Andy Berke

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On September 6, 2016, Berke announced his bid for re-election to a second term as mayor. His announcement focused on combating gun violence, enhancing workforce development, and expanding the city's focus on early childhood education. Berke was easily re-elected, defeating three challengers.

Second mayoral term

Berke was sworn in to his second term on April 18, 2017. [27] During his second term, he has continued many of the investments that marked his first four years in office, including renewed commitments to early childcare, violence reduction, affordable housing, digital equity, and economic development.

On September 23, 2019, Berke stood alongside Hamilton County Mayor Jim Coppinger and other officials to announce "East Chattanooga Rising," an initiative to convert the former Harriet Tubman Homes site into a mixed-use development anchored by an automotive paint manufacturing facility. [28] The project is expected to generate 150 jobs in one of Chattanooga's highest-poverty ZIP codes, which had not seen any economic development for more than a century. The city's commitment to small businesses also increased with the launch of the Neighborhood Reinvestment Fund, intended to help neighborhood-based lifestyle businesses obtain financing for minor improvements, marketing, and other expenses, [29] as well as the local launch of Kiva, a micro-loan program to provide start-up capital to entrepreneurs. [30] The downtown Innovation District was highlighted repeatedly throughout Berke's second term, with national exposure coming from Revolution's Rise of the Rest tour [31] and Project For Public Spaces' International Placemaking Week.

As part of the city's Fiscal Year 2019 budget, Berke committed $5 million to the community's first Affordable Housing Trust Fund [32] to combat the trend of local home prices and rents rising faster than wages. As of January 2020, the City was praised by Built for Zero, a movement of more than 80 cities and counties across the country working to measurably end homelessness, for having effectively reached net zero homelessness among its veteran population.

The Berke administration's widely praised response to the July 16 terror attack earned him the attention of the Strong Cities Network, a "global network of mayors, municipal-level policy makers and practitioners united in building social cohesion and community resilience to counter violent extremism in all its forms." Berke was invited to speak to the SCN multiple times and was involved with the 2018 launch of its Public-Private Partnership Task Force Against Hate [33] in conjunction with the German Marshall Fund. In April 2019, he announced the formation of a Chattanooga Council Against Hate to combat extremism and bias-motivated violence at a metropolitan level. Following local protests after the murders of Ahmaud Arbery and George Floyd, and the shooting of Breonna Taylor, Berke announced the formation of a new Office of Community Resilience [34] to help law enforcement officials, social workers, and criminal justice reform advocates co-create new solutions for responding to people in crisis. The Chattanooga Police Department also earned national recognition [35] for launching the Policing & Racial Equity Dashboard, an open-data tool that displays closed investigations, including citations, arrests, use of force, and citizen complaints by race.

The Mayor's Youth Council, a group of highly motivated young adults in their junior or senior years of high school, also became heavily involved with violence reduction, focusing particularly on generating new policies and ideas to curb the prevalence of gun violence in their community. [36] In Berke's second term, the Youth Council also became heavily involved in issues of boosting voter turnout [37] and improving environmental sustainability.

In 2018, Berke charged the Office of Early Learning with adding 1,000 high-quality "seats", or accessible, affordable spots for children who needed them, before the conclusion of his second term. As of January 2020, the Office was well on its way to that goal, having added 916 seats throughout the city.

Berke's second term has also seen the completion of several landmark capital projects, including the $10 million renovation of Miller Park Archived September 1, 2019, at the Wayback Machine in downtown Chattanooga, [38] the construction of a new Youth & Family Development Center in the Avondale neighborhood, [39] and the $6 million renovation of East Lake Park. [40] Other significant projects, including the renovation of Walnut Plaza and the construction of the Ed Johnson Memorial Project [ permanent dead link ] commenced during Berke's second term. The Ed Johnson Memorial Project was arguably the most significant undertaking of Public Art Chattanooga, a 501c3 nonprofit organization administered by the City of Chattanooga and the Public Art Commission to support public art projects throughout the city. PAC's strategic plan, CHA Creates, was passed by the Chattanooga City Council in February 2019 [41] and included the city's first "percent for art" policy to ensure continued long-term funding for public art projects and maintenance.

COVID-19 pandemic response

In response to growing concerns about the spread of COVID-19 in the United States, Berke signed an executive order declaring a state of emergency in Chattanooga on March 13, 2020, [42] the same day the first case of the virus was reported in Hamilton County. [43] Over the remainder of the year, Berke signed 45 more executive orders extending the state of emergency and authorizing additional steps to slow the virus's spread. [44] The Berke administration also launched programs to connect homebound senior citizens with health resources, [45] support struggling small businesses [46] and improve community testing, and focus on meeting the unique needs of Chattanooga's Spanish-speaking and Black populations [47] throughout the spring, summer, and fall of 2020. When the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines had secured emergency authorization, Berke's office announced "Get Ready! It's Up To You, It's Up To Us," a multimedia campaign to equip the community with information and resources about getting vaccinated.

In January 2021, Berke's office honored the hundreds of lives lost to the virus with COVID-19 Memorial Project, a website that invites community members to publicly share photos, stories, and words of inspiration about their lost loved ones.

The National Telecommunications and Information Administration

On February 2, 2022, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration named Berke a Special Representative for Broadband. [48] In this capacity, he will direct $48 billion in resources from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act to expand high-speed broadband service to states, municipalities, and tribal lands throughout the country. [49]

Other work

Berke serves on the board of advisors for Let America Vote, an organization founded by former Missouri Secretary of State Jason Kander that aims to end voter suppression [50] and is an advisory board member of Communities Overcoming Extremism: The After Charlottesville Project, formed in the aftermath of the August 2017 attacks in Charlottesville, Virginia. He is also a member of NewDEAL Leaders, a coalition of "pro-growth progressive state and local elected officials who champion ideas to grow the economy, expand opportunity for all, and make government work better." From 2018 to 2020, Berke served as co-chair of the National League of Cities Council on Youth, Education and Families.

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Andy Berke
Andrew Berke, RUS Administrator.jpg
Administrator of the Rural Utilities Service
Assumed office
October 6, 2022
Political offices
Preceded by Mayor of Chattanooga
2013–2021
Succeeded by