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Renewed call for an Atlanta Regional Economic Competitiveness Strategy

How many economic development plans does it take to market a region?

It depends. If it’s metro Atlanta, the answer is countless.

The most recent effort is the Atlanta Regional Economic Competitiveness Strategy that has been done for the Atlanta Regional Commission by Market Street Services.

The ARC’s effort is a requirement of the Economic Development Administration for each region to have a “Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy.” Although the ARC is required to go through this process every five years, it decided to take a more robust approach this time around.

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Rotary Club of Atlanta celebrates its100-year anniversary on June 18

By Maria Saporta
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, June 14, 2013

The glue that has kept Atlanta’s civic and business communities intact for the past century has been the Rotary Club of Atlanta.

One hundred years ago — June 18, 1913, to be exact — Ivan Allen Sr. sent a letter to the secretary of the International Association of Rotary Clubs in Chicago requesting that Atlanta establish its own Rotary Club.

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Column: Georgia Research Alliance’s VentureLab has good record

By Maria Saporta
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, June 7, 2013

After launching its venture capital effort — VentureLab — a decade ago, the Georgia Research Alliance and the Georgia Department of Audits and Accounts have concluded that the track record is quite good.

About 71 percent of the companies that have participated in GRA’s VentureLab since 2002 are still doing business in Georgia, while 29 percent are inactive. The survival rate of 133 VentureLab companies compares favorably to the survival rate of startup companies nationally, according to the Georgia Department of Audits.

As of September 2012, 87 percent of VentureLab companies survived to a second year compared with 67 percent nationally; and 76 percent survived to a fourth year compared with 44 percent nationally.

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Sam Williams reflects on his 17 years at the Metro Atlanta Chamber

By Maria Saporta
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, June 7, 2013

Fifty years ago, Sam Williams came to Atlanta for the first time as a Georgia Tech freshman from a small Tennessee town of 900 people “where you knew whose check was good and whose husband wasn’t.”

When his parents dropped him off at the doorstep of his Tech dorm, Williams saw Atlanta as “a great big, scary place.” He was a young man leaving the farm and a 4-H scholarship in Tennessee to study electrical engineering at Georgia Tech.

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Atlanta — a birthplace of housing innovation — needs ideas to provide homes for today’s generations

For more than 75 years, Atlanta has been a birthplace of housing innovation for people with lower incomes.

It was back in early 1933 when an Atlanta real estate developer Charles Palmer drove through what was then Techwood Flats and became distressed with the living conditions in the 14-block slum area.

He organized a group of Atlanta leaders to write a proposal to the federal government for $2.375 million from the federal government to clear the slum and build public housing to give the poor an opportunity to get back on their feet.

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Column: Kelly Dolan picked to lead Atlanta Women’s Foundation

By Maria Saporta
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, May 31, 2013

The Atlanta Women’s Foundation was in no hurry to hire a new executive director when Barbara Mosacchio moved to Chicago last July.

Instead the board decided to look at every aspect of the foundation — its mission, its strategic direction, its fundraising, its grantmaking and its greatest potential — before designing a wish list of the person who could best lead the influential organization.

“We’ve been calling it our ‘year zero,’ ” said Danita Knight, who has been serving as board chair during this process. “The final piece was hiring an outstanding person as our executive director.”

The board of Atlanta Women’s Foundation has named Kelly Dolan, a longtime Atlanta nonprofit executive, as its new executive director beginning July 1.

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Passenger trains essential to plans for downtown multimodal terminal station

To those who want to start writing an obituary on plans to bring passenger trains to the heart of downtown Atlanta — not so fast.

The naysayers were quick to declare the inevitable death to the long-planned Multimodal Passenger Terminal that’s to be built in “the Gulch” — an area that encompasses several blocks south of Five Points.

The Norfolk-Southern railroad sent a letter to the Georgia Department of Transportation in early May saying that because of anticipated growth in freight traffic, it does not expect to have sufficient capacity on its rail lines to accommodate passenger rail to serve the MMPT.

