Council Puts Milwaukee Flag Debate on Ice
Issue sent back to committee, council more focused on tragic death of Ald. Brostoff.
You won’t have to worry about the will-they-won’t-they saga surrounding the adoption of the People’s Flag of Milwaukee for some time.
The Common Council unanimously referred the file back to the Steering & Rules Committee.
“I’ll send this to committee so we have time, options, for our next steps,” said Ald. Peter Burgelis, who had led a multi-month outreach effort to replace the city’s 1950s flag with the “Sunrise Over the Lake” design selected from a 2016 citizen design contest.
Burgelis told Urban Milwaukee he is still considering next steps. During an October meeting, the council debated a possible referendum to settle the matter, but questions about such a vote’s legality under state law remain.
As it did in 2019, the process is bogged down in concerns about the city’s racial divide and the uneven adoption of the People’s Flag. While there is clearly visible adoption in many areas of the city and by several businesses, several Black council members have expressed concern that the yellow, blue and white flag is seldom seen in their districts and its design doesn’t reflect the city’s majority-minority status. Mayor Cavalier Johnson, a champion of the flag when he was on the council, has now threatened to veto its adoption.
But one thing was clear on Wednesday: absolutely no one wanted to talk about it, or anything else.
The council suffered the tragic loss of Ald. Jonathan Brostoff, 41, to suicide Monday and many members and city employees are still openly grieving. Brostoff’s desk was decorated with flowers, his favorite drink (Sprecher root beer) and a coat of arms depicting a “Honey Badger,” Brostoff’s self-described tenacious advocacy style.
Wednesday’s meeting was the first time the council had met since Brostoff’s death. It also came the morning after Vice President Kamala Harris lost her presidential bid in a race where Wisconsin wasn’t called until 4:45 a.m., less than five hours before the meeting.
For more on the flag debate, see our prior coverage.
The council will meet again Friday to adopt the 2025 city budget.
If you think stories like this are important, become a member of Urban Milwaukee and help support real, independent journalism. Plus you get some cool added benefits.
More about the People's Flag of Milwaukee
- Council Puts Milwaukee Flag Debate on Ice - Jeramey Jannene - Nov 6th, 2024
- Council Could Send People’s Flag To April Referendum - Jeramey Jannene - Oct 15th, 2024
- Council Again Delays Adopting People’s Flag - Jeramey Jannene - Sep 24th, 2024
- City Hall: Committee Endorses Making People’s Flag Official, Despite Objections - Jeramey Jannene - Sep 9th, 2024
- Proposal Asks City to Adopt ‘People’s Flag’ - Jeramey Jannene - Jul 2nd, 2024
- Milwaukee Finds Its Original City Flag - Jeramey Jannene - Sep 9th, 2021
- City Hall: Who Wants to Design A New City Flag? - Jeramey Jannene - Apr 23rd, 2019
- City Hall: Council Will Now Make Flag Decision - Jeramey Jannene - Feb 14th, 2019
- In Public: Does “People’s Flag” Need New Colors? - Tom Bamberger - Nov 19th, 2018
- City Hall: Arts Board Wants New City Flag Search - Jeramey Jannene - Nov 14th, 2018
Read more about People's Flag of Milwaukee here
Political Contributions Tracker
Displaying political contributions between people mentioned in this story. Learn more.
City Hall
-
Council Boosts Road Repair In Adopting 2025 Milwaukee Budget
Nov 8th, 2024 by Jeramey Jannene -
Hazmat Response to Suspicious Envelope At Election Commission
Nov 8th, 2024 by Graham Kilmer -
Court Finds Probable Cause In Spencer Misconduct Case
Nov 5th, 2024 by Graham Kilmer
There is a shortage of money for libraries, people are being shot, and we’re worried about the city’s flag?
MPS paid more than $800,000 to hire a firm to decide what schools to close, while in 2018, MPS spent more than $950,000 hiring another company to do the same.
Not sure why government organizations must keep expanding or hiring outside companies to perform basic functions. I don’t understand why we worry about a flag and miss the significant issues.