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Investor Pete Correll misses use of his corporate plane

Note to readers: It’s been a busy day, and several posts will follow. This item had to be cut from my next Atlanta Business Chronicle column, but I thought y’all might enjoy reading it.

Atlanta was the site of M&A International’s spring conference, bringing dozens of merger and acquisition specialists from around the world to the Ritz-Carlton Buckhead on April 16.

The event — Growing Opportunities in a Shrinking World — was co-sponsored by the Atlanta Chapter of the Association for Corporate Growth.

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Southern Co.’s David Ratcliffe heading to D.C. for energy and climate change hearings

Southern Co. CEO David Ratcliffe is on his way to Washington D.C. to represent the power company’s point of view on the proposed Waxman-Markey bill on energy and climate change.

Starting today, there will be four days of hearings on the draft 648-page bill. The bill is far-reaching and would begin to frame a program on a mandatory cap on greenhouse gas emissions.

In the past, Ratcliffe has voiced his opposition to the establishment of carbon fees as a way to reduce emissions.

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PBS’s Gwen Ifill talks about politics and trends

It seemed as though Gwen Ifill was in a room full of friends.

Speaking at an Atlanta Press Club luncheon today, the moderator and managing editor of “Washington Week” and a senior correspondent for “the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer,” actually was among colleagues and friends.

A couple of interesting comments from her luncheon talk at the Commerce Club downtown….

Whe was asked why President Barack Obama, whose father was African-American and whose mother was white, was considered black rather

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Georgia needs to board a fast train to develop high speed passenger rail

MARTA General Manager Beverly Scott can hardly contain her excitement.

After decades “toiling in the vineyards,” she and other rail advocates finally have friends in the White House.

With just a couple of days notice, Scott got a call from a friend at the Federal Transit Administration asking whether she could come up to Washington D.C. for the administration’s unveiling of its high speed rail strategy.

So early on Thursday morning, Scott found herself at the old Eisenhower Executive Office Building in Washington. After going through three different security screenings, she joined about 80 other transit advocates in a medium-sized room

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Ed Ellis shares his wish list for transportation in Georgia

By Guest Columnist ED ELLIS; transportation engineer; Regional Vice President of Kimley-Horn and Associates, Inc.

It’s just plain hard to talk about transportation in Georgia without cussing.

I’ve been in the transportation engineering business for over 35 years and it hasn’t been easy. I know what you’re thinking – nobody in their right mind would admit that, but I like to tell folks things would have been much worse if I hadn’t been here, and you can’t prove me wrong.

I also like to remind folks that Atlanta has been called the fastest growing human

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Atlanta: Let’s support the Dogwood Festival

What a joy it is to have the Atlanta Dogwood Festival back in its rightful home — Piedmont Park.

And we need the city of Atlanta to do everything it can to protect and nurture the festival for years and years to come.

The Atlanta Dogwood Festival helps mark the coming of spring — an annual ritual that breathes life back in the city and kicks off our festival season — Inman Park Festival, the Atlanta Jazz Festival, the Virginia-Highlands Festival, the National Black Arts Festival, and of course, the Peachtree Road Race.

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Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin gives kudos to City Council President Lisa Borders

It was a moment when eyebrows went up.

At Wednesday’s annual luncheon meeting of the Atlanta Convention & Visitors Bureau, Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin took the podium as the last time in her current role.

“I want to congratulate you for hanging tough in tough in tough times,” Franklin told the hospitality community.

And when she acknowledged the presence of

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Business leaders, frustrated by lack of progress, want action from state officials

Atlanta business leaders had a brainstorming meeting this morning on a strategy to get more accountable state elected officials.

The executive committee of the Metro Atlanta Chamber spent its enire monthly meeting talking about the breakdown during this year’s legislative session and how to prevent that from happening again.

For Sam Williams, president of the Metro Atlanta Chamber, the meeting demonstrated the level of frustration that exists in the business community.

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Does Cagle’s move mean more of the same?

So much political intrigue.

The news that Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle will stay put rather than run for governor is causing several politicians to rethink what their next move will be.

