City Council - Special Meeting
About this meeting
- Government Body
- City Council
- Meeting Type
- City Council
- Location
- Greensboro, NC
- Meeting Date
- December 8, 2025
Transcript
94 sections (from 157 segments)
[music] Welcome to [music] the special meeting of the Greensboro City Council. Today is Monday, December 8th, 2025. We are in the Katie Dorset Council Chambers and I will ask someone to read the motion for close session. I move that the council enter close session pursuant to NCGS143-318.11 A10 to view a recording release pursuant to GS132-1.4. Do I hear a second?
A second. That is moved by Miss Thurm, seconded by Miss Black. All in favor, please say I.
I. That passes unanimously. Thank you. We shall return after the close session. My name is Janita Chase
and I am Hassan Pittz and together we have been working underneath the moniker of SM for many years as interdisciplinary multimedia artists, sound, video and everything else. and we look forward to inviting you into the Grow Residency from November 6th until December 15th. Well, we're trying to um do an immersive videobased uh installation um that we hope will um connect largely with movement and remix a little bit of archival footage from [music] the Greensboro History Museum and contemporary everyday Greensboro footage that we've been collecting for the last several months.
I think there's [music] that that duality of being able to like replicate reality, but then also be able to like play, manipulate, create with the lens, through the lens. Uh that's always been particularly interesting.
You can find us online at signaltoise.com and we are signal to noise on Instagram as well. Welcome to Gate City Insider. I'm Rosemary Plybin. 54 adventures in six years. It kind of sounds like the premise of a book, right? Well, it is, but it's also a whole lot more than just printed pages. Laura Carney is a journalist and author, and she's finishing up a two-eek stay in Greensboro as part of one city, one book community read. Hello and welcome.
Hi. It's so nice to be here. Good to have you with us. Okay, let's start by just talking a little bit about you. What were you like as a little girl? Oh gosh, I was very shy, very pensive. Um I was in um accelerated classes from a young age and very academic and I just loved to draw all day long basically and I played a lot of sports. I was a tomboy too. A reader and writer as a child? Yes. Oh, big time. I started reading My mom claims I was three but I don't remember. [laughter] Okay. Wow, that's impressive. I'm guessing that your parents read to you as a child a lot. Yes, a lot. Yeah, my grandmother, too. Oh, that's great. All right, so tell us about your dad because this is this is leading somewhere. Tell us about your dad.
Um, oh, my dad uh was uh a writer himself and he was a salesman by day and he actually uh he sung and he was a comedian in nightclubs. That's a lot. Yeah. What was that like growing up with him like doing all those things? Oh, he, you know, he just was one of those people who uh sang more than he spoke and was always on. Always entertaining everybody, always, always making jokes all the time. Yeah. Very charismatic. I'm picturing him making up songs about you guys when, you know, just the getting ready [laughter] song or the breakfast song or something. Well, you know, there actually wasn't a lot of that because my parents divorced when I was six, so I would see him twice a week, but it was always very um undivided attention from him when we did see him.
I love that. And you lost him when you were young, 25 years old. Yes. tell us about that. What was that like? Um, it's interesting you say that because since doing this project of finishing his bucket list for him and writing this book, I don't even think of it as having lost him anymore. But, but he did die when I was 25 um in a car crash with a teenager who was using her phone um and went through the next intersection where he was which was very it was devastating. It was. Yeah. And um you found though a little bit later, a few years later, a list that he had left, a bucket list. Tell us about how did you find it? What was that like?
Sure. Well, it was actually 13 years later. Um, I was I had just gotten married six months before and my brother was moving into his first house and when they were moving in as he was unpacking, he he discovered that they had this bucket list that my dad wrote, which we later found out he wrote it when he was 29. So, he wrote it the year I was born.
Um, and I just knew immediately I needed to finish it for him. I had actually become a safe driving activist at that point. I've been doing that for a couple of years, but even that happened very much by happen stance because I was a copier at Good Housekeeping. I managed to accomplish my dream of working at a magazine in New York, what I had moved there for the year that he died. And I had sort of become blocked as a writer because there was one really important story I needed to tell, but I was too afraid to tell the story of the year that he died. Um, so I became an activist and as soon as we saw the list, I really think part of the reason I knew immediately I needed to finish this list for him to honor him was because of the activism. because I thought, well, maybe people will understand this was a full human being who had dreams just like anyone else does. And that's what happens when someone dies in one of these car crashes
instead of just a line in the newspaper. Yeah. Just a statistic because I think we can start to look at people that way sometimes. Let's dive into the list of So the list, how did where did it was in a box? Was it in an envelope? Did it, you know, was it was there any fanfare around it? Was it scribbled tight? folded up three folded up pieces of notebook paper front and back. Yeah. Little and and I actually have since learned that my dad uh kept that list in his wallet all the time. That's why it was folded and it had survived the car crash. It was in the car with him. Wow. Okay. So, what struck you first about the list?
Oh, um just how funny it was. Like my my dad didn't have very easily decipherable handwriting, so my brother and I really got a chuckle out of reading that. But um you know it was some of the items were so dramatic like swim the width of a river the way he would say it. I mean he was a writer and he was very dramatic. But I actually ended up doing that out in Asheville. I swam across the French Broad. Um but you know I I as I went through the list I one thing that really struck me was how many of the items my brother and I had already done. You know I I would say by coincidence but I don't think anything is really by coincidence. And I mean we are our father's children. So you know I had been to Paris. you know, I had become a marathon runner, so I, you know, run 10 miles straight seemed like an easy one for me to start with. Um, so yeah, it was more I couldn't believe it. Like, wow, we we really have been kind of accidentally following in our father's footsteps all along. And then, of course, there were very sweet items,
um, make my or it was give my children the best education, the best example, and the most love I can give. And what really struck me about that one was it looked like he had added most love later like at the top as though he was afraid perhaps he had not given us the best example. Had he checked off some things on the list? I know he had.
Yeah. Uh well there are 60 items and my mom's not sure, you know, did he finish writing the whole thing in 1978? We don't know. Maybe he added it a little bit later in life, but um there were 60 items. The ones that he did were he did five of them. So uh help my parents enjoy their retirement. um have an impressive record collection, uh see a World Series game live, uh do a standup monologue in a comedy monologue in a nightclub, which I'm so relieved he did because I didn't want to do that. Um and then it was uh oh gosh, what was the fifth one? Um have gosh, what was it? I'm so I'm I'm stuck right now. I'm stuck. But but I do remember that there was a one that he had marked Oh, he that's this is why he had marked one as having failed, which was pay my dad back $1,000 plus interest. Yeah. And and so and so how did you go about finishing this? You and your Well, first you do you first did you check off things that you and your brother had already done?
Yeah. I mean, I sort of did, but then as I was going through it, I I began realizing like some of them uh were worth doing again. Just it just made sense to do that. But but yeah, like visit Paris, for example, I had already done that. So I wasn't going to pay for another trip back to Paris. I mean, it wouldn't be a bad idea. So, so things like because I realized in in the in the um in the outline of telling the story as I wrote the book about my father's list, I could include a flashback to having gone to Paris before.
So, uh okay, we're going to dive some more into the book is my father's list in in case you didn't get that already. Um it's this year's community read for one city, one book in Greensboro. You can find out more about it and all the events surrounding it. Um make your own bucket list, all kinds of things like that. uh start at greensboro library.com. Now, we're gonna dive more into My Father's List. We're going to find out exactly how Laura completed it and how it changed her. That's coming up right after this break. Welcome back to Gate City Insider. Our guest today is Laura Carney. She's author of My Father's List Selection for this year's One City, One Book. And um when when you first decided to finish this list, you made a plan. You're you're going to do it. I'm wondering, were there things that you thought would be easy, things that you thought would be hard? And did did those shift once you kind of really got started get got started on it?
