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Atlanta Education Fund’s president moves to New York

By Maria Saporta

The founding president of the Atlanta Education Fund, Hosanna Mahaley Johnson, has accepted a new position in New York.

Johnson has been named executive director of social justice and district innovation for Wireless Generation, which helps develop innovative technology for classrooms from kindergarten to 12th grade.

The Atlanta Education Fund was started

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GWCC’s Dan Graveline – a developer for the state – retiring at year end

By Maria Saporta

The only executive director the Georgia World Congress Center has ever known — Dan Graveline — announced today he is retiring at the end of the year.

He will cap off his 33-year career by working until midnight, Dec. 31 at the Georgia Dome’s Chick-fil-A Bowl game.

It will culminate an amazing career by one of Georgia’s unsung public servants.

Graveline, 68 as of July 1, was named

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Newt Gringrich shares his plan for healthcare reform

By Maria Saporta

Former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich is not against health reform.

In fact, he told the Rotary Club of Atlanta today that health reform is necessary.

“What I’m opposed to in any health reform in this economy that will mean a tax increase,” Gingrich said. He then added that the bill that is in the House of Representatives today “will kill jobs.”

Gingrich has been working on healthcare

Posted inMaria's Metro

Georgia’s political power is not what it was

How far we have fallen.

Today Georgia finds itself in the weakest political position it has ever been at the national level, at least for the last six decades.

Currently, there is virtually no direct link to the party in power at the White House, the U.S. House of Representatives or the U.S. Senate. And Georgia is at risk of being left out in the political cold when it comes to power and influence.

Take the battle over the $1.75 billion appropriation for new F-22 fighter jets. Both U.S. senators from Georgia — Saxby Chambliss and Johnny Isakson — had placed the continued

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The Beltline and Beyond — blueprint for transit project’s next CEO

By Guest Columnist MATTHEW HICKS, associate legislative director for the Association County Commissioners of Georgia on economic development and transportation policy.

In 2003, a goal was set by those working on the BeltLine to have transit started on the corridor within ten years. It was a lofty target considering that every day brought obstacles and looming doubts about the overall project’s viability.

Yet every hurdle was overcome and soon problems

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Mayor Franklin praises Gov. Perdue for leading on water

By Maria Saporta

After a pow wow on water at the Governor’s Mansion earlier today, Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin gave a luncheon speech to the Buckhead Business Association, where she praised Gov. Sonny Perdue for taking a lead on this issue.

The water summit followed last week’s ruling by U.S. District Judge Paul Magnuson that most of metro Atlanta does not have the legal right to access water from Lake Lanier. The judge gave

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Gwinnett’s growth depends on water and transportation

By Maria Saporta

Although Gwinnett County is planning to remove its signature water towers along I-85 proclaiming that “Gwinnett is Great,” the county continues to anticipate strong growth for the next 20 years.

Economist Roger Tutterow of Mercer University participated in Gwinnett’s first annual “Transportation Summit” on Wednesday at the Gwinnett Chamber of Commerce’s headquarters.

By 2030, Tutterow said that Gwinnett will

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Tom Bell concerned about the future of free enterprise

By Maria Saporta

Tom Bell, who retired earlier this summer as CEO of Cousins Properties, is carrying the flag for free enterprise.

Bell is vice chairman of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which is in line to lead the organization from July, 2010 through June, 2011.

But starting in September, Bell will chair the U.S. Chamber’s Campaign for Free Enterprise, a national campaign that is expected to last through the 2010 mid-term elections.

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Leaders in Fulton, DeKalb, Atlanta are rallying state support for MARTA

It’s been pretty easy to blame the state legislature for the lack of progress on regional transportation issues and MARTA during the last session.

But part of the problem rests within the region. There has been a lack of consensus among local governments and their delegation of senators and representatives on how to proceed on key regional issues.

A significant meeting took place last week at Fulton County that hopes to change that backdrop.

The meeting included top elected leaders from the city of

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Foster children benefit when placed in permanent homes

By Guest Columnist KIM ANDERSON, CEO of Families First

Virtually every measure of individual success begins with a loving and supportive family. Yet on any given day, approximately 13,000 children in Georgia’s foster care system have lost the family connections essential for them to succeed in life.

The national and state trends are grim: 60 percent of children placed into foster care are there because of neglect, 10 percent because of physical abuse and 8 percent are victims of sexual abuse.

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Welcome to the new and improved SaportaReport

Readers,

After five months online, SaportaReport is delighted to let you know of some improvements to our site.

Most significantly is the addition of Lyle Harris, a longtime colleague of mine at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Lyle was a reporter and later an editorial writer focusing on the environment, housing, land-use and transportation issues.

Now he will be contributing his expertise

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Do the Right Thing: More than just a movie for Atlanta

A lot can happen in 20 years; it’s hard to believe “Do the Right Thing,” Spike Lee’s searing portrayal of urban race relations, debuted way back in 1989 when “Poppy” Bush was in the White House and asking us to read his lips. Two decades hence, we’ve wished “buh-bye” through gritted teeth to the Junior Bush-in-chief.

For Bush II’s beleaguered successor, fixing the economy and restoring our battered national character at home and abroad are, of course, top priorities. But, by virtue of his cross-cultural ancestry, President Obama is also implicitly tasked with re-defining our outdated notions about race.

On that score, Obama certainly has his work cut out for him. Come to think of it, as residents of metro Atlanta, so do we.

Hopefully, the recent 20th Anniversary celebration of “Do the Right Thing” at the Fox Theater will occasion more than wistful nostalgia for the late 80’s. It’s an opportunity also for metro Atlanta to examine anew some of the troubling issues Lee’s film dared to raise.

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Shepherd Center among top 10 rehab hospitals in U.S.

By Maria Saporta

Spreading the word.

James Shepherd, the inspiration and co-founder of the Shepherd Center, used Facebook to send his friends the message, along with this link, that the Atlanta hospital is among the top 10 rehabilitation centers in the United States.

U.S. News & World Report has just put out a ranking of the “Best Rehabilitaton Hospitals.” Atlanta’s Shepherd Center ranked 9th among a list of more than 150 hospitals in the country.

The rank was based on Shepherd’s reputation by specialists in the medical

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Bonds to pay off SunTrust loan for King papers

By Maria Saporta

City of Atlanta bonds already allocated to the proposed Center for Civil and Human Rights will pay off the balance of a $32 million loan used to buy a premier collection of Martin Luther King Jr.’s papers.

The finance/executive committee of the Atlanta City Council just approved the plan this afternoon in a 4-0 vote. The plan still needs to be approved by the full council and the Atlanta Development Authority.

Three years ago, Atlanta leaders came together to buy the King papers on the eve before they were to be sold at a Sotheby’s auction. Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin

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Atlanta leaders part of Obama’s urban policy team

Two metro Atlanta leaders are working with the Obama administration to establish its urban policy agenda.

Catherine Ross, director of the Center for Quality Growth at Georgia Tech; and DeKalb County CEO Burrell Ellis, were in Washington D.C. Monday as part of a round-table discussion advising the new White House Office of Urban Affairs.

President Barack Obama addressed the urban and political leaders in the afternoon explaining how the federal government can develop policies to improve housing, education and transportation systems in urban areas.

“The president is going to put his

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