First Coast Connect: Making history
A lawsuit challenging the limits of city power is taking shape. The Jacksonville Aviation Authority is preparing to take the city to court for allegedly "pickpocketing" the authority's cash reserves and quashing its state-granted autonomy. Animosity between JAA and the city, which has been brewing for years, recently accelerated with the ascension of Council President Nick Howland, who has pushed for greater influence over airport budgets, particularly development of Cecil Field. We speak to the executive editor of the Florida Trib whose reporting [https://floridatrib.org/2026/07/10/jacksonville-aviation-officials-prep-lawsuit-accusing-city-of-trying-to-pickpocket/] details why this is happening now and what’s at stake.
Guest: Nate Monroe, executive editor, the Florida Trib
St. Augustine's mayor-elect
In the 460 years since it was established, the city of St. Augustine has had just a handful of Black lawmakers. Before Commissioner Cynthia Garris [https://jaxtoday.org/2026/07/02/cynthia-garris-mayor/] took office in 2022, there were just five: Commissioner and Vice Mayor Errol Jones (who served from 2002-’12), Commissioner and Vice Mayor Henry Twine (who served from 1983-’92), Commissioner Richard White (served from 1990-1994), Commissioner Arnett Chase who was was elected in 1973 and Alderman John Papino (who served during Reconstruction before being shot in the face by a white marshal in 1902). Coupled with the city’s tortured civil rights protest era, during which the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. called the city the “most lawless” he’d encountered, the historic paucity of Black leadership makes the recent election of a Black woman mayor a momentous occasion in the Ancient City. We sit down with the mayor-elect to discuss its significance, as well as what mark she hopes to leave during her term in office.
Guest: Cynthia Garris, mayor-elect, city of St. Augustine
River City Chorus
For more than a decade, the River City Chorus has performed uplifting, spiritual and patriotic tunes at churches around the First Coast. During their summer performance series, they typically donate ticket proceeds [https://www.facebook.com/RiverCityMensChorus/] to a local charity. We ask the chorus director about the charity selection process and what’s included in their summer songbook. River City Chorus has three upcoming performances: July 17 at Hendricks Avenue Baptist Church, July 18 at Arlington Presbyterian Church and July 19 at Riverside Park Methodist Church.
Guests:
* Dale Choate, director, River City Chorus
* Chelsea Weise, Young Lives director, River City Chorus
* Mark Scott, member, River City Chorus
See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.
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