Yes. Well, you know, one of the things I I discovered early on was anytime I thought something was too easy, like I thought uh beat a number one seed at tennis would be easy because I Wait, wait, wait. You thought that would be easy? Well, I played on my high school tennis team. Okay. Okay. So, when it was something like that, like, oh, you know, I' I have some experience with this and and I've been having a stroke of luck with these first 14 items, so I'll just do this one in one day. Just just check it off, move to the next, like we do with to-do lists sometimes. When I started developing that attitude, that's when it would become disastrous. I actually ended up injuring my foot on the tennis court. Uh, I had a foot surgery later that year and, you know, gradually became afraid I might not be able to run ever again.
Oh, no. But the lesson in that ended up being letting my husband take care of me, which was something that was difficult for me in general. I was so self-sufficient, you know. Um, but that I I gradually began to learn that I needed to approach each list item with this attitude of uh humility and kindness. So, it also could never be a thing where I was being arrogant. Um, you know, you would think that type 40 words a minute correctly would be easy, but that actually ended up having its own difficulties with it. [laughter] Uh my brother did that one with me and he actually uh he did it I think he did 63 words a minute correctly. Of course he did it right before me. Um
harder ones uh I would say number three on the list write and have a few novels published. That was probably one of the most difficult but uh have five songs recorded. That was the most emotionally difficult for me because my dad was a singer and I ended up choosing uh the songs he sang to us when we were kids. So I actually did that one very at the end but they were always surprising you know some would take a day some could take three years uh correspond with the pope that only took me six weeks and I got a letter back and you would have thought that would have been really hard. Yeah that's why I put it off until year six but it was actually it actually happened right away. So
that's really cool. Okay so six years living out your father's list his dreams. How did it change how you thought about him and how did it change how he thought about you?
Um, you know, leading up to finding that bucket list, uh, part of why I became a copy editor in magazines was because I needed to be adjacent to creative people, but I was often too timid to actually take creative risks myself as a writer. So, it was like, at least I'm sort of here. And I always sort of uh misunderstood my dad's creativity growing up. And I would feel like, oh, I wish he could just stick to one job, you know, I wish he could stick to one idea. And as I began doing this bucket list, obviously with 54 items in six years, I'm switching from idea to idea quite a lot. And I actually became a freelancer then. And now I have like 11 different freelance copywriting jobs. That is not something I ever would have chosen, right?
I would have said that's too crazy, that's too risk-taking. But now that's the kind of person I've become. And I've actually began to understand that I thrive in situations where I'm doing lots of different things because I'm my father's daughter. And it was a thing I had resisted, but it actually makes me more creative. And you'd said you'd really resisted writing about and thinking about when your father died and this changed that, too. Well, yeah, it it is. Um that's one of the things we talked about at at our kickoff on Tuesday because my friend Melanie Brooks was here and she wrote this wonderful book I'd recommend for everybody to go read called Writing Hard Stories. Uh, I actually bought that book for myself when I started. So, and now we're friends. Isn't that crazy? That's pretty cool.
Um, but it's it was about how how to go about writing about something traumatic and and it was just very difficult for me to revisit that. But you know what? The list would help take care of that too sometimes because when I was stuck on that couch after my foot surgery and I couldn't go anywhere, that was when I wrote the chapter about my dad's funeral because I could no longer run away from myself. But and I also want to add though one thing that was very healing about this project is when I was able to go back and write about the more difficult moments and also you know my parents divorced when I was six that was difficult to write about too. Uh I was able to now integrate the sadder moments in in my life into the long longer timeline and there was something about doing that that really healed the trauma that was still left over inside of me.
You started writing about the list as you started working on it. So what made you want to do that? and then and writing about it is one thing. Sharing it is another thing too. So what what was kind of the thought behind both of those and and what led you to actually share it and make it into a book?
I always thought this was activism from the beginning. I always thought this is something where all of my friends I've met who've lost children this way who've had other family members die this way. You know, I'm going to get to be their voice and do this for them. So on the days, even the days where I was like, you know, I don't feel like jumping out of an airplane today, like I would make myself do it. I would say, well, my fear doesn't matter as much as it does to get their message out there into the world. So, that was what it was in the beginning. But then I gradually began to realize that I was feeling better doing this and I was becoming more confident doing this. And I think what it gradually became was this expression of a person who heals from grief, from traumatic grief, and also an expression of a of a woman who learns how to be who she really is. So, I think it started to gradually become a story about authenticity. Um, and that I think has actually uh touched more people um and and is the reason that the book has caught on the way that it has.
Right. We're gonna um talk more about uh my father's list, the community read for one city, one book. Again, uh greensboro library.com is where you can find out more about it. And uh a little bit more with Laura right after this quick break. We're back on Gate City Insider with author Laura Carney. Uh she wrote My Father's List, How Living My Dad's Dream Set Me Free. We were talking our last segment and you talked about your activism and you talked about it really around grief and and trying to give people voices and to name their grief and to live through it. But you also are act before this book before the list you were active uh talk about distracted driving. You want to talk a little bit about that?
Yeah. Um, I mean it has kind of become the new drunk driving in a way except for the fact that we all have iPhones now or some version of an iPhone. And and it's I think at some point I it dawned on me that it wasn't that people didn't know. It was rather it had become convenient for people to just use their phones at all times. So you get into the car and it's just another place that you're sitting in. And I had learned so much about what it actually does to your brain. I mean, even if you make a hands-free phone call, it it affects the your field of vision through the windshield. Um, and I I started doing very much straight activism with that, but at some point I started learning about the power of positivity and how if you actually give people positive reinforcement, that makes a difference, too. And that started to feel more aligned with who my dad was as a person. He wasn't someone who ever shook his finger at anyone or shamed anybody. So, I thought at one point, well, what if I become someone who just really values my life by doing this intentional living and I started writing my own bucket list. And now I actually teach bucket listing at uh Modern Prairie, which is the actress Melissa Gilbert's brand. And I just think if you're a person who is intentional about your life and you're mindful about what you're doing, you're not going to be the type of person who drives distracted anyway.
I love that. I love that connection. And that was my next question about your list. we share some of the things on your list. Sure. Well, one of them was hike the Lape Trail, which my husband and I just did, but that was one of the ones that took longer than I thought because it took us a whole year. We did it over on the weekends. It's how long? Uh 36 miles, but I believe we did 72 because we'd have to park and then go and then come back. Right. Right. Right. Right.
But I became an avid hiker doing that and it became just a fun free activity for my husband and I to do on weekends. Um a lot of mine are actually hiking related. I really would love to hike the Camino in Spain and I'm sort of working my way up to it. Um, Pikes Peak. I went to go try to climb Pikes Peak. It didn't go as well as I hoped. So, I'm going to have to go back. But that's the thing with list items I'm I'm learning is it's not about the outcome as much as it is the journey. So, if you choose something that your heart is yearning to do, it's because you're supposed to get something from that. So, does your list grow? Does it do you keep adding? I need to stop. I have like 290 items at this point and it's probably because it's on my laptop. So, it's so easy to just open it and type a new thing.
But does it feel pretty good to check one off? It has to, right? Like that's part of it. I think I've checked 80 off now 290. So, I'm doing okay. Yeah. Yeah. And the idea is to keep making your list. So, speaking of do you have recommendations? So, how do you start a list? And and what do you encourage people to think of when they're making their list?
