Posted inLatest News

Metro leaders seek grassroots support for regional transportation sales tax

By Maria Saporta

Now the hard work begins — shrinking a wish list of $22.9 billion worth of transportation projects into a list that is estimated to cost a total of $6.14 billion over the next 10 years.

But numerous questions remain.

At Monday’s Fulton County Transportation Summit, it was clear that a division exists among leaders in the county.

Virtually the whole meeting was dedicated to discussing the future of rail transportation in the region.

But several mayors in north Fulton have already been expressed their displeasure with the proposed tax because they already pay a one-penny sales tax.

Posted inLatest News

Chancellor Erroll Davis named interim superintendent of Atlanta’s public schools

By Maria Saporta

It’s official.

The Atlanta Board of Education voted Monday to name Erroll Davis, the outgoing chancellor for the Georgia Board of Regents, as the interim school superintendent (see previous posts in Latest Reports).

In an 8-0 vote (one board member was out of town), the school board picked Davis to succeed Superintendent Beverly Hall, whose last day will be June 30. By the way, Davis’ last day as chancellor also will be June 30, and he will become the interim on July 1.

Meanwhile, the board also is continuing its search for a permanent superintendent. It will interview three finalists for the position on Friday, but Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed said he will not support any superintendent that has been selected under the current governance of the Atlanta Board of Education.

Posted inLatest News

Mayor Kasim Reed’s business cabinet endorses Erroll Davis as interim APS superintendent

By Maria Saporta

The Atlanta Committee for Progress, at its regular quarterly meeting Monday morning, weighed in on the current situation of the Atlanta Public Schools by strongly supporting a plan to name outgoing Georgia Board of Regents Chancellor Erroll Davis as the interim superintendent.

“Because of his impeccable credentials, many of us see Mr. Davis as offering a lot of stability and affording us the time to do a national search for a best in class superintendent to serve the long term needs of the students in the Atlanta public schools,” said Phil Kent, ACP’s chairman and CEO of Turner Broadcasting.

Kent went on to say that Davis has strong support from Gov. Nathan Deal, the philanthropic community and a broad group of organizations, including 100 Black Men of Atlanta, which initially presented his name.

Posted inMaria's Metro

Historic Fourth Ward Park opens with more opportunities for the BeltLine and its parks

Few occasions are as uplifting as those when a city can dedicate a splendid new park for its residents.

That air of celebration was readily apparent at the opening of the Historic Fourth Ward Park on Saturday, June 18.

“There’s a saying among mayors,” said Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, while dedicating the park. “Boy, when it’s good, it’s good.”

As in all successful endeavors, many people deservedly are given credit for their roles in bringing the park to life — beginning with the vision of community activist Bill Eisenhauer.

The park is an amenity with multiple functions — the 2-acre lake serves as a

Posted inGuest Column

Metro Atlanta’s transportation efforts to show whether we’re still a city ‘too busy to hate’

By Guest Columnist REV. JOSEPH LOWERY, a Civil Rights leader and former president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference

We have come so far in this country in our efforts to bring forth harmony among all people – black and white, conservative and liberal, Democrat and Republican.

We have made great strides on so many issues when we have worked together for the common good.

In the South, and in our own city of Atlanta, we have emerged from the dark days of racial division that preceded the Civil Rights movement. Here, in Atlanta, we collectively made a conscious decision to usher in a movement of progress and prosperity for all in building a global mega- region.

Posted inDavid Pendered

Why not a park? Ideas abound for redeveloping Fort McPherson

By David Pendered

Atlanta faces a tough challenge as it prepares to absorb Fort McPherson on Sept. 15.

For starters, there are all kinds of strings attached once the military vacates the property – from federal requirements that it provide housing for the homeless to the immediate need for its protection by Atlanta police and fire.

Moreover, the city has to devise and adopt a master plan for this 488-acre tract amidst a fundamental shift in the economy. Atlanta and the state are supposed to woo redevelopment partners for the property at a time the region’s commercial and residential markets are moribund and showing few signs of recovery.

No wonder one fellow has suggested turning Fort McPherson into a park with a Civil Rights theme, according to Michael Dobbins, a former Atlanta planning commissioner.

Posted inEleanor Ringel Cater

Christopher Plummer shines in father-son film: ‘Beginners’

By Eleanor Ringel Cater

Time to trash all the Captain von Trapp jokes.

