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Equitable development: Master plan at Hulsey Yard a successful example for Murphy Crossing, elsewhere in Atlanta

By Guest Columnist BRANDON SUTTON, a member of the Hulsey Yard Study Committee

2020 will no doubt be remembered as a time of unprecedented disruption to the lives and businesses of countless people throughout the country, including right here in Atlanta. In a macro sense, the world has changed dramatically. In a micro sense, the lives and daily choices of people everywhere are in a state of suspended animation.

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Why global education still matters

By Guest Columnist JASON MARSHALL, executive director at Wesley International Academy

In recent months, international fear and caution have escalated, and we have watched national borders close while ideological isolationism rose. It may feel like this global disconnection is here to stay, but in many ways, the world has never felt smaller. … As an educator, I believe recent events have revealed that a global education is just as – if not more – important now than ever before.

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When ‘stay at home’ orders put children, women in easy reach of their abuser

Sheltering at home should provide comfort for people, but for our most vulnerable children it becomes a potential danger zone, and it disproportionately effects our children of color. For children who have been abused or trafficked, sheltering in place could be putting them back in the environments that caused them harm and trauma – back with their abusers or traffickers.

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Negative wealth effect + isolation: How reduced socialization could worsen a pandemic recession

By Guest Columnist BOB WILLIS, CEO, Willis Investment Counsel

For decades, I have maintained a professional diary of my thinking as chief investment officer for an investment management firm located north of Atlanta. Earlier this spring, when the pandemic led to safety precautions at our office, I headed to my mountain cabin to work remotely – which stimulated more thought and reflection, and a lot of writing. Bear with me as I reveal a few excerpts from back then, and now.

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The year of 20/20 vision: Perfection vs. clarity

By Guest Columnist FELICIA A. MOORE, president of the Atlanta City Council

Like many people excited to ring in the new year, I also referred to the year 2020 as the year of “perfect vision.” This year we would see clearly, with a perfect line of sight toward our expected outcomes. The elders of my generation often say, “Be careful what you wish for … you just might get it.”

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Remembering the launch of CNN on its 40th anniversary

By Guest Columnist MARK ALDREN, a member of the team that launched CNN and past president/board member, Atlanta Press Club

Skeptics, and there were plenty of them at the time, called it the “Chicken Noodle Network.” But 40 years ago, Atlanta was the birthplace of a revolution in news reporting. On June 1st, 1980, Ted Turner launched the Cable News Network, CNN. It was a bold experiment no one had dared try before – 24- hour news, seven days a week, beamed skyward to orbiting satellites.

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COVID-19 makes ‘Think Globally, Act Locally’ more than a check-box exercise

By Guest Columnists ANNA WESTERSTAHL STENPORT and SEBNEM OZKAN, of the Atlanta Global Studies Center at Georgia Institute of Technology

Universities and colleges, as local and global anchor institutions, are poised to educate the next generation of global citizens and empower metro Atlanta’s ‘new’ global agenda through the common international language of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals.

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An Open Letter to Dr. Lisa Herring, incoming superintendent of Atlanta Public Schools

These days are emotional for parents like me. My daughter is a high school senior and like many students across the country, she won’t get to experience her last day of school with her classmates and teachers. … Neither my mother nor I ever got the chance to graduate, so my daughter will be the first in our family. But we won’t be able to see her walk across that stage, and that’s something I have dreamed about since she was born.

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Leadership lessons from POTUS 1: What Washington wanted to say on becoming president

By SETH KALLER, president, Seth Kaller, Inc. (Historic Documents and Legacy Collections)  “The preliminary observation that a free government ought to be built on the information and virtue of the people will here find its proper place.” On April 30, 1789 George Washington solemnly swore to “faithfully execute the Office of President of the United […]

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Future of placemaking: Engaging places need affordable homes, mobility, authenticity

By Guest Columnists BILL TUNNELL, JERRY SPANGLER and TOM WALSH, leaders of TSW, a planning, architecture and landscape architecture firm

Recently we had the pleasure of celebrating our firm’s 30th anniversary. It was both gratifying and humbling to look back on three decades of designing buildings, communities and green spaces, and reflect on how fortunate we have been to participate in what has arguably been a revolutionary time period in building design and placemaking.

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Residential solar – New state policy, federal incentives could make this a break-out year

By Guest Columnist PETER DYE, academic manager at Oglethorpe University and clean energy advocate

Solar power is on the rise for Georgia’s businesses, and more and more companies are jumping on board this trend due to falling costs and increased pushes for sustainability. Facebook is building a solar farm in Newton County to power its new data center. Agnes Scott College is using solar energy to offset the campus’ carbon emissions. Even Georgia’s beer is being brewed with help from the sun thanks to Terrapin Beer Co.’s recently installed solar rooftop.

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Why save it? Just pave it – Conservation becoming tool of choice in Morgan County

By Guest Columnist CHRISTINE MCCAULEY WATTS, executive director of Madison-Morgan Conservancy

Would you like fries with that? Or fruit salad? We don’t always choose the healthier option, do we? It is our right. But at least the option exists these days: a sign that healthy choices are trending. Could it be that protecting a sense of place is beginning to trend, too?

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Addressing Atlanta’s health disparities through community service approaches

By Guest Columnist JENNIFER S. SINGH, associate professor of sociology at Georgia Tech

Heart disease is the leading cause of death in Georgia, and in Atlanta it disproportionately affects black and low-income communities. To address heart health disparities, Georgia Tech college students are getting involved through a community service-learning program at Georgia Tech in collaboration with American Heart Association and Grove Park Foundation.

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