters will cast their ballots at Shades Mountain Community Church.
Mountain Brook Community Church is also having Vacation Bible School. Those voters will vote at Cahaba Heights Baptist Church. Edgewood Elementary School is undergoing a lot of renovations this summer. Those residents are going to vote at Homewood Library.
Each voter affected by the above changes received a card from the Board of Registrars, telling them where to vote in the special election.
of health care is focused on integrating prevention and wellness as part of overall patient care. This site is uniquely positioned to be able to bring those aspects to the community.”
The development team includes Healthcare Resources in conjunction with Corporate Realty and Home Communities Company, as well as Brasfield & Gorrie, Goodwyn Mills Cawood, and Earl Swensson Associates.
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Thursday, July 13, 2023 • 9 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL NEWS
Courtesy City of Hoover
By June Mathews
A groundbreaking ceremony on June 27 officially marked the beginning of a $2.7 million project to make improvements to Jemison Trail.
The cost will be shared by the city of Mountain Brook, the Friends of Jemison Park and other donors.
City leaders have allocated $1.4 million over the next three years to the project. The Friends of Jemison Park recently presented a check for $1 million to the Mountain Brook City Council toward the group’s goal of matching the city’s contribution.
“I want to thank the City Council for stepping up and doing a public/private partnership with the Friends of Jemison Park,” Mayor Stewart Welch said in his introductory remarks. “Thank you for your dedication to Jemison Park. It is Birmingham’s signature park.”
Sally Worthen, president of the Friends of Jemison Park, said, “I’m so happy today has come. It’s going to be so great for the city of Mountain Brook, as well as for Birmingham.”
Worthen, who also expressed appreciation to everyone involved in the funding efforts, has lived across the street from the park since 1986 and became president of the Friends group about four years later. Organized in 1973, the Friends group seeks to continue the vision of Mountain Brook founder and developer Robert Jemison Jr., for whom the park is named.
The trail closed June 26 and will remain closed for approximately six months while the work is being done. Renovations include replacing the concrete walkways with asphalt for a more runner-friendly surface, widening paths and rerouting sections of the walkway along Shades Creek that are prone to flooding.
When completed, the 1-mile Jemison Trail will be 1.5 miles long and ADA compliant.
“What we’re doing now is helping the park go through the next few years,” said Joel Eliason of Nimrod, Long & Associates. “As more people discover the park, it gets more use, and we’re seeing more effects of that. So we’re trying now to mitigate some of those effects and make sure that this park is
‘Signature Park’
Groundbreaking Kicks Off Jemison Trail Project
still a viable part of the community for many, many years to come.”
About Jemison Park
The 54-acre linear Jemison Park is a greenway following the streambanks of Watkins Brook and Shades Creek in Mountain Brook. Used for walking, jogging, reading, bird watching and picnicking, the area is inhabited by owls, hawks, raccoons and foxes. An abundance of native plant species is also found there.
The land was reserved by Robert Jemison Jr. during the development of Mountain Brook to not only showcase the natural beauty of the area, but to provide a buffer zone in case of flooding. After Mountain Brook was incorporated in 1942, the land was turned over to the city. The public dedication of the entire 54-acre area as Robert Jemison Jr. Park was approved by the Mountain Brook City Council on Oct. 6, 1952.
For more information on Jemison Park and how you can support it, visit friendsofjemisonpark.org
WHERE TO WALK IN THE MEANTIME
For those in the habit of using the Jemison Trail and wondering where to get those steps in while it’s closed, here are some nearby options:
• The Chief’s Woodland Trail can be accessed from Park Brook Road until early August. This new crushed stone walkway offers a different view of Shades Creek and the native woods around it. Though the Woodland Trail is currently a dead-end trail, plans call for a bridge to be added that will connect it back to the Jemison Trail.
• The Watkins Trace Trail is a crushed stone trail that runs parallel to Cahaba Road and connects Jemison Trail to the city sidewalk system near Mountain Brook Elementary School. The Watkins Trail is four-tenths of a mile long.
• The Nature Trail, a crushed stone trail attached to the east end of Jemison Trail, runs between
Party for Hope
American Cancer Society Planning Hope Gala for Aug. 26
The American Cancer Society’s 43rd annual Hope Gala will take on a French theme this year when it is held Aug. 26, 6:30 p.m. to 11 p.m.
This year’s gala co-chairs – Jodi Benck, Jane Huston Crommelin and Anne Liles (left, from left) – are planning the French-themed evening to include a seated dinner, silent and live auctions and a band party to follow.
This year’s honorees are Neillie
Butler, Jack Darnall, Lynn Lloyd and Jenny Sobera, all of whom have fought cancer and are living despite their diagnoses. To hear their stories and donate in one or more of their names, go to acshopegala.swell. gives.
Funds raised for the event will benefit cancer research, patient programs and the Joe Lee Griffin Hope Lodge.
A statement from the co-chairs on
Overbrook Road and Shades Creek. Attached to the east end of Jemison Trail, the six-tenths of a mile long trail is surrounded by greenery and affords beautiful views of the creek.
• The Irondale Furnace Trail leads to the former site of the Irondale blast furnace, a Civil War-era facility that once occupied more than 2,000 acres. The trail runs six-tenths of a mile from Stone River Road, where parking is available, to the city’s sidewalks on Old Leeds Road. Dog stations are available onsite.
The Watkins Trace Trail, left, is popular with people and pets.
the event website states that the mission is to decrease the number of people who die from cancer by increasing access to quality health care to as many people as possible. “The fact is that cancer does not stop, and neither should our effects in finding a cure and providing essential patient services,” the statement says.
To sponsor the event, go to hopegalabirmingham.org.
10 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL LIFE
Journal photo by Jordan Wald
Journal photo by Maury Wald
Photo Beth Hontzas Photography
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Right: Callen Willis, Caroline Draney, Jenny Lynn Byrd. Below: Colette Smith, Brenda Perry, Charlotte Hatcher.
I Love America Night
Annual Wald Park Event Helps Crowd Beat the Heat While Entertaining
The red, white and blue was in full force at I Love America Night in Vestavia Hills on June 22.
The annual event always draws a big crowd to Wald Park, and this year was no exception. The pools and the splash pad at the city’s Aquatic Center invited cooling relief from the heat for kids and adults while others perused sponsor booths and participated in children’s activities.
Live music by local bands Lucky Larue and Chevy 6 provided entertainment, and those attending could pack their own picnic or buy dinner from the concession stand.
July Fourth Festival Activities, Music and Fireworks Marks the 4th in Homewood
Homewood celebrated the Fourth of July with a festival that drew people of all ages.
The fun began in the late afternoon, when two blocks of 18th Street South and one block of 29th Avenue South in downtown Homewood were blocked to traffic. Children’s rides and inflatables and other attractions were set up. Interactive activities were available, and a DJ provided music.
Since downtown Homewood offers one of the best spots in Birmingham to view the Thunder on the Mountain fireworks show on Vulcan Park, by nightfall crowds looked to the north to watch the spectacle.
The festival was presented by the city of Homewood and the Homewood Parks and Recreation Board.
12 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL LIFE
CELEBRATING INDEPENDENCE DAY
Journal photos by Jordan Wald
Mary Sutton and Cole McCoy
Josh and Anna Ehmke, Whitney and Sean Guin Tony and Katharine Raycraft, Lisa and James Nation
Kaylee Sills, Lori Sills, Walter Garfield, Ernestine French, Courtney French and Elisabeth French
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Journal photos by Jordan Wald
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ART FROM THE HEART
Studio By The Tracks Shows Works From Pros and Studio Artists
Studio By The Tracks held its Art from the Heart fundraiser at B&A Warehouse on July 9.
Live and silent auctions were the highlights of the event, along with a
selection of “buy-it-now” artwork by donating artists and Studio By The Tracks artists.
