Larry Langford

From Bhamwiki
Revision as of 14:15, 1 December 2008 by Alarob (talk | contribs) (→‎References: link)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Langford speaks at Linn Park. April 22, 2008. Photo by André Natta

Larry Paul Langford (born March 17, 1948 in Birmingham) is currently the Mayor of the City of Birmingham.

Langford had previously gained notice as a Birmingham City Councilor (1977 - 1979) and as a three-term mayor of Fairfield (1988 to 2000). From 2002 until 2007, he served on the Jefferson County Commission. Until 2006, he was the Commission President and served as Commissioner of Finance and General Services. From 2006 until he became mayor, he was the Commission's Commisioner of Health and Human Services.

Before politics

Langford as a WBRC reporter in the 1970s

Langford grew up in the Loveman Village housing project in Titusville. He graduated from Parker High School and then received his bachelor of arts degree in social and behavioral sciences from UAB in 1972. After that he served in the U. S. Air Force five years. After returning to Birmingham, he joined WBRC 6 as one of the region's first black television reporters in the 1970s and won several awards for his investigative reports. He was elected to the Birmingham City Council in 1977 and challenged incumbent David Vann and fellow councilman Richard Arrington, Jr for the mayor's office two years later. After losing the race to Arrington, Langford moved to Fairfield and was hired as public relations director for Birmingham Budwesier in 1982.

Langford and his wife, the former Melva Ferguson, have one son and two grandsons.

Fairfield mayor

In 1988 Langford was elected Mayor of Fairfield and began an aggressive campaign to revitalize the city. He took charge personally of the details of city operations, firing employees who failed drug tests and using a bail-out of Fairfield City Schools to exercise influence over the independent board. He created a Mayor's Commission on Literacy to improve student performance at Fairfield Preparatory High School through after-school tutoring and parent education. He is best known, however, for initiating cooperation between 11 Jefferson County municipalities to finance construction of the $90 million Visionland amusement park, which was built in Bessemer in 1998. The park struggled after a promising opening and declared Chapter 9 bankruptcy with $100 illion in depts in 2002. The park was later sold to a private operator for $5.25 million and has recently improved its standing.

Fairfield's investments in the park, in school construction and programs, and in the Fairfield Civic Center, along with drops in sales tax revenues from stores relocating outside the city, brought the city close to bankruptcy after Langford left office. The city escaped by selling the high school back to the school board (using capital funds made available through Jefferson County's 1-cent sales tax, which was proposed by Langford after he joined the Commission).

Langford served three terms as mayor of Fairfield, leaving office in 2000.

Jefferson County Commission

Langford was elected to the Jefferson County Commission by defeating incumbent Jeff Germany in 2002. He was elected President of the Commission by its members shortly thereafter. He proposed his 1-cent sales tax for school construction plan in 2005, relying on consensus he had built with fellow commissioner Mary Buckelew.

As Commissioner of Finance, Langford led the Commission through a series of complex bond swaps aimed at reducing the County's debt service through lower interest rates. Critics have noted that the advisors hired to execute the swaps have been paid as much or more in fees as they proposed to save the county in payments. Some of Langford's activities regarding those deals are the subject of an investigation by the United States Security and Exchange Commission (SEC). Specifically two loans made to Langford from lobbyist Al LaPierre. At the same time, LaPierre was invoicing Bill Blount for "services rendered regarding Jefferson County" and Blount's investment firm was awarded several bond contracts from the Jefferson County Commission. Langford has refused to answer questions regarding those transactions during questioning in a Miami federal court.

Following the 2006 general election the Republican majority in the Commission installed Bettye Fine Collins as Commission President, leaving Langford and fellow Democrat Shelia Smoot as a voting minority.

After Langford was sworn in as the Mayor of Birmingham, the Commission set a special election for February 2008 to fill his unexpired term. On November 21, 2007 Governor Bob Riley appointed George F. Bowman to the seat. Meanwhile the Jefferson County Board of Elections scheduled a special election on February 5 which was won, unofficially, by William Bell. Certification of the election results was halted by the Alabama Supreme Court pending legal resolution of the issues involved in replacing Langford.

