Atlanta election news 2009
Georgia Politics and Elections | Atlanta & Georgia Voter Guide
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Deal continues criminal justice revamp
Gov. Nathan Deal has signed an order continuing the work of a criminal justice reform council that was instrumental in sweeping changes enacted this past legislative session. Among the panel's new members are the governor's son, Jason Deal, a Superior Court judge who oversees accountability courts in Hall and Dawson counties.
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Chattahoochee on endangered list
A national environmental group has listed the Chattahoochee as one of the nation’s 10 most endangered rivers, although the presumed threats do not yet exist. In a report to be released today, Washington-based American Rivers said two planned reservoirs that would collectively draw 140 million gallons a day from the Chattahoochee River earned it the No.
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President returning to Atlanta
President Barack Obama will return to Atlanta in June for a series of fundraisers, according to a preliminary invitation obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Obama's campaign will hold a series of afternoon events June 26, the invitation said, although times and locations have yet to be announced.
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Four Georgia colleges add "state" to name
Four of Georgia's traditional two-year colleges will add the word "state" to their names to reflect that they now offer limited four-year degrees, under action the State Board of Regents took Wednesday. The new names are: Atlanta Metropolitan State College, Darton State College, East Georgia State College and Georgia Perimeter State College.
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Law will give options to prison
The way Georgia punishes thousands of nonviolent offenders will forever change when Gov. Nathan Deal signs landmark legislation Wednesday. It represents a first step in the governor's long-term plan to reserve prison beds for the state's most violent criminals.
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Incentives for Baxter plant top $200M
Incentives used to lure a new pharmaceutical manufacturing plant and its 1,500 promised jobs to a site 40 miles east of Atlanta could exceed $210 million. When Gov. Nathan Deal announced last week that Georgia had landed the high-tech Baxter International factory, the state Department of Economic Development estimated the state would give the company $80 million in incentives.
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15 busted in gang sweep
Fifteen people from the Atlanta area were among more than 600 arrested this month as part of a wide-ranging crackdown on gangs involved in human smuggling and trafficking in 150 cities and in Honduras. Police from Atlanta, Forest Park, Sandy Springs and Cobb County assisted in “Project Nefarious,” according to U.
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Law prods public officials toward transparency
Cheryl Miller has been hammering at a proverbial stone wall that she sees standing between her and the local school district. Miller is among parents in DeKalb County who’ve been digging for information about a decision they find repugnant: allowing cell towers to be erected at several schools.
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Redrawn districts change dynamic
Walton County is still getting to know U.S. Rep. Paul Broun, which might explain why his surname was spelled “Brown” on fliers for a town hall meeting last week in the county courthouse. The Athens Republican has what he described as a second full-time job learning about his significantly redrawn district, which he hopes will send him to a third full term in Congress.
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John Lewis to be honored by transparency advocates
The Georgia First Amendment Foundation will award U.S. Rep. John Lewis with the 2012 Charles L. Weltner Freedom of Information Award at a banquet Wednesday night. Lewis, a civil rights icon, has been a "consistent and persistent advocate of government transparency and accountability," according to the foundation.
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MARTA service cuts loom
MARTA General Manager Beverly Scott warned Monday that the transit agency needed to start preparing for deep service cuts in part because the state legislature failed to lift regulations on how much it can spend on operations. That failure coupled with projections that sales tax revenues -- MARTA's main funding source -- will come up $130 million short in the next five years of what had been previously projected means the agency will have to make cuts to ensure it has the $40 million in operating reserves required by law.
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Fulton tax chief keeps power
The state's highest-paid elected official won't take a pay cut, nor will he be forced to stop selling delinquent tax bills to private collections firms. Two measures aimed at Fulton County Tax Commissioner Arthur Ferdinand died in the House late Thursday, along with a property taxpayers' rights bill pushed by Senate Majority Leader Chip Rogers, R-Woodstock.
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Judge dismisses suit seeking to dissolve young cities
A federal district judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed against the state which sought to dissolve the cities of Dunwoody, Sandy Springs, Johns Creek, Milton and Chattahoochee Hills. The lead attorney for the Legislative Black Caucus, which filed the suit last April, called the decision "shocking" and said he would appeal.
