The Delray Beach Chamber of Commerce has a nice annual tradition.
Every year, as part of its Leadership Delray program, the Chamber arranges for the class to have lunch with Mayor’s past and present.
It’s a nice event that allows us old timers—I call us the PIPS for Previously Important People— to trot out old stories and meet up and coming leaders in the community. For the class, hopefully the event enables students to understand where we’ve come from as a community.
Mayors are assigned to different tables for lunch and at the end we stand up and answer a few questions. This year we were asked to address our biggest challenges and to share a leadership tip.
It’s a fun program and you never know—someone in the class may be a future mayor or commissioner. I’m a graduate of Leadership Delray and I’m pretty sure former commissioners Pat Archer and Gary Eliopoulos are graduates too. I’m probably missing a bunch, so I apologize in advance.
Anyway, this year Mayor Petrolia attended along with Tom Lynch and Jay Alperin who served in the 1990s and Dave Schmidt, Tom Carney and some guy named Jeff who served in the 2000s. From the looks of things, I think the mayors had a great time.
As for me, I always enjoy the lunch Q and A, which this year included questions such as:
How much did you have to raise when you ran? (About $20,000, today races can easily hit six figures)
What has changed about Delray since you served? (Just about everything).
Would you run again? (Can you do the job from Maine in the summers? Asking for a friend.)
What do you see as future challenges for our town? (Here’s a short list: sea level rise, affordable housing, infrastructure repairs, a toxic political environment, education, traffic and a need to engage the community and the list goes on…..)
I pay particular attention to the topics that my lunch partners are interested in. The Leadership program attracts a cross section of community leaders from a wide range of fields so it’s a good focus group for determining issues people are interested in. We spent a lot of time talking about the high cost of living in Delray and the challenging nature of politics these days.
I also really enjoy hearing from the mayors. We’re a rare breed, there are only 10 of us still around. This year’s attendees represented 30 plus years of local politics and these men and women have seen a lot: The Decade of Excellence, the transformation from “Dull Ray” to All America City, the discovery that several of the 9/11 terrorists were living here (many in the class didn’t know that), the impact of the opioid crisis and of course Covid and hurricanes.
So many stories. So many lessons learned. I think it’s valuable to share these insider perspectives.
Years ago, we did two “Mingle with the Mayors” events at the Crest Theatre and the Delray Library.
It was kind of like an “Inside the Actor’s Studio” format with a cocktail party thrown in for good measure. I remember learning a lot about my city from listening to Mayors such as Leon Weekes and Doak Campbell who served long before my time in office.
I wish those events and these lunches were recorded because local history is often lost to the march of time.
To guard against some of that, here’s a list of the mayoral challenges and advice given last week.
Tom Carney: Biggest challenge: Balancing a budget during a financial crisis. Leadership advice: engage the community in visioning processes etc.
Tom Lynch: Challenge: Hiring a good city manager after a decade of turnover and fighting illicit drug sales (successfully tackled by community policing policies). Advice: Stay in your lane. Set policy and let the staff execute.
Shelly Petrolia: Challenge: The opioid crisis and Covid. Advice: Work with the community.
David Schmidt: Challenge: Moving Atlantic High School, 9/11 fallout. Advice: Empower the staff.
“I never lost sleep about what was happening at City Hall,” he said. A nice vote of confidence.
Jay Alperin: Challenge: Cleaning up the mess created by Tom Lynch (that was tongue in cheek, Tom was a great mayor). Implementing the Decade of Excellence Bond. Advice: Listen. Good leaders listen and don’t dictate.
Me: Challenge: Hurricanes (back when stores and gas stations didn’t have generators), the Jerrod Miller shooting. Advice: Be kind. You can’t be an effective leader if you aren’t kind and empathetic.
Thanks to Delray Chamber, President Stephanie Immelman, Chamber Marketing Director Sara Mears and the staff at the Golf Club for a memorable afternoon.
Let’s keep the tradition going. You never know who might be taking notes for a future run.
I was invited to two of these,; I happened to be in the hospital both times and couldn’t attend. I never got asked again.
Oh I didn’t know that. We’re going to fix that Rita. We need you there my friend. Lots of lessons and history to offer.