Well, what we teach uh in our modern prairie class, I teach it with a woman named Stacy Lauren who who founded the Do the Thing Challenge. And we're actually doing it right now. If you want to join us, Greensboro, we're I shouldn't have looked over there, but but if you want to join us, we're we're doing it on a private Facebook group. So, all you have to do is go to the Greensboro Library page and you can find it. Um, so, uh, what I recommend, take 15 minutes and write down your list of values. Do that first because there's something about writing that values list that gets you centered and you stop becoming someone who's living for what other people expect of you. And then write down just five. Just start with five and take a month and try to do at least one of the five.
Okay. That can be hard especially if you have these big adventure big adventures. But they don't always have to be so big. I mean I think you know that you know they don't have to be good to Paris. They don't have to be skydive. No. My dad had grow a watermelon on there. [laughter] Plant a plant an apple tree. Yeah. Did you grow a watermelon? I did but it was only about this big. It counts. Right. It was green and pink on the inside or a little bit. more about turning me into a gardener, which I never thought I could be living just outside of New York City and to make something with your own hands, right? What do you hear from readers who have started to make their list to live their lists to be more authentic?
Oh gosh, so many things. You know, I think it's it's there's something about how honest the book is and you know, I'm not superwoman doing these list items. There's uh you know when I when I ran the 10 mile straight, it was in the LA Marathon and I started peeing my pants while running down Rodeo Drive. When I jumped out of an airplane, I'd had an apple for breakfast that day and I threw up midair. You know, I I made sure I included these ridiculous things that happened because I wanted to be clear. I'm just a regular person trying to do something extraordinary. And I think there's something about the energy of that that when people read this book, it helps them to recognize, oh, if she can do this, I can do this, too. And that doesn't just apply to bucket list. It also applies to people who have an important story to tell, but they're too afraid to tell it. So, I do actually I have a lot of people now who have asked me to help them publish a memoir or even self-publish. And, you know, my husband and I, he's a book designer. I'm a copy editor. So, hey, if you have a story, like we're happy to help you do it.
You love to tell a story, right? Yeah. Oh, yeah. I mean, I'm a journalist at heart. That's telling other people's stories.
Yeah, I know. Yes. So, what would your dad think of this? What would you think of the book about you f first about you finishing the list then writing a book and then passing it on like you have? Oh gosh, you're gonna make me cry. You know, I think it's the thing that we just said. I think it's that it's not only that I had faith in him, that he was leading me every step of the way doing this because he was, but I've now become a person who emboldens other people and I teach them that they can accomplish anything they set their mind to because if you have a dream, the universe wants to see you get it done. I love it. I love it. Well, you can check out Laura's book from the library, of course, or buy it at one of our many wonderful locallyowned bookstores. Find out more about My Father's List and the One City One Book Program by going to greensboro Library.com. From all of us here at Greensboro Television Network, thank you for spending some time with us. Hope a great day. Greetings. Good afternoon. Welcome to the Barber Park Event Center, home of the Ruth Wicker Tribute to Women. My name is Carla Banks. I am honored to serve as the MC for today's program, and we are so glad to see each and every one of you. At this time, we always like to start programming by acknowledging any of our elected officials who are joining us. If you are an elected official, please stand or wave so we can recognize you.
Thank you. Thank you for taking time out of your busy schedules to be here today. As I look around the room, I am surrounded and certainly in awe to be surrounded by such impressive women. Just take a moment, look around the room, and just take this all in. You are ambitious. You are brilliant. You are confident, unapologetically authentic, and accomplished. And from where I'm standing, your sense of style definitely on point. Give yourselves a round of applause. [applause] Thank you for joining us for the annual Women's Equality Day lunchon hosted by the city of Greensboro and the Commission on the Status of Women. This marks the first year the luncheon is being paired with the biianial induction for the Ruth Wicker tribute to women. Today's honores will join the 46 individuals and four organizations previously etched in the permanent tribute exhibit which has celebrated local women and their achievements and community contributions for the past six years. Prepare to celebrate today's inductees while being inspired by the dynamic motivational speech which will be delivered by none other than Miss Leah McNair, lead pastor of Circle City Church in High Point. Without further ado, we will begin today's program. Please welcome Pam Mcadoo Rogers, chair of the commission on the status of women. She is also a tribute to women inductee from the inaugural class of 2019. Pam will deliver an outline of the work and the purpose of the commission. [applause] Good afternoon.
As chair of the commission on the status of women, it is my honor to welcome you to our women's equality day lunchon featuring the roof wicker tribute women tribute to women induction. This occasion brings together community leaders, advocates, and supporters to celebrate the progress of women, to honor those who have led with vision, and to recommmit ourselves to the work still ahead. Today we reflect on the 19th amendment and the long struggle for women's suffrage which reminds us that equality is never simply given. It is secured through persistence, courage, and sacrifice. Women's Equality Day is not only a celebration of history, but also a call to action, a reminder that the journey toward full equality in pay, opportunity, representation, and safety continues. We are especially proud to induct this year's honores into the Rof Wicker tribute to women. Rof Wicker's life and service embody the values leadership, compassion, and resilience. Through this trooper, we not only honor extraordinary women who make a difference in our community, but we also inspire the next generation to step forward and leave with purpose. The Greensboro Commission on the Status of Women carries that same spirit forward and dedicated to in
identifying the needs of women and girls in our city and working to improve their quality of life. Some of our key initiatives include research and advocacy. The commission published the 2022 women of Greensboro report which surveyed local women and identified key challenges in areas like health care, mental health, money, and safety. Educational programs hosting forums such as our leadership services series, workshops, community engagement, creating platforms for women and girls to have a voice in decisionmaking. including listening sessions and celebration and recognition, sponsoring events like today's lunchon to uplift and honor women who have meaningful contributions to Greensboro's progress. As we celebrate Women's Equality Day and honor the remarkable 2025 ROF Wicker Tribute to Women Inductees, let us carry forward the commission's mission to break down barriers to advocate for equality, equity, and to build a Greensboro where every woman and girl can reach her full potential. Let's get to work.
