Bemis cites difficulties balancing his personal life and business with public service.
Source: Gresham Outlook
Tuesday, June 16, 2020
By Christopher Keizur, PMG
In a post to Facebook, Bemis wrote about the difficulties trying to balance raising a family, supporting a business during the COVID-19 pandemic, and dealing with challenges within City Hall.
"At the current moment, facing a pandemic; a rising, powerful, and necessary social justice movement; and the City's budget woes, all while trying to keep my business afloat, is not tenable," Bemis wrote. "I must fight for my business to provide for my family."
The mayor's seat now will be open in the November election, and Bemis is pushing for entrepreneur and community leader Travis Stovall to run for the position.
"Travis has been intricately involved in the City of Gresham, serving on committees ranging from public safety, to affordable housing and community development," Bemis wrote.
Bemis wrote that he watched Portland Police Chief Jami Resh step aside last week in order to allow someone else to lead the organization. Stovall is a black man who has spoken about the difficulties he has faced in East Multnomah County.
"As a political leader, it is always tempting to see oneself as the solution to whatever problems we may face," Bemis wrote. "However, when I spend time in self-reflection and consider the entirety of the critical work our city and broader society must address, I need to be willing to say I am not the best solution to these specific problems."
Bemis thanked the community for supporting him during his public service in Gresham.
"I came to Gresham as a 15-year-old kid. My family had nothing, and I knew nobody. This community has given me everything," Bemis wrote. "I will never forget your generosity and I will always do everything in my power, in any capacity, to give everything I have to this community."
Read Mayor Bemis' full statement below ... Gresham Residents, Serving the City of Gresham for the past 18 years is the honor of my lifetime. I have watched this community grow in beautiful ways over my two decades of elected service at the local level. We developed parks, paved streets, deployed programs for children and families, and enhanced services across the organization. The community also grew more diverse, which has enhanced our city in every possible way, with a wide variety of lived experiences adding to our vibrancy, and with schools that look like the world our children will actually enter. I have always felt that if the American experiment of belonging and representative democracy could work in a community as racially and economically diverse as Gresham, it could still work on any scale -despite the struggles we face nationally. I still believe this to be as true today as it was when I first ran for City Council in 2002 as a 29-year-old kid. Gresham has become a big city, but it’s also a big idea. What we have done here and what this community has meant, are bigger than just a municipal corporation providing core city services. As an idea, Gresham is as noble as any ever ventured, and I’m amazingly proud of who we have become. And while I’m confident in Gresham’s destiny, I’m also very familiar with the challenges we face locally, and broader as a nation. Locally, with a global pandemic, we face significant budget issues, which are compounded by one of Oregon’s lowest tax rates hampering the organization for decades. More broadly, this pandemic threatens the physical and economic health of our residents, disrupts services, and threatens small businesses across America. As a restaurant owner, I feel the latter impact profoundly. Our family restaurant has been closed to dining service since March. We were well structured to survive normal and even significant ebbs and flows in business, but nobody in the industry could anticipate or plan for what we currently face. To be honest, I’m fighting for the business to survive. For months, I’ve tried to balance the pressing daily needs of the City of Gresham with my business and my family. My oldest son just graduated from Gresham High School. He was four-months-old when I was first elected to the City Council. Juggling these challenges is always difficult, but the call to public service has been worth the challenges and sacrifices. At the current moment, facing a pandemic, a rising, powerful, and necessary social justice movement, and the City’s budget woes, all while trying to keep my business afloat, is not tenable. While it is the most difficult decision I’ve ever faced, the current day demands that I must fight for my business to provide for my family. To do so, I have chosen to resign as Mayor, effective Wednesday, June 17, at 9:00 am. Resigning my position now means that the Mayor’s seat will be up for election this November. For years, I have implored my friend, Travis Stovall, to run for City Council or consider running for Mayor. Travis has been intricately involved in the City of Gresham, serving on committees ranging from public safety, to affordable housing and community development. He’s also represented Gresham on the TriMet Board and started an entrepreneurial business in Gresham. Travis is also a black man. I watched Portland Police Chief Jami Resh show courage and leadership last week when she announced that she was stepping aside in recognition that the right leader for this moment was somebody else. As a political leader, it is always tempting to see oneself as the solution to whatever problems we may face. However, when I spend time in self-reflection and consider the entirety of the critical work our city and broader society must address, I need to be willing to say I am not the best solution to these specific problems. It is in that spirit that I publicly urge Travis Stovall to run for Mayor this November, and I endorse him strongly should he choose to do so. The best possible outcome for our city right now requires a leader like Travis to help navigate our way to a better and more just future, with our strong connections intact on the other end. While I have pushed very hard for public safety reform and new approaches, and believe strongly in this work, this is a time in our nation’s history when we all have to ask how we can best help push the critical causes of change and justice. In that exploration, we must also be open to the idea that doing our best, at times, calls us to not try to lead from the front, making way for new leaders. Now is that time for me. I thank you tremendously for the incredible honor of serving as your Mayor. I came to Gresham as a 15-year-old kid. My family had nothing, and I knew nobody. This community has given me everything. You’ve given me a business, a family, a purpose, and an opportunity to spend my good years trying to enrich and edify our collective destiny. I will never forget your generosity and I will always do everything in my power, in any capacity, to give everything I have to this community. In the coming days, I’m going to focus hard on trying to save our family business and see my oldest son off to college. While this will capture my immediate attention, once again, service to others remains my chief objective, and this action, in this moment, is not the end of my work in public service. Public service can be a lonely endeavor, but I’ve never felt alone in Gresham because your kind letters, emails, cards, and prayers have always given me confidence in our work. Please know that I continue to pray for our community, your families, and your health, safety, and prosperity. With my deep and profound gratitude, God bless you all.