PUBLIC RECORD: Conduct of Elected Officials, CRA TIF Data, and June 17, 2026 Meeting

Dear Commissioners,

My name is Sylvia. I was born and raised here in Pensacola, and while District 3 has my heart, because I remember what our community looked like before decades of deliberate disinvestment took hold, my advocacy extends to every district across Escambia County.

I am writing to you today in my dual capacity as a local voter, a human services professional, and the Founder of Empower Black Families. I am also a former substitute teacher for the Escambia County School District and the remarried widow of a retired Navy veteran who rests at Barrancas National Cemetery on Naval Air Station, Pensacola.

I fully intended to speak at the June 17, 2026 meeting, on a different topic. A medical issue has physically prevented me from attending in person at this time. Make no mistake: my physical absence does not equal a lack of oversight. As I watched that meeting, I was deeply disturbed by the behavior and commentary displayed by members of this commission. This conduct appears to be the norm based upon previous meetings I’ve watched.

During the discussion, Commissioner Stroberger made a remark regarding data centers that referenced Dollar Generals and storage units. While I understand the comment may have been intended as humor, it was followed by Commissioner Lumon May’s response that “those are only in my district,” which was then met with laughter.

As someone who has spent the last several months researching housing, food access, transportation, economic development, and poverty throughout Escambia County, I did not find that exchange amusing. District 3 is a documented food desert with historically high poverty rates and portions of District 1 face significant economic hardships of their own.

To support these observations with data, I have attached maps and demographic information related to grocery access, poverty, housing, and child well-being in Escambia County. For many residents, particularly those without reliable transportation, access to affordable, nutritious food remains a significant challenge rather than a matter of personal choice.

Furthermore, I contacted the corporate point of contact for ALDI and proposed a new store at Town & Country Plaza on Pace Boulevard. The location met all the necessary retail criteria.

The point of contact rejected the proposal, stating, and I quote: ‘Sylvia, I appreciate you reaching out with your proposed site. Unfortunately, we are not currently interested in this location. If this changes in the future, I will get back to you.”

When I asked for an explanation as to why they refused to invest in our neighborhood, I was met with total silence. I know exactly why when you see how blighted the area is. If I were an investor, I would have declined too. When corporations like ALDI decline to invest, our residents are left with options like Grocery Advantage.

The conditions there are unacceptable; the food sold is frequently of such low quality it is unfit for human consumption. I have taken pictures of these conditions myself. In fact, a local council member personally went into the Pace Boulevard location (before it was switched to Barnes Fresh Market) and expressed disbelief at the smell and the rotten food they witnessed.

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TRUTH OVER POLITICS: Breaking the Blueprint of Gatekeeping in Pensacola.

For the record: I will not spend my time defending why my organization is called Empower Black Families. I believe in treating people as individuals while also recognizing the challenges that exist within Black communities. Both things can be true at the same time. 

My focus isn’t on arguing about the name. My focus is on the work. 

So, on that note… 

I’ve been labeled as “hostile”, an “angry individual”, and “antagonistic.’ Calling me angry, hostile, and antagonistic, is an outdated tactic that no longer works. Reporting me to the former chief deputy and city attorney hasn’t stopped me from speaking out as well.  

As the founder of Empower Black Families, my priority is ensuring that our communities are never left in the dark.  

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Part 4: The Invitation

Breaking cycles is not a single moment. It is a series of quiet choices, made again and again. It looks like pausing before we repeat what was familiar. Like choosing understanding over silence. Like learning that strength does not require suffering.

For many of us, the most radical act is not confrontation, it is reflection. It is asking different questions. Not “Why did this happen to me?” But “What do I want to pass on?” Because what we leave behind is not only what we escape. It is what we teach.

Healing does not erase the past. It gives us language for it. And language gives us choice. Choice to speak, or not. Choice to forgive, or to set boundaries. Choice to love without losing ourselves.

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Part 3: Breaking the Silence Without Breaking Ourselves

Breaking generational cycles doesn’t begin with confrontation. It begins with clarity.

