nothin DuBois-Walton Takes On Elicker For Mayor | New Haven Independent

DuBois-Walton Takes On Elicker For Mayor

Thomas Breen Photo

Karen DuBois-Walton: “New Haven knows how to come together and solve big problems in creative ways.”

Promising to rally New Haveners to tackle big challenges with equity,” Karen DuBois-Walton has decided to explore a challenge to incumbent first-term Mayor Justin Elicker in a Democratic primary.

DuBois-Walton said in an interview Friday that she plans to hold an announcement of an exploratory mayoral campaign committee on Monday, which is International Women’s Day.

The formation of the committee will enable DuBois-Walton to raise money for her exploratory campaign. She said she intends to limit individual contributions to $375, so that when she switches over to a formal campaign she can participate in the city’s public-financing Democracy Fund.

Donald McAaulay Sr. is serving as her campaign treasurer. Robin Golden is her deputy campaign treasurer. No campaign manager has been announced yet.

DuBois-Walton, who is 53, serves as president and CEO of the Housing Authority of New Haven/Elm City Communities. She has spent months meeting with people about a mayoral run; she said she encountered excitement” in many quarters about a potential run: A lot of people feel left out, not included. They want to see leadership that will be inclusive and bring people together with energy.”

Elicker announced in January that he is running for reelection this year. (Click here to read about that, including his case for reelection.) Both he and DuBois-Walton are Democrats.

After Elicker’s 2019 mayoral victory, DuBois-Walton served on his transition team. In Friday’s interview, she refrained from criticizing him. Rather she focused on the moment, and the challenge, facing a diverse city looking to emerge from a brutal pandemic year.

I don’t want to say anything anti,’” DuBois-Walton said.

DuBois-Walton said that, if she decides to run, I’m running for a vision, which is a vision of equity and inclusion, a vision of bringing people together. I don’t think any of these problems get solved in isolation. We [will] bring a team together that is energetic and excited about tackling problems.”

She spoke of inspiring a community recovering from the health, economic, and social losses of the Covid-19 pandemic: It means positioning our young people to address this learning loss they’ve had, also the loss of recreation time and play time with friends. It’s addressing the distress our community is feeling which is coming out in many ways, including the increase in criminal activity and the tragic loss of life due to homicide.”

DuBois-Walton came to New Haven in 1985 to study at Yale.

What drew me to New Haven is New Haven’s ability to come together and have big vision and take bold actions that you don’t see any other place daring to do. That’s the kind of leadership that’s needed to take on the multiple pandemics New Haven is facing right now. … Let’s come up with some creative stuff that people feel included in, rooted in equity. A spirit unlike the spirit we’ve lived through in the national conversation. Let’s do what New Haven knows how to do: come together and solve big problems in creative ways.”

Maya McFadden Photo

DuBois-Walton, at center, cutting ribbon in October on Phase II of rebuilt Rockview homes.

DuBois-Walton has been a part of that civic problem-solving process for decades, beginning with her work at the Yale Child Study Center in the early years of its joint program with city cops to help children exposed to violence address their trauma. Besides heading the housing authority, DuBois-Walton has served as mayoral chief of staff and city chief administrative officer, overseeing line departments like police, fire, parks, and public works. She serves on the state Board of Education. In the past four years she has organized community-wide forums about how to respond to the Trump administration; and, with her husband, she has organized Storytellers New Haven, events at which a diverse group of people active in the community have shared personal life stories. DuBois-Walton and five fellow Black women in September launched a political action committee called Ella’s Fund aimed at translating this summer’s grassroots uprisings for racial justice into lasting state and local political power.

In eyeing the mayor’s office, DuBois-Walton said Friday, she will look to do on a broader scale the kind of work the housing authority has done in low-income neighborhoods under her watch. Part of that work has involved rebuilding rundown developments into clean, safer neighborhoods, such as Rockview and Brookside, and Mill River Crossing (formerly Farnam Courts). Part of that work has involved offering opportunities for families: prenatal and early-childhood programs, in-school tutoring and after-school and employment programs for students, workforce development programs for adults.

None of it is perfect,” DuBois-Walton said. It involves working with people to meet them where they are, dream with them, and then put in supports.”

New Haven has traditionally given mayors second terms. The last one-term mayor, Thomas Tully, was elected in 1929; he wasn’t on the ballot in 1931. The one-term mayor before him, Samuel Campner, did lose a reelection bid in 1917. But Campner (New Haven’s first and only Jewish mayor) was actually a half-term mayor: As president of the Board of Aldermen (as it was then named), he ascended to the mayoralty in 1917 when the previous mayor died, and he served out the term.

I welcome Dr. DuBois-Walton to the race,” Elicker told the Independent.

I’m running for reelection so I can continue to ensure that we get through the pandemic, people get vaccinated, we get our kids back into school, we can continue house permanently individuals experiencing homelessness, and build on the work that we’ve already done.”

Tags:

Sign up for our morning newsletter

Don't want to miss a single Independent article? Sign up for our daily email newsletter! Click here for more info.


Post a Comment

Commenting has closed for this entry

Comments

Avatar for robn

Avatar for CityYankee2

Avatar for NHPS family

Avatar for FacChec

Avatar for FedUp

Avatar for Intheknow

Avatar for Johnnieboy

Avatar for ISeeRacism

Avatar for Urn Pendragon

Avatar for sara78

Avatar for IfeMichelle

Avatar for dixwell06511

Avatar for 1644

Avatar for justchecking

Avatar for 1644

Avatar for Brian L. Jenkins

Avatar for Scherzo

Avatar for Speak4Poc

Avatar for Thomas Alfred Paine

Avatar for CityYankee2

Avatar for 1644

Avatar for WeThePeople

Avatar for bassmaster

Avatar for fc4us

Avatar for Heather C.

Avatar for NHctParent

Avatar for anonymous

Avatar for Whalley

Avatar for Harvey Fair

Avatar for BevHills730

Avatar for owen@large

Avatar for Old Haven

Avatar for ShadowBoxer

Avatar for MrHinkyDink

Avatar for Lifer

Avatar for Brian L. Jenkins

Avatar for beyonddiscussion

Avatar for BevHills730

Avatar for Browntown

Avatar for anonymous

Avatar for Solo

Avatar for owen@large

Avatar for Dennis..

Avatar for hamden voter

Avatar for Crystal

Avatar for manofthepeople1

Avatar for Sabrina-in-NewHaven

Avatar for ElmCityLover

Avatar for Thomas Alfred Paine

Avatar for budman

Avatar for 1644

Avatar for IfeMichelle