[applause]
And I believe we will have each of our inductees come forward as I have the pleasure of introducing this year's inductees to the Ruth Wicker tribute for women. We have some gifts for you and um what looks like an official certification. The nominations, for those of you who aren't familiar with the process, were submitted by the public and these women were selected for their outstanding contributions to the greater Greensboro community. I will call you up one at a time. Starina Green. [applause] Darlina is a 2005 graduate of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. She has spent more than 20 years empowering others and giving back to this community. Starina is the founder of Real Life Incorporated, a nonprofit focused on providing financial assistance, educational resources, and referrals to families and single parents. This work strengthens community support systems and promotes self-sufficiency for those in need. Congratulations. [applause] Let's give her another round of applause. [applause] Our next inductee is no stranger to many and we are so excited at the city of Greensboro, Mayor Nancy Vaughn. [applause]
Mayor Vaughn has served as Greensboro Mayor since 2013. She previously wore the hats of Mayor Prom and city council member dating back to 1997. Her leadership extends to board memberships for a host of community organizations. Mayor Bon has been a staunch champion for economic development, resulting in the expansion of diversified job sectors with impressive salaries. Congratulations [applause]
[applause]
Our next inductee, Miss Julia Walker. Julia is a senior partner at Susan Hunt Law where she provides estate planning services. She is recognized for developing and sharing community resources including a YouTube series to increase public understanding of estate planning. Julia is a mentor and active participant with campus Greensboro and Synergy. These organizations are dedicated to the development of young professionals. Congratulations [applause]
Last, but certainly not least, Rachel Wilson. [applause]
[applause]
Rachel is a recording artist, motivational speaker, and life coach. Her achievements and impact center on creativity. Rachel has encouraged hundreds of people through her gospel music and inspirational videos. Girl Talk International is the faith-based nonprofit she established in 2009 to empower and inspire women. Rachel also ministers at the Kingdom Vision Life Center in Greensboro and is the founder of Rachel Wilson Ministries Incorporated. Congratulations [applause] Congratulations. [applause] The induction is obviously an honor, but anytime you're inducted into a group of any kind, there is usually a charge that goes with that. Now, to deliver the charge to the inductees, please welcome Robin Davis, owner of Maxi Bee's Bakery and 2023 Tribute to Women Inductee. [applause] Good afternoon everyone. Sterina Green, Mayor Nancy Vaughn, Julia Walker, Rachel Wilson. Today you join a powerful legacy. You become part of a circle of visionaries, pioneers, and change makers whose stories are enshrined in the tribute to women exhibit at Barber Park. Since
2019, this living history has uplifted educators, advocates, philanthropists, leaders, and barrier breakers, women whose courage and conviction have shaped Greensboro and beyond. With your induction, you do more than receive recognition. We ask you to continue leading with integrity, lifting others as you rise, and making visible the contributions of women in every sphere of life. You carry forward the spirit of Ruth Wicker, whose generosity and vision created this space to ensure women's stories will never again be overlooked or forgotten. Your names are now permanently woven into this fabric of progress. The charge before you is to honor this recognition by remaining bold in action, unwavering in service, and steadfast in opening doors for future generations. May your example remind every woman and girl who visits this exhibit that her voice matters, her presence matters, and her contributions matter. Inductees, we celebrate you. We honor you. And we charge you to keep blazing trails so that the story of women in Greensboro and in our world continues to grow brighter, stronger, and more inclusive for years to come. Thank you. [applause] Addition to recognizing and lifting up our inductees, we have a phenomenal keynote speaker. I had the distinct pleasure of meeting today's keynote in her element just a few short months ago when I visited her church on friends and family day. In addition to being the lead pastor of Circle City Church in High Point, Leah McNair is an entrepreneur, public speaker, and author, she founded Sister Circle
International, which is a nonprofit dedicated to women's empowerment. With more than 27 years in the ministry, she has graduated from the University of North Carolina Greensboro with a bachelor in public health education. There's more.
In December, she will earn her master's of divinity from Virginia Union University. [applause] In addition to that, this year she has been part of the leadership Greensboro class and she is the author of five books, one of which is entitled 21 days of powerful prayers for women and this actually set the foundation for the sister circle international which she established in 2020. It is worth noting that the organization started with nearly 40 women. Today they are more than 10,000 women strong across the entire United States. Please put your hands together and prepare to be moved by the powerful voice and motiv motivational message. Give a warm city of Greensboro welcome to Miss Leah McNair. [applause and cheering]
[applause] Good afternoon everybody. Good afternoon.
I am so thankful to be here today and I believe that we are here for one purpose to celebrate the purpose and the power of the woman. And I know we got a few fellas in the building, but ladies, I would like you to find another lady around you and just look at her real good and say, "Girl, you a bad somebody." You hear me? You are a bad somebody. You a bad somebody, fellas. We'll get to y'all in a minute. We'll get to y'all in a minute. But girl, you are a bad somebody. Do you hear me? You are amazing. You are amazing. And it is an honor to celebrate women today. It is an honor to have our elected officials here today and our bad to the bone mayor, Mayor Nancy Vaughn. We honor you today. It is only right that we celebrate how far we have come. A little over five decades ago, Congress declared this day as Women's Equality Day. Not just to remember history, but so that we could live out loud our callings. This is not just a date on the calendar, y'all, but this is a date with destiny. It's a daily grind. It's a relentless grit of real women with real names, real problems, but real callings that cause them to rise to the occasion even when times get tough. And today we honor four such women who have carried their communities forward with their vision, with their courage, and with their strength. We don't have to know you personally to know that it wasn't easy for you to get where you are today. I mean, I really want to be honest. Let can can I just be down to earth today?
It's hard being a woman. It's hard being a It's a tough job being a woman. We got to look beautiful, stay hydrated, keep the clothes washed and folded, raise our kids, raise grandkids, raise other people's kids that we don't know why they at our house. And we got to raise our husbands, too. We got to raise the husband, too. And it's a difficult thing to be a woman. We got to remain competitive on our jobs. We got to hold down our positions. And some of us have to do our boss's job, too.
It's hard being a woman, keeping up with the latest trends. We have to look beautiful every time we come out of the house. We have to do all of this in 6 in heels without looking like we're walking like a baby lamb. It's hard being a woman.
It's a hard job. Sometime we got to pump our own gas, got to change our own oil, got to check our own tires, and still leave the house looking like Beyonce. It's hard. Find you a sister. Say, "Girl, it's hard. It's hard. Girl, it's hard. It's hard. Can't gain too much weight. Can't lose too much weight. Can't be too happy cuz they'll call us a silly woman. can't be too serious cuz they'll call us the angry woman. It's hard being a woman. I've been doing this 44 years and I understand that it's not easy. And if people only understood the weight of what it takes to be a woman. So here's the golden question this afternoon. Who pushes the pusher? Who encourages the encourager? Who lifts the lifter? The lifter? Who helps the helper? Where do we go when times get hard? Well, I believe the answer is sitting right beside you at your table today. The answer is right beside you because in spaces like these, it is a beautiful thing where we come together to uplift the uplifterss simply by saying thank you. And today that's what we want to do to our honores. We want to say thank you. And I've been preaching a long time. I've been preaching since the age of 16. I'm 44 now. So, I've been doing this a long time and I know what it's like to give your life to a work. I know what it's like to give everything to what you do and who you do it for. And when I think of these women, I can't help as a preacher but to think about Mary, the mother of our savior Jesus. I can't help to think about her because Luke chapter 1 uh verse 28 talks about a conversation that Mary had when an ang with with an angel when the world was hopeless. The world was lifeless. The world was broken, defeated, and in
distress. And here comes Mary. Mary, she was a marginalized woman. She was a woman really, if we be honest, from the ghetto. Nobody knew about Mary. She was overlooked. She was inexperienced. She was undervalued. This was Joe's boo from the streets, y'all. And God chose Mary. He chose her with no notoriety, no fame, no name, no wealth. She was just a average girl with extensions in her hair, bamboo earrings.
Okay, I'm in the right I'm in the right Okay, I'm in the right room. I'm in the right room. But God still chose Mary. And he had a conversation with her in verse 28 of chapter 1 in Luke. And he said, "Uh, rejoice, highly favored one. The Lord is with you. Blessed are you among women." He chose Mary. That's a bad woman. And just when she said to him, "How can this be? How can I have a baby? Even at my young age, in my inexperienced state, how can this be?" The angel drops this line on her. And I want to give it especially to our inductees today and to everyone in the room. Verse 37. Check it when you get home. It says, "For with God nothing shall be impossible." Oh my God, that's an amazing line. It's a short statement, but it's packed with power and hope. It's packed with a resilience that lets you know that no matter what you're going through, nothing is impossible. Isn't it amazing that Mary carried the solution to the entire [clears throat] world's troubles? I believe that you are Mary, my sisters, you are Mary. Could it be that you are the solution to the mental health crisis? Could it be that you are the solution to the educational inequity in our world? Could it be that you are the solution to poverty? I want you to say it and say it with your chest. Say, "I am the solution."
