Starting in September, Emory University welcomes its first female president, Claire Sterk. She served as Emory’s provost since 2013.
She succeeds Jim Wagner, who has been Emory’s president for 13 years.
Articles by Maria Saporta
Starting in September, Emory University welcomes its first female president, Claire Sterk. She served as Emory’s provost since 2013.
She succeeds Jim Wagner, who has been Emory’s president for 13 years.
Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and key members of the business community favor asking voters for a full penny sales tax for transportation later this year – a half-penny going to MARTA and another half-penny going toward other transportation projects.
By Maria Saporta As published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on June 10, 2016 The sixth annual Clinton Global Initiative America will be held in Atlanta June 12 to 14, bringing together national leaders in business, philanthropy, government and nonprofits. A highlight of this year’s meeting will be a special one-on-one conversation between two former […]
By Maria Saporta
As published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on June 10, 2016
The Atlanta region likes to boast of being a hub of Fortune 500 company headquarters – bragging that it has the third-highest concentration in the country – an assertion included in the video shown in the city’s presentation that helped it recently win the 2019 Super Bowl.
But that’s an overstatement at best.
In fact, Atlanta’s high watermark as a Fortune 500 company region may have come in 2015 when there were 18 companies in the prestigious list.
Atlanta hosted a historic conversation Tuesday afternoon between two former U.S. presidents – Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter.
The venue was the Clinton Global Initiative America meeting at the Atlanta Marriott Marquis, where nearly 1,000 leaders from around the country have been convening since Sunday.
Original post on WABE by Maria Saporta The Koch brothers have a national reputation for funding Republican candidates and conservative causes. But in Georgia, there is another side to the Koch family. Koch Industries bought Georgia-Pacific in 2005. One year later, Charles Koch’s wife, Elizabeth Koch, started Youth Entrepreneurs Georgia to help spark an entrepreneurial spirit among […]
Twenty-five Atlanta-based LGBT and allied organizations sent out a joint press release in response to the shooting at the Pulse Nightclub in Orlando.
And they announced that they will hold a vigil Tuesday evening at the Center for Civil and Human Rights “in memory of those who were killed in Orlando and a call to action to prevent this terrible violence from happening again in the future.”
Former President Bill Clinton kicked off the Clinton Global Initiative America meeting Monday morning in Atlanta by taking a moment of silence to reflect on the massacre that happened in a gay nightclub in Orlando early Sunday morning.
In talking about the numerous challenges that the country is facing, Clinton said: “We can present an alternative view for the future…, a road map for how we can succeed.”
NEW YORK – Pilots from Delta Air Lines lined up in front of the elegant offices of Cravath, Swaine & Moore, where the Atlanta-based airline was holding its annual meeting Friday morning.
They were holding placards saying: “First Class Airline. First Class Contract” and “Labor Risk…. Back on the Table?”
By Maria Saporta
As published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on June 3, 2016
When Jenny Pruitt got the call saying she had been selected as the 2016 Four Pillar honoree by the Council for Quality Growth, her first reaction was they had called the wrong person.
“I’m humbled and excited,” Pruitt said of the honor, which will be presented on Oct. 13 at the 27th annual Four Pillar Tribute at the Georgia World Congress Center.
Pruitt, a third-generation Atlantan, is the only the third woman to make the esteemed list (Gwinnett County’s Louise Radloff received it in 2000, and Atlanta’s Shirley Franklin received it in 2009.
Was Atlanta airport general manager Miguel Southwell fired because he wouldn’t award contracts to “companies other than the highest-ranked bidder”?
That’s the suggestion of a May 31 letter to the city from Southwell’s attorney, Lee Parks, seeking documents related to the sudden May 20 firing by Mayor Kasim Reed of the chief of Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.
The incoming president of Emory University wants to DeKalb County institution of higher learning to have a much closer relationship with the City of Atlanta and the rest of the region.
In a couple of brief conversations after Claire Sterk was named the next president of Emory on June 3, it was readily apparent that she wants the university to be externally focused on community issues outside the walls of what is often viewed as an Ivy League school in the South.