First of all, let me express my disappointment in the tone of the letter that Norfolk-Southern sent to the Georgia DOT. The letter makes it sound as though it has closed the door to passenger rail serving downtown Atlanta.

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Column: Atlanta architect John Portman to receive Four Pillar Award

By Maria Saporta
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, May 24, 2013

Internationally renowned architect and developer John Portman will receive the prestigious 2013 Four Pillar Award from the Council for Quality Growth.

Portman will receive the award on Oct. 10 at a dinner at the Hyatt Regency Atlanta — a trend-setting hotel that he designed — with its unique indoor atrium. It’s a building that launched the Hyatt hotel chain and a building that gave Portman international fame.

But to describe Portman as just an architect or developer is only providing two sides of a multifaceted artist and entrepreneur.

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Metro Atlanta leaders — in a state of recalibration — seek a way forward

When regional Atlanta leaders traveled to the Washington, D.C. metro area for the 2012 LINK trip, it was hard to contain their excitement and anticipation.

In just a few short months, the Atlanta region would face its moment of truth of whether it would invest in a transportation system that would lead to the transit oriented development they were witnessing in downtown Washington, D.C. and the booming suburb of Arlington, Va.

But if the regional transportation sales tax were to be defeated, Metro Atlanta Chamber President Sam Williams said at the time: “We don’t need to go on another LINK trip. We should just go to a funeral.”

A year later, Atlanta’s regional leaders went to the Greater Houston area where they witnessed a region that was growing faster than the rest of the nation, often topping economic development rankings among metro areas.

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Regional Atlanta leaders on 2013 LINK trip find Houston to be humbling

By Maria Saporta
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, May 24, 2013

HOUSTON – For metro Atlanta leaders who have been used to selling the economic jewel of the Southeast, visiting the largest city in Texas can be a humbling experience.

Houston, the fifth-largest metro area in the country, has been enjoying an economic resurgence that has become the envy of many, including Atlanta, the ninth-largest metro area in the United States.

Houston’s relative economic strength was a point that was brought up repeatedly during the 17th annual LINK visit from May 15 to May 18. The LINK trip involves a group of about 110 regional leaders from Atlanta going to another city to learn from it.

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Column: Community groups ULI-Atlanta and LCC will combine

By Maria Saporta
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, May 17, 2013

ULI Atlanta and the Livable Communities Coalition have agreed to join forces — creating the ULI Atlanta Livable Communities Council.

The Council will be part of the Urban Land Institute’s Atlanta district and will assume the mission of the Livable Communities Coalition (LCC), the nonprofit metro Atlanta advocacy group formed in 2005 to promote smart urban growth.

David Allman, who has served as LCC’s board chair and is the incoming board chair of ULI Atlanta, said combining both entities makes “perfect sense going forward.” Allman, founder of developer Regent Partners, said the two entities have common goals — walkable communities and transit-oriented development (TOD).

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Greater Houston may be bigger than the Atlanta region; but is it better?

HOUSTON — As the delegation of 110 metro Atlanta leaders got off the AirTran charter plane in Houston on the morning of May 15, one of the flight attendants parting words were: “Everything is bigger in Houston.”

That line became a metaphor for the 17th annual LINK trip — an opportunity for regional leaders to view how other cities address their urban challenges to see how metro Atlanta can benefit from the experiences of others. LINK stands for “Leadership, Involvement, Networking, Knowledge.”

This column will focus primarily on three areas — the Texas Medical Center, Houston’s recent advances in public transportation and its dominant role in the shipping and logistics industry.

In each of those areas, there are lessons for metro Atlanta and Georgia — valuable comparisons of how we compare, compete and contrast.

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Innovation marked Atlanta Falcons stadium architectural competition

By Maria Saporta and Amy Wenk
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, May 17, 2013

Five architectural teams competed for the highly sought after contract to design the new $1 billion retractable-roof stadium for the Atlanta Falcons.

Kansas City, Mo., firm 360 Architecture won the contract, partly for its novel and ground-breaking ideas on two retractable-roof designs.

