Posted inLatest News

Clean Air Campaign names Tedra Cheatham its new head

By Maria Saporta

The Clean Air Campaign will soon have a new executive director — Tedra Cheatham, currently the chief operating officer for the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce.

Cheatham will succeed Kevin Green, who was selected in May to be president and CEO of the Midtown Alliance.

The Clean Air Campaign conducted a search with the help of the Goodwin Group firm.

“At the end of the day, Tedra was the perfect fit,” said Renay Blumenthal, who chairs the Clean Air Campaign’s board. “Tedra’s experience as a leader, a convener and a conduit for advancing positive growth will be instrumental as the Clean Air Campaign works to accomplish its mission.”

Posted inLatest News

Future Atlanta Hawks owner Alex Meruelo welcomed to the city by Latin and local leaders

By Maria Saporta

The Latin American Chamber of Commerce of Georgia welcomed its newest star to town.

Alex Meruelo, president and CEO of Meruelo Enterprises, has reached an agreement to buy the Atlanta Hawks and Philips Arena.

If the sale is approved by the National Basketball Association, Meruelo would become the first Hispanic majority owner of a NBA team.

At a reception Wednesday evening at the Buckhead Club, top Latin business leaders got an opportunity to visit one-on-one with Meruelo, whose diversified investment holding company based in Southern California.

Posted inDavid Pendered

Cobb transportation sales tax forum calm, informative

By David Pendered

The meeting Tuesday evening in Marietta had been so benign, with no incendiary comments about the proposed sales tax for transportation, that Brett Bittner said he felt compelled to speak at the end.

“There had been so many ‘pro’ comments that I had to make sure I got to say something,” said Bittner, who’s vice president of the Cobb Taxpayers Association and executive director of the Libertarian Party of Georgia. “My concern is the cost of the projects … and what we are committing ourselves to maintaining.”

Never once over the course of the two-hour event was there a public mention of transit causing an increase in crime, as was the case at a similar event in Smyrna earlier this month.

Posted inATL Business Chronicle

Gov. Nathan Deal open to state pension dollars being invested in venture capital funds

By Maria Saporta
Friday, Sept. 16, 2011

In an effort to make Georgia more competitive, Gov. Nathan Deal is open to allowing a portion of the state’s pension funds to be invested in venture capital.

Georgia is the only state in the nation that forbids its employee pension funds to be invested in alternative investments — a sore point among technology leaders hoping to make Georgia a vibrant center for research and new ventures.

For much of the past decade, technology leaders have been trying to get traction at the state Capitol to change Georgia’s restrictive investment policies — so far to no avail.

But Deal could emerge as a champion to change the state pension funds’ investment portfolio.

Posted inLatest News, Michelle Hiskey

Leading female pro golfer – Rosie Jones of Sandy Springs – continues to break barriers

By Michelle Hiskey

Two of Atlanta’s top professional golfers will end the 2011 season by starring in atypical competitions this weekend.

You’ve probably heard of Matt Kuchar, who will tee off Thursday at East Lake Golf Club in the Tour Championship.

Kuchar, who lived in Brookhaven before moving to St. Simons a year ago and starred as an amateur while attending Georgia Tech, knows his scores at East Lake will also count toward the FedEx Cup – the PGA Tour’s prize for season-ending points playoffs.

Meanwhile, across the Atlantic Ocean, Rosie Jones of Sandy Springs will be leading the best American female pro golfers into the Solheim Cup against all-stars from Europe. This team match play (modeled after the men’s Ryder Cup) will take place at Killeen Castle in Ireland starting Friday.

Posted inLatest News

Atlanta Rotary panel: Georgia should do more to support its diverse music industry

By Maria Saporta

Georgia needs to extend the same kind of tax credits to the music industry as it has the film and video industry.

That was one of the themes that three veterans of Georgia’s music industry share with members of the Rotary Club of Atlanta at the Monday luncheon.

The members of the panel included:

Joel Katz, a high-powered Atlanta-based entertainment attorney with Greenberg-Traurig, has been a major player in Georgia’s music scene for decades;

Dallas Austin, a songwriter, music producer, filmmaker, movie producer and musician who helped turn Atlanta into a center for urban music through the hip hop label LaFace and working with a number of local and national acts; and

Chuck Leavell, a Georgia tree farmer and keyboardist who has played with the Allman Brothers, Eric Clapton, George Harrison and has been touring with the Rolling Stones for three decades.

Posted inLatest News

Charles Tarbutton elected chair of state’s economic development board

By Maria Saporta

The Georgia Department of Economic Development elected a new chair — Charles Tarbutton — at its board meeting on Sept. 16.