And I’m not just talking about movie lovers. I’m talking to YOU
Christopher Plummer. Yes, YOU, who once said that acting with your “The Sound of Music” co-star, Julie Andrews, was like “acting with a Hallmark Card.”

And yet, she got an Oscar and you…?

Actually, Plummer, now 80, has long since apologized for dumping on the movie that made him famous world-wide. But the proof, as we crix like to say, is in the acting.

And Lord, can Plummer act.

Actually, many of us have known that for a while. Say, anyone who caught him on-stage in ”The Royal Hunt of the Sun” or saw unsung sleepers like a marvelous little mystery-thriller from the late ‘70s called “The Silent Partner.” Or his Oscar-nominated turn as Leo Tolstoy in “The Last Station.” Or his Kipling in “The Man Who Would Be King.” Or as Mike Wallace in “The Insider.”

Posted inLatest News

Marcus plans school for autistic children; talks about jobs, GE, Blake and Nardelli

By Maria Saporta

In a luncheon talk to the Atlanta Press Club Wednesday, Bernie Marcus announced plans to build a school to serve children with autism.

Marcus, co-founder of the Home Depot and a leading philanthropist, founded the Marcus Institute in 1990 to serve children with developmental disabilities.

Since then, the facility has focused its efforts on children with autism. Also, Marcus then turned the Marcus Center to Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta to give it greater stability.

“This morning, I had a meeting about actually taking the Marcus Autism Center and taking it to education,” Marcus told the Atlanta Press Club Wednesday. “We are probably going to open a school very shortly for children with autism.”

Posted inDavid Pendered

Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed seems to want to control Atlanta public housing

By David Pendered

Any niceties that ever existed between Atlanta’s public housing chief and Mayor Kasim Reed’s strongest appointee to the housing board evaporated Wednesday.

The two sparred over just two aspects of the housing agency’s budget – the use of outside lawyers and a communications firm. But the real issue was an open challenge to Renee Glover’s ability to lead the Atlanta Housing Authority, as she has since 1994.

At stake in this contest are the homes and future living conditions for about 50,000 residents in some 20,000 households. Plus, there is a myriad of contracts to be awarded and paid through an annual operating budget of just over $256 million.

Posted inATL Business Chronicle

Column: Woodruff Arts Center surpasses $8.8 million fundraising goal

By Maria Saporta
Friday, June 10, 2011

The Woodruff Arts Center has 8.8 million reasons to celebrate.
After two years of falling short of its campaign goal, the Woodruff Arts Center surpassed its $8.8 million goal of its 2010-2011 annual corporate campaign.

But that’s not all. For the first time in its history, the center received its first $500,000 corporate contribution. And amazingly, the center actually had three corporate donors giving $500,000 — The Coca-Cola Co., the Georgia Power Foundation and United Parcel Service Inc.

“In the midst of national and local reports of declining support for the arts, the Woodruff has a great story,” said Kurt Kuehn, the chief financial officer of UPS

Posted inDavid Pendered

Fort McPherson: Varying views on how it should be redeveloped after military exits

By David Pendered

Competing plans for redeveloping Fort McPherson are starting to take the stage.

One plan that will be presented Wednesday carries extra heft. It was crafted by Georgia Tech students who were overseen by Michael Dobbins, a former Atlanta planning commissioner and current professor of practice at Tech.

“The big policy issue presented by Fort McPherson is whether this 488 acre site, which is roughly four times of the size of Atlantic Station, conceives of itself as interacting with the rest of city or remaining an enclave,” Dobbins said. “All of the planning so far treats it as an enclave.”

Posted inDavid Pendered

Atlanta Beltline park already trashed by vandals after reopening in May with $4.5 million facelift

By David Pendered

If you build a Beltline park, they will come – and trash it.

That has been the experience with a park that opened May 14 following a $4.5 million restoration. D.H. Stanton Park is located in Southeast Atlanta, adjacent to the city’s planned corridor of transit, trails, greenspace and development.

“It’s extremely disappointing and disturbing, what’s happening at Stanton Park,” said city parks Commissioner George Dusenberry.

Posted inLatest News

Shareholders approve AGL-Nicor merger with goal to close by the end of the year

By Maria Saporta

Shareholders of AGL Resources Tuesday morning approved the pending merger between the Atlanta-based natural gas company and Nicor Inc., which is based in Naperville, Ill.

