Brandy Majors, introduced by the clerk, criticized what she called "performative" leadership at the council, saying that residents' detailed testimony about displacement and environmental harm is overridden by developers and donors who present polished narratives that secure favorable votes. "Representation without action is decoration," she said, urging measurable commitments rather than symbolic statements.
Other commenters echoed demands for accountability. Jesse Vershawn Paris accused the city's Democratic establishment of gatekeeping that prevents independent and Black candidates from ballot access and public forums; he framed his candidacy and coalition work as a response to that exclusion. Both speakers called for tangible outcomes — not identity statements — and urged the council to center budgets and policy around the needs of Black residents, unhoused people, elders and other vulnerable groups.
The public comments combined calls for procedural fairness in elections with broader demands that the council make measurable policy and budget choices that prioritize marginalized residents. No council responses were recorded during the public comment period.