Monthly Archives: August 2009

Old Question, New Answers for Atlanta’s Struggling Media

Who will tell the people?

That oft-repeated line was first written by Mary Anne Evans, the Victorian novelist who was best known by her pen name, George Eliot.

Don’t get me wrong; I wouldn’t know George Eliot from George Foreman. Frankly, until I sat down to write this column, I was clueless about the fact that Eliot (who more famously authored the classic, Silas Marner) was a woman.

But that trenchant question, asked rhetorically by one of Eliot’s fictional characters, has been nagging at me lately.

Considering what’s happening to the newspaper industry, in general and metro Atlanta media, in particular, I wonder ‘who will tell the people?’

As a lifelong reporter, the meltdown of modern journalism has me understandably worried. As a citizen of this region, the implosion of our local newspapers has me terrified.

My former employer and the state’s largest daily newspaper, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, has shrunk – literally and figuratively – into a shadow of its former self as its readership and revenues have tanked.

In the two years since I left the AJC, the staff has been cut dramatically, key departments have been downsized or eliminated and the reporters still working there are stretched far too thin to do their best work.

Recently, the paper’s publisher announced the decision to shutter the AJC’s storied downtown headquarters and move the bulk of its operations out to the suburbs by the middle of 2010. Continue reading

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Column: AGL’s CEO pushing hard for United Way goal

By Maria Saporta
Friday, August 28, 2009

John Somerhalder may not know what this year’s United Way goal will be until moments before the campaign kicks off on Sept. 1.

Somerhalder, CEO of AGL Resources Inc., who is chairing this year’s United Way campaign, is still meeting with executives to push the goal number “as hard as we can.”

The 2008 United Way campaign raised $80.5 million, Continue reading

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GRTA awarded no-bid contracts to McKinsey

By Maria Saporta and Dave Williams
Friday, August 28, 2009

The Georgia Regional Transportation Authority’s (GRTA) decision to award two contracts worth up to $4.5 million without competitive bidding is being questioned by several people in both the public and private sector.

The two sole-sourced contracts have been awarded to McKinsey & Co., a consulting firm, to advance Gov. Sonny Perdue’s IT3 initiative, which stands for Investing in Tomorrow’s Transportation Today.
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Georgia’s Planned Parenthood to join forces with Alabama

By Maria Saporta

Planned Parenthood of Georgia is merging with Planned Parenthood of Alabama.

The merged organization — Planned Parenthood Southeast — was supposed to have begun its operations on Tuesday, Sept. 1, but it has been delayed for a month to dot a “few more ‘i’s,’” according to Leola Reis, the vide president of external affairs for Georgia. The merged territory will cover all of Georgia, Alabama and most of Mississippi.

“Combining our two organizations will Continue reading

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Mayoral candidates can rise above racial tensions that have divided Atlanta in the past

For the past couple of months, I’ve been talking to the top candidates for Atlanta mayor about my concern that this could be the most divisive mayoral campaign in the past three decades.

I thought that a likely run-off election that is almost sure to include City Councilwoman Mary Norwood, who is white, and any of her opponents, all of whom are all black; that race would raise its ugly head.

Little did I expect that a major racial blow-up would happen several months before the general election on Nov. 3.

But that’s what happened this week when a position statement
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Alan Kiepper, Former MARTA executive, passes away

By Maria Saporta

One of the architects of our modern MARTA system has passed away.

Alan Kiepper, MARTA’s general manager and CEO from 1972 to 1982, passed away on Aug. 26 in Annapolis, Md. at the age of 81.

I received an email from one of his successors at MARTA — Ken Gregor — who wanted to make sure Kiepper was recognized for the influence he had on Atlanta’s growth.
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DeKalb, Atlanta awarded $14.9 million federal grant

By Maria Saporta

DeKalb County and the Clean Cities Atlanta Coalition has been awarded a $14.9 million grant by the U.S. Department of Energy.

The grant will fund programming designed to reduce the use of fossil fuels in transportation vehicles.

In a statement, Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin said: “I want to personally thank the Department of Energy and the Office of the Vice President for pushing this Continue reading

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Georgia losing millions by not moving on commuter rail

By Maria Saporta

Georgia’s continued lack of progress on building a commuter rail line towards Griffin is costing the state millions in lost stimulus dollars.

Unless the state acts quickly to get the project moving, it is extremely vulnerable to losing the $87 million federal funds already allocated to the project.

Those are two concerns expressed by U.S. Rep. David Scott (D-Georgia) earlier Continue reading

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Mayor Franklin responds to Turpeau’s racially-charged paper on mayoral race

By Maria Saporta

Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin believes Atlantans have moved beyond the racial divisions that afflicted the city decades ago.

After reading a position paper of the Black Leadership Forum, thought to have been written by Aaron Turpeau, the mayor felt she had to respond.

In the paper, Turpeau wrote that the black community needs to rally behind Continue reading

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Candidates Borders and Reed denounce racially-charged comments in mayor’s race

By Maria Saporta

Race has entered the Atlanta’s mayor’s race.

A position paper by the Black Leadership Forum, written by Aaron Turpeau, is urging the black community to rally behind one black candidate to make sure Atlanta doesn’t end up with a white mayor — notably City Councilwoman Mary Norwood who currently is ahead in the polls.

Turpeau then urges black leaders Continue reading

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