Milwaukee, WI
UW-Milwaukee guard Markeith Browning II is dismissed from team
A turbulent season for the UW-Milwaukee Panthers got quite a bit bumpier Monday.
Markeith Browning II, a junior guard expected to be one of the Panthers’ top players coming into the season, has been dismissed from the program.
“Announcements like this are never easy,” coach Bart Lundy said in a statement released by UWM. “It was an internal decision done with the best interests of the program in mind. We certainly wish Markeith the best moving forward. The entire program hopes for nothing but success in his future and will do what we can to help him on that path.”
The 6-foot-4 Browning, a native of Ypsilanti, Michigan, was perhaps the Panthers’ best all-around athlete and someone who could be a difference-maker on the defensive end of the court.
But offensively Browning had struggled – not unlike the rest of the 4-7 Panthers – as he was averaging only 8.5 points on 40.7% shooting to go with 3.5 rebounds and 2.5 assists.
In fairness to Browning, he was being asked to play out of position much of the time due to UWM’s lack of a true point guard. Still, his overall impact was nowhere near what it was expected to be coming into a season with exceedingly high expectations.
Browning was the lone scholarship player remaining from the Pat Baldwin era. He played in 54 games at UWM.
To help fill the void caused by Browning’s absence, freshman Makuei Riek is planning to drop his redshirt and will be available moving forward for the Panthers.
A 6-6, 170-pounder from Rochester, Minnesota, Riek is raw but also is a solid athlete capable of playing multiple positions.
UWM, which next hosts Tennessee-Chattanooga at 1 p.m. Friday, is also expected to get leading scorer BJ Freeman and key reserve Langston Wilson back from injuries in the short term.

Milwaukee, WI
Milwaukee garbage, parking changes for Good Friday, Easter

MILWAUKEE – The Milwaukee Department of Public Works will be modifying certain operations due to Good Friday and Easter. Here’s a list of changes that residents need to know.
Garbage and recycling
- There will be no garbage and recycling pick-up on Friday, April 18.
- Drop-Off Centers will be closed on Friday, April 18 and Sunday, April 20.
- Drop-Off Centers will remain open on Saturday, April 19 from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
- Collection days shift forward after each city holiday; review the collection schedule on the city’s website.
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Parking enforcement and towing
- No overnight parking enforcement on Saturday night into Sunday morning, April 20 from 2 a.m. to 6 a.m.
- Overnight parking enforcement resumes on Sunday night into Monday morning, April 21 from 2 a.m. to 6 a.m.
- Vehicles still must be legally parked and not in violation of any posted parking regulations.
- Tow Lot will be open on Friday, April 18 and Saturday, April 19 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
- Tow Lot will be closed on Sunday, April 20.
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Milwaukee Water Works
- The Water Works Customer Service Center at 841 N. Broadway will be closed on Friday, April 18 for in-person and live telephone assistance.
- Automated account information and bill payment will remain available by calling 414-286-2830.
- Customers can pay their Municipal Services Bill and check account balances online anytime.
- Questions concerning billing or making payments can be emailed or by calling customer service the following business day.
- For water emergencies, customers are asked to call the 24-hour Control Center at 414-286-3710.
For other requests, schedules, and information, residents should call 414-286-CITY, visit the DPW website or enter service requests online.
The Source: The Milwaukee Department of Public Works released information for this report.
Milwaukee, WI
Radio Milwaukee Names Jordan Lee As Executive Director