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Atlanta streetcar moves forward despite MARTA funding woes
MARTA directors found themselves handing out more than $62 million in contracts Monday while warning that the transit agency faces potential cuts in service if the state Legislature doesn't lift controls on its spending. Board member Jim Durrett warned that if the Legislature doesn't permanently lift its requirement that MARTA spend half of the local sales tax money it receives -- its primary funding source -- on capital improvements instead of operations, then MARTA could be forced to "substantially reduce" service after 2013.
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MARTA request turned down
The state House Transportation Committee Tuesday rejected a MARTA request to be able to contract to provide rail services in areas outside Fulton and DeKalb counties. State. Rep. Mike Jacobs, R-Atlanta, asked his fellow committee members to approve a change to the MARTA law that would permit the transit agency to operate, construct or maintain rail services for counties or cities that do not currently have it.
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Cheating educators would return bonuses under bill
Georgia educators who got bonuses tied to falsified standardized test scores will have to return that money to their school districts if a bill passed by the House of Representatives Tuesday becomes law. "This just affects the bonus," said Rep. Billy Mitchell, D-Stone Mountain, who introduced the legislation, H.
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Group cites immigration law in moving conference from Atlanta
The American Educational Research Association moved its 2013 annual meeting from Atlanta to San Francisco because of Georgia's new immigration law, the group announced in a news release. Last year Georgia lawmakers passed House Bill 87, a sweeping anti-illegal immigration law that proponents say will deter illegal immigrants from coming to Georgia and burdening the state's taxpayer-funded public schools, hospitals and jails.
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Opposition grows for DeKalb transit tax
Simmering opposition in south DeKalb County to the proposed regional transportation sales tax is heating up, posing another challenge to backers of this summer’s referendum. The DeKalb NAACP has joined some politicians in opposing the proposed one-cent sales tax because the project list does not extend MARTA rail into south DeKalb.
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Sharpton in Atlanta for rally
The Rev. Al Sharpton joined the son of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and the head of the organization co-founded by King in Atlanta on Thursday, claiming there is a national effort to undermine the minority voting rights won during the civil rights movement.
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Bill would allow charges for legal fees in open records requests
A provision added Wednesday to a rewrite of the state's sunshine laws would allow government agencies to charge "reasonable attorneys fees" for the cost of paying lawyers for their time spent reviewing or redacting information on documents sought in Open Records Act requests.
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MARTA bill promises power shifts, more controls
A state lawmaker is proposing legislation to rein in MARTA’s awarding of lucrative consulting contracts, undercut Fulton County’s authority to appoint board members and reassure voters that rail service won’t creep into their county without them approving it.
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Obama nominates Pryor to appeals court
President Barack Obama on Thursday nominated Atlanta lawyer Jill Pryor to serve on the federal appeals court and fill a vacancy that has stood since August 2010. If confirmed by the U.S. Senate, Pryor would serve on the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta, which has jurisdiction over federal cases out of Georgia, Alabama and Florida.
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Chief appraiser stepping down
Charged with setting property tax values in a hotbed of taxpayer revolt, Fulton County Chief Appraiser Burt Manning got used to being vilified. But even the thickest of skins has limits. On Valentine’s Day, Manning will call it quits, leaving two months earlier than planned to start a new job with the state Revenue Department.
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Tests less crucial in No Child waiver
Student test scores won't be pivotal to how schools are rated now that Georgia has been allowed to opt out of federal No Child Left Behind requirements. A waiver granted Thursday by the Obama administration also means Georgia won't be bound by the law's mandate that all students be proficient in math and reading by 2014.
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State to invest in Fort Mac
Gov. Nathan Deal wants to spend about $28 million to help bring new life to Fort McPherson, but there are few details on how the money will be used and what future investments the state will make. The recently vacated, 488-acre Army post is about four miles south of downtown Atlanta and has been hailed as a strong candidate for redevelopment, although few concrete plans have been advanced so far.
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House approves sex trafficking study
Trafficking in sex workers and laborers -- modern slavery -- has attracted the attention of the Georgia Legislature, which is moving ahead with a study commission. The Georgia House passed a resolution Tuesday urging the creation of a 13-member commission to study human trafficking and the treatment of victims.
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Pay cut for Fulton tax chief?
Because of a loophole in a state law -- and by personally collecting fees for billing taxes in three cities -- Fulton County Tax Commissioner Arthur Ferdinand has become the state's highest-paid elected official.Taking in $347,000 last year, Ferdinand's earnings approached the level of the U.