I am the solution. I'm the solution to voter suppression, to the digital divide, to the food deserts in my community. I am the solution. And I looked at these amazing women that are before us today, and I couldn't help but when I thought about Mary, I had to think about Julia cuz Julia, yes, ma'am, you are not just playing an estate, sister. You preserve legacies. You protect people's peace of mind. And we thank you today. Would y'all say thank you to Julia real quick? Yeah. Then I had to think about our mayor this afternoon, my fellow Jersey sister. 12 years as our fearless mayor. But your work is so impressive. But the thing that impresses me most about you is not just your work, but how you pause for a moment to take care and raise your beautiful daughter, Katherine. That's where the real impressive work goes. Would y'all tell our mayor thank you for the work? That's what real womanhood is all about. It's all about knowing what matters in the moment. And Dr. Rachel, my fellow Spartan sister who uh ministered to women when they are in a dark place, you are a trailblazer, girl. You are of the 4.4% of black women who have earned doctoral degrees. You a bad girl.
You're a bad girl. You're a bad girl. And when women found themselves with dreams that were drained because of life. I believe that your vision, your songs, your counsel, your coaching, your ministry, your life. Pick them up from a dark place and remind them that they can do anything. You are a bad girl and we thank you. Would you tell Dr. Rachel's thank you.
Then I thought about Star Le. Oh my god, you are amazing. And the message in your book when you told women that they will smile again. When I read that, it came from a deep place within you. And I can only imagine the valleys, the hills, and the rough terrain that you had to push your way through to tell somebody else you can smile again. I can only imagine uh how you've had to live your w life in order to tell us that we need to vibrate a little bit higher. I can only imagine, my sister, what it took for you to be that example, to be what you needed growing up. I am so thankful that I can look at you and see how to raise my twin sons, Judah and Jordan, while you're raising your son, Pierre. But what I love most about you is that you are the shining reflection of your beautiful 96year-old grandmother Helen. Girl, you a bad somebody. Would y'all tell her thank you? Thank you. Thank you. [cheering and applause] Y'all are some amazing women. And I thought about it. I thought about all the work that you have put in to do what you do. And I'm I'm working on my divinity degree and I you know I was talking to uh one of my uh professors and she she is a scholar professor. Her name is Dr. Patricia Gould Champ and she shared something with me that I want to share with you as I close. She was talking about all of the things that she's done in her life. This woman is in her 80s, but in her lifetime, she made history in the area of theology. She founded churches. She led social justice movements. She blazed trails as she went along. She wouldn't let anything stop her. She wouldn't let the fact that she was a woman stop her from doing what was in her heart to do. And in a moment
where I had time to just sit still and talk to her for a minute, I had one question for her. And that question was simple. How did you do it? How did you affect so much change in the world today? And her answer is simple and it's the answer I'm going to give to you before I take my seat. She said, "Leah, here's how I did it. Before I tried to change the world, I changed my zip code." And can I tell you this morning, this afternoon, that before you try to change the world, all you got to do is change your zip code. Would you take a minute? I'm not going to come to your house, but just call out your zip code today. Call out your zip code. Yeah. Call out your zip code. Yeah. Yeah. That's the space you are called to change first. And I thank you, sisters, for being bold enough to change your zip code. I thank you for staying up late to change your zip code. I thank you for crying tears on a pillow that nobody saw to change your zip code. I thank you for loving people who put daggers in your back but smiled in your face to change a zip code. I thank you. I thank you for the work you've done to change the zip code. And I do believe that because you were bold enough to change your zip code that you are about to change the world. If you believe it, would you clap your hands and thank God for the opportunity to change the world. The City of Greensboro Water Resources Department would like to thank you, our residents, for your continued partnership and support in bringing clean, safe water to everyone in our city. Here's how we're working to make your dollar be of the most benefit to you and everyone in Greensboro. For
every dollar you spend on water services, a percentage is used to support the massive operation that is water resources. This includes water supply, storm water, water reclamation, construction and repair, and payment of loans. For every dollar we receive, 30% goes to water supply operations. This invaluable system is made up of water treatment plants at Lake Brandt and Lake Townsen that treat lake water to make it safe for all the things we need it for. Certified water treatment operators, maintenance specialists, and lab specialists accomplish this [music] by working around the clock, performing more than 490,72 water quality tests annually to ensure that the water delivered to you continues to be of the highest quality. The system also includes 1500 or more miles of new and existing water pipe and pumping stations to deliver the treated [music] water to every home, school, and business in our city. These pipes and stations need to be maintained to avoid interruption [music] in service, protect the quality of the water, and to meet any and all Environmental Protection Agency regulations to water quality. With your continued support, [music] we are also rehabilitating or replacing pipes that have been in operation for many years. 29% of every dollar is used for water reclamation. These are the systems that collect, transport, and treat all the used water before releasing it back into the environment. The city of Greensboro's [music] TZ Osborne Water Reclamation Facility and Laboratory is committed to producing quality data. The results recorded from this [music] laboratory help ensure environmental protection and provide cost recovery for the entire wastewater treatment system. The laboratory maintains [music] state of North Carolina certification through compliance with all certification requirements. This laboratory performs various [music] environmental analysis on wastewater samples throughout the treatment process, creek samples, and [music] industrial discharges from
multiple users of the city of Greensboro's wastewater system. 6% goes to storm water systems. Greensboro's storm water management program is committed to the preservation and enhancement of residents quality of life through [music] water quality improvement, drainage, infrastructure management, maintenance and repair, flood hazard minimization, and public awareness. The existing systems are maintained to ensure effective storm water management and engineering of new [music] systems provide for more efficient and effective processes as our city continues to grow. 18% of each dollar is dedicated to repayment of loans. This is used for the equipment [music] systems and treatment facilities used in water supply and water reclamation. These systems require significant investments for upgrade and repair and sometimes often require large capital investments to complete. 17% of your investment goes to construction and repair. To keep all of these systems running consistently and safely, repairs are always necessary. [music] Additionally, as our city grows, these systems must expand, which means new construction is [music] also needed, not only to increase the size of the system, but to upgrade their operations, making them more efficient, safe, and effective. New construction will also be needed to take advantage of new technology that will be paramount to improving our system. Managing our water resources is such a vital and important need for everyone in our city. While we at the water resources dedicate our work to our [music] water system, we're also customers and users of this vital resource. We know how important your contribution is to this partnership. And with your continued support, we are [music] working hard to maintain, improve, and expand our water resources system in ways [music] that will provide safe and reliable services to you and your families, to our neighboring cities, and to our environment for generations to come.
I am the granddaughter of a veteran as well as the daughter of a veteran. So the service that was provided to the men and women of the United States of America and what they have done means a lot to me as well as to everyone else. I joined JOTC because some of my friends had done it and I was really interested in what it was a part and then I continued to stay through the program because of the community and the family that it fostered. Giving back to our veterans at any given time during the year is so important just for everything they've done for our country, for our communities at any given time, for all the things. Too late. Try it on a flight is a 501c3 and we send veterans to Washington DC for free to visit all of their memorials and to make sure that they are recognized for their service that they have given to our country. Well, basically when you're there, you realize one thing that you got to take care of one another. Everybody bleeds red, you know what I mean? And even though there were in differences uh
during that time, but you learned uh to be brothers in war. Um, I'm here at the Veterans Day parade. It's my first time volunteering here and I'm loving all the camaraderie that I'm seeing between everyone. I've met a lot of uh military personnel. I actually plan a commission out of North Carolina State University and the Army ROC program. So, seeing all the lovely faces out here, getting some background information on what it takes to be an officer in the United States Army, it really means a lot to me. I really wanted to give back to those who have served before me. Y'all out here every year in force. Why is it so important for you to be out here?
