About this office
Shelby County Commissioners are the 13 members of the county's legislative body. Each represents a single-member district, and together they pass resolutions and ordinances, approve the annual county budget, set the property-tax rate, and set countywide policy. They attend regular Monday commission meetings and Wednesday committee meetings and must complete at least seven hours of continuing education each year through the UT County Technical Assistance Service (CTAS).
Salary: $34,900/year (Action News 5, Dec 2021).
Term length: 4 years.
Brooks served fourteen years as State Representative, leading House Judiciary subcommittees and chairing the Tennessee Black Caucus. She sponsored Public Chapter 502, enforcing Title VI in federally funded entities. As Commissioner, she chaired Core City, Neighborhoods & Housing, Community Services, and Brownfield Advisory Committees. Brooks filed a DOJ complaint regarding Juvenile Court due process violations, forming oversight programs to ensure reform implementation. She held participatory town halls on these reforms. Her background demonstrates legislative drafting experience and committee leadership relevant to county governance.
The candidate advocates lowering taxes for homeowners while raising them for out-of-state investors, addressing budget and tax policy judgments. Their platform to turn blighted properties into affordable homes using grant money targets land use and community services. Working for the Frayser CDC and chairing its volunteer board demonstrates prior engagement with constituent relations in District 7. The campaign style of knocking on doors suggests a direct approach to resident outreach. However, the biography provides no information regarding legislative process experience, specific budget literacy skills, or completion of state-required continuing education through UT CTAS.
No information found regarding Dedriene Rogers holding or seeking the office of County Commissioner District 7. The current holder is Henri E. Brooks. No information found regarding her candidacy in the 2026 election. No information found in sources regarding prior office held by Dedriene Rogers. No information found in sources regarding education of Dedriene Rogers. No information found in sources regarding family of Dedriene Rogers. Bio does not indicate policy judgment, budget literacy, legislative process experience, constituent relations capacity, or completion of state-required continuing education through UT CTAS.
Moore founded Abundant Earth Global CDC in 2018, managing operations focused on poverty alleviation through education and food security. Her thirty-plus years of business experience in Atlanta, New York, and Washington, DC, suggest familiarity with organizational management and fiscal oversight relevant to county budgeting and tax policy. As a nonprofit founder, she likely possesses skills in drafting resolutions and navigating legislative processes for community benefit. She represents parts of Binghampton, Douglas, Frayser, and Midtown, engaging directly with constituents through her church youth programs and volunteer work with the NAACP and United Way.
Naylor is a lifelong Memphian and former small business owner with degrees from White Station High School and the University of Memphis. Her background as an entrepreneur suggests practical experience relevant to budget literacy and policy judgment on local economic matters. As a dedicated mother, she may bring personal perspective to constituent relations within her district of approximately 70,000 residents. However, the biography lists no prior elected office or specific legislative experience, leaving gaps regarding drafting ordinances or navigating intergovernmental processes.
Morales is a candidate in the Democratic primary for Shelby County Commissioner District 7 on May 5, 2026. He appears on the Memphis Public Libraries "Meet the Candidates" page. The biography provides no information regarding his policy judgment on countywide matters such as budget, taxes, or land use. It does not indicate any demonstrated budget literacy or experience with legislative processes like drafting ordinances. There is no evidence of prior public service, constituent relations work, or educational background. Bio does not indicate career history, education, prior public service, or statutory training.
Licensed Tennessee attorney since 1981, Gerald Greenβs legal career includes multiple disciplinary findings for neglecting client matters and failing to communicate, resulting in censure and a stayed suspension. He is a Republican candidate for Shelby County District 7, appearing as the sole primary nominee for the May 2026 election. The biography confirms his residency in District 7 for nearly three decades but provides no evidence of experience with county budgeting, tax policy, or legislative drafting. It does not indicate prior public service roles, constituent casework history, or completion of required UT CTAS continuing education.