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Obama can be on Ga. ballot
President Barack Obama’s name will remain on the Georgia primary ballot after a state law judge flatly rejected legal challenges that contend he can not be a candidate. In a 10-page order, Judge Michael Malihi dismissed one challenge that contended Obama has a computer-generated Hawaiian birth certificate, a fraudulent Social Security number and invalid U.
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House panel passes public defender funding measure
A key House panel Wednesday passed a measure to allow a constitutional amendment be placed on the ballot to let voters decide whether a revenue stream set up to fund Georgia's indigent defense system can be dedicated solely for that reason. House Judiciary Non-Civil Committee Chairman Rich Golick, R-Smyrna, who sponsored House Resolution 977, said the public defender system needs to be on as solid financial footing as possible.
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Fulton uses funds for lobbying
Taxpayers pay hundreds of thousands of dollars a year for the Fulton County government’s lobbying arm, which is pushing an agenda at the state Capitol that includes positions that run counter to the views of many residents. The commission has ordered its legislative team to fight any measures that would reshape or minimize the county government or lead to the breakaway of a new Milton County.
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Senators send names for vacancies
Trying to solve a judicial logjam, Georgia’s two senators have told President Barack Obama who they’ll allow to be considered as nominees for three longstanding vacancies on the federal courts in Atlanta. Republican Sens. Saxby Chambliss and Johnny Isakson on Tuesday wrote White House Counsel Kathryn Ruemmler that they would not hold up Atlanta lawyer Mark Cohen if he is nominated to fill a vacancy on the 11th U.
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Georgia chief justice calls for sentencing reforms
Georgia's chief justice on Wednesday called on lawmakers to enact sentencing reforms that steer nonviolent offenders away from costly prison sentences, saying, "we now know that being tough on crime is not enough." In a 25-minute address before a joint session of the Legislature, Chief Justice Carol Hunstein asked lawmakers to adopt proposals by the Special Council on Criminal Justice Reform that studied Georgia's sentencing and corrections system.
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Ga. 400 plan alarms some
Drivers on Ga. 400 are about to get a desperately needed new travel lane — but it could come with a price: Safety. A new project, announced by Gov. Nathan Deal in his State of the State address this week, plans to convert the highway’s shoulder into a new travel lane between Holcomb Bridge Road and the North Springs MARTA station.
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State Rep. Kip Smith charged with DUI in Buckhead
Republican state Rep. Kip Smith was arrested early Friday morning in Buckhead and charged with DUI, according to an Atlanta police report obtained by Channel 2 Action News. Smith, a 29-year-old lawmaker from Columbus, was pulled over after leaving Hal’s restaurant on Old Ivy Road and allegedly running a red light while traveling southbound on Peachtree Road, the police report said.
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After carjacking, Gold Dome to get its own GSP post
A new Georgia State Patrol post, along with 22 troopers, will soon be in operation near Georgia's state Capitol building in Atlanta. The state's Board of Public Safety voted to add the post Thursday, less than a month after a state employee was carjacked near the Gold Dome.
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Deal: Cheating 'alarming'
A fear of failure, consequences from low test scores and mismanagement led educators in 11 of Dougherty County’s 26 schools to cheat on state exams in 2009, according to an investigative report released Tuesday by Gov. Nathan Deal. One teacher said her fifth-grade students could not read, yet did well on the state's Criterion-Referenced Competency Tests.
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Court appears ready to hand legal victory to transgender woman
The federal appeals court in Atlanta appears ready to grant a legal victory to Vandy Beth Glenn, a transgender woman who was fired as a legislative editor at the General Assembly after she disclosed she was going to make the transition from man to woman.
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Burden of proof upheld in death cases
A divided federal appeals court on Tuesday let stand Georgia’s tough burden of proof required of death-penalty defendants seeking to prove they are mentally disabled and thus ineligible for execution. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals’ 7-4 decision means Georgia is the only state in the country that sets the highest barrier for defendants raising such claims to escape execution.
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Costly payouts pile up for Atlanta
Settlements for damages related to broken water meter covers, potholes, sewer backups and other problems has cost Atlanta taxpayers $1.25 million since 2010. And in some cases the damage to people and property that taxpayers wound up paying for could have been avoided, as the city had already been made aware of some of the problems.
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Georgians line up to buy alcohol
Jonathan Orr has been waiting for this day for seven years. “When do you actually get to drink history?” asked Orr, waiting with his three young children just feet from the front counter of The Beer Growler in Avondale Estates. Sunday marked the first day that some cities in Georgia could legally sell alcohol on that day.
