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Driving in Medieval Times

Driving in Medieval Times

šŸ›£ļø Where the laws have no names Ā·Ā Bill Freeman passes Ā·Ā Belmont shooting update Ā·Ā Much more!

Good afternoon, everyone.

The key to reducing traffic fatalities is to ramp up the enforcement of traffic laws. Weā€™ve been saying this for as long as weā€™ve been writing these newsletters, but it looks like that idea is finally starting to catch on in the Metro Council. The Banner reports this morning that Councilmembers Jacob Kupin and Jeff Eslick are sponsoring a resolution requesting that MNPD and the Nashville Department of Transportation and Multimodal Infrastructure increase traffic enforcement.

Even the mayor has started to come around. ā€œI have observed a slight increase, anecdotally, in very reckless driving with extraordinarily high rates of speed on local roads, and Iā€™m comfortable if somebody in that scenario gets pulled over for a significant traffic violation,ā€ Mayor Freddie Oā€™Connell told the Banner.

With that in mind, I thought Iā€™d reprint the tale of my own realization from May that traffic laws werenā€™t being enforced and how it changed my behavior. Also, Megan penned an excellent piece that same month on how MNPD is slowly returning to ā€œtraditional policingā€ after a honeymoon with the devil.

Onward.

Getting pulled over in Nashville used to be a fairly regular occurrence. Before graduating high school, I got at least a handful of speeding tickets and warnings, and attended driving school on two separate occasions; in general, I felt very monitored on the road. Because of that, I'd try to follow the speed limit, use turn signals more consciously, and come to a full stop at every stop sign. The thought of a law man out there who might pull me over changed the way I drove.

Then, in 2018, I learned that the Metro Nashville Police Department would no longer pull over drivers for minor infractions. After a series of studies were released purporting to find no correlation between the number of traffic stops and the reduction of criminal activity, traffic stops fell off precipitously.

It had long been a goal of the department to reduce the number of stops. In 2012, MNPD initiated 445,152 stops. By 2018, they got that number down to 204,484. In 2022, the most recent year for which thereā€™s full data, MNPD conducted just 18,663 traffic stops.

With this in mind, at the start of Covid, I bought a cheap 1990 Mazda Miata and didnā€™t bother to register it. I treated it as a ā€œfugitiveā€ car of sorts. I stopped considering speed limit signs, referred to it as my go-kart, and on lazy Sunday afternoons, Iā€™d blitz down Briley Parkway and split off onto the rural roads in North Davidson County. Looking back on that period, I am certain that I achieved nirvana.

My point in telling this story is that I could feel the lack of police presence on the roads, and as a result, my behavior changed. Even with the risk entailed while driving an unregistered vehicle, I wasnā€™t concerned in the slightest about being stopped.

Similarly, less conscious and more reckless drivers than myself across the country have changed their behavior. As traffic stops plummeted, drivers have acted more erratically and, as a result, roads have gotten more dangerous for both drivers and pedestrians. Pedestrian deaths are currently the highest theyā€™ve been in forty years.

A number of reports analyzing whatā€™s contributed to this rise focus on the size of SUVs, the use of smartphones, or inadequate infrastructure. Twelve years ago, an entire global initiative designed to address it called Vision Zero emerged. And cities like Nashville have adopted its tenets, building out pedestrian infrastructure and modifying roads to make them safer (e.g. illuminating crosswalks and banning right on red). Vision Zero initiatives are tied deeply into Freddie Oā€™Connellā€™s transit referendum. Itā€™s a program you hear about repeatedly from local leaders as a kind of secular mandate from heaven that requires urgent attention.

And yet, the solution is sitting right at their feet. The roads are more dangerous now because people drive more dangerously. The most immediate thing the city could do to make them safer is empower police officers to pull over people for driving like idiots again. DAVIS HUNT



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Nashville

āœļø The Passing Of A Nashville Mogul Bill Freeman, an influential Nashville powerbroker who co-founded the real estate firm Freeman Webb Company, passed away yesterday. A local investor in more ways than one, his company owned both the Nashville Scene and Nashville Post. Freeman was also a prolific fundraiser for the Democratic party, and even ran for mayor in 2015. 

"The Police Department responded to a 911 call concerning a shooting at 7:46 p.m. Sunday," MNPD spokesperson Don Aaron told the Tennessean. "Mr. Freeman was found deceased. His death is being investigated as a suicide."