The annual art auction fundraiser helps support Studio By The Tracks, a
studio and gallery for adult artists on the autism spectrum. The studio provides space, materials and instruction and guidance as needed, all free of charge to participating artists. ❖
14 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL SOCIAL
Journal photos by Jordan Wald
Merrilee Challiss, Daisy Winfrey, Anne Yates, Jeff Nesmith, Kelsey Crafton
Carrie Beth and Charles Buchanan, Linda Baker, Brooke Bowles, Joe Carter
Kathy and Kyle Dagostino
Sophia Rataj, Mark Jaunet
Shannon George, Scott Winchell
Paul and Joanna Ware
Katie Loggins, Lee Hollis
Lisa Pruitt, Blair Crabtree
Soike Eckenrode, Shannon George, Madeline Eckenrode
Delegates from the Birmingham chapter of the National Society of Arts and Letters attended the society’s national meeting in Lexington, Kentucky, recently to support local drama competition winner Megan Pecot.
Pecot, a 2018 theater arts graduate of Birmingham-Southern College, was one of 14 participants. She now is traveling with a touring company.
Chapter President Catherine Rogers and Corresponding Secretary Gail Ledbetter made the trip to represent the chapter and support Pecot.
Additional Birmingham chapter officers are Mary Lynda Crockett, vice president for programs; Becky Thomas, recording secretary; Kathryn DeCola. treasurer; Les Filmer, past president; Judy Cook, chaplain; and Judith Hand, parliamentarian.
Committee chairs are Peggy Carlisle, Patricia Dice, Tallulah Hargrove, Ruth Jensen, Dane Peterson and Janis Zeanah.
New members who have been welcomed are Barbarann Beckett, Stephanie Byrne, Martha Lee Culp, Naomi Cunningham, Lisa DeVivo, Anita Dillon, Esta Camplain, Becky Keyes, Nadine
L’Eplattenier, Susan Mee, Murray Phillips, Carla Robertson, Denis Stork and Julia Stork.
Membership is open to all who wish to support the advancement of young people in the creative arts. The rotating competition for 2024 will be musical theater, as well as the annual competitions in art and classical voice. ❖
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Thursday, July 13, 2023 • 15 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL SOCIAL
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Catherine Rogers, president of the Birmingham chapter of the National Society of Arts and Letters; Megan Pecot, drama competition winner; and chapter delegate Gail Ledbetter.
Meeting,
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Supporting the Arts NSAL Delegates Attend National
Support Student
I’m With Mike 5K
120+ Run and Walk for Prostate Cancer Research
More than 120 runners and walkers gathered early for the I’m With Mike 5K Race and 1-Mile Walk in Homewood on June 24.
Most of those registered came from the Birmingham area and from throughout the state, but runners also came from Baton Rouge, Cincinnati and Indiana.
Runners and walkers could participate virtually or on site at the event’s starting point, The Battery Sports Bar. Those at The Battery at 7 a.m. were geared up for the event with music from a live DJ, food and other activities, followed by a group warm up shortly before the race and walk began at 8 a.m. An awards ceremony was held after the race.
The event is a fundraiser for the Mike Slive 5K Foundation, which seeks to raise awareness of prostate cancer and support cutting-edge research. ❖
The Crossings at Riverchase offers everything you want and more — flexible living options, thoughtful amenities and convenient services. Enjoy more of what you love while surrounded by a vibrant array of opportunities and activities, not to mention all-day dining with your choice of chef-prepared, seasonal menu items and wellness-focused programming for enrichment in mind, body and spirit. Whether you’re looking for independent living, assisted living or memory care, our community feels right for all the right reasons.
Explore the refreshing senior lifestyle waiting to be found at The Crossings. Call 205-225-7626 or visit TheCrossingsAtRiverchase.com to schedule an appointment.
16 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL SOCIAL 2171 Parkway Lake Drive | Hoover, Alabama 35244 Independent Living | Assisted Living | Memory Care ALF #D5986 | SCALF #P5928
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Journal photos by Jordan Wald
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Twilight Ball
A Spring-Like Garden Welcomed Guests to Presentation Ball
The 2023 Twilight Ball was held April 22 at the Country Club of Birmingham for 148 Mountain Brook sophomore members and their escorts.
A seated dinner and live music from DJ 4 Barrel Funk followed the presentation.
Lisa Bailey Designs and JAMM Entertainment transformed the Country Club of Birmingham’s East Room and entrance into a beautiful spring garden with twilight accents throughout. The emcee for the evening was Don Mosely.
Ensley Darnall served as chairwoman of this year’s event, along with Tona Hitson and Drue Miller as co-chairs, Karon Staples as secretary and Hill Weathers as treasurer.
Additional committee chairs who helped make the night a memorable one were Leigh Anne Nomberg, Beth Little, Janet Skinner, Monica Vinoski, Stacy Freeman, Kelley Caine, Melanie Gee, Meg Kerr, Emily Lassiter, Anna Comer, Kristin McPherson, Jennifer Gray, Melody Read, Ashley Shook, Kam Patton and Kathleen Woodry. ❖
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Reuniting Chi Omegas
Alumnae Gather to Celebrate Summer and Each Other
More than 75 local Chi Omegas gathered for the Birmingham Chi Omega Alumnae Association meeting recently at Frances Anderson’s home. The group celebrated its annual Summer Soiree as well as spending time catching up with old friends and meeting new alumnae from schools near and far.
Alumnae can keep up with future events and happenings by following @bham_chioalum on Instagram.
Attending the June meeting were Abigail Clark, Allie Rutherford, Allison Abad, Amy Moore, Amy
Young, Ann Louise Cooper, Ashley Ferguson, Ashley Johnson, Avery Goggans, Beverly Phillips, Caroline Henley, Catherine Messer, Charlotte Weaver, Courtney Passarella and Darry Elizabeth Freeman.
Also attending were Elisabeth Hale, Elizabeth Anne Pickering, Forrest Hamrick, Frances Anderson, Glenda McPherson, Hallie North, Hanna Tew, Jane Thornton, Kara Lamar, Kay West, Kelley Evers, Kim Barranco, Kim Cochran, Kristi Logan, Lani Graphos, Leah Rice and Leigh Ann
Smyth.
Also attending were Lillian Brand, Lindy Walker, Maggie Donlon, Mary Beth Cannon, Meg Fullen, Melanie Toranto, Morgan Karst, Nancy Faulkner, Nancy Putnam, Nikoletta Shockley, Rhea Pelekis, Sara Douglas Waugh, Stephanie Carothers, Suzanne Ridgeway, Terri Ferguson, Tracy Chavis and Virginia Cochran.
Introducing the 24/7 Virtual Care Agent
Always Best Care is the first in Birmingham to offer a 24/7 Virtual Care Agent to raise our standard of care and ensure the safety and well-being of our clients. Your loved one can now receive the highest quality in-home care services with a 24/7 safety net for aroundthe-clock, comprehensive, affordable care.
Introducing the 24/7 Virtual Care Agent
Always Best Care is the first in Birmingham to offer a 24/7 Virtual Care Agent to raise our standard of care and ensure the safety
Who is Virtual Care Suited For?
Who is Virtual Care Suited For?
Who is Virtual Care Suited For?
· Anyone who wants extra peace of mind and 24/7 support
· Those living alone or with family
· Anyone who wants extra peace of mind and 24/7 support
· Those living alone or with family
· An individual experiencing cognitive decline
· An individual experiencing cognitive decline
· Anyone receiving home healthcare services
What is Virtual Care?
Always Best Care is the first in Birmingham to offer a hybrid in-home care solution which provides for top quality in-person care with 24/7 virtual remote support. This combination of high touch and high tech raises our standard of care and ensures the continuous safety and well-being of our clients. Your loved one can now receive the highest quality in-home care services with a 24/7 safety net for around the-clock, comprehensive, affordable care.
Always Best Care is the first in Birmingham to offer a 24/7 Virtual Care Agent to raise our standard of care and ensure the safety and well-being of our clients. Your loved one can now receive the highest quality in-home care services with a 24/7 safety net for aroundthe-clock, comprehensive, affordable care.
What is Virtual Care?
What is Virtual Care?
What is Virtual Care?
Always Best Care AI is an audio analytics technology that detects health and care anomalies in the home to serve as a 24/7 safety net so that you know, without a doubt, that your loved one is safe and able to remain independent.