Important for us to be out here because we want the community to understand we support our veterans. Without our veterans, we wouldn't even exist. We have we need them. They've done things great things in the past, present, [music] and in the future. It is uh very important for the public to stay connected with our veterans because especially this time of year there are a lot of veterans that don't have family or friends in the area. So we need to do the American Legion likes to do buddy checks and we ask the we ask the community to do the same thing. If you know a veteran, check on them. Especially our older veterans and our even our younger veterans. If they're a veteran, check on them because holidays can be a very tough time for a veteran.
I just putting it together, getting in touch with all the veterans group, seeing some of our older veterans come out and be recognized, especially our Vietnam veterans. They didn't get this welcome when they came back from Vietnam. And that's when I served during that time. with flavors like cumin, sweet potato, habiscus. These are not your typical frozen dessert flavors you'll find in every supermarket, but you will find them here. The idea was born thousands of miles away, but the product is made right here in Greensboro. All right, Chef Net, where did the idea for Elica [music] Treats come from?
It's from this desire to tell my story and build a community and create a community around me. Culinary really is not really my strength. I think that's more because of my background. Um, having a mom who's an amazing cook, so I grew up having everything that's really flavorful and also my dad was a foodie even before foodie was a thing. Predominately my flavors are Middle Eastern and Indian inspired flavors. I do have a very diverse multicultural taste palette myself that I have some incorporation of few flavors that's representation of communities that I connect with or I belong to as in like right now I'm a North Carolinian so I have [music] Carolina peach sunker which is a peachbased non-dairy flavor. It has [music] pancake bits in it and it's me recreating sker from Siri County. The flavors are all cardamom infused. That's what elica means. Elica is cardamom in my mother tongue uh which is malalam which is a language spoken in Kerala. That's the my my parents home state in India. This is where I store all our ingredients. Um because we actually try to source fresh produce from local sources itself, local suppliers. So hence our farmers. So I purchase them when they're in season and you know stock them as much as possible. We have to be really creative with how much we package into a complete finished packaging and how much we actually store it uh for later cuz there's also as a wholesale business you have to be prepared for you know recurring orders and uh the only way to do that is to have something in stock rather than producing when you get the order which is really highly expensive when you are a consumer package good business. I mean
we don't have a designated kitchen space where we have access to it anytime and every time as we please. I mean that this is very easy access but still you know we're renting it by the hour. So we you have to factor those things in. These are our 3 oz cups. This is sulmani sorbet which is black tea with cardamom and lemon. It's literally a drink. It's a piping hot tea that we serve typically after a huge meal. And it's very prominent in the Muslim community itself, regardless which part of the Muslim community around the world. It's a Muslim culture to have black tea after a hu big feast to serve that to your guest. And so, you know, I just I executed that tea as a sorbet. So, this freezer started my journey here really. And this is where we store now all of our 3 oz cups and some of our gift packaging. I did uh launch Greensboro. That's an accelerator program by the chamber here in Greensboro. And at the end of the program uh they granted me this freezer upon my request, you know, to assist me with my uh distribution. I do love actually the fact that this business really challenges me in so many different ways that it's always continuous problem solving which I've always been good at and that's something that actually keeps me interested. So, Kulfi is our bestseller. That's considered traditional Indian ice cream. That's actually milk based with saffron, cardamom, and pistachio. And Kulfi is literally the emperor of frozen desserts, hands down. Like, so that's the only flavor that I did not create. But all the other flavors that we have are all my own creations. It's worth experiencing because traditional method of making ice cream is not really how I really execute my flavor. So when I say I have plantain ice cream, I mean
plantain is literally the base of the ice flavor. It's not me just adding chunks of plantain or flavor of plantain. You can find the sweet treats at local restaurants and some specialty stores. also online at icatreats.com. [music] Good morning. My name is Captain Tony Tuntol. I'm the commanding officer of the Greensboro Police Department Training Division. On behalf of the Greensboro Police Department, I would like to welcome you to the graduation of the our 118th Police Academy. I ask that each of you rise as the recruits from the 118th Police Academy enter the auditorium led by the Greensboro Police Department Training Division staff.
Please remain standing as the Greensboro Police Department's honor guard presents our national colors and Mrs. Ashley Lowe honors us by singing the national anthem. It is the protocol of the Greensboro Police Department that members of our agency place their right hand over their heart at the order present arms. And we would be honored if you would join us in doing the same. Oh, say can you See by the dawn early [singing] so proud we held at the twilight last
gleaming whose broad stripes and bright stars through the sparts we watched were So gallently stream and the rockets [music] bombs bursting in air gave proof through the [singing] night that our flag was still there. Oh, say [singing] does that star spangled ber yet wave or [singing] the land of the free and the home of the brave.
Thank you, Mrs. Low. I will ask that police chaplain Minister Cedric Parker come and offer the invocation. Let us bow our heads in prayer. Gracious and almighty God, we pause in gratitude on this special day. A day of honor, achievement, and new beginnings. We thank you for each graduate represented here for their courage, their perseverance, and their commitment to serve our community with integrity and compassion. Lord, we ask for your covering and protection over them as they step into their calling to uphold justice and preserve peace. May their hearts remain steadfast, their judgment sound, and their actions guided by wisdom and fairness. Bless their families and loved ones who have supported them along this journey. Those who have prayed, waited, and sacrificed. May they feel your pride and presence in this moment as well. God, we ask that you continue to strengthen our community with unity, understanding, and respect. Let this ceremony remind us that the true that true service is rooted in love and humility. We give you thanks for the Greensboro Police Department and for all those who serve. Grant them safety in every shift, peace in every challenge, and joy in the fulfillment of their duty. We offer this prayer in your holy name. Amen.
Please be seated. Now, I would like to call forward Greensboro Police Chief John Thompson to offer his remarks and welcome our special guest. Good afternoon. All right. I'd like to thank everyone for taking the time to come out this afternoon uh in support of the Greensboro Police Department and the 118th Police Academy class. This is always a challenge when we have to come up here because I can see nothing but light right now in my eyes. And so I apologize if it looks like I'm squinning. I'm I'm used to looking up and actually seeing people's faces and I can't see anybody out there. So, um, I want to take a moment to thank some of our elected officials that have joined us today to show their support for the academy class in the Greensboro Police Department. We have with us Mayor Nancy Vaughn. We have Mayor Prom, Mary Kay Abuader. We have Councilwoman Thurm and Councilwoman Pender. I can't see if there's anybody else that came in. All right, that looks like it. So, um, also like to take the opportunity to thank, uh, city leadership that's here in attendance today, uh, and any other elected officials that are joining us. I'd like to take the opportunity to thank our law enforcement partners, other organizations that are here to support the Greensboro Police Department. Thank you to those from the community that have taken the time to come here and show support for our organization.
And finally, I'd like to express my deepest gratitude to every single police officer and member of our professional staff, all of whom have chosen to dedicate their time and talent to serving this great city. I'd like to take a moment to to really speak to two groups here today. um first the family friends here to support the members of the 118th Police Academy and then second the speak directly to the members of the 118th police academy. So to the family and friends and supporters I ask for you to thank and remember three things patience support and pride. patience due to the long nights, the missed holidays, the tough calls, and all the difficulties and challenges that come with this noble profession. Support for the soontobe officers here on the stage as they come into one of the most trying professions where support can be lacking, recognition for the amazing work can oftentimes be minimalized. Lastly, pride. Not just pride for the members on this stage, but be proud of your role in their success and recognize that their achievements and successes are your achievements and successes. To the graduating class, you are becoming a member of a premier law enforcement agency during a very exciting time. We are one of the highest paid, best incentivized of any departments in the state. You have received some of the best training arguably in the country in the police academy.