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School tax vote may bode well for transit
Despite the no-new taxes drum beat in modern politics, many metro Atlanta voters showed they have a tolerance for at least some taxes, as nine area school districts voted in favor of continuing a penny tax for education. While that is perhaps a positive for folks pushing for yet another penny-on-the-dollar tax for transportation headed to the voters next year, experts say another yes vote is far from certain.
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Atlanta City Council members push for film commission
In the wake of heated debate over whether Mayor Kasim Reed's plan to create a small agency to oversee Atlanta's film industry would kill jobs, two City Council members have a new plan. Joyce M. Sheperd and Michael Julian Bond introduced legislation Nov.
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State board to review APS
The state Board of Education will reconvene a hearing Wednesday based on a new law that allows the state board to recommend removal en masse of the Atlanta School Board for jeopardizing the city school system's accreditation with political infighting and turmoil.
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Mayor's brother quits amid probe
The older brother of Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed kept his city job and kept driving around town, sometimes in a city-owned vehicle, after his license was suspended and he was detained in May for driving on a suspended license. That incident was not a secret in the mayor's office.
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Buckhead elementary school trying to become poster child for SPLOST funding
When Atlanta residents go to the polls Tuesday to vote on a $513 million sales tax that would go toward improving and building schools, the Buckhead cluster will have a lot at stake. School officials and parents argue that classes at the eight schools in the cluster are overcrowded and that several of the schools' tiny footprints makes it impossible to expand.
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Downtown transit hub moves ahead
Seventeen years after the first plan was unveiled to build a major transit hub in downtown Atlanta, the Georgia Department of Transportation is trying again. The agency Monday is scheduled to sign a $12.2 million contract for a new master plan with a team of contractors experienced in large-scale developments.
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Cain called a ‘force of nature’
Editor's Note: We’re closely covering Georgia-based GOP frontrunner Herman Cain. For this article, our experienced reporting team spent weeks reviewing public documents and conducting interviews in Georgia and in Nebraska, where Cain made his business reputation.
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Morehouse divided on alum Cain
With little prompting any graduate of Morehouse College will recite for you the following: “You can always tell a Morehouse Man. But you can’t tell him much.” Enter Herman Cain, Morehouse Class of ‘67 and a front-runner to become the Republican nominee for president, according to recent polling.
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School SPLOST has opposition
Four metro Atlanta school systems seeking $2 billion through a sales tax renewal face voter opposition because of cheating and spending scandals. People question whether more money should be handed over to systems in turmoil — notably Atlanta Public Schools and the DeKalb County School System.
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Church's pride in Cain outweighs differences
down in the soul — Herman Cain is one of them. Always will be. When he’s home in Atlanta, he’s among friends at Antioch Baptist Church North, where he’s been a member for more than 30 years. Fellow members call him a good man, a brother in Christ, as solid as the very doors of the church.
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5 seek seat on Atlanta school board
After a few months of relative calm following the July resignation of former Atlanta Board of Education Chairman Khaatim Sherrer El, the school system is getting closer to filling his seat. On Nov. 8, voters in District 2 will choose a new school board member from among Byron Amos, Angela Brown, Dwanda Farmer, Michael Jeter and Donald Walker.
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'Gentle giant' chosen to lead ARC
Doug Hooker, a fixture in Atlanta power circles for more than two decades, has been tapped to take over a slumbering giant of an agency that has awakened to its own power over people’s daily lives. Hooker is the national search committee’s choice to replace Chick Krautler as executive director of the Atlanta Regional Commission.
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Kasim Reed makes top 10 of ‘Root 100′ list of notable African-Americans
Mayor Kasim Reed joins such notables as singer Beyonce, NAACP CEO Benjamin Jealous and hip-hop artist Will.i.am on the Root 100 list – an annual compilation of the 100 “Most Influential African-Americans Under 45” released Wednesday. “The Root 100 identifies African-American influencers 45 and under who shape our daily conversations with work that matters,” the website, which describes itself as the No.
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Group sues for guns in church
Should you be allowed to carry a gun to church? What about the person sitting next to you? The question before a three-judge panel for the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta Thursday is whether Georgia’s prohibition on firearms in places of worship conflicts with the promise of religious freedom in the First Amendment to the U.