For Jordan Lee, it’s all about the music. Plain and simple.
After serving in an interim role since January, Lee is taking over as the executive director of Radio Milwaukee (WYMS-88.9 FM) – the station’s third in a little more than three years.
“It’s back to basics,” he said. “Our mission is pretty clear. We use music to bring people together. We had some leadership that was trying to use other tools to do that. I’m just going to focus on music. That’s what we’re known for. That’s what we’re good at.”
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Music has been at the core of Lee’s professional journey.
“I came from the Milwaukee music scene myself,” Lee told Milwaukee Magazine. “It’s inherently a part of where my vision goes. I’m taking a look at how we can improve the existing programs we have. I have no new programming initiatives at all right now. Probably won’t. But there’s a lot of room for improvement and a lot of opportunity to increase the impact in what we’re already doing. I feel we lost a little bit of time these past couple years by trying to do new things that quite frankly I didn’t hear people from Milwaukee asking for.”
Lee specifically pointed to Radio Milwaukee’s effort to move into news.
“That was a mistake,” Lee said. “I feel strongly that we need to be focused on storytelling in music. We have great news with stations like WUWM and WHAD. We recently partnered with Kristin Brey (WTMJ radio host and Milwaukee Journal Sentinel columnist). Let’s let those people do that great work. We want to be focused on music.”
Lee replaces Maxie C. Jackson III, who took over the top leadership role at Radio Milwaukee in September 2022 after a stint a New England Public Media. Before Jackson was Kevin Sucher, who resigned in January 2022 after less than two years on the job.
A native of Kenosha, Lee said he “grew up culturally” in Milwaukee, performing as what he described as a First Stage Children’s Theater “brat” and then doing gigs as a musician at venues like The Rave and the old Globe East concert hall. He moved to the city at age 17 and currently resides in Bay View.
Lee most recently served as senior director of programming and has spent more than 15 years across two stints at Radio Milwaukee, including serving in various leadership roles.
Lee first joined Radio Milwaukee in 2008, a year after it launched, as a morning show host and, three years later, moved to assistant program director before becoming program director and station director. In January 2022, he joined Paragon, for which he had previously served as a consultant, in a full-time role. He returned to Radio Milwaukee in November 2023.
“I’ve known Jordan going back a number of years through the various roles he’s played in the organization,” Radio Milwaukee board chairman Al Orr said in an interview. “I once had an opportunity to see him speak at a donor event. His ability to articulate the mission, vision, promise and opportunity of Radio Milwaukee really struck me. He spoke from the heart without prepared notes. He displayed a natural leadership style that night. If you look at all the experiences he’s had as a convener in the community and his industry experience both with this organization and with his consulting stint, he’s developed this mix of credibility and commitment and natural leadership. That’s what we all felt was really important as we move into this important new period for Radio Milwaukee.”
Orr said that Lee rose above all other candidates when it came to selecting the next executive director, and he stood out in his interim role. Lee’s promotion to the executive director role will provide important stability for the organization, he added.
“He has a really unique way of leveraging relationships, and his path to this place has positioned him and equipped him in a way that none of the others who recently proceeded him were,” said Orr. “They didn’t have that mix. I feel like this is an opportunity for us to find some long-term leadership in the role.”
Lee’s on-the-job accomplishments at Radio Milwaukee include serving as a catalyst for creating and launching HYFIN, an urban alternative station dedicated to celebrating and supporting Black music and culture. In addition, he led strategic planning, supported the implementation of new and innovative programming and developed and implemented community engagement strategies.
“Music is a tool that is much older than any of the communication styles we have,” Lee said. “It’s also a tool that we can wield for good. That’s been our mission from the get-go.”
To that end, Lee stressed the importance of cultural advocacy through music. “That’s going to be the solution to some of our city’s consistent divisions,” he said. “People are really excited about sharing other cultural experiences. Look at what’s happening in food when people here have an opportunity to try something that is different.”
Among the initiatives that Lee plans to foster is “continuing to push the envelope on artists we feel are strongly representing the new sounds of what we want people to pay attention to.”
“We also really want to double down on our local efforts,” he said. “We’ve really been doing a lot of experiments throughout the years of trying to find impactful ways to create a better platform for Milwaukee musicians. There’s a lot of ground that we can still solidify in those spaces.”
Lee said he’s also actively restructuring the executive leadership of the organization to “ensure that we don’t lose track in the future.” He’s setting the framework to create a trio of leaders at the top of the organization with himself as executive director, Tarik Moody as senior director of strategy and innovation, and the hiring of a deputy executive director.
“Tarik is one of the few staff members who’s been around longer than me,” Lee said. “He really knows where we’ve been, and his reputation in Milwaukee as being a strategist and a technology innovator is rock-solid. He’s going to keep us aware of what’s going on with disruptions, technology changes and economic waves of change.”
The deputy executive director will serve as a chief financial officer of sorts, he said.
“That person is going to make sure that we’re making good financial decisions around programming and execution of ideas,” Lee explained. “With me focused on culture and mission, Tarik focused on technology and my new deputy focused on finance, those are really the main pillars that we’ve always expected the executive director to be good at, which has left me wondering if there are unicorns out there who are good at all of those things.”
The deputy executive director will have to possess certain attributes to join the Radio Milwaukee leadership team, Lee said. “We’re going to be really focused on someone who knows Milwaukee but specifically the nonprofit business sector in Milwaukee and understands how the funding ecosystems work around here.”
The restructuring was essential for Lee in agreeing to move into the executive director role.
“I came back because I wanted to invest my energy into this thing that I care so much about,” Lee said. “That’s the same reason I’m restructuring the leadership team. We really need to future-proof this company because to me, it’s a really important part of the fabric of Milwaukee.”
Along those lines, Radio Milwaukee also announced the promotions of two other key organizational leaders – Element Everest-Blanks as program director of HYFIN and Kenny Perez as program director of 88Nine.
“These promotions represent the strength and stability of Radio Milwaukee’s leadership, as well as our dedication to reflecting the diversity and pride of our city,” Lee said. “It’s been since day one that we’ve wanted to be a rainbow coalition of culture and sound. We’ve really wanted to be a place where you think you only like one thing, but then you come over here and you learn that you like a lot of things. You just need to have a chance to get exposed to them.”
Once a deputy executive director is in place, Lee wants to grow Radio Milwaukee’s staff. “We really want to do more by investing more in what we’re doing.”
Milwaukee, WI
Reckless driving victim urges Milwaukee residents to shape Vision Zero plan