Always Best Care AI is an audio analytics technology that detects health and care anomalies in the home to serve as a 24/7 safety net so that you know, without a doubt, that your loved one is safe and able to remain independent.
What Can We Detect?
What Can We Detect?
Always Best Care AI is an audio analytics technology that detects health and care anomalies in the home to serve as a 24/7 safety net so that you know, without a doubt, that your loved one is safe and able to remain independent.
· Falls or other physical distress
Who is Virtual Care Suited For?
· Exceptional care
· Calls for help
· Falls or other physical distress
Who is Virtual Care Suited For? What Can We Detect?
· Anyone who wants extra peace of mind and 24/7 support
· Anyone receiving home healthcare services
· An individual who has experienced falls
· Those living alone or with family
· An individual who has experienced falls
· An individual experiencing cognitive decline
· Anyone receiving home healthcare services
· An individual who has experienced falls
· Cognitive decline
· Calls for help
· Cognitive decline
· Early signs of infection
· Falls or other physical distress
· Early signs of infection
· Calls for help
· Cognitive decline
· Early signs of infection
· Exceptional care
· Difficulty performing a task
· Negative communication
· Difficulty performing a task
· Risk of medication error
· Negative communication
· Exceptional care
· Risk of medication error
· Difficulty performing a task
· Negative communication
· Risk of medication error
Always Best Care AI is an audio analytics technology that detects health and care anomalies in the home to serve as a 24/7 safety net so that you know, without a doubt, that your loved one is safe and able to remain independent. For More Information About 24/7 Virtual Care, Please Contact Us Today! alwaysbestcare-birmingham.com | 205.874.9730
❖ 18 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL SOCIAL Courtesy
For More Information About 24/7 Virtual Care, Please Contact Us Today! alwaysbestcare-birmingham.com | 205.874.9730
Introducing the 24/7 Virtual Care Agent
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and well-being of our clients. Your loved one can now receive the highest quality in-home care services with a 24/7 safety net for aroundthe-clock, comprehensive, affordable care. Introducing the 24/7 Virtual Care Agent · Falls or other physical distress · Calls for help · Cognitive decline · Early signs of infection · Exceptional care · Difficulty performing a task · Negative communication · Risk of medication error · Anyone who wants extra peace of mind and 24/7 support · Those living alone or with family · An individual experiencing cognitive decline · Anyone receiving home healthcare services · An individual who has experienced falls
From left, front, Hallie North, Frances Anderson, Catherine Messer, Lillian Brand. Back, Sara Douglas Waugh, Kara Lamar, Jane Thornton, Caroline Henley and Ann Louise Cooper.
Courtney Passarella, Leah Rice, Ashley Johnson Amy Young, Kay West, Stephanie Carothers, Nancy Faulkner
Right, Abigail Clark, Nikoletta Shockley, Suzanne Ridgway, Meg Fullen, Charlotte Weaver.
Banter Included All Things Golden at BMA Event
Thank you for being a friend! It was a night of nostalgia on June 1 as attendees paid tribute to the iconic Golden Girls series at Birmingham Museum’s Art after 5 event.
The BMA encouraged people to come dressed as their favorite Golden Girl. Golden Girls-inspired cocktails, cheesecake bites, bingo, an interactive photo booth with a backdrop of the Golden Girls kitchen, fantastic artistry and more were included in this event.
Attendees could create a Golden Girls keepsake button, fan or bracelet and compete in a drag show and pageant.
Art After 5 is an after-hours event where art and pop culture collide. ❖
Thursday, July 13, 2023 • 19 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL SOCIAL
Ashley Daly, Katie Alexander, Layton Hopkins Angela Wright, Danna Horne
Katelyn Griffin, Melissa Vargas
Catherine Thompson, Josh Frizzell
Megan Fitzpatrick, Carrie Hefner
Rachel Miller, Ashley Sargent
Tanji Harton, Maranda Gilmore
Amanda Walden, Jennifer Chapman
Journal photos by Jordan Wald
Cohesiveness 101
BH&G’s 2023 Inspiration Home Flows with Color, Function and Style
By June Mathews
Situated amid the natural beauty of Vestavia Hill’s Forest Creek neighborhood, created with the skill of a seasoned craftsman and refined by a strong attention to detail, Birmingham Home & Garden’s 2023 Inspiration Home lives up to its name.
The house is loaded with imaginative ideas for anyone seeking to build a home, upgrade, renovate or simply add a touch of something different to their surroundings.
Designed by David Smelcer and brought to life by builders John Mark Rives and Eric Waite of RW Development, the home is located at 2717 Vestavia Forest Drive.
Tier 1 sponsors for the project are Ferguson Bath & Kitchen Gallery, Triton Stone Group and Cottage Supply Company.
With its Alabama natural stone complemented by
photos by Jordan Wald
weather-resistant James Hardie siding, the facade of this traditional five-bedroom, four-bath beauty is a reflection of its environment. The meandering creek for which the quiet cul-de-sac community is named runs nearby, and mature hardwoods grow in the neighboring forest.
An underlying palette of neutral tones throughout the house serves as a subtle backdrop for carefully curated art in a variety of media, spectacular lighting fixtures, eye-popping wall and window treatments, and colorful furnishings that combine functionality with style.
As for the yard, Jennafer Collins of Green Space LLC used native plants to create a pleasing blend of nature and landscaping. By then, Rives and Waite had already provided a functional touch by ensuring the home and its future residents not only enjoyed, but were served by its natural surroundings.
“We were intentional about how we placed the home so that the backyard is like an extension of it,” Rives explained. “We envisioned kids playing in the backyard, and it’s so much more advantageous having them where you can see them rather than at a lower level.”
To give the home its interior personality, a team
See FOREST CREEK, page 22
20 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL
Journal
HOME
Birmingham Home & Garden’s 2023 Inspiration Home was brought to life by builders Eric Waite and John Mark Rives (from left) of RW Development.
Crimson Home Photography
LOOK FOR: Cool wallpaper patterns and spectacular ligth fixtures.
throughout the house.
• Range hood covered in Venetian plaster, in the kitchen.
• Coolest wallpaper pattern, in the primary bathroom.
• Panoramic sliding glass doors to the outdoor living space.
DETAILS: 2023
Inspiration House Tour
Dates & Tickets
The 2023 Inspiration Home is open to the public July 6-30, each Thursday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m., and each Sunday afternoon from 1:00 until 5:00 p.m.
Tickets are $10 and may be pur chased at birminghamhomeandgar den.com. Proceeds will benefit Lifeline Children’s Services.
2023 Inspiration Home
Interior Team
Foyer: Hiltz Lauber & Rugko
Great Room: Ashely Ayer of Ashley Ayer Interiors
Rug Sponsor: Angie Burge with English Village Lane
Kitchen: Nicole Roby with Rome
Curate
Dining Room: Stock & Trade Design Co.
Powder Room, Mudroom,
Laundry: Mary Catherine Folmar of Cotton & Quill
Outdoor Living: Hollywood
Outdoor Living
Primary Bedroom & Bathroom:
Christopher Collection
Closets & Pantry: Kim McBrayer of Space Cadets
Upstairs Bedroom: Candy
Whitaker of White Peacock Designs
Upstairs Loft: Christopher Collection
Upstairs Twin Bedroom: Dorm
Decor
Upstairs Bonus Room:
Scandinavian Design Gallery
Upstairs Bedroom: Bill Aroosian of Habitation
Downstairs Den: SWAG Design Studio
While in the House, Look For:
• Spectacular lighting fixtures
• Christopher Collection’s portraits of their employees’ dogs in the loft.
• Abstract wall art in the upstairs bonus room.
• Bedroom décor in the upstairs dorm room.
• Black and white tilework in the Downstairs bathroom.
• Built-in dog crate with coordinating cushion in the laundry room.
Thursday, July 13, 2023 • 21 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL HOME
patrick gilbert | 205.542.9940 | patrick @ wedgworth net LET US PLAN & BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME – the wedgworth team
“every home is unique because every client is unique.”