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Labor shortage costs Ga. $391M
Georgia’s economy is projected to take a $391 million hit and shed about 3,260 jobs this year because of farm labor shortages, according to a report released Tuesday by the state’s agricultural industry. The report does not cite the reasons for the worker shortages in Georgia’s $68.
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MARTA chief: $2.3 billion needed
MARTA chief executive Beverly Scott warned state lawmakers Monday that even if next year's transportation referendum passes, the metro area's largest transit system will still face $2.3 billion in unfunded maintenance needs over the next decade. "We do not have an answer of how it's going to be funded," Scott said, adding that if the regional transportation plan is rejected, the agency's maintenance costs would spike to $2.
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Reed seeks slice of Obama's jobs bill
WASHINGTON – Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed looks at President Barack Obama’s jobs bill and sees a fresh-baked pie of money. And he intends to help determine how the slices are divvied up. A frequent visitor to the nation’s capital, Reed is back this week for several meetings, including chats with members of the Georgia delegation at Congressional Black Caucus festivities.
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Ex-congressman Swindall gets probation in campaign funds case
Former U.S. Rep. Pat Swindall has been sentenced to one year of probation after pleading guilty to three misdemeanor counts of being involved in illegal campaign contributions. The Fulton County Daily Report says in its Friday edition that Swindall was sentenced on Aug.
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DOT withholding construction funds?
The Georgia Department of Transportation said Tuesday it has spent nearly $1 billion last budget year on road projects and related costs, rejecting a contention that the agency has been stifling job creation in Georgia's beleaguered construction industry.
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Atlanta voters may vote on one-percent sales tax for water and sewer projects
Rate increases of about 20 percent could hit Atlanta residents if they don't vote to renew a special one percent sales and use tax to fund water and sewer projects, city officials said Tuesday. The city's Department of Watershed Management said it needs $113 million from the tax proceeds in 2012 to abide by a consent decree that required major upgrades to the sewer system.
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Georgia's next chief justice picked
When Georgia Supreme Court Justice George Carley determined he would resign when his term runs out at the end of next year, he knew he would be passing up the chance to be chief justice of the state's highest court. But on Thursday, his six colleagues made sure that was not going to happen.
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Deal dumps state climatologist
Gov. Nathan Deal has dumped Georgia's longtime state climatologist without apparently telling him, just as 150 Georgia counties became eligible for federal aid because of ongoing drought and excessive heat. Deal with no public announcement signed an executive order Tuesday appointing a state employee to take over the climatologist's job, which for years had been housed at the University of Georgia in Athens.
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Immigration panel draws fire
A powerful new panel aimed at helping curb illegal immigration in Georgia has yet to hold its first meeting but it is already attracting controversy. The Anti-Defamation League on Wednesday called on Gov. Nathan Deal to reconsider his decision to appoint anti-illegal immigration activist Phil Kent to the panel, saying Kent has a history of making “deeply disturbing" comments about immigrants.
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Beltline, rail plans draw ire
Support for the regional transportation tax referendum appears shaky among some key leaders in northern suburbs, with the Atlanta Beltline’s presence on the project generating much of their resistance. Mayors from those communities say much of the $6.
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Chances to weigh in on transportation projects in metro Atlanta
Metro Atlanta residents can have their say on a draft list of projects to be funded by a proposed regional transportation tax during forums this month throughout the region. The draft list of projects, totaling $6.14 billion, was compiled by a five-member executive roundtable of local elected officials last month, and must be finalized by a full 21-member roundtable of leaders from each county by Oct.
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Obama picks Atlantan to lead Southern region campaign
The man who orchestrated Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed's campaign has been tapped to help President Barack Obama win the South in 2012. A spokesman for Obama for America says Tharon Johnson has joined the campaign as the southern regional director and will be "a key part to building the organization" in the area.
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Reed backs Lewis on controversial proposal to strip some of his congressional reach
It is not an election year, but Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed is in full campaign mode for U.S. Rep. John Lewis and the preservation of his congressional district. Under a proposal being floated by Republican leaders in the Georgia General Assembly, Lewis, who represents Atlanta, would lose the Buckhead area to Rep.
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Report: ATL among worst in access to transit
The Atlanta region ranks among the worst major metro areas in the nation for putting transit services within reach of people without cars, the Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Program said in a report released Thursday. Of the nation’s 100 largest metro areas, Atlanta ranks 82nd, providing 68.
