Posted inDavid Pendered

Future Wal-Mart, possible stadium and more foster hopes for renewal near Georgia Dome

By David Pendered

A future Wal-Mart store and other civic projects are rekindling hopes for community renewal in a neighborhood west of the Georgia Dome in Downtown Atlanta.

The Wal-Mart is to open in the summer of 2012 in Historic Westside Village, a retail center located at 825 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. It’s located across MLK Drive from the original Paschal’s restaurant.

Wal-Mart is expected to bring more than decent groceries, a pharmacy, money center and jobs to the community, according to Tillman Ward, a community leader who was born in the neighborhood.

Posted inEleanor Ringel Cater

Larry Crowne movie is Tom Hanks’ ‘big fat mid-life crisis’

By Eleanor Ringel Cater

I’m afraid I am part of the demographic who is supposed to be thrilled that Hollywood has tossed me a bone this summer.

To wit: the “adult” romantic comedy, “Larry Crowne,” starring Tom Hanks and Julia Roberts.

Lord. Gimme “Transformers 3” any day.

Based on an idea by Hanks and co-scripted by Nia Vardalos, star/writer of the inexpicable mega-hit, “My Big Fat Greek Wedding” (which Hanks produced), “Larry Crowne” could be subtitled, “My Big Fat Mid-Life Crisis.”

Larry (Hanks, who also directed) is downsized from his job at U-Mart (read Wal-Mart or Target or whatever) and told the reason is, he lacks a college diploma.

Posted inDavid Pendered

Confidential business plan for Fort McPherson’s future now an issue with reuse plan

By David Pendered

A new wrinkle emerged Thursday in the tense discussion about the fate of Fort McPherson – the contents of the confidential business plan that is to guide the fort’s conversion to civilian use.

The business plan is emerging as a contention because it has guided the redevelopment plan a state authority has approved for the fort’s land.

Over the past month, the redevelopment plan has come under fire from a non-profit group – Georgia Stand Up – that raises questions about whether the current plan will help or hurt the surrounding community.

Suddenly, the business plan that envisions construction of a biotech research facility near the center of the property is at the center of debate over how best to reuse a 488-acre site that the military is abandoning after more than 120 years.

Posted inDavid Pendered

Atlanta City Council votes against extending bar hours

By David Pendered

The Atlanta City Council has again rejected a proposal to extend the drinking hours at bars in the city.

The vote clears the way for an effort to tighten the city’s alcohol ordinances. The goal of that legislation is to make it easier for Atlanta to close businesses that habitually violate the city’s alcohol codes and escape closure through legal loopholes.

The council has considered extending bar hours periodically since 2003, when the hours were shortened following several years of violent outbursts that were linked to late-night drinking.

Posted inDavid Pendered

Atlanta City Council to vote Tuesday on proposal extending bar hours

By David Pendered

The Atlanta City Council is slated to vote Tuesday on a proposal to extend the legal drinking hours at bars to 4 a.m. on Mondays through Fridays, and Saturdays until 2:55 a.m.

The council has been advised by its Public Safety Committee to reject the measure.

However, it’s a truism that the fate of any legislation is uncertain once it’s put before a legislative body. Especially a proposal that comes as a surprise after a holiday weekend – as is the case with this one.

Posted inMaria's Metro

Public broadcasting in Georgia and Atlanta shines, but greater potential exists

Against all odds, public broadcasting is alive and well in Atlanta and Georgia.

This is true despite the ongoing divide between the state’s two largest public broadcasting entities — Georgia Public Broadcasting and Public Broadcasting Atlanta (but more on that later).

Case in point: the recently-released documentary: “Margaret Mitchell: American Rebel,” shows how great local public broadcasting can be. The one-hour documentary was produced, directed and written by Atlanta’s-own Pamela Roberts.

“It’s a gift for the ages to Georgia,” said Teya Ryan, GPB’s president and executive director. “We don’t use any state money for production and

Posted inGuest Column

Georgia gets more time to work on water conservation; but water wars are not over

By Guest Columnist STEVE O’DAY, section head of environmental and sustainability practice group for Smith Gambrell & Russell

If you are sitting back thinking the most recent decision in the Water Wars means Atlanta’s worries are over, turn off that faucet and think again.

Last Tuesday, a three-judge panel for the U.S. Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a lower court’s 2009 decision that it was illegal for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (“Corps”) to draw water from Lake Lanier to benefit the metro Atlanta area and otherwise relieved Georgia from the “draconian” obligation to work out water issues with Alabama and Florida by July 2012 or be cut off from the reservoir.