Crimson Home Photography
FOREST CREEK
From page 20
of award-winning vendors and designers was assembled, and each became responsible for an area of the house. The challenge, however, was to not only bring innovation, style and even a bit of whimsy to every space possible, but to develop a plan that flowed from room to room.
To: Janet
From: Over The Mountain Journal, PHONE: 205-823-9646
Date: Feb.
If we have not heard from you by 5 pm of the Friday before the press date, your ad will run as is. We print the paper Monday. Thank you for your prompt attention.
“Cohesiveness was key to connecting the spaces together,” said Rives. “Having the home look like one designer did it was important to us. We wanted it to look and feel like one home, not like a showcase house where every room is done in a different style. We put a lot of trust in the designers and gave them free rein to do what they needed to do.”
Neutral Tones, Eye-Popping Treatments
An underlying palette of neutral tones throughout the house serves as a subtle backdrop for carefully curated art in a variety of media, spectacular lighting fixtures, eye-popping wall and window treatments, and colorful furnishings that combine functionality with style.
Main level living not only encompasses a fabulous eat-in kitchen –check out the range hood covered in Venetian plaster – an elegantly understated dining room and a comfortable, family-friendly great room, it also has adjacent outdoor living space accessible through panoramic 16-foot sliding
glass doors, as well.
And in case the future owners of the house are concerned that the furry, four-legged members of the household feel at home, in a quiet corner of the main level laundry room near the kitchen is a built-in pet crate, made comfy with a custom cushion that coordinates with the wallpaper.
Upstairs and downstairs, the Inspiration Home affords plenty of room for family members or guests to spread out, relax and enjoy life. The upstairs loft and nearby bonus room are perfect spots for playing a board game, working a jigsaw puzzle or just having a quiet visit with friends. For
22 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL HOME
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Kitchen, above, by Nicole Roby with Rome Curate. Below, dining room by Stock & Trade Design Co.
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Home Photography
FOREST CREEK, page 24
Thursday, July 13, 2023 • 23 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL HOME 4500 1st Avenue North, Birmingham | (205) 592-8615 As experts in tile design and counter top products, we welcome you to visit our showrooms and discover our extensive collections while working with our dedicated designers. CELEBRATING 90 YEARS ADDITIONAL LOCATIONS Montgomery • Huntsville Tuscaloosa • Nashville Memphis • Baton Rouge • Pensacola Bluff Park WindoW Works Call 205-542-6094 LocaLLy owned and operated f Wood window restoration and repair f Sash replacement, rot repair f Replace broken and fogged glass f Wood insulated, putty glazed, and composite vinyl replacement sashes Crimson Home Photography
Clockwise from left: Foyer, Hiltz Lauber & Rugko; Outdoor living, Hollywood Outdoor Living; and primary bathroom, Christopher Collection.
DINING AT
FOREST CREEK
From page 22
Summer is Here!
Tricia’s Treasures
rowdier gatherings, the downstairs den can accommodate ballgame watchers, video game players and golfers treating themselves to a round on the golf simulator.
But for all the new ideas you’ll find in the Inspiration Home, you might also be inspired to revert to some old favorites. Anyone who loved the heyday of wallpaper and shades of blue in upholstery and home accessories during the 1980s and 90s will enjoy seeing those trends adapted to 21st century tastes.
‘This house has something for everybody, but I think it’s really meant for somebody who wants to find a place they can love and live in for a long, long time.’ —HOMEBUILDER ERIC WAITE, RW DEVELOPMENT
Tricia
Over The Mountain Journal, phone 205-823-9646 April
This is your AD PROOF from the OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL for the April 21, 2023 issue. Please
“This house has something for everybody, but I think it’s really meant for somebody who wants to find a place they can love and live in for a long, long time,” said Waite. “It’s for somebody who sees it and with certainty says, ‘This is our forever home.’”
The 2023 Birmingham Home & Gaden Inspiration Home located at 2717 Vestavia Forest Drive in the Forest Creek community of Vestavia Hills is currently for sale. For more information contact listing agents Mike Wald, 205-541-0940 or Hayden Wald, 205-919-5535 with RealtySouth.
24 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL HOME
make sure all information is correct, including address and
number!
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The upstairs loft and nearby bonus room are perfect spots for playing a board game, working a jigsaw puzzle or just having a quiet visit with friends. For rowdier gatherings, the downstairs den can accommodate ballgame watchers, video game players and golfers treating themselves to a round on the golf simulator.
Thursday, July 13, 2023 • 25 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL HOME 109 Hilltop Business Drive Pelham www.GriffithArtGallery.com 205.985.7969 Acrylic on
Acrylic by Maya Eventov Smart shades that set the vibe. The vibe is cozy for reading Lively on family night. Inviting for company And intimate on date night. Smart shades do the work for you, making it easier to create the right ambiance. Plus, they save on energy bills too. Call 205.824.330 for a free in-home consultation. budgetblinds.com/birmingham 2130 Columbiana Road Vestavia Hills, AL 35216 © 2023 Budget Blinds, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Budget Blinds is a trademark of Budget Blinds, LLC and a Home Franchise Concepts Brand. Each franchise independently owned and operated. BAKER LAMPS & LINENS 5299 Valleydale Rd. | 205.981.3330 | bakerlampsandlinens.com BeforeAfter FANTASTIC Selection of Lamp Shades Lamps • Lamp Repair • Custom Lamps Chandelier Re-wiring Before After BeforeAfter Before After
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Homewood Carpet & Flooring Is Now Shunnarah Flooring
Hey, everyone, Foo Shunnarah here! I want to share some awesome news with you.
I started Homewood Carpet & Flooring 17 years ago. Throughout those 17 years, my company has experienced tremendous growth here in Homewood. We are incredibly thankful for this community’s support and love that has allowed us to grow to the point of serving all of Greater Birmingham, and beyond. This growth is part of why I have a huge announcement to make: Homewood Carpet & Flooring is now Shunnarah Flooring!
We’re changing our name to get back to our roots: Family. So just a little background, my family, the Shunnarahs, came from a little city called Ramallah, just north of Jerusalem. This is where it all started. Born in Ramallah, my parents Fuad and Samira Shunnarah moved to the states - the rest is history. You’ve probably heard our name around Birmingham, and beyond. All of the hard work, loyalty, and love, I owe to my parents. My dad
started young, working hard to start and support his family. My father, his siblings, and their cousins, worked hard and our family grew here in Birmingham and beyond. His values and ethics are ingrained in me and inspired me to start this business.
To me, being a Shunnarah means: rich in heart, rich in mind, rich in loyalty. I aspire to bring all of these values into my business. Shunnarah Flooring stands apart from other flooring companies because we represent family, we represent hard work, loyalty, honesty, and passionately going above and beyond in everything we do, each and every day.
With these core values in mind, our mission is clear as we eagerly continue to grow Shunnarah Flooring and serve our customers here in Homewood, Birmingham, and beyond. Thank you for being a part of our family!
Shunnarah Flooring is located at 813 Green Springs Hwy, Ste. 156, 205-518-6423.
The Story Behind The TruBlue Handyman Services
When you think of a handyman you might picture a big crusty guy in overalls who gives you a price for a job, does it half way, and is gone soon as he gets paid, never to be seen again. If that’s been your experience, you’re not alone.
That’s why the owners of TruBlue set out to be different. Their goal in starting the company was to help seniors, busy families and individual homeowners who just need a little project or two done by someone who knows how.
Owners Rick and Roxanne Batson along with Mur Feldman wanted to help people just like themselves to get their small repairs and maintenance jobs done by quality technicians.
They now have 12 professionals, both men and women, on the team who focus on small projects only.
“We try to match the skills of the technician with the client and the job for best results.” said Mur. “Our team includes specialists such as painters, plumbers and carpenters while others have more general skills and work on small repairs, assembling furniture or general maintenance.”
“Our objective is to become the trusted person for a homeowner to call on whenever they need maintenance or repair work done. We want to build relationships that last. Our clients know when they call on us they can count on us to show up and do the work right or fix it if it’s not!” Rick commented.