MILWAUKEE — The City of Milwaukee is looking for public feedback to help reach its goal of eliminating all traffic deaths and serious injuries by 2037.
The Vision Zero Action Plan draft is now open for public comment and the leaders of the initiative want more community involvement.
“We want to check in one more time with people and ask, ‘did we get this right? Is there anything else that needs to be added?’ No plan is a perfect set in stone thing. We are going to be amending and adding new actions as well,” Vision Zero Policy Director, Jessica Wineberg explained.
TMJ4
The group hosted an open house Tuesday evening at the Villard Square Library.

TMJ4
“The recklessness is ridiculous nowadays,” Tina Ortiz said.

TMJ4
Ortiz attended the open house to learn more about the plan and provide feedback. She knows reckless driving all too well.
She shared that her life changed on April 6, 2018, when she was hit by a drunk driver.
“She left me for dead—it was a hit and run,” Ortiz said.
As a result of the crash, Ortiz lost her leg and now advocates for safer roads to prevent others from experiencing similar trauma.
Watch: Milwaukee residents chime in on citywide reckless driving initiative
Milwaukee residents chime in on citywide reckless driving initiative in final month of public comment
“I’m being here at Vision Zero to get my education and to pass it on,” Ortiz said. “I want other people to be educated as well to understand the plans and the purpose.”
The draft of the Vision Zero Action Plan includes proposals for safer streets, accountability in the justice system, and public education on traffic laws, among other initiatives.
“It means everything to me. The safer the better,” Ortiz added.
According to the city, 68 people were killed by traffic violence in Milwaukee in 2024.
A number that is too high for Milwaukee resident Andre Clavelli.
“Vision Zero is important. No deaths is even better than what we currently have,” Clavelli said.

TMJ4
If all goes well, the Vision Zero team plans to present a final plan to the Common Council by May, with the goal of having it signed by Mayor Cavalier Johnson in June.
“Vision Zero, it’s going to go—watch what I tell you. It’s starting here—it’s going to shoot like a rocket,” Ortiz concluded.
Community members interested in learning more are invited to the next open house from 4 to 7 p.m. on April 22 at the Mitchell Street Library.
Click here for more information.
This is the link to the survey for the plan.
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