Posted inEleanor Ringel Cater

‘Page One: A Year Inside the New York Times’ questions the future of the daily paper

By Eleanor Ringel Cater

About the only thing lacking in this heavily cosmetic-ized “insider” look at the great Gray Lady is a pair of breast implants.

Maybe that’s because there are so few women featured in the movie (though, to be fair, both females at the daily morning power meeting opted out of being interviewed).

Not that it matters much. “Front Page: A Year Inside The New York Times” is shameless hagiography poorly disguised as a we-can-take-it/warts-and-all documentary.

To begin with, you must accept the notion that the Times is something sacred: the Valhalla of print, the Light beside the Golden Shore.

Posted inDavid Pendered

Atlanta’s Beltline embodies healthy lifestyle envisioned by new sustainability group

By David Pendered

A new organization in Atlanta met Thursday for the first annual EcoFest Sustainable Development Opportunities Forum.

The event kicked off with a morning-long driving tour of the Beltline, the sweeping urban renewal project in Atlanta that embodies many ideals of the new organization. An afternoon slate of speakers talked about green business opportunities, green efforts at Atlanta’s airport and energy efficiency.

Verdant Elements, Inc. is a non-profit that intends to foster healthy lifestyles through sustainable development and environmental strategies, said VEI’s board chairman, Gregory Wilson.

Posted inEleanor Ringel Cater

The late Peter Falk enjoyed a respectable and diverse movie career before ‘Columbo’

By Eleanor Ringel Cater

Before he found his perfect persona in a rumpled trenchcoat and a shambling manner…

That is, before he became world-famous as the TV detective, Columbo, Peter Falk had a strong movie career, which included two Oscar nominations for best supporting actor.

The first was for playing a homicidal thug in 1960‘s “Murder Inc.”

The second was for a light-hearted riff on the same sort of mobster in Frank Capra’s last movie, “A Pocketful of Miracles.”

Falk was headed toward becoming the Joe Pesci of his era — the go-to guy if you had a gangster role to cast, funny or murderous. Falk did play another bad guy — again, more of a spoof than a killer — in “Robin and the Seven Hoods” He was the villain to Frank Sinatra and his Rat Pack.

Posted inDavid Pendered

State Tollway Authority helping to relocate Amtrak Station to Atlantic Station, GDOT board member says

By David Pendered

The state’s tollway authority is negotiating the planned relocation of Amtrak’s train station from Buckhead to Atlantic Station, the mini city on the western edge of Midtown.

The station’s proposed relocation was to be the first item discussed at a meeting convened today by Emory McClinton, a member of the state transportation board. The matter never came up.

“Gena [Evans] is negotiating it. That ‘s all I can say,” McClinton said after the meeting.

Evans is executive director of the State Road and Tollway Authority. The agency is best known for collecting tollsa long Ga. 400.

Posted inDavid Pendered

State tollway authority helping to relocate Amtrak station to Atlantic Station, GDOT commissioner says

By David Pendered

The state’s tollway authority is negotiating the planned relocation of Amtrak’s train station from Buckhead to Atlantic Station, the mini city on the western edge of Midtown.

The station’s proposed relocation was to be the first item discussed at a meeting convened today by state Transportation Commissioner Emory McClinton. The matter never came up.

“Gena [Evans] is negotiating it. That’s all I can say,” McClinton said after the meeting.

Evans is executive director of the State Road and Tollway Authority. The agency is best known for collecting tolls along Ga 400.

Posted inDavid Pendered

Some Atlanta residents question direction of the city, fate of Fort McPherson

Anyone who wanted to discuss Atlanta’s proposed comprehensive development plan at a meeting in a church Tuesday evening in Southwest Atlanta left gravely disappointed.

The crowd of more than 60 who crowded into a meeting hall at St. Peter Missionary Baptist Church wanted to talk about issues that nag them over the kitchen table every day.

Where’s the city’s plan to attract industrial jobs? Why does Atlanta plan to use property taxes to induce development when existing building have such high vacancy rates? Who’s looking after folks at risk of losing their homes to foreclosure?

Don’t even talk about redeveloping Fort McPherson once the military vacates Sept. 15. Some of its neighbors think the city’s already cut a secret deal with developers

Posted inGuest Column, Moments, Moments Season 1

To my dear mother: please don’t let me be misunderstood

By Guest Columnist CHRIS SCHRODER, a former newspaper reporter and publisher, is president of Schroder Public Relations in Midtown Atlanta and chief operating officer of saportareport.com

I fancy myself to be a professional communicator – and after 22 years as a newspaperman and 9 years of running my own public relations firm in Midtown Atlanta, I suppose I have a little bit of “street cred.”