For more information call 205-839-3818.
26 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL HOME YOU FOO & Homewood Carpet & Flooring is now SMALL PROJECTS SPECIALISTS Call Us NOW! 205-839-3818 The average home needs 22 repairs. What about yours? Tub Cut Outs Save 1000's over Traditional Bath Renovation Restore The Door! - Decks, Steps, Fences -Sheetrock repair -Hang TV/Pictures -Video doorbells -Door/Cabinet Repair -Pressure Washing -Touch-ups -Glass Door Repair -Shower Door Repair
TruBlue owners Mur Feldman, above left, and Rick Batson, above right and his wife Roxanne wanted to help people just like themselves to get their small repairs and maintenance jobs done by quality technicians.
ShelfGenie has been transforming customers’ lives for more than 20 years by designing and implementing custom home solutions that put everything within a homeowner’s reach.
We are the only nationwide franchise that designs, builds and installs custom pull-out shelving solutions into existing cabinets.
ShelfGenie prides itself in having the best quality Glide-Out shelves available to homeowners.
Our designers create a custom solution that solves home pain points, eyesores and trouble areas.
We transform everyday frustration into joy by giving you up to 50% more storage and better accessibility to the items in your cabinets.
Our solutions, services and dedicated team of
Everything Within Reach
professionals, from the initial call , to the designer, to the installer, we are simply unmatched in the business.
ShelfGenie is more than a product—it’s an experience. Our three-step process will guide you to the best solutions for your individual needs and lifestyle.
While ShelfGenie started in the kitchen, we can make any space more accessible with our proprietary solutions designed to fit your unique lifestyle.
We can create a custom solution for your bathroom, home office, basement, entertainment center, laundry room, workshop, craft room and garage that will dramatically increase your organization and accessible storage space.
We are a National Association of
Professional Organizers (NAPO) Industry
Partner and received their Best Home Organizing Award two years in a row. Our solutions are proudly designed and built in the U.S.A.
Each client receives a FREE in-home consultation with one of our trained Designers. When a client makes a purchase, one of our companycertified Installers calls within 48 hours to schedule a field measurement.
Four to six weeks after the field measurement, the same Installer contacts the client to arrange a convenient installation date and time.
98% of our installations take less than a day because we do most of the finish work before we get to the house. ShelfGenie handles each step of the design and install process.
Thursday, July 13, 2023 • 27 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL HOME
12 NO INTEREST NO PAYMENTS *On Approved Credit* MONTH Call for Your FREE Design Consultation (205)941-6621 | shelfgenie.com *Limit one offer per household. Must purchase 5+ Classic/Designer Glide-Out Shelves. EXP 8/31/23. Independently owned and operated franchise. ©2023 ShelfGenie SPV LLC. All rights Reserved. Custom Glide-Out Shelves for your existing cabinets and pantry 50% OFF INSTALL!
ShelfGenie offers custom solutions that solve home pain points, eyesores and trouble areas BEFORE & AFTER BEFORE & AFTER BEFORE & AFTER We can create a custom solution for your bathroom, home office, basement, entertainment center, laundry room, workshop, craft room and garage that will dramatically increase your organization and accessible storage space.
‘Bringing People Together’
First FOOD+Culture Fest Celebrates City’s Great Tastes
By Donna Cornelius
Birmingham’s food scene – along with some high-profile chefs – will take center stage this fall. The first FOOD+Culture Festival, set for Oct. 12-15, will celebrate the city’s great tastes along with the traditions and background that make Birmingham a culinary destination. A reveal party last October provided a taste of the event, which is expected to have a significant economic impact on the city. Organizers are hopeful that the inaugural festival will be the first of many.
Established by local community leaders dedicated to building a better Birmingham, FOOD+Culture Festival will focus on food and the dynamic, diverse cultures found in this region. The festival will bring together food lovers and food makers, chefs, artisans, beverage professionals, farmers and storytellers from Birmingham and beyond.
This year’s event will feature five signature events over four days plus an amplified farmers market experience at the Market at Pepper Place, more than 10 dinners, and more than 50 featured chefs, mixologists, brewers and other culinary professionals.
“Food has the transformative power of bringing people together, and we look forward to seeing how our vision for FOOD+Culture Fest creates opportunities for connection, celebrating our culinary landscape while also shining a light on topics of deeper cultural significance,” said Rebecca Lemelin Gann, the festival’s programming director. “We have events including a lunch featuring all female chefs; a seated dinner celebrating Black chefs, culture and cuisines in honor of the 60th anniversary of the Civil Rights Movement; as well as FOOD+Fire: a Great Southern Tailgate event, presented by Southern Living.”
Celebrity Chef Headliners
Among the talented folks headlining the festival will be chef Frank Stitt, whose Highlands Bar and Grill won the James Beard Award for Best Restaurant in 2018; Dothan’s Kelsey Barnard Clark, winner of Bravo’s prestigious Top Chef Season 16 title; Misti Norris of Dallas’ Petra and the Beast, which was named one of the 50 top restaurants in the U.S. by Food and Wine magazine; James Beard
“Next Level Chef.”
Also in the lineup are Adam Evans of Automatic Seafood in Birmingham, winner of a James Beard Award for Best Chef: South; James Beard Award semifinalist David Bancroft of Auburn’s Acre; chef and painter Roscoe Hall of Birmingham; Woodrow Scott of Archibald and Woodrow’s BBQ in Northport; Kristen Hall of Birmingham’s Bandit Patisserie; Rob McDaniel of Birmingham’s Helen restaurant; and many more culinary luminaries.
The 2023 festival kicks off on Thursday with a seated luncheon presented by the Birmingham chapter of Les Dames d’Escoffier and showcasing an all-female chef lineup, then an early evening reception centered around the inaugural Frank Stitt Award for Industry Excellence.
Friday’s main event will include a seated dinner in the streets of Pepper Place, celebrating Black culture, cuisine and the influence the community has had on Alabama’s foodways, with guest chefs and presenters from around the Southeast. In future years, this event will evolve by highlighting a different culture each year that has helped shape Birmingham’s food identity.
Saturday starts with an amplified Market at Pepper Place followed by a walk-around tasting event at Sloss Furnaces featuring the barbecue community, live-fire cooking and Southern tailgate culture.
Sunday will end back at Sloss Furnaces with a biscuit, brass and Bloody Mary brunch.
organization, established by Sloss Real Estate, The Market at Pepper Place, FRED Communication by Design, the International Association of Culinary Professionals, Keri Lane Promotions and others.
The 2023 event will be produced with partners and major sponsors, including Southern Living magazine, the Alabama Tourism Department, Protective Life, the Birmingham Museum of Art, Amavida, Hellmann’s Mayonnaise, and the Tony & Libba Rane Culinary Science Center at Auburn University.
Sharing Food Traditions and Talent
“I’m a big cheerleader for Birmingham and have always recognized we have some of the best food in the country,” said Cathy Sloss Jones, Sloss Real Estate CEO/president. “FOOD+Culture Festival will allow us to share some of our extraordinary culinary traditions and talent with locals and visitors alike. Not only is FOOD+Culture Fest bringing the potential for tremendous economic impact, but also we hope to establish a sense of camaraderie around food, creating opportunities for community growth and a vibrant food economy.”
FOODIE
J’La Gala
LJCC to Throw ‘Only at the J’ Gala With Kosher Dinner
By anne ruisi
A three-course kosher dinner and live music will be among the highlights of the Levite Jewish Community Center’s second annual J’la Gala fundraiser on Aug. 6.
“Only at the J” is the theme for the event, which will begin at 5 p.m. at the LJCC.
“I hear only-at-the-J stories all the time,” Executive Director Brooke Bowles said in a story about the gala on the LJCC’s website, bhamjcc. org. “People have such great memories about learning to swim with Coach John and growing up in our youth lounge and starring in a theater production in Pizitz Auditorium. Fundraising efforts like this gala will help us extend these experiences to everyone regardless of their financial situation.”
Chef Maureen Holt of Southern Graze, who prepared the meal at last year’s gala, will again prepare the kosher dinner in the LJCC’s kosher kitchen, overseen by a rabbi.
