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Friends remember the contributions and humor of developer John Aderhold

By Maria Saporta

Hundreds of people turned out Monday at the Peachtree Presbyterian Church to celebrate the life of Atlanta developer and civic leader John E. Aderhold.

Aderhold, passed way on Aug. 10, four days shy of his 86th birthday.

But his passing did not stop his family from throwing a birthday party in his honor on Sunday.

“The entire family went to the Varsity,” Rev. Victor Pentz said to the congregation attending the service. The whole family included Aderhold’s widow, Helen; his son, Tom, and his grand-children and great-grandchildren.

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Improve list of regional transportation projects; fix flaws in HB 277; and the region stands to benefit

Passing a draft list of transportation projects on Aug. 15 was only the first step.

The Atlanta region has two months left to improve both the list as well as the process outlined in House Bill 277.

What’s at stake? Creating a transportation system for the Atlanta region that will best serve our metropolis for decades to come.

First: the list.

The executive committee of the Atlanta Regional Transportation Roundtable — working with state and local government officials — has been hard at work for the past several months trying to come up with a list.

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Fair Share for Transit urges Roundtable to add more transit projects to draft list

By Maria Saporta

Fair Share for Transit, the coalition of 81 organizations advocating for greater investment in public transportation, made a final plea for its cause on Friday.

On Monday, the Atlanta Regional Transportation Roundtable executive committee will approve its final draft list of projects that are supposed to total $6.1 billion. The full Roundtable must approve the final list by Oct. 15.

So far, the roundtable’s executive committee has identified a total of $3. 6 billion for transit projects, but its list was still $400 million above the $6.1 billion target.

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Developer John Aderhold — key Atlanta business and civic leader — passes away

By Maria Saporta

Update: A celebration of John Aderhold’s life will be held at Peachtree Presbyterian Church, 3434 Roswell Road, Atlanta, on Monday, August 15, 2011, at 11:00 AM. In lieu of flowers, contributions can be sent to the Carlyle Fraser Heart Center at Emory Hospital Midtown.

One of Atlanta’s business anchors — John Aderhold — passed away Wednesday afternoon after a long illness.

Aderhold helped shape Atlanta in several ways. He was instrumental in the development of the Georgia Dome, serving as chairman of the Georgia World Congress Center when the deal was being put together and the facility was built.

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Column: One-stop volunteer effort to be launched by Hands On Atlanta and United Way

By Maria Saporta
Friday, August 5, 2011

Thanks to a new partnership between Hands On Atlanta and the United Way of Metropolitan Atlanta Inc., it soon will be easier to volunteer in the community.

The two organizations have joined forces to create a “one-stop, online shop” for volunteerism throughout the metro area — an effort that will be launched Sept. 1.

Hands On Atlanta has adopted new innovative technology that will permit both organizations to post volunteer opportunities, provide online registration,

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Atlanta BeltLine’s Brian Leary says we must pass regional transportation sales tax

By Maria Saporta

The regional transportation sales tax “can not NOT pass,” according to Brian Leary, president and CEO of Atlanta BeltLine Inc.

Leary spoke at a luncheon meeting Wednesday, Aug. 10 of the Urban Land Institute’s Atlanta chapter about how the BeltLine belongs on the list of big ideas that has guided the growth of Atlanta.

The Atlanta BeltLine, a 22-mile circular rail corridor that envelops the central city, has emerged as one of the top priorities of Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed’s administration.

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Lead consultant Glenn Totten resigns from metro transportation campaign team

By Maria Saporta

The lead consultant hired to help pass the regional transportation sales tax in metro Atlanta has resigned.

Glenn Totten, CEO of Totten Communications based in Alexandria, Va., resigned late last week in a mutual agreement with the rest of the campaign team.

“At the end of the day, it was mutually agreed to due to the time commitment involved,” said Paul Bennecke, principal of Red Clay Strategies, one of the other consultants on the team.

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Drew Charter School receives $1 million innovation grant

By Maria Saporta

It was a big day in the decade-long history of the Drew Charter School in East Lake.

First, Comcast used the school as the platform to announce it Internet Essentials program in metro Atlanta — a program designed to help bridge the digital divide for those less fortunate.

Gov. Nathan Deal, Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, Georgia House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams and U.S. Rep. John Lewis all showed up for that event.

And as soon as that was over, a group of dignitaries went to one of the conference rooms at the school for a special announcement.

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When it comes to transit funding, the State of Georgia is missing in action

Through all the chatter over what should be included on the Atlanta region’s transportation projects list, a loud vacuum can’t be ignored.

The vacuum? The State of Georgia.

Just what role, if any, will the State of Georgia play in contributing to metro Atlanta’s transit systems? And what role will the State of Georgia play in controlling the future of our region’s transit governance?

Consider this. The one-penny regional transportation sales that will go before voters next year will be raised (and invested) in the 10-county Atlanta region. If passed, this is money that metro Atlantans will contribute and invest in their own region’s future.

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Deloitte makes major leadership transition

By Maria Saporta
Friday, August 5, 2011

A transition in leadership is taking place at Atlanta’s largest public accounting firm, Deloitte LLP.

Brad Branch, who has been the office managing partner for Atlanta and Birmingham, Ala., since January 2008, is becoming a national managing partner for the firm.

And Ed Heys, who has been the deputy managing partner, is succeeding Branch and overseeing Deloitte’s operations in Atlanta and Birmingham.

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Atlanta-Havana charter flights are on the horizon with Delta and Marazul agreement

By Maria Saporta

People will soon be able to fly to Cuba from Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport.

Marazul, the oldest and most experienced charter and travel agency serving Cuba in the United States, has entered into an agreement with Delta Air Lines to begin direct charter flights from Atlanta to Havana.

