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Commissioner Mariah Parker Announces Resignation; Melissa Link May Run

Commissioner Mariah Parker leads an anti-police protest in June 2020. Credit: Jessica Luton/file

Athens-Clarke County Commissioner Mariah Parker announced their resignation Monday effective Aug. 31, saying they have become disenchanted with their work on the commission and want to return to street-level activism.

Parker’s resignation sets up a special election to fill the last two years of their term. It will be held on Nov. 8, coinciding with the general election, according to the ACC government.

Officials said Monday that voters of the new District 2 that will take effect Jan. 1, not the current District 2, would elect a new commissioner. However, they backtracked on Tuesday, saying that “the eligibility of voters and candidates who can qualify for the vacant Commission seat has not been fully determined.”

Commissioner Melissa Link told Flagpole that she intends to run for the seat if eligible, although she shares many of Parker’s frustrations. Republican legislators drew Link out of her district during post-Census redistricting earlier this year, preventing her from running this year, and political newcomer Tiffany Taylor won the new version of Link’s District 3 in May. Parker’s redrawn District 2 strongly resembles the former District 3 and includes Link’s residence in the Buena Vista neighborhood.

“This district, this community, deserves someone who knows what they’re doing, who can hit the ground running,” said Link, who has served two terms on the commission.

Link added that she has spoken with Parker and believes Parker will be well positioned to influence the local government as an organizer, filling a void left by the progressive organization Athens for Everyone.

Parker (who uses gender-neutral pronouns) told Flagpole that they recently started working for Raise Up the South, an affiliate of the national Fight for 15 movement to raise the minimum wage that’s organizing restaurant workers in Georgia. But they also plan to use their knowledge of the inner workings of government to help train activists locally in Athens.

Parker was first elected in a 2018 special election triggered when Commissioner Harry Sims resigned to run for mayor, winning by just 13 votes, then gaining national attention by choosing to be sworn in on a copy of The Autobiography of Malcolm X. Despite the ensuing controversy, which included receiving death threats, Parker was re-elected in 2020 with no opposition. They’ve been a leading progressive voice on issues like affordable housing, racial equity, police violence and LGBTQ rights.

Parker’s full resignation letter is below:

I sat in a meeting not long ago, surrounded by a small group of people with a century of local government involvement between them. We needled at prospective policy, identifying loophole after loophole that housing cartels could exploit to negate work toward housing as a human right. Exasperated, one member of the meeting joked aloud: “Late stage capitalism!”

The remark surprised me coming from someone so chill and refined. A lot of us chuckled. But after that, we went back to the drawing board, earnestly musing on helpful ways forward. I sat partially dazed thinking about it: we all knew what the true problem was. We were exhausted by it. But we could do nothing but chuckle sadly.

We all feel it, but many are scared to say it: the Mayor & Commission are elected, but it’s money that governs. Housing cartels buy up whole blocks of Black neighborhoods– as JW York has done in East Athens– while families scramble in the face of eviction. The University of Georgia, with a billion dollar endowment and an immensely wealthy Board of Regents, sits pretty by keeping thousands of essential workers in poverty. The same is true for the corporate chains that dominate our food landscape by paying workers pennies; a bloated insurance bureaucracy that picks and chooses what care you can receive– almost every aspect of our daily lives is more or less decided, not by local politicians, but profitability.

With the Republican state legislature working to stymie progress at every turn and a federal government that could but chooses not to guarantee housing, healthcare, and good jobs, the hands of the Mayor & Commission are bound and bound again. Our constituents look to us to reign in this organized greed, and I am committed to do that. But I accept now that this aim is largely incompatible with the work of a county commissioner, as prescribed.

From the Civil Rights Movement to even local issues, only masses of consciously organized people can bend the arc of history toward justice. There would be no fare free public transit without Athens for Everyone. There would be no police accountability without the Athens Anti-Discrimination Movement. There would be no concept of municipal reparations in the South without the Linnentown Project. The community centers at Rocksprings and Nellie B would have never reopened if not for the powerful coalition of Black parents that demanded we save our youth. And I’ve only been here to enact their demands in the first place because hundreds of voters made it so.

Our crises are compounding, and leaders are needed in the streets to help build new mass movements insistent on a level of transformation that far transcends what we as commissioners can deliver.

I am still proud of what we have accomplished together, despite our impediments. In addition to the above, we’ve achieved substantive leaps forward in affordable housing and living wages, and smaller but much-needed steps toward a more humane criminal punishment system, like marijuana decriminalization and cash bail reform. In dreaming of more, I sometimes forget about these promises kept.

But I am most proud of every Athenian that has pushed us to act, as I maintain that we, the commission, can claim nothing– every victory belongs to the people who organized and insisted.

I do thank the colleagues I have stood alongside in struggle for a fairer community: Patrick Davenport, Melissa Link, Tim Denson, Jesse Houle, Russell Edwards, Carol Myers, Deborah Gonzalez, and Spencer Frye, to name a few. While our paths in the movement are diverging, I remain inspired by your dedication to fight from within and the solutions you’ve dreamt up under adverse circumstances.

Most of all I thank Hattie Whitehead, Fred Smith, Broderick Flanigan, Mokah Johnson, Erin Stacer, Briana Bivens, Tommy Valentine, my partner Paul, and all the organizers who made our victories possible. There are thousands more, too many to name, who have lent their support, critique, expertise and resources, and to whom my credit is due.

It’ll look a little different now, but I am with you still.

Sadly, fighters like you are too few, and we will need to bring in thousands more like you to achieve the changes we need. Without a leaderful mass movement that is ready to fight the money, government will grind on with less than the people need to show for it.

The story of my life is a story of service, but stories are often broken into chapters. I close this chapter with peace, pride and hope at the prospect of a new chapter of focused service to growing that movement.

Please accept this as notice of my resignation as Athens-Clarke County Commissioner for District 2, effective August 31st, 2022.

This post is being updated with new information as it becomes available.

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