We are a department of innovation using new technology and specialized units to fight crime. And who knows, you might even become a viral social media meme if you're lucky. Our community truly supports us every day in our efforts to make Greensboro safe for all people. With this, I ask you to remember four tenets that have influenced my career and hopefully they will guide you as you move forward in your career. Compassion, service, hard work, and humility. All things we do, we do with compassion. As the police motto directs, we protect and serve. Always remember to serve. Hard work is a principle I have tried to live by every day. There's a quote from Gandhi, one of my favorite quotes. Uh and he says that satisfaction lies in the effort, not in the attainment. Full effort is full victory. Lastly, do your work with humility. I'm sure most of you, like the officers who came before you, chose the profession for service to others and not recognition. But please always remember to keep a humble heart. I am fortunate that I have hired a social media manager that keeps me humble daily. but find whatever in your life you need to make sure you keep yourselves humble every day that you come in to do your job. In closing, thank you family and friends for your support. For the recruits here on the stage and members of the class 118, thank you for choosing a career of service.
[applause] A police officer will face numerous challenges throughout their career and no one can do this job alone. To be successful, it is essential to have the support of family and friends. It is through your support that these 25 recruits have made it through this academy and we thank you. Now, please allow me to take a moment to introduce our training division staff. These individuals have been dedicated and they have committed themselves to our success as an organization through the development, education, and training of his personnel. This staff works tirelessly on numerous projects and programs while providing unwavering support to these recruits as well as our sworn officers and our professional staff. They are truly a team of professionals with whom I am proud to be associated. Lieutenant Candy Vaughn, Sergeant Chris Wingfield, Corporal Chandler Miller, Range Master Officer Dan Harris, lead CCT instructor and taser instructor Tim Jordan, lead driving instructor Nick Ingram, and Michelle Heard, who is actually an employee of the fire department, but she helps us through every day and through this program and many other things that we have to do. Please join me in giving these individuals a welldeserved round of applause. [applause]
I would also like to thank members of the Greensboro Fire Department who are in attendance today. We share the training facilities with them and we are grateful for their support and camaraderie. Historically, the Greensboro Police Department presents several very special awards during the academy graduation. Today, we honor members of the 118th Police Academy who have distinguished themselves. I call upon our police academy school director, Sergeant Chris Wingfield, and the training division staff to present the special awards. All right. The first award we're going to give out is for the highest academic achievement award. Right. During the course of the academy, the students are given 40 topical areas uh of instruction ranging from constitutional law to driver's training to mental health awareness. Each student must pass each of these blocks of instruction while also preparing for the comprehensive state exam at the end of the course. The amount of studying required is demanding both physically and mentally as more materials presented over the course of delivery. During each class, we have one student who separates themselves academically by achieving the highest overall average during the academy. For the 118th academy, the student finished with an overall average of uh 92.99%. The training staff is pleased to present the award of the highest academic average to recruit Pickicket. [applause]
The next award is the Captain Dan Moore Memorial Physical Fitness Award. [snorts]
Each student is required to pass a physical fitness standard set uh by the state of North Carolina. For the 118th Academy, I'm proud to present the Captain Dan Moore Memorial Physical Award or Physical Fitness Award to recruit UK. [applause] The firearms award. The firearms award is presented by our firearms instructor or lead firearms instructor to the student who displayed excellent marksmanship skills in displaying uh the um marksmanship skills. In addition to the award, each student is eligible for an individual award for scoring a 98% or higher during the qualification course. The recruits that uh reached this level of proficiency are recruits Cohen. If I just get you to stand. Uh, recruit Cohen, Eberly, Long, and Makoszi. [applause] All right. Over the two weeks of firearms, more than two weeks at this point, the students are taken from basic firearms terminology to a state required combat course where accuracy and weapon controls tested under stress. Students range from uh never firing a weapon to being well-versed with a firearm. Okay. One student was chosen from this class based on their firearms qualification scores and their overall firearms course performance. The recipient of the firearms award for the 118th Police Academy is Recruit Riel. [applause]
You have your seat. The SCAT award, which is an acronym for subject control arrest techniques, uh is the course that incorporates what you may know as defensive tactics. Each students given instructions in handcuffing techniques, subject control, and officer safety. The the department's SCAT instructor uh chose a student who not only demonstrates proficiency in the classroom and matroom but also perform uh personifies those immeasurable components of heart and drive. for the 118th Police Academy. The uh recipient of this SCAT award is present uh presented, excuse me, to recruit Erkson. [applause] The next award is the instructor award. The delivery of the police academy is an opportunity for each of our new employees to be given a block of instruction while also becoming part of the city of Greensboro and their new family at the police department. The 118th Police Academy consisted of roughly 1,000 hours of instruction that's provided by uh our assigned training staff and many instructors throughout the department. Each instructor brings something to the class that they are assigned and that they are an integral part of one of the best instructionalmies in the southeast. [snorts] Even with all that, we have instructors to step forward and demonstrate a commitment to both the department and the academy. For the 118th Academy, one instructor was chosen above the other instructors for their level of dedication uh in providing excellent instructions, quality work, and meeting the rigorous demands placed by both the state of North Carolina and the training staff. This instructor received excellent reviews by the
students and was the lead instructor on a block that many students identified as one of the best that they set through. Uh, it's my pleasure to present the instructor award for the 118th Police Academy to Detective Gregory Lehman. [applause] [applause] On June 27th, 1978, a brave hero of the Greensboro Police Department, Officer Michael Gray Winslow, lost his life in a vehicle crash while responding to assist another officer who had called for assistance. Michael was a member of the 50th PBIC, which was the police basic introductory course that we now call the police academy. And since Michael had not yet turned 21 at the time of his class graduation, he had to wait until February 16th, 1978 to be sworn as a Greensboro Police Officer. As a continuing memorial to Michael and his brief but impactful career, his family supports the Michael J. Winslow Memorial Award, which distinguishes overall excellence and professionalism exhibited by one member of each graduating class. The Michael G. Winslow Memorial Award is the highest honor an academy graduate can receive. This award is presented on the basis of the
selection by his class members themselves and serves as a lasting testimony that it that its recipients was found to be possess those personal values, attitudes and abilities which are characteristic of a true police professional. Presenting the Michael G. Winslow award is Sergeant Eric Early. Sergeant Eric Early received this award as a member of the 81st Police Academy. It is my honor and privilege to announce the recipient of the 118th Police Academy, Michael G. Winslow Award winner, Recruit Marlo Wood. [cheering and applause] [applause] Now, as now, as is customary, at our graduation, a student is selected to represent them. At this time, I call forward recruit peppers to deliver the class address. Good morning to Chief Thompson, command staff, honored guests, community members, friends, family, and of course, my fellow members of the 118th. Thank you all for joining us today to share this moment that so many have worked so hard to make happen. And to my fellow classmates, thank you for allowing me this this opportunity to speak. It is a great honor to stand before you. and I only hope that I can do justice to the dedication that you have shown to become a graduate of the Greensboro Police Academy. Today marks the end of our time as cadetses and the beginning of our careers as Greensboro Police Officers. To my classmates, congratulations.
