Posted inDelaney Tarr

City of Atlanta acquires Tatum Lakes to create public park and preserve

The City of Atlanta announced its acquisition of Tatum Lakes Nature Preserve this week, marking a major step in transforming the 50-acre urban forest dotted with lakes and wetlands into a publicly accessible park. Tatum Lakes is situated in Southwest Atlanta’s Adamsville neighborhood, with around four acres of lakes and wetlands surrounded by a mature […]

Posted inColumns

New study says Georgia can lead in brain health innovation

Georgia can dominate as a hub for brain health and neuroscience. That’s according to an extensive nine-month-long study conducted by the Georgia Research Alliance (GRA) and Deloitte. The study examined the academic and research assets that currently exist in Georgia, how the state compares to other states and how Georgia can move forward to leverage […]

Posted inSmall Business

Black History Month and the Small Business Growth Imperative in Georgia

Black History Month is often framed through culture, leadership, and social progress. In the business community, it also provides a practical opportunity to examine economic participation, small business growth, and market access. For Georgia’s economy, the conversation is not only about recognition. It is about expansion of opportunity through enterprise. Small businesses remain one of […]

Posted inHigher Education

Atlanta Roots Guide Georgia Tech Provost in Pursuit of Global Innovation

Growing up less than 5 miles from Georgia Tech’s campus, Raheem Beyah didn’t know how the Institute would shape his career, nor did he imagine that he would one day — as provost — shape Georgia Tech’s role as a leader in the Atlanta community and around the world.   An Atlanta Public School (APS) system graduate, Beyah credits his teachers and the principals at Frederick Douglass High School for placing him on the path that […]

Posted inPeople, Places & Parks

Parks, Resilience, and the Power of Coming Together — All at Park Pride’s Parks & Greenspace Conference

By Hannah E. Jones, Park Pride’s Marketing & Communications Manager Picture this: Over 500 park experts, leaders, and advocates coming together for a day of learning, sharing best practices, and making connections to strengthen our parks and the neighborhoods they serve — all with the backdrop of a sea of vibrant tulips in full bloom. […]

Posted inSecuring Atlanta's Future

A Day in One Advocate’s Life at GEEARS’ Strolling Thunder 

To prepare for one of our biggest events of the year—Strolling Thunder at the Georgia State Capitol—we at GEEARS put a lot of energy into defining what this day is all about.  But Strolling Thunder is also a very stimulating adventure for young children and their parents. As GEEARS’ Executive Director, Mindy Binderman, recently noted, […]

Posted inDelaney Tarr

‘From Rails to Trails’ explores train tracks, tension and the American landscape

A new documentary tells the story of a grassroots movement, fierce pushback, national tensions, controversies and the transformation of the American landscape across 55 minutes. It showed at the Atlanta HIstory Center on Jan. 29 to a large local crowd. And it’s all about abandoned railroads turned to sprawling trails. “From Rails to Trails” is […]

Posted inAdrianne Murchison, Columns

Atlanta Ballet’s afterschool program starts at East Point elementary school

Atlanta Ballet’s Centre for Dance Education has launched a pilot afterschool program at Briar Hills Elementary in East Point. The dance centre wants to become part of the school’s curriculum in the next academic year. Through ballet and modern dance, students are taught discipline, listening skills, intentionality, teamwork and structure, said Diane Caroll, the Centre […]

Posted inGuest Column

The Plug: A step toward real community food and energy independence

For decades, we’ve treated food systems, energy systems, and economic development as separate conversations. They aren’t. They are tightly linked parts of the same system — and when one fails, the others feel it immediately. Rising food prices, stressed power grids, supply chain disruptions, and climate volatility are not isolated problems. They’re signals that the […]

Posted inColumns

Fulton County challenges FBI raid in federal court, says it will not be intimidated

Fulton County is asking a federal court to order the return of election files seized during the Jan. 28 FBI raid, and to unseal the affidavit supporting the search warrant for the county’s elections hub. Commission Chairman Robb Pitts and Commissioner Mo Ivory have separately told the media that they view the raid as part […]

Posted inGabi Hart

Atlanta Association of Black Journalists swears in new board of directors as chapter marks 50 Years

The Atlanta Association of Black Journalists (AABJ) , one of the nation’s oldest and most influential organizations for Black media professionals, swore in its new board of directors Jan. 10 during a ceremony that underscored the chapter’s legacy and its relevance in a shifting media landscape. Founded as a local chapter of the National Association […]

Posted inReporter's Notebook

Reporter’s Notebook: Boaters Advocacy, GRA’s multigenerational leaders, Piedmont Center redevelopment

Boaters Day at the Capitol A coalition of outdoor recreation organizations will host Boaters Day at the Georgia State Capitol on Feb. 12 to raise awareness among lawmakers about public access to the state’s rivers and streams. The event is organized by the Freedom to Float Coalition, which includes Georgia Rivers, the Georgia Canoeing Association, […]

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