Analysis
Some politicians talk about dreams. Mayor Frank Jackson talks about haunting visions.
Last week, as Cleveland鈥檚 longest-serving mayor shut the door on a fifth campaign, he described the nightmares that will trail him into retirement.
Crack cocaine鈥檚 toll on families in the 1980s and 1990s. The opioid epidemic. Children who endure trauma only to be judged by the world for trying to survive.
鈥淕oing to the funerals of children murdered in the drug game and the street culture that has no mercy,鈥 the 74-year-old mayor continued. 鈥淵oung men coming home from prison with no hope of a job, decent housing or opportunity to raise a family. And yes even those, those who do right in spite of it all, but receive little or no help as they struggle, they struggle to overcome the challenges and the obstacles that have been put in their path.鈥
Jackson has channeled these visions before. When he won a third term almost eight years ago, he took the stage at Sterle鈥檚 Slovenian Country House and .
It was a story about the late Hough Councilwoman Fannie Lewis, who, after a hospital stay, shared with Jackson an apparition of her own.
鈥淪he told me that her vision was there was this huge slab of concrete, a huge slab of concrete of enormous weight,鈥 Jackson said in 2013. 鈥淗uge slab of concrete of enormous weight. And that she heard crying and moaning and wailing from beneath that slab of concrete.
鈥淎nd I asked, I said, 鈥楳s. Lewis, what did it mean?鈥欌 he continued. 鈥淪he said she asked the same question. 鈥榃hat does this mean?鈥 And it came to her that the crying and the moaning and the wailing from beneath this huge slab of concrete of enormous weight was that of the people. And that they were crying and moaning and wailing because they had to bear the burden of this huge slab of concrete of enormous weight.
鈥淎nd she said to me that it鈥檚 our duty and responsibility as public officials never to add to that burden, but to relieve that burden in what we do. And if we add a feather, then we have added to the burden of the people.鈥
Cleveland has heard its share of moaning and wailing over the last decade and a half. The foreclosure crisis that left decaying homes in its wake. The 2012 police chase that ended with 137 bullets and two unarmed civilians dead. The killing of Tamir Rice. Toxic lead paint that has silently poisoned children.
At a news conference last week, I asked Jackson if he thought he鈥檇 moved that slab of concrete in his 16 years leading City Hall. First, he defined the slab: a political and economic system built on inequality and racism that, if not reformed, will generate social unrest.
鈥淲hat haunts me is that I know that no matter what I鈥檝e done, or what has been accomplished, that it鈥檚 not been enough,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o that haunts me. And so I sorely hope, surely hope, that I did not add to that burden, but relieved it, in some little way.鈥
The next mayor will have to decide whether to continue Jackson鈥檚 more ambitious efforts to relieve that burden. Will a neighborhood development plan deliver good-quality housing within reach of Cleveland鈥檚 working families? Can recreation centers become places where kids find help coping with trauma? Those questions will be left to Jackson鈥檚 successor, whomever the voters choose. The winner in November will also have a chance to refute the more vexing aspects of the Jackson era: a and a loyalty to flawed lieutenants.
Arguably, Fannie Lewis鈥 and Frank Jackson鈥檚 haunting visions leave any mayor with a Sisyphean task. But they also give voters a key question for challenging the people who want to run City Hall:
How will you move the huge slab of concrete of enormous weight?