You dedicated yourself over the last half a year, sacrificing your time, comfort, and egos for just the chance to see yourself walk across the stage. We have earned this opportunity and I look forward to celebrating our achievements with you all over the next week. However, I would also be remiss if I suggested we made it here alone. To the friends, family, loved ones, and children of all the 118th, know that everyone in this class is aware of the sacrifices that you have made. You were patient with us through hundreds of hours we spent at school or studying the night away. You listened to our concerns, gripes, and fears without complaint. You treated blisters, bruises, busted lips, and irritated, bright red eyes with a smile. You were patient and there for us, and we could not have asked for any more. Now, we promise that we will be there for you in ways we haven't been able to in the last 6 months. I would also like to thank the training staff. Many of us, myself included, had no prior law enforcement experience or military background. A paramilitary style training environment was a brand new experience. something that Corporal Miller and Sergeant Wingfield were probably painfully aware of the first they time they watched us attempt to march. And half of us ran into each other while we were all supposed to turn right. Despite these challenges, the training staff here at GPD molded us into the best possible officers we could be. And all of the graduates of the 118th saw the time the training staff dedicated to ensuring we were prepared for a career we chose. You missed just as many weekends, holidays, and birthdays as we did. You did the same physical training that you asked of us. And one of you lost a knee attempting to teach a rather large cadet how to escape from Mount. Sorry, Officer Jordan. I promise I won't put anyone else on light duty while I work here. To all those that took the time to train us, allow me to extend a hearty thank you. From a first day at the academy, a single question was posed to every
member of the 118th on a near daily basis. Almost every instructor of each block asked us this question to begin class. Sometimes it was a direct interrogation and other time it was hidden behind subtle warning. The majority of the time, however, it went unspoken. The only hint that it was there, the bright gleam of a bell we could ring to quit the academy as we sweat through PT or face the wrong end of a squealing taser tin. The question was a simple one. Why become a police officer? Why suffer through PT? Why get tazed, gassed, and pepper-sprayed? Why fight a 6'6, 280lb ex-col player after doing enough burpees and squats to make the nearest trash can your closest friend? Why choose this career? A career that might ask you to risk your life for strangers that you'll never know. When I was asked this question, I always gave some half-correct answer. It was a dream of mine. I wanted to help people. I wanted to drive really fast with blue lights and sirens. But deep down, I always knew these answers weren't quite right. There was something else just underneath the surface. Something I couldn't bring myself to say or couldn't find the words to explain how I felt. I saw the same conundrum on my classmates's face. A brief bit of confusion. They felt the right answer, same as me. But we could never put it in the right words. Yet one day, I found my nose in a book. This particular book being the Bible. I don't know why I was reading it that day. Maybe I was bored. Or maybe I was looking for inspiration. Maybe I was simply praying I could finish my third five mile run after experiencing the absolute joy of Corporal Miller's I want to see someone ring the bell and set a record pace. Whatever the reason, I had thumbmed to the book of Isaiah for a particular passage caught my eye. Isaiah 68 states, "Also, I heard the voice of the Lord saying, "Whom shall I send and whom will go for us?" Then I said, "Here am I. Send me." Here I felt something
something familiar. A man is asked who the Lord should send to serve his cause. A service that might make him suffer, that might make others hate him, that might bring risk to life and limb. And yet Isaiah responded to the Lord without even knowing the full extent of what God asked of him. He did so unreservedly, willingly, righteously, seeking to serve for no other reason but for the pure holiness of God as he had witnessed in all his glory. and because he was the one there in that moment who could answer God's call. Reading this passage made me realize a simple truth. The question, why become a police officer and whom shall I send are one and the same? The question is nothing more than a call to serve. Those who answer this call do so willingly, unreservedly, and righteously. And I believe that the reason every graduate of the 118th answered such a call is simple. Because if not us, then who? We, the 118th, are here and we want to serve our community, our city, our state, our nation, and to protect the streets we call home. Today, we will walk out of the ceremony with an everlasting symbol of the call to serve pinned on our uniform. The badge of a Greensboro Police officer represents all we have worked to achieve over the last 28 weeks, and we should wear it with pride. Yet, the same badge also represents something beyond our past and present accomplishments. more than even the oath that we will swear today. When you look at yourself in the mirror and see that shiny brass shield, know that you have committed yourself to a lifetime of service, not just a moment. Such a life demands nothing short of excellence. And excellence requires the fortitude to always answer me when we are faced with the question, who shall we send? Up to this moment, the 118th has answered that question with unwavering dedication. A dedication that developed into a brotherhood we all now share. Look no further for proof of this brotherhood than the long nights spent studying new material produced by the state. We were told to just read the
book and read we did. Hundreds, thousands of hours spent with our noses glued to computer screens and typing out passages. And while some of us may have read more than others, as evidenced by the sudden scarcity of Corporal Miller's push pins to track our retakes, more than one student took the time to become an impromptu tutor when their fellow cadets needed assistance to pass an upcoming exam. One cadet in particular took this challenge of mentoring us to heart, staying after class to lead study sessions, typing out hundreds of pages worth of notes, and encouraging us to bury ourselves in our studies. And while he might not be on the stage with us right now due to an unfortunate injury, I know that not a single member of the 118th would disagree with me that he still stands at the heart of our brotherhood. I am confident that without you, there would not be 25 people standing on this stage. Tate, I know you're watching right now, and I want you to know that we will all be waiting for you in the 120th, brother. Further approval of our brotherhood of service was forged in the many hours spent with Corporal Miller improving our physical training. There, cadets did not ask, but demanded for the man beside him to push through all adversity. For some of us, that PT was very, very adverse. And while we may not all have escaped from misplaced bottle caps, surprise doctor's appointments that just so happened to overlap with scheduled runs, and 103°ree fevers that turned a brief jog into a snot-filled nightmare, everyone on the stage today pushed through an intense program to become the best we could be. Many recruits put in additional hours. Cadets Marlo Wood, Spencer Wood, and Tyler Urgson have dedicated extra time out of their days, often arriving at the training center at 4:00 a.m. or staying several hours after dismissal to work with those of us who knew we needed the extra conditioning and work we did. Leaving our egos and pride at the door, we accepted the stark truth that we would never be fit enough for this job. When lives are on the line, one simply cannot risk that they may be physically incapable of performing in the line on duty. And finally, I saw evidence of our brotherhood of service in the fight we
showed when the only possible outcome of training was personal suffering. When our faces were painted bright orange with a can of pepper spray, no couets, no cadet surrendered to the searing heat in our eyes or the scorching heat on our skin. We fought through, staying in the fight, our focus on the singular mission to serve. We faced the taser with a smile until the probes hit at least when there was more than a few screams. Still, we all hoped hopped back up. Some of us hopping mad, others laughing and sore. We gassed ourselves to the point of sickness and then responded to practicals where we fought men larger and more experienced than us. And some on the stage before you faced a great loss in their personal lives during this academy, facing situations that would have made a lesser man quit, these recruits showed the heart to answer the call no matter the circumstance. serving as both a pillar of support for their heartbroken families and still showing up to class every day, willing themselves through what may have been the hardest time in their lives. To those of you on this stage that showed such heart, know that the rest of the 118th saw your sacrifice and that we will always have your back. To conclude, allow me to leave you with this. A wise man in the Greensboro Police Department once said, "Don't quit. Never quit.
[music] [music] [music] [music] [music] I would like a motion to go back into open session, Please. So moved. Do I hear a second? Moved by Mr. Holston, seconded by Mr. Marshall. All in favor, please say I.
I. Now I would like a motion to adjourn open session. So moved. And do I hear a second? Second. Second by Miss Crawford. F motion by Mr. Holston. All in favor, please say I. I. Thank you.
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Heat. Heat. N.
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Heat. Heat.
This transcript was automatically generated from the official public meeting video and is presented unedited. It reflects remarks made on the public record by elected officials, staff, and public commenters. Transcript accuracy may vary; view the original recording for reference.