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Making Atlanta more bicycle friendly will complete our streets

By Guest Columnist REBECCA SERNA, executive director of the Atlanta Bicycle Coalition.

The city of Atlanta recently took on an exciting new challenge – to rank among the top 10 most sustainable cities in the United States.

Following the announcement, Atlanta was selected as one of nine U.S. cities to pilot a new sustainability index for cities. Sustainable Atlanta, the city’s nonprofit partner in achieving these goals, plans to include miles of bike lanes and percentage of

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Atlanta can meet its destiny as part of the Peace Millennium

By Guest Columnist JOHN NAUGLE, an advocate for declaring Atlanta — the City of Peace.

As we finish celebrating 01/01/11, we are beginning the second decade of the thousand-year period of human history called: The Peace Millennium (Years 2000-3000).

Atlanta, how will you grow in this special year and new decade? In our organization’s opinion, Atlanta is the best positioned city on Earth to excel and become a beacon of peace to the entire world. This dream, born in the birthplace of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and “I Have A Dream”, can soon enough experience reality.

As civic, government and business leaders unite to build the global peace legacy of Dr. King’s birth city it will be transformed. The City of Atlanta will fulfill its great

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Imperial Hotel’s rich history tells us how we have treated our poor

By Guest Columnist BRUCE GUNTER, president of Progressive Redevelopment Inc.

Years ago, the Atlanta Business Chronicle ran a regular series of articles entitled “The Romance of Real Estate,” which chronicled the story of the rise and fall of prominent buildings.

Located at the entrance to downtown Atlanta, on Peachtree Street at Ivan Allen Boulevard, the Imperial Hotel merits such story telling today. It has risen and fallen a number of times over the course of its 100 year history, with the latest fall currently underway due to a pending foreclosure by Fannie Mae.

Nonetheless, the Imperial has proven to be resilient over the years, and it is likely that it will emerge again under new ownership and be given a fresh start.

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Imprisoned Nobel Laureate spotlights need for human rights

By Guest Columnist EVERETTE HARVEY THOMPSON, Southern Regional director for Amnesty International USA in Atlanta, Ga.

The plight of China’s Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo is taking place in the glare of world publicity, but his terrible situation is not uncommon. Millions worldwide suffer cruel persecution, their freedom and lives in peril, while governments deny their fundamental rights as human beings.

As we mark International Human Rights Day, people are still tortured or ill-treated in at least 111 countries; freedom of expression is restricted in at least 96 countries; and prisoners of conscience are held in at least 48 countries, according to Amnesty International’s

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Atlanta BeltLine can gain inspiration from the ‘little belt’ in Paris

By Guest Columnist RYAN GRAVEL, senior associate at Perkins+Will, and the original visionary behind the Atlanta BeltLine.

In 1994 I was studying abroad in Paris while in college at Georgia Tech and I had no idea I was living half a block from a grand urban experiment.

The old elevated railroad viaduct running east along Avenue Daumesnil in the 12th Arrondissement that I naively passed underneath at least twice a day on my way to the market or laundromat wasn’t just an old abandoned relic. It was months away from the groundbreaking of its transformation into the Promenade Planteé and Viaduc des Arts – a half-mile elevated walking garden up top with arts-related businesses and studios housed in its elegant arched

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Buying local food is healthy for Georgians and the state economy

By Guest Columnist SUSAN VARLAMOFF, director of the Office of Environmental Sciences at the University of Georgia’s College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences

As families gather around the Thanksgiving table this year, some will be serving food produced on Georgia farms. My family will dine on turkey grazed at White Oak Pastures, a fourth generation farm in south Georgia. And our vegetables will come from Loganville’s Three Peas in a Pod farmer’s market.

This past summer I attended the Georgia Organics’ Attack of the Killer Tomato Festival and found myself among 800 exuberant people—teenagers to 70 somethings—enjoying drinks and dishes infused with locally grown tomatoes of all varieties.

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Opportunity for metro transit to leap forward

By Guest Columnist MICHAEL W. TYLER, chairman of MARTA’s board and a partner with the Kilpatrick Stockton law firm.

Forty-five years ago a group of visionary Georgia leaders looked into the future and saw a greater Atlanta metropolitan region linked together through one regional transit system. Consequently, in 1965 the Georgia General Assembly created Metro Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority.

