The New Tri-State Defender - July 29-August 4, 2021

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VOL. 70, No. 30

July 29 - August 4, 2021

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COVID-19 UPDATE

Health officials, workers battle ‘avoidable’ tragedy by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

The resurgence of COVID-19 in a morphed more transmissible form is hitting Shelby County hard. “The folks getting sick now are between 1844 (years old),” said Shelby County Health Department Medical Officer Dr. Bruce Randolph. “They are unvaccinated, and many of them have underlying medical problems, which

makes them severely at risk.” Randolph was referring mainly to the COVID-19 Delta variant that has spawned a national resurgence of the virus, mostly among those who have not received a COVID vaccine. Officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said 83 percent of the new virus cases are the highly transmissible Delta variant, and some 90 percent of those among unvaccinated people. Memphis Children’s Clinic has six locations in Shelby and DeSoto counties. Over the

past seven days, 13 of those being tested for COVID-19 have come back positive. Across the state, Tennessee has reported more than 2,000 pediatric cases just in the last two weeks. “The real tragedy is that this was all avoidable,” said Randolph. “The resurgence would be non-existent if everyone had been vaccinated. While people are acutely ill, they can’t get the vaccine. They just have to ride it out.” Randolph said there have been some “breakthrough cases,” in which vaccinated people have contracted the virus. The breakthrough

victims, however, have in most cases avoided serious illness or hospitalization. Randolph said in some of the new cases of vaccinated people contracting the virus, the victims have some immuno-compromised condition that has compromised their immune systems in some way. Still, he urged everyone “to go and get vaccinated.” In Memphis-Shelby County, the virus re-

SEE COVID-19 ON PAGE 2

Nominated by Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris, Dr. Michelle Taylor takes over as Health Department director on Aug. 2. (Photo: Karanja A. Ajanaku)

Dr. Taylor nets Health Department director’s post with unanimous vote For the family of “Gladys Millie “MaDear” Bennett, the time has come to officially celebrate her home as a welcomed addition to the National Register of Historic Places. Pictured (l-r): Yvonne Bennett, daughter of author, Ambrose Bennett; Ambrose Bennett, and Darryl Wells, “MaDear’s” grandson, raised as her own son. (Courtesy photo)

‘MaDear’s House made a National Historic Site; son’s new book tells why

by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

The flower bed along the front of the porch is as beautiful as it was when “MaDear” was tending it. “Some of these plants have been here since the 1950s,” said Ambrose Bennett, son of “MaDear.” That’s just one of many enduring elements of a remarkable legacy of a woman who was the daughter of slaves. Gladys Millie Crawford Bennett raised

her children at 1039 Delmar Street in Memphis. But it was so much more than a house. Gladys Bennett was “MaDear,” not only to her children, but to all those who came to that house. “Our house was like two shotgun houses put together,” said Ambrose Bennett. “We lived on one side, and boarders lived on the other side. But everyone came to eat at our dining room table. This is the same table that has always been here.” Bennett had his mother’s house designated as a National Historic Site. It started with the Memphis City Landmarks

Commission nomination to add the “Gladys Millie “MaDear” Bennett House to the National Register of Historic Places on Dec. 19, 2019. On Feb. 7, 2020, the house was officially added to the registry. The Bennett family was planning a huge celebration. But then, the COVID-19 pandemic hit. And those plans were discarded. Until now. Ambrose Bennett and other family members will host a celebration of the house as an historic site on

SEE HOUSE ON PAGE 2

County Commission also stands pat on not raising property taxes by James Coleman

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

In its first post-budget meeting since June, the Shelby County Board of Commissioners on Monday voted unanimously to approve Dr. Michelle Taylor as the new director of the Shelby County Health. The commission also opted to let the tax rate, which they approved in June, remain at $3.45 per $100 assessed value. The action let stand the decision to not raise county property taxes for the 2021-2022 fiscal year that began July 1. A Memphis native, the lieutenant colonel currently advises the Air Force National Guard on health care policies. Taylor is a graduate of White Station High School. She studied at Howard University, the James H. Quillen College of Medicine at East Tennessee State University, the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis, Johns Hopkins University and Harvard University. She was nominated by Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris. Her first day on the job is Aug. 2. “Dr. Taylor advises and helps lead health care policy for the Air National Guard, an organization with 107,000 airmen and 7,500 health

SEE TAYLOR ON PAGE 2

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