2007 Birmingham mayoral campaign

Langford 2007.PNG

In June 2007 he announced that he would run for Mayor of Birmingham in the October election with the slogan "Let's Do Something." During the campaign Langford touted his long record of initiatives and promised action to move the city forward.

In order to qualify for the election, he signed a 6-month lease for a loft apartment in the Blach's building on 20th Street North on June 4. He registered as a Birmingham voter on June 7.

He dismissed reports about ongoing investigations of his role in Jefferson County's financial crisis, saying that the reports were political ploys staged by his enemies. He also dismissed scrutiny into the operations of Computer Help for Kids, a charity he helped to found which received large contributions from Fairfield and Jefferson County.

Results from the October 9 election gave Langford 26,230 of 52,120 votes cast, 171 more than he needed to avoid a run-off with challenger Patrick Cooper. After the election was certified, Cooper filed suit claiming that Langford failed to establish residency in Birmingham as required by state law. Judge Allwin Horn dismissed the suit on November 26. Cooper dropped his appeal and conceded the election on December 17.

Meanwhile, Langford tapped former Alabama Supreme Court justice Ralph Cook, Jr and Alabama Power CEO Charles McCrary to lead his transition team and hired Deborah Vance to serve as his chief of staff. He began meeting immediately with various regional leaders and with Governor Bob Riley, specifically to outline his plans for mass transit and a domed stadium in Birmingham. He also announced a plan to provide 15,000 laptop computers to 1st through 8th graders at Birmingham City Schools with help from John Katopodis and the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) foundation.

Mayor of Birmingham

Langford was sworn in as mayor by Judge U. W. Clemon in an afternoon ceremony at Boutwell Auditorium on Tuesday November 13, 2007. He made several changes to his staff on the same day. In addition to new Birmingham Chief of Police A. C. Roper, Langford dismissed Fire Chief Carl Harper, city attorney Tamara Harris Johnson, spokesman Ed Davis, city auditor Etta Dunning, public works director Stephen Fancher, and Birmingham Board of Education liaison Gwen Welch. Newly-appointed administrators include Ivor Brooks as fire chief, and Rickey Kennedy as director of public works.

Prior to his first City Council meeting, Langford distributed sealed copies to the council members of a proposed Birmingham Economic and Community Revitalization Ordinance to raise sales taxes and business license fees in order to finance a $500 bond issue. The borrowed money would pay for public transit, a domed stadium, laptops for school children, and $1 million in discretionary funds for each council district. The copies were marked "confidential", with Langford asking the councilors to return their comments privately before the plan was made public. A copy of the 1-page summary was provided to the News after legal advisor J. Richmond Pearson responded that the document was a public record.

On January 9, 2007 Langford underwent a medical procedure to correct lost blood flow in his right hip caused by avascular necrosis. Larry Lemak performed the surgery at Brookwood Medical Center.

On April 22, 2008 Langford issued a proclamation on city letterhead proclaiming April 25, 2008 to be "It's Time to Pray" in the City of Birmingham. He called upon "all Bishops, Priests, Pastors, Ministers and all of our citizens of various denominations and creeds" to join him in donning burlap sacks and having their heads smeared with ashes during a prayer rally at Boutwell Auditorium. The display, part of his Plan 10/30 series of anti-crime rallies, was intended to show humility and restore God's favor to a city wracked with violence. Anticipating complaints from defenders of the 1st amendment's establishment clause, Langford stated that "the Constitution of the United States calls for a separation of church and state - it never said anything about a separation of church from state.” (Underwood - Apr. 22, 2008)

Indictment

On April 30, 2008 attorneys working for the United States Securities and Exchange Commission filed a civil suit in federal court accusing Langford of violating United States securities laws in his dealings with Al LaPierre and William Blount while on the County Commission. The suit claims that Langford accepted more than $150,000 in money and benefits from the two in exchange for steering the county's bond business to Blount's firm.

On December 1 Langford was arrested at his office at Birmingham Budweiser by FBI agents. The 101-count indictment accused him of accepting bribes from Al LaPierre and William Blount in June 2003, while serving as president of the County Commission. He is also accused of engaging in a conspiracy with the other defendants to enable and conceal the alleged bribes. Additional counts allege that mail and wire fraud were committed in the furtherance of the conspiracy and that Langford falsified his income tax returns.

