Rick's Blog

Mayor Reeves: Where Has All the Fun Gone?

Pensacola Mayor D.C. Reeves appears upset that residents aren’t impressed with his new city logo or how he rolled it out. Once again, he has taken to social media to defend a logo that some have jokingly described as looking like a zebra’s butt.

Once Upon A Time

In 2023, during his first year in office, the mayor didn’t take himself so seriously and had fun rebranding because sometimes the best civic engagement comes wrapped in humor and creativity.

When the City of Pensacola announced in March 2023 that it needed names for three new street sweepers, nobody anticipated the overwhelming response that would follow.

An Unexpected Wave of Participation

Within just two days of launching the contest, then-Public Information Officer Kaycee Lagarde reported more than 450 entries flooding in. By the submission deadline on April 14, city staff found themselves reviewing over 1,500 creative suggestions from residents eager to give personality to these municipal workhorses.

From Submissions to Stardom

Mayor Reeves and city staff narrowed the field to 12 finalists, setting up a public vote that drew remarkable engagement. The finalist list read like a comedy lineup: Sweepy McSweepface, Obi-Wan Cleanobi, Lightning McClean, Dirt Reynolds, Dirty Harry, The Grim Sweeper, and Darth Sweeper among others.

In June 2023, the city unveiled not just the winning names but custom designs to match at his weekly press conference. Sweepy McSweepface, Obi-Wan Cleanobi, and Lightning McClean became the official identities of three Elgin street sweepers that would patrol Pensacola’s 326 miles of city roadways.

The mayor enjoyed the contest so much that he added a “Mayor’s Choice” bonus name, selecting Dirt Reynolds for a fourth sweeper.

Why It Matters

Aside from the jokes and wordplay, the contest managed to shed light on vital city services that often go unnoticed. Pensacola’s fleet of eight street sweepers removes over 4,700 tons of debris annually, preventing pollutants from entering stormwater systems and protecting local waterways. They respond to parades, festivals, and special events while running their regular 16 monthly routes.

The street sweeper naming contest proved that civic engagement doesn’t always require serious town halls or complex policy debates. Sometimes it just takes a little creativity, a sense of humor, and the willingness to let the public have some fun with their government.

 

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