Both Marazul and Delta have received all the necessary approvals in Cuba and the United States to begin this service.

“We’re excited to be partnering with Marazul on flights between Atlanta and Cuba,” said Trebor Banstetter, a Delta spokesman. “It reinforces Atlanta’s status as Delta’s global gateway, where we currently offer flights to more than 70 international destinations in 47 countries.”

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Column: SE Council of Foundations names Janine Lee new CEO

By Maria Saporta
Friday, July 29, 2011

The Southeastern Council of Foundations has named its first woman as well as its first African-American to become its new president and CEO.

Janine Lee, who has served as president and CEO of the Southern Partners Fund for the past four years, will take over on Sept. 1. Previously Lee served as vice president of education programs for the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation, and before that, as vice president of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation in Kansas City, Mo.

She also is a co-founder of Grantmakers for Effective Organizations and co-author of “Funding Effectiveness: Lessons in Building Nonprofit Capacity.”

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Atlanta-based SunTrust now a global United Way partner

By Maria Saporta

SunTrust Banks has entered into premier status with United Way Worldwide — announcing Wednesday that it has become a United Way Global Corporate Leadership Partner.

The Atlanta-based bank in 2010 gave a total of $8.4 million to United Way nationally, including $3.1 million to the United Way of Metropolitan Atlanta through both the employee and corporate giving.

Of that, the SunTrust Foundation gave a total of $2.88 million in 2010. A supersized check of $2.88 million decorated the SunTrust board room during the announcement.

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Transit and MARTA counties are losing out on project lists

By Maria Saporta

An outside review of the official lists floating around on the possible transportation projects that will be part of the regional referendum has determined two disturbing trends.

First, it appears that “roads are faring much better than transit on the official short lists” presented by the staff of the Atlanta Regional Commission — even the list that is considered to favor transit.

And two, the projects that are on “those short lists are lopsided in favor of serving counties that don’t pay for MARTA.”

Those observations have been made by Ken Edelstein, editor of the GreenBuildingChronicle, who said that he has been pouring over the numbers in the various project list options and realized that “the vast majority of transit projects have essentially been pushed off the scenarios.”

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Metro Atlanta plays critical role in the trade that goes through the Savannah port

By Maria Saporta

Little did we know that the Savannah Port really could be known as Atlanta’s port.

That’s what Curtis Foltz, executive director of the Georgia Ports Authority, told members of the Rotary Club of Atlanta on Monday.

Of the $15.2 billion of trade that went through the port in 2010, “ 60 percent of it — $8.1 billion — came from metro Atlanta,” Foltz said.

“We are almost branded as an Atlanta port,” Foltz said to the gathering of Atlantans.

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Tad Leithead: regional transportation referendum likely to be Nov., 2012

By Maria Saporta

It was regional transportation day in Cobb County.

Tad Leithead, chairman of the Atlanta Regional Commission and a former chairman of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce, gave the keynote speech at the First Monday breakfast on the upcoming transportation sales tax referendum in 2012.

During the question-and-answer period, Leithead was asked whether Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed’s desire to move the date of the referendum from the special primary date of July 31 to the general election on Nov. 6 would be successful.

“The momentum is moving towards delaying the referendum to November,” Leithead said. “The July primary day would have a lower turn out. And you don’t get a broad base of voters to the polls.”

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Commuter rail line to Griffin not as costly as state estimates, rail advocate says

By Maria Saporta

Georgians for Passenger Rail has analyzed cost projections for a commuter rail line between Atlanta and Griffin, and it has determined that the cost would be several hundred million dollars less than the estimates provided by the Georgia Regional Transportation Authority.

Gordon Kenna, executive director of Georgians for Passenger Rail, had a meeting with GRTA officials, who provided a breakdown of the various costs — construction, development and operations — for the pilot project.

GRTA’s has estimated that the project’s capital cost would be $463 million, including 30 percent for unallocated contingency costs.

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GeorgiaForward can help propel the state into the future

I’m not really sure when North Carolina by-passed Georgia to become the most progressive state in the Southeast.

But thanks to the GeorgiaForward forum in Macon last year, I know how North Carolina passed us by.

It all came down to vision and leadership. Former North Carolina Governor Jim Hunt (who served during two different eras) saw the merit of bringing together bi-partisan leaders to focus on the most important issues facing the state.

That’s how North Carolina was able to coalesce around a vision to become a center for high technology; around a vision to bring passenger rail and high speed trains; around a vision to have a balanced energy portfolio that included renewable fuels; and the list goes on.

Posted inATL Business Chronicle

Downtown Multi-modal terminal funding at risk

By Dave Williams and Maria Saporta
Friday, July 29, 2011

A key development project planned for downtown Atlanta is in danger of falling off a list of transportation improvements metro voters will be asked to fund next year.

A request for $50 million to help build a bus and rail passenger terminal in the blighted “Gulch” area has been removed from the latest project lists a committee of local elected officials is assembling for a 2012 referendum on a regional transportation sales tax.

Combined with another move by the regional “roundtable” to cut from the list a proposed commuter rail line linking

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Two people named to succeed Marcia Bansley at Trees Atlanta — Veates and Levine

By Maria Saporta

Trees Atlanta has decided it will take two people to replace its founding executive director Marcia Bansley.

Late Friday afternoon, Trees Atlanta announced that it is turning to two insiders to become co-executive directors.

Connie Veates, also will hold the title of chief operating officer and be responsible for development, special events, membership, communications, office management and finance.

Greg Levine will become chief program officer responsible for all of Trees Atlanta’s program areas, including NeighborWoods, the urban forestry crew, forest restoration, education and building maintenance.

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