In creating MARTA, the state legislature’s goal was to help transform the Atlanta region into a world-class metropolitan area with world-class transportation infrastructure that would benefit the entire state.

The original vision of the legislature was to launch an initial five-county regional transit system comprised of Fulton, DeKalb, Gwinnet, Cobb and Clayton counties. These five counties were given the right to choose by referendum whether to join the system and to enact a one-cent sales tax to help fund MARTA.

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Reynoldstown project creates green, affordable home

By Guest Colunmist YOUNG HUGHLEY JR., CEO of Resources for Residents and Communities; and Guest Colunmist STEVEN R. FADER, president of business development at New World Home.

During World Habitat Day in October 2009, Evelyn Nu’Man, Atlanta’s director of housing, introduced New World Home (NWH), an award-winning, rapidly growing developer of sustainable housing, to Resources for Residents and Communities (RRC), a non-profit community development organization in need of a partner for a special project in Reynoldstown.

Inspired by the groundbreaking Memorandum of Understanding among the U.S. Department of Transportation, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the Environmental Protection

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Georgia Conservancy promotes healthy growth through Blueprints program

By Guest Columnist KATHERINE MOORE, growth management and Blueprints program manager with the Georgia Conservancy.

Earlier this year, community leaders in the working-class neighborhoods of northwest Atlanta reached out to the Georgia Conservancy for help.

These residents aren’t “NIMBY’s” trying to stop developers from clearing land. They’re not seeking to chase off any big-box stores or industrial plants.

So, why did these concerned residents contact us? The answer may surprise you. They want help shaping – not

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New entry ways to Chattahoochee River promote healthy living

By Guest Columnist HELEN PRESTON TAPP, Georgia state director of the Trust for Public Land.

Fall’s fresh air and blue skies beckon us outdoors to enjoy neighborhood strolls, hikes in the woods, biking and boating adventures and campouts. Even a little time on a trail or in a park re-invigorates us. Now, there is mounting evidence that reinforces what we feel: Getting outdoors is good for us.

And making sure that all of us have places for people to connect with nature, friends, family and our heritage is the mission of The Trust for Public Land (TPL). TPL negotiates with landowners to buy key properties which

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Broke and broken: Fixing sidewalks should be city’s responsibility

By Guest Columnist SALLY FLOCKS, founder, president and CEO of PEDS, an Atlanta-based advocacy group for pedestrians.

In Boston, Charlotte, Chicago, and Washington, D.C., tax dollars pay for sidewalk repairs, with substantial amounts budgeted each year. The City of Atlanta, in contrast, makes sidewalk repairs the responsibility of adjacent property owners.

The City’s program is politically unpopular, especially in low-income areas, and has been ineffective city-wide. The annual budget includes no funding for sidewalk maintenance or enforcement, which ties the hands of Public Works officials. Few people voluntarily repair sidewalks, and everyone who walks suffers as a result.

The 2008 State of the City’s Infrastructure report

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The Atlanta BeltLine provides a prescription for a healthy city

By Guest Columnist VALARIE WILSON, executive director of the Atlanta BeltLine Partnership

With so many critical needs – education, health, jobs and more – why would we as community leaders and engaged citizens focus now on parks, trails and transit? While they are nice amenities, shouldn’t we concentrate on serious problems during these challenging times?

Obesity is deadly serious – now the second leading preventable cause of death in the United States. And hypertension is the leading preventable cause of death in the world. So it is heartening that the conversation around complex and often overwhelming healthcare policy topics is shifting to focus increasingly on

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The 2010 smog season remains up in the air

By Guest Columnist KEVIN GREEN, executive director of the Clean Air Campaign

Since breathing is one of the great pleasures in life, we thought we would take a minute to assess how this year’s smog season has gone, how it compares to years prior and where we may be heading.

To start with the obvious, this summer has been HOT – one of the warmest Georgia summers on record. And the heat affects more than just our thermostats. Ground-level ozone is formed when pollutants mix with heat and sunlight, which is why we have a “smog season” in Georgia, the five-month period from May 1- Sept 30. As cooler temperatures and shorter days move onto the horizon, so too does the end of when we are most likely to see days of increased air pollution.

