A series of public commenters used the council’s public-comment period to press city officials for help on violent crime and infrastructure problems.
Angela Cheatham identified herself and said her son was murdered Aug. 16 of the prior year; she said repeated calls and emails to police detectives and city staff had gone unanswered and asked the council and mayor’s office for help to prevent the case from becoming a cold case. “I called. He don't return my call,” Cheatham said as she asked the city to intervene on her son’s investigation. Councilors and mayoral staff responded by offering to connect her with the mayor’s chief of operations and to pursue follow-up with police detectives.
Later in the public-comment period, Cynthia Turner raised ongoing drainage issues at an address in northwest Birmingham, provided case numbers and said crews had promised repairs but the work had not been finished. Public-works staff said they had inspected the site, reported there were willow trees that should be removed, and pledged to send a crew to clear vegetation and deepen the ditch as needed; staff agreed to meet with the resident after the meeting to firm up a repair schedule.
Councilors used the public-comment responses to stress accountability: several asked administration staff to track follow-up steps and to report back on timelines for repairs and investigative updates. Residents at several points asked for quicker, more consistent follow-up on service requests and criminal-investigation inquiries than they had received.