This year’s menu will begin with two appetizers: summer bruschetta with red onion, tomatoes and basil; and charcuterie on a stick with pickled okra, olives and red sweet pepper. A watermelon and cucumber salad will be served, followed by the main course, pan-roasted lemon chicken breast with basil pesto, served with chive Yukon gold mashed potatoes and a squash and zucchini ragout with eggplant, sweet onion and blistered cherry tomatoes.
A dessert station and champagne wall will feature chocolate trifle, lemon pie with lemon curd and a graham cracker crust, and strawberry and basil ice pops.
Guests also can enjoy signature cocktails, and there will be silent and live auctions, with the live auction managed by C. King Benefit Auctions.
Tickets are $125 and availability is limited. The LJCC noted that last year’s gala was sold out and raised $111,000.
The proceeds will help fund a wide range of programming for children and adults.
While the LJCC is the only Jewish community center in Alabama, membership is open to anyone, and a large percentage of members are not Jewish. The center’s website notes, “The J provides a safe and welcoming space for children and adults of all ages and backgrounds to learn and thrive.”
Award winner Rodney Scott of Rodney Scott’s Whole Hog Barbecue; Erica Blaire, one of the country’s leading female pitmasters, of Blue Smoke Blaire’s Competition BBQ in Houston; and Birmingham’s Jonathan Harrison, a contestant on the first season of Gordon Ramsay’s
Throughout the week, invited restaurants around the city will host an out-of-town guest chef, offering one-night-only menu items in addition to the restaurant’s full menu. These dinners will be non-ticketed, first-come-firstserved based on reservations through the restaurants’ websites. More information about these dinners will be announced in August.
FOOD+Culture is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit
Jones is a member of the festival’s board of directors along with Leigh Sloss-Corra, executive director of the Market at Pepper Place and president of the Les Dames d’Escoffier’s Birmingham chapter; attorney John Pickering of Balch & Bingham LLP; Cheryl Slocum, food writer, chef and food editor of Dotdash Meredith Publishing; Chanda Temple, senior project manager from the city of Birmingham Mayor’s Office; and Valerie Thomas, CEO of the VAL Group.
Visit bhamfoodplus.com for more information, updates and details on the 2023 schedule of events, this month’s ticket launch and more. Some special events have limited capacity and are expected to sell out quickly.
Top Restaurants Prepare Tempting Menus for Birmingham Restaurant Week
Birmingham Restaurant Week kicks off July 20, with more than 50 locally owned restaurants, food trucks, bars and coffee shops participating in the 10-day event.
Added to the Summer Edition of BRW this year is a Food Truck Pop-Up Park, and the popular BRW Preview Party and Wineology will be returning. Spire is presenting the event.
The event, which lasts through July 29, gives patrons the opportunity to indulge in two-, threeand four-course meals at a prix-fixe on special menus priced from $5 to $50 per person. They
28 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL FOOD
‘I’m a big cheerleader for Birmingham and have always recognized we have some of the best food in the country.’
CATHY SLOSS JONES, SLOSS REAL ESTATE CEO/PRESIDENT
A reveal party last October provided a taste of the event, which is expected to have a significant economic impact on the city.
Courtesy
NEWS
can return to some of their favorite restaurants or visit new ones.
The event also allows local chefs to showcase recipes that put Birmingham on the foodie road map. It promotes local restaurants, and, most importantly, raises money to battle food insecurity in the area.
“Birmingham’s culinary and beverage industry has been through a rough couple of years of heartbreak with nationwide labor shortages, product shortages and inflation,” said Bill Stoeffhaas, co-founder of BRW and owner of Style Advertising, the organizer of BRW. “Birmingham Restaurant Week 2023–Summer Edition has a goal to promote locally owned restaurants and provide assistance to them where we are able to. Without our restaurants, the vibrancy of our culinary community will diminish. So, we’re making sure the people in our community know about all of the great new places to eat and even offer them some deals at the places they already frequent.”
Diners can search participating restaurants and see their special menus on the BRW website at bhamrestaurantweek.com. Users can view participating businesses by neighborhood, meal, price point, service or other desired option to aid in planning their BRW culinary plan of attack. Menus will be added by July 15.
Current participants include Adored Sweets (bakery and sweets truck), Davenport’s Pizza Palace in Mountain Brook and Vestavia Hills, Dread River Distilling Co., Dreamland BBQ, Elysian Gardens, Fat Charles BBQ, Gumbo to Geaux Food Truck and Catering, Michael’s Restaurant, Nawlins Style PoBoys, Nori, Ovenbird, Pandy’s SnoBiz, Parkside on Fifth, Pasteles La MoreliAna Pastries & Desserts, Rojo, Rusty’s BBQ, Slice Pizza & Brew in Lakeview and Vestavia Hills, Smoke Bistro, SOCU Southern Kitchen & Oyster Bar, Stephen’s Hotdog Wagon, The Fig Birmingham, The Gardens Cafe by Kathy G, Treats So Sweet, Umami, Uptown Cantina and Vino, with more to come soon.
The Preview Party will be held at the Sloss Furnaces Visitor Center, at 20 32nd St. N. in Birmingham, on July 18 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. for foodies to learn and taste more about what restaurants involved have to offer.
BRW’s Food Truck Pop-Up Park will take place July 20-July 22 at 32nd Street South and Sixth Avenue South.
Wineology is the event’s finale. The wine flight tasting and food pairing event will be held Aug. 1 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Urban Parc, at 1006 20th St. S. in Birmingham.
Wine will be provided by UnitedJohnson Brothers of Alabama while Sysco Foods will provide hors d’oeuvres. Tickets are $30 per person for the Preview Party and Wineology. They will be available at bhamrestaurantweek.com/events.
“At Spire, we know just how important restaurants and other businesses in the food and beverage industry are in this community,” Joe Hampton, president of Spire Alabama said. “We couldn’t be happier to continue our partnership with
Birmingham Restaurant Week, support our local restaurants and provide the community with a way to connect through enjoying great food and drink.”
The summer edition will benefit Community Kitchens Birmingham, which operates two kitchens, one in Woodlawn and one in Southside, where more than 44,000 meals are prepared each year. Community Kitchens also offers services such as education and advocacy to support the homeless in Birmingham.
The winter edition of BRW donated $2,500 to Magic City Harvest for its efforts to lower food waste and hunger. Over the past 14 years, Birmingham Restaurant Week has donated more than $100,000 to local nonprofits and community organizations, including FeedBHM, Manna Ministries and Firehouse Ministries.
Hoover Restaurant
Week Focuses on Local Restaurants
So many restaurants signed on for Hoover Restaurant Week this year that it had to be stretched to last for three weeks.
Hoover Restaurant Week itself kicks off July 14 at 7:30 a.m. at Veteran’s Park with Good Morning Alabama, sponsored by WBRC and including special host Russell Jones. That part of the event, which highlights local family-owned restaurants offering special menu items or special pricing, runs through July 23.
The first week of July was dedicated to the BBQ and Burger Showcase, in which patrons were encouraged to try BBQ and burger restaurants in Hoover and post it about it on the Hoover Restaurant Week Facebook page to be entered to win a restaurant gift certificate.
The second week featured a Bartender Challege, East vs. West, which was sponsored by Sweet Home Spirits.
This year’s restaurant options include Biscuit Belly, CakEffect, The Craft Burger, I Heart Mac & Cheese, Jambo Grill, Johnny Brusco’s Pizza, K & J’s Elegant Pastries, Tortuga’s Pizza, Tre Luna Bar and Kitchen, Clean Eatz, Hunan Cuisine, Jake’s Soul Food Cafe, Kabob-Licious, Kilwins, La Conchita, Magic Milkshakes & More, Moe’s Original Barbecue, The Pita Cafe, Teriyaki Madness, Beef’ O’ Brady’s, Farrelley’s Southern Bar and Kitchen, Merck’s Tavern, Saw’s BBQ, Silver Coin Indian Grill, The Electric, The Whole Scoop, and Unagi Bento and Sushi.