ā€œBill was many thingsā€”real estate visionary, mayoral candidate, pilot, media magnate, staunch Democratā€”and friend,ā€ Mayor Oā€™Connell posted on X. ā€œOur city, state, and nation are better for his tenacity and commitment.ā€

āœ°   āœ°   āœ°

šŸšØ Belmont Shooting Trial Update Mayor Oā€™Connellā€™s prediction following the tragic death of Jillian Ludwigā€”a freshman Belmont student shot and killed in a park near campus last Novemberā€”may, in part, come true. At the time, the mayor voiced his concerns when it was discovered that the suspect in the case, Shaquille Taylor, had been released from police custody shortly before the shooting: 

I definitely think it is worth looking at the gap that exists between someone who is deemed incompetent to stand trial, and yet winds up in a place where they can be on the streets untreated and armed. And so we do seem to have a loophole there. Because my fear right now today is, even with a murder chargeā€”and we don't know this in advance, but I have seen the statement from District Attorney General Glenn Funk's office about thisā€”I suspect that if there were a murder charge for the same suspect it could be possible that that would be dismissed.

Now, a year later, doctors who evaluated Taylor have informed the judge that he is indeed too incompetent to stand trial. While he might get off the hook for the same reason he has been absolved of other past crimes, a new law may prevent Taylor from returning to normal society. In July, ā€œJillianā€™s Lawā€ went into effect requiring those deemed mentally unfit for trial to be involuntarily committed to a treatment facility. 

According to NewsChannel 5, the judge is expected to issue a decision on Taylorā€™s mental capacity on December 9.

āœ°   āœ°   āœ°

šŸšŒ Who Funded The Transit Campaign? Mere days before the election, questions about where millions in pro-transit funding came from put a slight crack in the veneer of Oā€™Connellā€™s Choose How You Move campaign. In a letter sent out on October 29th, the stateā€™s Bureau of Ethics and Campaign Finance demanded that the nonprofit, Nashville Moves Action Fund, disclose its donations when it was discovered that several special interest groups reported giving to the initiative.

Yesterday, Axiosā€™ Nate Rau published his findings after digging through the disclosures only to uncover an unsurprising pattern: ā€œThe transportation effort was funded by a conventional cross-section of business interests, which previously backed the Music City Center and downtown stadium projects.ā€ According to Rau, the Nashville Moves Action Fund received $2.34 million in donations from the likes of ā€œPredators co-owner and former Gov. Bill Haslam, labor union groups, the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce and engineering firms that figure to bid on the upcoming city contracts all contributed to the effort.ā€ 

DEVELOPMENT

Via NBJ Tennessee's most-expensive home listing just sold for a record price (More Info)
  • Ex-Pennington Distilling site listed for sale (Post)
Entertainment

THINGS TO DO

View our calendar for the week here and our weekly film rundown here.

šŸ“… Visit our On The Radar list to find upcoming events around Nashville.

šŸŽ§ On Spotify: Pamphleteer's Picks, a playlist of our favorite bands in town this week.

šŸ‘ØšŸ»ā€šŸŒ¾ Check out our Nashville farmer's market guide and yearly festival guide.

TONIGHT

šŸŽø ZZ Top @ Ryman Auditorium, 7:30p, $79.50+, Info

šŸŽ» Danish String Quartet @ Schermerhorn Symphony Center, 7:30p, $20+, Info
+ Presented without the Nashville Symphony

šŸŖ• Bluegrass Mondays - Vickie Vaughan @ Dee's Lounge, 6p, $10, Info

šŸŽø Timbo & Lonesome Country @ Jane's Hideaway, 8p, Info
+ modern take on classic country, bluegrass & hillbilly Jazz

šŸŖ• Val Storey, Carl Jackson, Larry Cordle & New Monday @ Station Inn, 8p, $20, Info

šŸ’€ Grateful Monday @ Acme Feed & Seed, 8p, Free, Info

šŸ•ŗ Motown Monday @ The 5 Spot, 9p, $5, Info

In case you missed it...

šŸ“° Check out the full newsletter archive here.

The Priest Who Fought the Nazis
Filmmaker Todd Komarnicki on the role of blind faith in making a movie about Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
MNPDā€™s Looming Staffing Challenges
šŸšØ Community organizaiton embraces police Ā· Gangland Ā· Christmas movie Ā· Much more!
The Week in Streaming (November 12)
Our recommendations to counteract the endless scrolling.
A Dark and Daunting Night at the Metro Council
šŸšØ CRB reaches in the cookie jar Ā· Bells CHYM for Transit Ā· Film rundown Ā· Much more!