The meeting was relatively short as more than 90 percent of the votes cast approved the merger. There were no questions from shareholders during the meeting.

About 95 percent of the shares cast approved increasing the number of AGL board seats from 15 to 16. Currently, AGL has 12 directors. The vote will permit ACL to add four members of Nicor’s board to the board of the merged company.

Posted inLatest News

Erroll Davis being proposed as interim superintendent of Atlanta’s public schools

By Maria Saporta

The name of Erroll Davis Jr., former Chancellor of the Georgia Board of Regents, is being put forth to be the interim superintendent for the Atlanta Public Schools.

Among the organizations supporting Davis for the sensitive position is 100 Black Men of Atlanta.

Gregory Hawkins, chairman of 100 Black Men of Atlanta, sent a letter to the search firm involved in helping select the leadership for APS strongly recommending Davis for the interim post.

The letter stated that Davis “has a proven track record in the education and academic arena serving in his former position since early 2006.”

Posted inLatest News

U.S. Chamber’s Tom Donohue tells Atlanta Rotary how business is faring in D.C.

By Maria Saporta

There was lots of patting on the back at he Rotary Club of Atlanta’s luncheon Monday with Tom Donohue, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, as the keynote speaker.

Donohue was introduced by Sam Williams, president of the Metro Atlanta Chamber, who said Donohue was “making an incredible difference in Washington.”

Williams also told a story of when Donohue, president and CEO of the American Trucking Association, was being considered for the top chamber job in 1997.

Posted inATL Business Chronicle

Regions Bank moving to Midtown tower

By Maria Saporta
Friday, June 10, 2011

Atlanta’s sixth-largest bank will move to Midtown’s Atlantic Center Plaza, where it will put its name across the top of the 24-story tower — instantly raising its profile.

Regions Financial Corp. plans to consolidate employees from several offices across North Atlanta where its leases are expiring. It wanted to bring its staff under one roof, make its real estate footprint more efficient and save costs, said Bill Linginfelter, the bank’s area president for Georgia and South Carolina.

The biggest advantage, though, might be visibility. The Downtown Connector cuts through Midtown and it’s lined with some of Atlanta’s most prominent office towers.

It’s the same advantage that has drawn banks from other parts of the city to Midtown, including Citizens & Southern

Posted inMaria's Metro

Atlanta roundtable trying to figure out transit investment; Charlotte, N.C. shows the way

For decades, the third rail for transit in Georgia has been money.

The state’s gas tax is constitutionally limited to funding roads and bridges — giving the state a convenient excuse for not investing in public transit or alternative transportation modes, such as sidewalks, bicycle and multi-purpose paths.

As a result, almost all of the state’s transit systems have been financed by county governments, or in the case of the Atlanta, Fulton and DeKalb — the one-penny MARTA sales tax.

Posted inGuest Column

Creating safe links between transit and walking a vital part of our transportation future

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

The decades-long neglect of pedestrian safety in the design of state roads exacts a heavy toll. Each year in metro Atlanta, some 1,400 pedestrians are hit by motor vehicles, resulting in 1,000 pedestrian injuries and 70 pedestrian deaths.

While the region has made dramatic progress during the past five years in reducing overall traffic fatalities, the number of pedestrian deaths remains constant. In 2009, pedestrians accounted for one out of five traffic fatalities in the 10-county region.

Posted inDavid Pendered

Upgrades under way (hopefully) for rural transit program for poor, elderly, disabled

By David Pendered

State transportation officials are working to improve the program that transports the poor, elderly and disabled from their home to health care in rural Georgia.

This effort doesn’t garner the high level attention of the companion program to ease gridlock and enhance transit in urban areas. The headline-grabbing transportation mobility program is to lead to a vote next year on a proposed penny sales tax to pay for upgrades in metro Atlanta and other regions statewide.

The rural and human services transit program serves mostly the poor, old, and/or disabled. It’s funded at about $138 million a year to provide a patchwork quilt of transit services, mainly to health care facilities.

Posted inDavid Pendered

Atlanta won’t consider longer bar hours, despite the rumors

By David Pendered

There’s no cause for either celebration or concern – Atlanta does not intend to reopen talks about allowing bars to serve alcohol later into the night.

Councilman Michael J. Bond said Thursday that he’s received calls from folks concerned about legislation he filed Monday. They think he may want to create a forum to extend pouring hours.

That’s not the case.

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