Fortune made it official Monday morning.
Georgia has a new Fortune 500 company – Veritiv – giving the state a total of 18 companies on the list.
And for the first time ever, Georgia has a woman at the helm of a Georgia-based Fortune 500 – Mary Laschinger, Veritiv’s CEO.
By Maria Saporta
As published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on June 3, 2016
When Mike Thurmond won the Democratic primary election on May 24 for CEO of DeKalb County with 72 percent of the vote against two opponents, he drew support from all parts of the county.
That’s how he can conclude a 90-minute exclusive interview with Atlanta Business Chronicle that focused on some of the most contentious issues dividing DeKalb with an expression of hope.
“I’m so excited and optimistic about the future of DeKalb County,” Thurmond said. “We will be recognized as a national model of local governance. We are going to figure it out. We are the land of opportunity in the metro area.”
By Maria Saporta
As published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on May 27, 2016
State business leaders are being asked to join the Chairman’s Circle of Youth Entrepreneurs Georgia – a nonprofit started by Elizabeth Koch in 2006.
Liz Koch is the wife of billionaire Charles Koch, an owner of Koch Industries, which bought Georgia-Pacific in 2005.
The Chairman’s Circle was launched May 19 at a reception at the Center for Civil and Human Rights. The goal of YE Georgia is to make entrepreneurship an educational priority for public schools. So far, YE Georgia operates in public schools in Atlanta, DeKalb, Cobb and Gwinnett. “We’re in 13 schools, and we are serving 360 students,” Mrs. Koch said at the reception. It started in two Atlanta schools serving only 38 students. Since it started, YE Georgia has reached about 2,000 students.
By Maria Saporta and Amy Wenk
As published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on May 27, 2016
For Arthur Blank, securing the 2019 Super Bowl was a culmination of a dream that began when he announced he was buying the Atlanta Falcons in December 2001 — nearly two years after the city hosted its last Super Bowl.
“It’s amazing from where Atlanta has come in the last 16 years,” Blank said in an interview in Charlotte, N.C., on May 24 after the 32 owners of the National Football League awarded the 2019 Super Bowl to Atlanta. “My heart is touched by a lot of people. My motivation comes from what we can do for others, in making people happy and seeing the gleam in their eyes.”
It’s been a long and winding road since that day – full of emotional ups and downs as he has had to deal with the daily angst of running a professional sports team.
By Maria Saporta
As published in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on May 20, 2016
The Woodruff Arts Center has tapped Martin Flanagan, president and CEO of Invesco Ltd., to chair its annual corporate campaign for 2016-2017.
The annual corporate campaign has raised more than $10 million to support all the arts and education programming of the Woodruff Arts Center and its divisions: the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, the High Museum of Art and the Alliance Theatre.
“We are thrilled that Marty has agreed to chair our 2016 – 17 Annual Corporate Campaign,” said Doug Hertz, board chairman of the Woodruff Arts Center. “Marty and Invesco have been tremendous supporters of the Arts Center for years. Now he is doing even more by continuing the tradition of Atlanta’s most respected CEOs leading our annual corporate campaign.”
Communities in Schools Atlanta recently held its annual Choose Success Award Dinner and spotlighted two of its co-founders – Neil Shorthouse and Bill Milliken, and two of its strongest backers – real estate leader George Johnson and philanthropist Anne Cox Chambers.
Atlanta has been an entrepreneurial city for nonprofits and perhaps no organization symbolizes that better than Communities in Schools.
Many in Atlanta’s business community were shocked May 20 when Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed unexpectedly terminated Miguel Southwell, aviation general manager at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.
We obtained the city’s termination letter to Southwell.
Newly updated
CHARLOTTE – Atlanta has won the Super Bowl for 2019.
A relieved contingent of Atlanta leaders celebrated after the 32 owners of the National Football League awarded the city the Super Bowl – Atlanta’s third ever.
Arthur Blank, owner of the Atlanta Falcons, at a press conference after the four-ballot vote, said he felt as though he was at the Academy Awards – needing to thank everyone who had played a part in getting Atlanta to this moment.