Langford pleaded not guilty and was released on a $50,000 bond and required to stay within the Northern Judicial District of Alabama.

Personal finances

Langford's personal finances have come under scrutiny several times as questions arose about deals that he initiated while holding public office, personal loans made to him by figures involved in those deals, contributions to charities controlled by him or his associates, and the nature of his employment outside of office.

Some of the most serious allegations are outlined in the civil suit filed by the SEC. They claim that he received over $150,000 in personal loans from a lobbyist involved in advising Jefferson County on bond-swap deals. The loans were poorly documented and have not been repaid. A 2.1-acre parcel in Hoover that Langford claimed to have used as collateral for the loans is actually held by CMNLL Inc, a group in which Langford was involved, though he has not himself made payments toward the purchase or property tax.

Local journalists have also questioned the nature of his work as a public relations director for Birmingham Budweiser, and whether he has used his political influence to attract donations to a number of charities he controls and to drive sales for 5Linx, a marketer of telephone systems for which he acts as an independent agent.


Preceded by:
Bernard Kincaid
Mayor of Birmingham
2007 -
Succeeded by:
current
Preceded by:
Gary White
Jefferson County Commission president
2002 - 2006
Succeeded by:
Bettye Fine Collins

See also

References

  • Westlake-Kenny, Barbara (Fall 1997) "Alumni Spotlight: Larry P. Langford, B.A." UAB Magazine. Vol. 17, No. 4
  • "Larry Langford." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 27 Mar 2006, 19:19 UTC. 28 Mar 2006, 20:47 [1]
  • Wright, Barnett. (April 23, 2006) "Langford's full of ideas, both big and small." Birmingham News
  • Wright, Barnett (June 3, 2007) "Langford launches run for mayor." Birmingham News
  • Bryant, Joseph D. (September 2, 2007) "Hopefuls have just weeks to win votes." Birmingham News
  • Bryant, Joseph D. (September 21, 2007) "Idea man Langford a champion for change." Birmingham News.
  • Whitmire, Kyle (October 4, 2007) "Larry Langford's Greatest Hits." Birmingham Weekly
  • DeButts, Jimmy (October 15, 2007) "Chamber's Vance tapped as Langford's chief of staff." Birmingham Business Journal
  • Blackledge, Victor (November 6, 2007) "SEC eyes possible link in work, loans to Langford." Birmingham News
  • Bryant, Joseph D. (November 15, 2007) "Birmingham Mayor Larry Langford assembles team, keeps many Kincaid staffers." Birmingham News
  • Velasco, Eric (November 15, 2007) "Details emerge in hearing on Larry Langford's residence." Birmingham News
  • Bryant, Joseph D. (November 19, 2007) "Birmingham Mayor Larry Langford retains more department heads from Bernard Kincaid's administration." Birmingham News
  • Wright, Barnett (December 18, 2007) "SEC wants to force Larry Langford, Bill Blount to testify in Jefferson County bond swap deals." Birmingham News
  • Wolfson, Hannah (December 19, 2007) "Birmingham Mayor Larry Langford believes he's the target of a federal criminal investigation." Birmingham News
  • Archibald, John (January 6, 2008) "Smoke or worse wafts from SEC." Birmingham News
  • Underwood, M. (April 22, 2008) "Leapin' Larry's Prayer Proclamation" Birmingham Weekly
  • Blackledge, Brett (April 30, 2008) "SEC files civil complaint against Birmingham Mayor Larry Langford, banker and lobbyist." Birmingham News
  • Blackledge, Brett J. (May 29, 2008) "Birmingham Mayor Larry Langford received interest in property without investing money, later used land for collateral." Birmingham News
  • Reeves, Jay (August 10, 2008) "Visions of Birmingham's mayor: Idea guy or 'LaLa'?". The Telegraph (Macon, Georgia) - AP.
  • Bryant, Joseph D. (November 9, 2008) "A year later, Langford puts `my record against anybody'." Birmingham News
  • Whitmire, Kyle (November 20, 2008) "Larry Langford: The Year in Review." Birmingham Weekly
  • Walton, Val (December 1, 2008) "Feds unseal 101-count indictment charging Birmingham Mayor Larry Langford, William Blount and Al LaPierre." Birmingham News

External links