But it doesn’t take long for me to be humbled, particularly by my 94-year-old mom.

Posted inMaria's Metro

As architect John Portman gets recognized, the Hyatt Regency Atlanta is ‘renovated’

Such a strange juxtaposition.

Internationally-acclaimed Atlanta architect and developer John Portman is finally getting his due. Eighteen months ago, the High Museum of Atlanta featured a retrospective of his life’s work in art and architecture. The City of Atlanta has been going back and forth about getting a downtown street named in his honor.

And now a new documentary — “John Portman: A Life of Building” — has been released that places Portman as one of the most important architects of the 20th Century.

But at the same time as Portman is receiving his due, key pieces of his architecture are being destroyed.

Last year, the Portman-designed Antoine Graves Senior Housing High Rise was demolished by the Atlanta Housing

Posted inDavid Pendered

Region’s recruiters hope to attract biotech companies

By David Pendered

Metro Atlanta’s business recruiters intend to make a strong pitch to the international biotech community at a conference that begins today in Washington, D.C.

When the recruiters open shop, they will be swimming in the deep end of the biotech pool.

More than 1,700 companies are expected to be represented at the BIO International Convention, which runs through June 30. The event bills itself as “the world’s largest gathering of thought leaders and decision makers in biotechnology.”

Posted inEleanor Ringel Cater

‘Cars 2’ more of an action spy movie than a car movie

By Eleanor Ringel Cater

Something in me thinks the late Steve McQueen would be honored that future generations may know him best as a shiny red race car named Lightning McQueen, the animated star of Pixar’s “Cars” movies.

The first “Cars” earned more than $460 million worldwide (peanuts, actually, compared to other Pixar hits, but still a lot of cash). In the sequel, “Cars 2,” McQueen (voiced by Owen Wilson) takes a back seat to his buck-toothed, rust-bucket best buddy, Mater, a down-home tow truck (Larry the Cable Guy).

Lightning takes Mater with him when he goes overseas for the World Grand Prix, sponsored by a squirrel-y proponent of alternative fuel, a former oil baron named Sir Miles Axelrod (Eddie Izzard).

Posted inDavid Pendered

Update on Metro Transportation Tax: Elected officials tell regional planners to halve $23 billion list

By David Pendered

Four metro Atlanta politicians who are to lead the process of deciding which transportation projects to fund with a proposed penny sales tax have passed the first part of the task to regional planners.

The four elected officials voted Thursday to have the Atlanta Regional Commission cull their $23 billion wish list. The vote came soon after the top Transportation Department official working on the project admonished the elected officials to get to work.

“I recommend you pull your sleeves up and get working,” said Todd Long, GDOT’s planning director. “It’s coming quick. You’ve got to cull that list down.”

In short order, the Executive Committee of the Atlanta Regional Roundtable voted 4-0 to have the ARC take a first pass at the wish list. The ARC is charged with cutting the wish list of transportation projects in half – from $23 billion to $11.5 billion – by July 7.

Posted inEleanor Ringel Cater

Saying goodbye to Atlanta’s movie legend — Linda Dubler

By Eleanor Ringel Cater

The movie scene in Atlanta is a little darker these days. Last week, Linda Dubler died. She’s been the Film/Video/Media Curator at the High Museum since the program’s inception in 1985.

The cause of her death: something both painful and unpronounceable, called myelofibrosis, a form of bone marrow cancer. Ironically…sadly…her father died of the same disease.

In many ways, Linda was film in Atlanta. She had a hand in the creation and direction of Women in Film and IMAGE Film & Video Center where the Atlanta Film Festival originated decades ago. I can’t begin to count the number of times I quoted her when I needed a credentialed film expert.

Posted inDavid Pendered

Metro Atlanta transportation tax: Elected officials ask regional planners to cut $23 billion list in half

By David Pendered

Four metro Atlanta politicians who are to lead the process of deciding which transportation projects to fund with a proposed penny sales tax today passed the first part of the task to regional planners.

The Atlanta Regional Commission was charged with cutting the wish list of transportation projects in half – from $23 billion to $11.5 billion.

The Executive Committee of the Atlanta Regional Roundtable voted 4-0 to have the ARC take a first pass at the wish list.

Gift this article