“Hoover’s restaurant scene has exploded in the past decade,” David Cohen, president of Hoover Restaurant Alliance, said in a statement. “Family-owned restaurants in Hoover always offer something new and delicious, and it’s all a short drive from anywhere in the metro.”
Visit hooverrestaurantweek. com to learn more about this year’s restaurants and deals.
Thursday, July 13, 2023 • 29
FOOD
OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL
Accelerated
Sargent Closing In on PGA Tour Membership Through New Program
By RuBin E. GRant
It’s been quite a year for former Mountain Brook High School golfer Gordon Sargent. He played in two of golf’s majors and in two other PGA Tour events, which has brought him to the cusp of earning his PGA tour card.
Sargent, who will be a junior at Vanderbilt in the fall, holds 17 points in the PGA Tour University Accelerated program, which was established in November. Players who earn 20 points on the accelerated points scale by the end of their third year of NCAA eligibility earn PGA Tour membership.
Sargent has 17 points thanks to winning the 2022 NCAA title as a freshman, being named the NCAA Division I Freshman of the Year, having two starts in majors and being included on national teams. He already has been named to this year’s U.S. Walker Cup team, which will give him another two points when he tees it up Sept. 2-3 at St. Andrews in Scotland. Players do not accrue accelerated points until they tee it up in a competition.
Sargent also could earn his 20th point if he represents the United States in the World Amateur Team Championship Oct. 18-21 in Dubai. That’s a strong possibility since Sargent is the top-ranked amateur in the world and represented the U.S. in the 2022 World Amateur Team Championship.
Making a cut in a PGA Tour event is worth one accelerated point and a top-10 finish brings one additional point.
Given sponsors’ exemptions the past two weekends, the 20-year-old Sargent competed in two professional events. He failed to make the cut in the Rocket Mortgage Classic June 29-July 2 at the Detroit Golf Club, shooting a 1-under 143 (71-72) in the first two rounds.
But last weekend, Sargent made the cut in the John Deere Classic to earn his 17th accelerated point. He finished with a 7-under 277, tied for 57th, with rounds of 70-67-69-71 at TPC
LEATH
From page 32
ter demonstrated on and off the field. He is a finalist for the Gatorade National Boys Track & Field Player of the Year award to be announced in July.
Leath’s Year
As a senior this past track season, the 6-foot-1,160-pound Leath won the 800- and 1,600-meter events at the Alabama High School Athletic Association Class 7A state meet, leading the Rebels to a second-place finish as a team. Leath’s winning time in the 1,600 of 4:07.33 ranked No. 19 nationally among prep competitors in 2023.
Leath took seventh in the 800 at the Brooks PR Invitational in June in Seattle, Washington, in a state-record 1:49.84, which ranked No. 15 nationally.
He also earned dual All-American
Deere Run in Silvis, Illinois.
Staying in College Either Way
Even if he hits the 20-point threshold in October, Sargent could not accept his tour card until the end of the following school year in 2024. Sargent told Golf Channel in January he planned to stay at Vanderbilt through his junior year regardless.
“You’d obviously be thinking about (accepting that PGA Tour card) because there’s just so much that comes along with it, but at the same time, everyone tells you that college is the best time of your life,” Sargent said. “But yeah, if I achieved it after this year, I’m still definitely going to come back for my junior year, and obviously things could change a little bit after that. But I don’t think I’m ready to play professional golf right now.
“I can’t even imagine traveling the world by myself playing professional golf at age 20. I’d rather just stay in college another couple years and get better. … And if you have a PGA Tour card waiting for you, it gives you a lot of freedom.”
Sargent was the low amateur in the U.S.
honors at Nike Outdoor Nationals at the University of Oregon in June with a sixth-place finish in the 800 followed by his anchor leg for a 4x800 relay quartet that took second in a state-record time of 7:30.68. Leath was joined on the relay team by Henry Strand, Mitchell Schaaf and Max Armstrong.
“This year was such a great experience, and really I focused on achieving both individual and team goals,” Leath said. “Ultimately, I think this focus put me in position to be considered and ultimately selected for the Gatorade Player of the Year award.”
Vestavia Hills track coach Richard Anderson was ecstatic to see Leath earn the award.
“Nobody deserved it more … in my mind,” Anderson said. “He did a great job, and his times speak for themselves, not only in the state but nationally. But beyond all that, I’m happiest about the person Alex became this year. He matured and embraced all challenges.”
Open in June with a 284 four-round total, tied for 39th. He shot rounds of 69-71-75-69 to earn low amateur honors by nine shots at Los Angeles Country Club. According to Elias Sports Bureau, Sargent was just the sixth amateur to have two rounds in the 60s at a U.S. Open.
Sargent had a strange ending on the 18th hole in the final round. His putt looked as though it was headed for the center of the cup when it shockingly bounced out and right back onto the green.
“I had like a 2½ footer straight up the hill that hit the back of the hole and just bounced right back to me,” Sargent said afterwards. “Haven’t seen that happen in a while, but that’s how it goes sometimes.”
In the spring, Sargent received a special invitation to the Masters. He was one of seven amateurs at Augusta National but missed the cut by six shots, finishing with a two-day total score of
Anderson wasn’t the only one who noticed.
“Alex Leath established himself as one of the top middle-distance talents in the nation this spring, breaking two
Nationals.”
Former Mountain Brook High School golfer Gordon Sargent, who will be a junior at Vanderbilt in the fall, holds 17 points in the PGA Tour University Accelerated program.
state records to rank among Alabama’s all-time track greats,” said Rich Gonzalez, editor of PrepCalTrack.com. “He smashed a 16-year-old state record in the 800 before capping his senior season by anchoring the Rebels’ 4x800 quartet to the third-fastest performance in national prep history at Nike Outdoor
plus-9.
That turned out to be a rare poor showing for Sargent, who had an exceptional sophomore season at Vanderbilt, earning SEC Player of the Year and Golfweek Men’s National Player of the Year awards. He was ranked No. 1 in final 2023 Palmer Cup Rankings and No. 2 in Golfstat ratings.
But earning PGA Tour membership through the accelerated program isn’t easy. Since 2010, only three players would have earned membership through the accelerated program: Patrick Cantlay (2012), Justin Thomas (2013) and Patrick Rodgers (2014).
Sargent is rapidly closing in on it though.
“I feel like if you play just good golf and the golf that you know you’re capable of, then you’re going to reach those 20 points without having to think about it too much,” Sargent told reporters before the Rocket Mortgage Classic.
Leath maintained a weighted 4.11 GPA in the classroom. He also volunteered as part of multiple fundraising campaigns to benefit cancer research
baseball, softball, and boys and girls track and field. It awards one National Player of the Year in each sport. The selection process is administered by the Gatorade Player of the Year Selection Committee, which leverages experts including coaches, scouts, media and others as sources to help evaluate and determine the state winners in each sport.
in association with Vestavia Rise, a school initiative.
The Gatorade Player of the Year program annually recognizes one winner in the District of Columbia and each of the 50 states that sanction high school football, girls volleyball, boys and girls cross-country, boys and girls basketball, boys and girls soccer,
Leath joins recent Gatorade Alabama Boys Track & Field Players of the Year Maddox Hamm (2021-22, Scottsboro), Strand (2020-21, Vestavia Hills), Josiah Harry (201920, Mobile Christian) and Charles Lewis (2018-19, Sparkman), among the state’s list of former award winners.
Leath will attend the University of Virginia this fall on a track scholarship.
“Virginia got themselves a good one to compete in the ACC (Atlantic Coast Conference) and be an impact,” Anderson said. “I think Alex has a bright future.”
30 • Thursday, July 13, 2023 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL SPORTS
‘I can’t even imagine traveling the world by myself playing professional golf at age 20. I’d rather just stay in college another couple years and get better.’
‘Nobody deserved it more … in my mind. He did a great job, and his times speak for themselves, not only in the state but nationally. But beyond all that, I’m happiest about the person Alex became this year. He matured and embraced all challenges.’