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Great cities embrace great public art

By Guest Columnist FRANK MANN, senior director at Cushman & Wakefield of Georgia.

I consider myself very fortunate to have traveled a great deal throughout my adult life both for pleasure and for business. I am continually impressed and even amazed that major cities all over the world have made such strong commitments to the display of public (and in many cases private) art.

This becomes evident regardless of the city one travels to including older cities in the United States, like Chicago and New York, where many wonderful paintings and sculptures adorn their streetscapes, building lobbies and outdoor plazas and fountains. Most often parks

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As cash gifts decrease, Hands On Atlanta sees increase in volunteerism

By Guest Columnist GINA SIMPSON, president and CEO of Hands on Atlanta.

Since I joinied Hands On Atlanta in November 2008, there has never been a dull moment.

We have seen a tremendous surge in volunteerism over the last year, a welcome development because the need is greater now than it has ever been.

With the economic downturn and increased unemployment, we saw a 30 percent increase in our volunteer efforts in 2009. Many people have chosen to volunteer as a means of networking with potential employers, while meeting critical service needs in the

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Economy and changing portrait of Atlanta to drive housing choices

By Guest Columnist BRUCE GUNTER, founder and president of Progressive Redevelopment Inc.

Eventually, Atlanta will emerge from this devastating recession, but it will not look the same when it does. Now retrenching from an over-fed housing sector, the new economic and geographic landscape will impact many housing-related business sectors, entire neighborhoods, thousands of families, and land development patterns.

In this larger context, what will become of affordable housing in Atlanta?

First, our local markets are being shaped by national economic and financial factors. Homeownership rates will decline significantly, despite record low mortgage interest rates and more reasonable home prices.

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Adults learning to read can transform lives

By Guest Columnist EMILY ELLISON, president and CEO of Literacy Action

As morning traffic in Atlanta returns to its pre-summer crawl, signs of the new “season” are everywhere: Heavy backpacks are pulled over shoulders. Peanut butter sandwiches and apples are crammed into lunch boxes.

And families all over the city are rushing out the door, hoping that permission slips have been signed and that summer reading assignments were completed. It’s back-to-school time in Atlanta – an annual rite of passage for everyone from the pre-school set to college students.

What many people don’t realize is that it’s also a time when thousands of adults return to school, adults who

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Georgia’s faith community targets stimulus funds for energy efficiency

By Guest Columnist ALEXIS CHASE, executive director, Georgia Interfaith Power & Light.

Energy efficiency and Georgia’s faith community have not always been friends. Most congregations tend to think short-term, rarely considering long-term sustainability when renovating old structures or building new ones; their eyes are fixed on cost and speed.

Fortunately, that’s changing, thanks to an innovative statewide program recently launched by Georgia Interfaith Power & Light (GIPL). It’s called Power Wise.

We received $400,000 in federal stimulus money enhanced by $200,000 from a private foundation to help Georgia’s faith communities of every religion,

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Georgia has the most to gain by embracing energy efficiency

By Guest Columnist MARILYN BROWN, a Georgia Tech professor of energy policy and director of Sustainability in the Science and Technology Program.

Nowhere are the stakes higher for the development of an energy policy that leads with energy efficiency than in the South.

The region, comprised of 16 states and the District of Columbia, currently has the greatest dependence on fossil fuels in the nation. With only 36 percent of the country’s population, the South accounts for 44 percent of the nation’s energy use. As the fastest growing region in the nation, increasing demands for power will force even greater dependence if steps are not taken to

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Losing job opens new doors to strengthen the arts in Atlanta

By Guest Columnist JOE WINTER, co-founder of C4 Atlanta, a non-profit arts service organization.

You hear about it, empathize with it, but it never hits home until it happens to you: getting laid off from your job.

My co-worker Jessyca and I had just wrapped up a major annual project. She and I had received phone calls over the weekend to come to the office for a meeting early on Monday morning, April 5, but with no explanation of the agenda for the meeting.

I walked in to the office. There were six of us: me, my two co-workers, and the board “triumvirate:” the co-presidents and the treasurer who was also the consultant.

The co-presidents immediately turned the meeting over

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