Folks who had been thinking about jumping in the lieutenant governor’s race now are seeking alternative races because few want to take on an incumbent.

But here’s the discouraging reality.

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Metro Atlanta executives to ponder inaction during last session of Georgia General Assembly

Not surprisingly, the Metro Atlanta Chamber plans to devote its entire executive committee meeting Thursday morning on state legislative issues.

The meeting follows a particularly disappointing session of the General Assembly that ended earlier this month without resolving a number of issues critical to the Atlanta business community.

Among the issues high on the chamber’s list include: the lack of progress on a bill that would allow voters to pass a one-cent sales tax for

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Robert Woodruff must be smiling from above

The late Robert W. Woodruff would have taken special pleasure in today’s announcement that the Winship Cancer Institute at Emory University had received a formal designation by the National Cancer Institute.

Woodruff, president and leader of the Coca-Cola Co. for decades, actually was the center’s “first benefactor,” according to Vicki Riedel, executive director of development for the Winship Cancer Institute.

“It was his first gift to Emory,” Riedel said.

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Metro Atlanta Cooperation can lead to renewed regional political power

Something extraordinary is taking place.

As never before, the Atlanta region is coalescing around a common agenda.

The metro Atlanta area is composed of more than a dozen counties, numerous municipalities and governmental agencies and authorities. It is extremely difficult to get the urban, suburban and ex-urban leaders to understand how their interests are mutually intertwined.

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French viewing the United States differently since the election of Barack Obama

Americans and the French view racial equality through different lenses, according to French journalist Nicole Bacharan.

Bacharan spoke Friday evening at Georgia Tech on behalf of the Alliance Francaise d”Atlanta and the European Union Center of Excellence at the Sam Nunn School of International Studies.

For example, affirmative action is France is referred to as positive discrimination. While Bacharan said affirmative action has been fairly

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Sam Olens reflects on the 2009 Legislative Session

By Guest Columnist SAM OLENS;
Chairman of the Cobb County Commission
Chairman of the Atlanta Regional Commission

President Barack Obama’s stimulus package is bad unless it helps balance the State budget; property tax reform is needed but not accomplished; trauma funds are essential but not approved; water conservation and supply was a non-issue; transportation funding and MARTA were left in the dark; a win for the Governor on Georgia Department of Transportation governance; and confirmation of last year’s homeowners tax relief grant with a huge property tax increase later this year.

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MARTA has friends in the Atlanta region

The Atlanta Regional Commission today showed what true leadership can do.

The ARC’s Transportation and Air Quality Committee voted unanimously to pursue using up to $25 million in federal stimulus funding to help cover MARTA’s anticipated operating shortfall during the next fiscal year.

If the resolution is passed by the ARC’s board at its May meeting, then MARTA should be able to continue providing its current level of service through May, 2010.

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Let’s have an “urban” renaissance at Georgia State University’s School of Public Policy

Georgia State University today named W. Bartley Hildreth as the new dean of the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies beginning July 1.

Here’s my hope. Perhaps Hildreth can put “urban” back into focus at the GSU School.

Currently, Hildreth is the Regents Distinguished Professor of Public Finance at the Hugo Wall School of Urban and Public Affairs at Wichita State University. From the release that came out today,

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Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle calls 2009 legislative session “exciting,” but many are disappointed

The strangest part of Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle’s address to the Atlanta Press Club today was his opening talk, which lasted nearly 15 minutes.

During that whole speech, every reference Cagle made about the tumultuous recent legislative session was positive. Could that be because Cagle is running for governor and doesn’t want to make any new enemies?

“This was an exciting session,” Cagle said without discussing the

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Atlanta has opportunity to seize global mantle of leadership for civil and human rights with new center

Guest column by Doug Shipman,
Executive director of the Center for Civil and Human Rights

When Billy Payne stated during a speech in 2006 that the opportunity to build a civil and human rights oriented institution was bigger than the Olympics, more than a few heads turned.

Only recently has an understanding of the opportunity Atlanta and Georgia now possesses come into clear focus. Great places have a theme that binds their collective memory and current action together.

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