VESTAVIA HILLS TRACK COACH RICHARD ANDERSON
Courtesy
Homewood Track Coach
Leaves to Become Spain Park’s AD
By RuBin E. GRant
Josh Donaldson added another state championship to his coaching resume in the spring when he guided the Homewood Patriots to the boys Class 6A title.
But Donaldson wasn’t content just being a successful high school track coach.
After 11 years at Homewood High School, including the past six as the Patriots’ head cross-country coach and the past four years as head track and field coach, Donaldson is taking a higher position.
He was hired in June as Spain Park’s new athletic director and took over officially on July 1.
“I’ve always wanted to get into athletic administration, and when the job opened up, I decided to get my feet in the door and see how it goes,” Donaldson said. “I felt good about everything and it worked out.”
Donaldson replaces Patrick Kellogg, who retired from Spain Park.
Donaldson graduated from Homewood in 2008, obtained his bachelor’s degree in math and biology from the University of Alabama and a master’s in education from UAB.
As an athlete and coach, he was a part of 33 state championship teams and
17 state runner-up teams at Homewood. As head coach, he led Homewood’s cross-country and track and field teams to six state titles.
Donaldson also served in various event planning and leadership capacities at the Knight Eady and Show Choir Nationals event groups.
“It was definitely a hard decision to leave Homewood,” Donaldson said. “It’s bittersweet, but I’m looking forward to the opportunity I have at Spain Park. Spain Park has a great athletic program and I want to help them continue the excellence that is already there and work with the coaches and the administration.”
Spain Park Principal Amanda
Esslinger considers Donaldson a great fit, noting his success in the classroom as a teacher as well as a coach.
Donaldson was the 2020-21 Homewood City Schools Secondary Teacher of the Year and grew Homewood’s Advanced Placement biology program from four students to 80 students while maintaining a 71% pass rate for the AP biology exam.
“This is quite remarkable because the state’s pass rate for the AP biology exam is 54%,” Esslinger said. “In addition to his obvious athletic and academic accolades, coach Donaldson is a true servant leader with strong leadership, organizational skills and character.
“We are happy to welcome him to Spain Park to help our student-athletes, teachers, coaches and athletic programs grow and succeed.”
Lamey
Named
Hoover AD
Hoover also will have a new athletic director. Harley Lamey was hired recently to replace Andy Urban, who left in the spring to become Mountain Brook’s athletic director.
Lamey spent the past two years at Hoover as the Bucs’ assistant athletic director and head wrestling coach, getting to coach his son, Jack. Before arriving at Hoover, Lamey coached at Vestavia Hills for four years and 15 years at Piedmont before that.
“I’m so thankful to the administration that believed in me, the board and Dr. (Dee) Fowler (Hoover schools superintendent), to allow me to serve in this position,” Lamey said after taking over as the Bucs’ athletic director.
McDONALD
From page 32
“Kierson is dominant in all facets and has a killer instinct when it comes to winning,” Thompson head coach Dan DeMasters said. “She is a stellar left-footed player.”
McDonald is the fourth player from Oak Mountain to earn the Gatorade state award, joining Bailee Hartnett (2011-12), Toni Payne (2012-13) and Julia Pack (2015-16).
Oak Mountain won more than 100 games during McDonald’s career and captured the 2021 Class 7A state championship.
“Overall, I think I had a good career,” McDonald said. “When I was younger and I walked into high school, I would look up at the banners and I was like, ‘I want to have a banner up there one day. We only won one state championship, but I’m glad we got to win one.”
McDonald graduated in May with a 4.0 GPA and was a member of the National Honor Society. She volunteered locally on behalf of the Auburn tornado relief effort and served at the YMCA. She also participated in multiple community service projects with Church of the Highlands and through her club team, Alabama FC.
The Gatorade Player of the Year program annually recognizes one winner in the District of Columbia and each of the 50 states that sanction high school football, girls volleyball, boys and girls cross-country, boys and girls
basketball, boys and girls soccer, baseball, softball, and boys and girls track and field, and awards one National Player of the Year in each sport. The selection process is administered by the Gatorade Player of the Year Selection Committee, which leverages experts including coaches, scouts, media and others as sources to help evaluate and determine the state winners in each sport.
McDonald joins recent Gatorade Alabama Girls Soccer Players of the Year Isabel Smith (2021-22, Mountain Brook), Haley Duca (2020-21, Chelsea), Morgan White (2019-20, Westminster School at Oak Mountain) and Tara Katz (2018-19, Montgomery Academy), on the state’s list of former Gatorade award winners.
McDonald will play in college at the University of Alabama.
“I love all the coaches and think they’re all so great,” McDonald said. “They have lot of passion and high energy. It’s a growing program, so it’s a good place for me to play.”
McDonald enrolled earlier this summer. She’s hoping to play as a freshman.
“We’ll see,” she said. “I have a little bit of a knee injury right now, but I’m getting treatment for it.”
McDonald plans to major in criminal justice with plans to become a defense attorney or criminal investigator one day.
“I watched “Criminal Minds” on TV and a lot of criminal documentaries and got really interested in it,” she said.
Thursday, July 13, 2023 • 31 OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL SPORTS
Josh Donaldson Courtesy
Accelerated: Sargent closing in on PGA Tour membership through new program Page 30
SPORTS
Thursday, July 13, 2023 ❖ OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL
Embracing Challenges
Vestavia Hills’ Leath Turns Focus Into Gatorade Track and Field Award
By RuBin E. GRant
Alex Leath didn’t want to be left out. He had seen two of his former Vestavia Hills track teammates get recognized as Gatorade Players of the Year, and he wanted to join them.
In late June, Leath did just that when he was selected as the 2022-23 Gatorade Alabama Boys Track & Field Player of the Year.
“First and foremost, I am honored to be selected for this prestigious award,” Leath said. “Winning Gatorade Player of the Year is an honor I have hoped for since my freshman year. When I started running in 7th grade, my head coach (coach Greg Echols) told me that I had some talent and that I could work to develop my gifts.
“As I moved into high school and committed to running full time, I had excellent role models who taught me how to improve as a runner. With two teammates being recognized with the Gatorade Player of the Year from Vestavia in recent years, Ethan Strand and Crawford West, I thought that I might be able to do the same.”
Strand was the boys honoree in 2020-21, giving the Rebels two recipients in three years. West was a two-time state recipient of the Gatorade girls crosscountry award in 2020-21 and 2021-22. Strand, who just finished his freshman year at North Carolina, also was a two-time cross-country honoree.
The award, in its 38th year, recognizes not only outstanding athletic excellence, but also high standards of academic achievement and exemplary charac-
Very Good Ending
Oak Mountain’s McDonald Named Gatorade Alabama Soccer Player of the Year
By RuBin E. GRant
Kierson McDonald was already a month beyond the end of her high school soccer career at Oak Mountain when she received the highest honor of her career.
McDonald was named the 2022-23 Gatorade Alabama Girls Soccer Player of the Year in late June.
“It was so amazing when I found out,” McDonald said. “I knew I was up against some very good athletes. It’s a very good way for me to end my high school career.”
The award, in its 38th year, honors the nation’s best high school athletes and recognizes high standards of academic achievement and exemplary character demonstrated on and off the field.
McDonald is a finalist for the Gatorade National Girls Soccer Player of the Year award. She joins an elite alumni association of state award-winners in soccer, including Alyssa Thompson (2020-21, Harvard-Westlake School, California), Mallory Swanson (2014-15, Mountain Vista High School, Colorado), Heather O’Reilly (2002-03 and 2001-02, East Brunswick High School, New Jersey) and Abby Wambach (1997-98, Our Lady of Mercy School of Young Women, New York).
The 5-foot-10 McDonald played as a defender, midfielder and forward during her senior season this past spring, leading the Eagles (22-4) to the Class 7A state semifinals. She scored 31 goals and had 15 assists to earn first-team AllState honors.
See McDONALD, page 31
Homewood track coach leaves to become Spain Park’s AD Page 31
See LEATH, page 30
Journal file photo by Jordan Wald
Alex Leath
Journal file photo by Marvin Gentry
Kierson McDonald