For many of us, silence was never about denial. It was about survival. About protecting family. About keeping the peace, even when it cost us our own. But there comes a point when silence stops protecting us. And starts protecting the harm.

Healing does not require exposure. It does not require reliving every painful detail. And it does not require abandoning faith, culture, or family. It requires honesty, with boundaries.

One of the most misunderstood parts of healing is forgiveness. Forgiveness is often rushed. Weaponized. Used to bypass accountability. But forgiveness was never meant to excuse harm.

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Part 2: What We Inherited; The Generational Loop

Trauma doesn’t always announce itself. More often, it repeats.

When pain goes unaddressed, it doesn’t disappear.
It gets reshaped.
It becomes behavior.
It becomes belief.
It becomes family culture.

In many Black families, survival is passed down as wisdom.
“Be strong.”
“Don’t tell our business.”
“Pray about it.”
“You’ll be alright.”

And sometimes, those words helped us endure.
But endurance is not the same as healing.

Children raised in silence learn to read emotion instead of language. They learn to anticipate instead of ask.
They learn responsibility long before they learn safety.

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Part 1: What We Inherited: When Survival Becomes Normal.

When you grow up in survival, you don’t call it trauma. You call it life. You learn how to read rooms. How to stay quiet. How to adapt.

In many Black households, especially ones shaped by faith and tradition, survival is praised. Endurance is celebrated, and questioning pain is often seen as weakness. So we learn early not to ask why. We learn how to function, even when something inside us is breaking.

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What We Inherited: Introduction

This is a four-part series called What We Inherited: A Story of Survival, Forgiveness, and Generational Healing.

In many Black households, especially in the South, we are taught early how to endure. We pray. We keep moving. We don’t talk about what happens behind closed doors.

Silence is often framed as strength. Forgiveness is often framed as duty. And survival becomes so normal that we stop asking what it’s costing us.

I grew up inside that silence. Not because my family didn’t love me, but because pain, especially in Black families, is often inherited rather than discussed.

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Inside Kupfrian Manor: How Disaster Funds, Tax Credits, and Hidden LLC’s Built a Senior Project They Can’t Afford.

The agenda for Kupfrian Manor is on the City Council Agenda Conference, where there is no open forum, no presentation and no hearing required. Meaning this project, which uses $700,000 in federal CDBG funds, is being pushed through without public explanation.

Developer Pattern: How The Paces Foundation Builds in Escambia County

PACE Foundation has developed multiple senior housing projects in Escambia County, including Brownsville Manor and the upcoming Kupfrian Manor. They use the same development model in every project: layered LLCs, LIHTC financing, out-of-state ownership, and heavy use of federal subsidies. Projects are presented as ‘community-based,’ but ownership, profit, and control flow back to Georgia.

They use wood-frame construction even for multi-story senior housing in hurricane-prone Florida. Wood-frame homes are also pose fire safety risks, water damage and mold, pest and termite infestations and noise and privacy problems

Use the arrow (< and >) to click through the slideshow

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“The City Pretends. Pensacola News Journal Prints, But the Paper Trail Doesn’t Lie”.

While Pensacola News Journal posts early morning articles and social media teasers with”breaking updates’ on the redevelopment of the old Baptist Hospital site, the community most impacted by this redevelopment is always the last to know. And the paper trail shows why.

City procurement records show that Bayou District Consulting, LLC had long been on the radar.
2023–2024: Private meetings, tours, and planning discussions occurred behind closed doors. These steps were taken long before any RFP process was publicly announced.

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Why Fear Can’t Lead Us…

Fear has always been the weapon used to keep our people quiet. In earlier times, it showed up as threats, chains, and laws that said we couldn’t speak or learn.

Today it shows up in silence; in jobs we might lose, positions we might offend, or looks that tell us to “wait our turn.” But waiting has cost us enough.

At every council meeting, in every vote, and in every plan written about our neighborhoods, fear keeps too many good people from saying what they already know is wrong.

That’s where the community must step in. Our voices are not tied to political seats or salaries; they’re tied to truth, history, and the generations coming after us.

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