Tarbutton, who has been serving as vice chairman of the GDEcD board, is assistant vice president of the Sandersville Railroad Co., a short-line freight railroad primarily serving kaolin, forest products and plastics industries in Central Georgia.

In 2008, Tarbutton served as chair of the Georgia Chamber of Commerce.

Tarbutton succeeds Ben Hinson, who is president and owner of Mid Georgia Ambulance in Macon. He had served on the economic development board since 2007.

Posted inMaria's Metro

Past ARC Chair Sam Olens: Is it time to elect a metro leader?

The Atlanta region is like Rodney Dangerfield. It don’t get no respect.

For decades, efforts to create a regional mindset have had mixed results.

Barriers are torn down just to be rebuilt — creating divisions between the inner urban core, the closer-in suburban counties and the exurban counties; between cities and counties; between the northern and southern parts of the region.

And while elected officials in all the various cities and counties in the 10-county area that makes up the Atlanta Regional Commission all agree that our problems cross over the borders of their jurisdictions, they all understand that when it comes to decision-making time they must take care of their voters first.

Posted inDavid Pendered

Oakland Cemetery refurbishing mausoleums, S.C. experts arrive this week

By David Pendered

Atlanta’s historic Oakland Cemetery embarks this week on a tricky next step in its comprehensive effort to preserve decaying mausoleums.

Expert preservationists will examine two mausoleums that are in dire straits. One structure is held together with metal bands, and the other is shedding sheets and chunks of its stone skin.

“The materials in these are limestone and sandstone, and they have been melting over time,” said David Moore, Oakland’s executive director.

Posted inGuest Column

As Atlanta wrestles with awarding airport concessions, it’s time to revisit an idea

By Guest Columnist GEORGE BERRY, former aviation commissioner for the City of Atlanta, former commissioner of the Georgia Department of Industry, Trade and Tourism and retired executive of Cousins Properties

It is my guess that shortly after signing a lease/purchase agreement for the Candler Field property in l925, the Mayor of Atlanta or a member of the Board of Alderman was approached by a constituent hoping to establish a hot dog stand at the new facility.

In the decades since, airport concessions have been the bane of airport managers and have been tainted by corruption both real and implied.

Posted inEleanor Ringel Cater

A cough here; a sneeze there — ‘Contagion’ movie is as deep as a piece of Kleenex

By Eleanor Ringel Cater

By the time I was done with “Contagion” — or, perhaps, by the time “Contagion” was done with me — all I wanted was good shower.

And maybe a gallon of hand sanitizer.

As you may have guessed from the title, “Contagion” is about a contagious disease. A virus, you might say. Or a plague, to get biblical about it.

Tag, you’re it. And now you’re dead.

Posted inDavid Pendered

Challenge: Managing region’s largest proposed road, transit construction project

By David Pendered

The first step was to create a $6.14 billion project list.

The next challenge facing the Atlanta Regional Roundtable is figuring out how to manage a road and transit construction program that would span 10 years and 10 counties. Presuming, of course, that voters approve next year a proposed 1 percent transportation sales tax.

“What has to be sorted out is how we have administration across the board,” Gwinnett County Chairman Charlotte Nash said Friday at a roundtable meeting. “We have to have an adequate oversight system in place.”

The cost of that oversight could be close to $250 million, or about the amount earmarked for the proposed MARTA route from Atlanta east along I-20. The management question has to be answered, at least in part, by Oct. 15 in order to devise the construction schedule that must be submitted to the state Legislature.

Posted inDavid Pendered

As Mall at Stonecrest marks 10 years, area businesses plan association in lieu of a CID

By David Pendered

As the Mall at Stonecrest prepares to celebrate its 10th anniversary in Lithonia in October, a new business association is taking shape to bolster the area surrounding the mall.

The group intends to champion a power center that’s a bit unusual: It doesn’t have a Community Improvement District to oversee its broader concerns, as do at least 12 other major commercial centers in metro Atlanta, according to a list maintained by the Atlanta Regional Commission.

In the absence of a CID, Stonecrest area business leaders plan to model a new group along the lines of the Tucker Business Association. That north DeKalb County group represents about 130 businesses and has existed 56 years, said Honey Van de Kreke, TBA’s vice president.

Posted inLatest News

Georgia Power’s Paul Bowers to follow Carol Tomé as chair of the Metro Atlanta Chamber

By Maria Saporta

The Metro Atlanta Chamber has named Paul Bowers, president and CEO of Georgia, to become its chair for 2013.

Bowers, who became president of Georgia Power on Jan. 1, has quickly emerged into one of the state’s key business leaders.