But the four other architectural teams also presented worthy and unique concepts in stadium design. Some mapped out ways to connect the structure with downtown and the surrounding communities of Vine City, English Avenue and Castleberry Hill.

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Column: Kathy Keeley named new leader of disabilities group AADD

By Maria Saporta
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, May 10, 2013

The nonprofit All About Developmental Disabilities (AADD) has named a new executive director just in time for Mother’s Day.

The new director is Kathy Keeley, who has been serving as interim executive director since last August of the 50-year-old nonprofit. AADD provides support services, advocacy and training to more than 2,000 individuals and families living with developmental disabilities.

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Dedicated dollars needed to improve parks, green space in metro Atlanta

It’s the same old story.

When government budgets get tighter, one of the first items to get cut is in the parks and recreation department. While parks and recreation centers are vitally important to a city’s quality of life, when it comes to choosing between police officers and park maintenance, public safety usually wins out.

Two metro Atlanta governments provide alternative approaches that show different approaches on how to fund park acquisition and maintenance — the City of Atlanta and Gwinnett County.

Margaret Connelly, executive director of the advocacy organization Park Pride, sent out an “Alert” on May 10 saying that the proposed City of Atlanta budget by Mayor Kasim Reed would shift about $3 million from trust funds to help cover an operating budget gap for fiscal year 2014.

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Two churches are key to final Atlanta Falcons stadium site decision

By Maria Saporta and Amy Wenk
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, May 10, 2013

Now that the new Atlanta Falcons stadium has been given a green light from the various governmental entities and now that an architect has been selected, the next step is finalizing the site.

Active discussions are underway to get that issue settled as soon as possible, so work can start on the $1 billion retractable-roof stadium.

According to official agreements, there’s an Aug. 1 deadline to determine if the preferred stadium location known as the “South site,” which is the land that sits between Martin Luther King Jr. Drive and the Georgia Dome, is feasible for the project.

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Column: Chick-fil-A Foundation spreading its wings

By Maria Saporta
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, May 3, 2013

A new corporate foundation is solidifying its place on Atlanta’s landscape.

In the past couple of years, the Chick-fil-A Foundation has a hired a new director, adopted a new name, and most recently, appointed an impressive advisory board to help it support youth and education in the community.

Rodney Bullard, who became executive director of the foundation in 2011, said he has been studying other corporate foundations in Atlanta to adopt best practices and be as effective as possible.

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Annual meetings bring Atlanta business leadership changes

By Maria Saporta
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, May 3, 2013

The local thread of leadership that has run through several of Atlanta’s key companies has become thinner during the 2013 annual meeting season.

In late April, the annual meetings of shareholders were held for Genuine Parts Co., Coca-Cola Enterprises Inc., SunTrust Banks Inc., Marine Products Corp., Rollins Inc. and The Coca-Cola Co., among others.

These are legacy Atlanta-based companies that have had long-term relationships with complementary and crossover ties with each other for decades.

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Atlanta LINK delegation headed to Houston for economic success tips

At first glance, one might question why 110 leaders from metro Atlanta would pick Houston, Texas as the city to study for its 17th annual LINK trip from May 15 to May 18.

But consider the following facts.

Forbes has named Houston, Texas as the “coolest” city to live in the United States. Atlanta didn’t make the top 20 list.

Between 2007 and 2012, Houston gained nearly 175,000 new jobs while Atlanta lost 178,000 during that same period.

Houston is the fifth largest metro area in the United States compared to metro Atlanta, which is ninth.

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Column: YWCA of Atlanta names Emily Ellison new CEO

By Maria Saporta
Published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on Friday, April 26, 2013

The YWCA of Greater Atlanta has tapped longtime civic leader Emily Ellison to serve as its new president and CEO.

Ellison is one of the founders of the Atlanta Girls School; she currently serves as its director of advancement. She plans to join the YWCA on July 15.

The YWCA of Greater Atlanta has been led by Sharmen Gowens, who has been its interim CEO since August, following the departure of Justine Boyd. Gowens will be returning to her role as a YWCA board member in August.

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