In addition to his upcoming role at the Metro Atlanta Chamber, Bowers has been asked by Gov. Nathan Deal to help in the water negotiations between Georgia, Alabama and Florida.

Bowers also was instrumental is getting former Georgia Chancellor Erroll Davis to become the interim superintendent of the Atlanta Public Schools; and he has become involved in efforts to raise money to develop the College Football Hall of Fame in downtown Atlanta.

Posted inATL Business Chronicle

Column: Detroit businessman Michael Horowitz to lead Atlanta’s Jewish Federation

By Maria Saporta
Friday, Sept. 9, 2011

The Jewish Federation of Greater Atlanta has named Detroit businessman and philanthropist Michael Horowitz as its new president and CEO.

The federation, Atlanta’s premier Jewish fundraising organization, approved Horowitz as its new leader at its board meeting Wednesday, Sept. 7. He will begin his new post Oct. 17.

Horowitz held several leadership roles in Detroit’s Jewish community. He chaired the board of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, served on its executive community and founded the Israel and Overseas Committee as some of his roles.

Posted inLatest News

GE’s Jeff Immelt tells Atlanta executives to invest and believe in their businesses

By Maria Saporta

One of the nation’s business leaders — Jeff Immelt — told Atlanta executives Wednesday that if they want their companies to thrive, they can’t sit on the sidelines unwilling to invest in the future.

Immelt, chairman and CEO of GE (General Electric), also is chairman of President Barack Obama’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness, an appointment made in January.

“If you are not investing, you are going to lose because there’s no great tailwind,” Immelt said. “If you are waiting on Washington to be confident again, really you are better off watching reruns of a Falcons game. I don’t think it (an economic recovery) is going to come from Washington. It’s got to come from you. We need confidence.”

Immelt was the guest of the Metro Atlanta Chamber at one of its Insights on Leadership programs. He was interviewed by Metro Atlanta Chamber President Sam Williams on a variety of

Posted inLatest News

Report: Atlanta region ranked as the worst metro area for seniors’ access to transit

By Maria Saporta

The Transportation for America, a coalition that promotes smarter transportation investment, has ranked Atlanta as the worst metro area in providing seniors access to mass transit.

Such a ranking is especially devastating for metro Atlanta — a region that is projecting a dramatic increase in senior citizens.

The report — “Aging in Place, Stuck without Options” — determined that the majority of the nation’s metro areas with a population of more than 1 million people provided seniors with poor access to transit.

The number of senior citizens with poor access to transit will continue to grow as the baby boom generation continues to get older.

Posted inATL Business Chronicle

William Shaheen to be new head of Humane Society

By Maria Saporta
Friday, September 9, 2011

The 138-year-old Atlanta Humane Society is about to begin a whole new chapter in its history.

The organization has selected its board chairman — William Shaheen — to become its new president effective Jan. 20, 2012, when the current president — Carl Leveridge — plans to retire.

And later this year, it will double in size and expand its offerings when its new Mansell Road campus in North Fulton opens on Dec. 1.

For Shaheen, 48, it also is a second professional chapter in his life. He has been president of Shaheen & Co., a second-generation, family-owned real estate development firm.

And although he will continue to work with the firm in a strategic capacity, Shaheen is following his passion by becoming president of Atlanta Humane Society.

Posted inMaria's Metro

Xernona Clayton and Gail Craig Mayes — healing a father and cleansing a family

This article first appeared in 50th anniversary issue of Atlanta Magazine in May 1, 2011 — an issue that featured 50 people who changed Atlanta over the past five decades.

Xernona Clayton
In the 1960s, this civil rights leader struck up an unlikely friendship with KKK Grand Dragon Calvin Craig. Four decades later, Craig’s daughter and Clayton discuss their shared past with Maria Saporta.

When Xernona Clayton moved to Atlanta in 1965, she accepted a position at the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, working side by side with Coretta Scott King and Martin Luther King Jr. during the civil rights movement. In 1967 she became the first African American in the Southeast to have her own television program, The Xernona Clayton Show, which aired on WAGA-TV (then the CBS affiliate in Atlanta).

Posted inDavid Pendered

Fort McPherson: 1885 – 2011; future unclear for 488 acre site

By David Pendered

The gates at Fort McPherson are to swing shut for the last time near midnight Wednesday, and the future use of the 488 acre site seems absolutely unclear.

Blame the economy.

The private sector is hording cash. Governments at all levels slashing programs and staff to balance their budgets.

In this economic environment, it’s tough to imagine the formation of a proposed public-private venture named the Georgia Science & Technology Park. The reuse plan for the fort calls for the state to lead the way in fostering a 127-acre campus of enterprises engaged in research and development.

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