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No transit deal this week
No deal. At least not this week. The mayors and county commissioners from across metro Atlanta who planned to approve the region's most important infrastructure plan in decades could not agree on it by Thursday, their scheduled deadline. Instead, with $400 million left to cut and a north-south regional divide roiling negotiations, they have put off their final vote until the last possible moment under state law, Monday afternoon.
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Transportation list vote today?
A group of local elected officials from throughout the Atlanta region is on a mission Thursday to do something historic: agree with one another on transportation. Five mayors and county commissioners are scheduled Thursday to approve a draft list of transportation projects for the 10 Atlanta region counties, totaling $6.
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Redistricting not only item on session's agenda
Gov. Nathan Deal officially called lawmakers back into session starting Monday, a formality that came with a twist when he put at least two issues on the table besides redistricting. Lawmakers will consider changing the date of regional transportation referendums to be put before voters next year, Deal said.
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Poor get cheap Internet
Comcast Corporation is partnering with several metro Atlanta school districts to educate families about a new program to offer discounted Internet access to low-income students. Today at a morning press conference, Comcast executives along with Mayor Kasim Reed, Gov.
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Georgia schools awarded $4M
Gov. Nathan Deal surprised an Atlanta charter school Monday with a big boost to its bank account – $1 million in Race to the Top money. Students and staff at Charles R. Drew Charter School greeted news of the award with applause and cheers on the first morning of classes.
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Witnesses: Wrong man got life sentence
Amid a sweeping federal investigation five years ago of violent street gang activity, two gang members told authorities they had witnessed the drive-by killing of a 22-year-old Norcross woman. They told FBI agents – and, later, a federal grand jury -- that Daniel Cortes, a 16-year-old member of the Sur-13 gang, shot and killed Rebecca Moore in the pre-dawn hours of Jan.
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Emory, Cobb rail lines get support
A MARTA line to Emory University, a line from the Arts Center station to Cumberland in Cobb County, and part of the Atlanta Beltline won coveted first slots on a tentative project list that may go to voters in a referendum next year. Whether commuters will be riding those lines within 15 years as advocates hope is an open question -- depending on many factors, including at least three votes yet to come.
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Michael L. Patten, 73: Was florist for former Gov. Jimmy Carter
Michael L. Patten lacked a degree in floral design, but it didn't matter. A love for flowers and an eye for color, design and detail was apparent in every arrangement he touched. "He had a natural ability," said Gerald Asherbranner, a friend and former business partner from Alpharetta.
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Deal names his lawyer to judgeship
Gov. Nathan Deal has appointed his executive counsel to fill a vacancy on the Fulton County Superior Court. D. Todd Markel of Atlanta will be sworn in within the next few weeks, the governor’s office said Wednesday. Markel will fill a vacancy left by the resignation of Judge Michael D.
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Metro transportation plan tightens
No new lanes for South Cobb Drive commuters from Cobb Parkway to Atlanta Road. Peachtree Street transit riders won’t have a north-south streetcar line. Drivers on I-675 won’t get a new interchange at Cedar Grove Road. At least not until after 2040. That’s according to the region’s newest funding list for transportation projects, which the Atlanta Regional Commission is expected to approve Wednesday.
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APS board keep jobs
The Atlanta Public Schools board turned Tuesday toward its fight to redeem itself and regain full accreditation after the state decided to allow board members to keep their jobs. Superintendent Erroll Davis readied plans at the board's suggestion to record a video for the district's YouTube channel, aimed at high school seniors unnerved by any possibility they may graduate next year from unaccredited high schools.
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New Grady CEO has solved big issues
Facing an overflowing emergency department with wait times reaching up to 12 hours and people leaving without being seen, John Haupert took action. Haupert — currently chief operating officer at Parkland Health & Hospital System in Dallas but expected to become CEO of Atlanta’s Grady Memorial Hospital — helped guide the complete revamping of the massive safety-net hospital’s emergency room system.
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Reed builds big campaign fund
Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed raised more than $630,000 for his re-election campaign over the past six months, putting him on pace to exceed his massive 2009 totals, while sending the first shot at anyone who might want to challenge him in 2013. Reed released his fundraising totals on July 8 to the state ethics commission in a 69-page report.
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Atlanta City Council on Facebook, Twitter
The Atlanta City Council have launched Facebook and Twitter pages this week to give Atlanta residents direct access to news, updates, and municipal information via social media. Citizens and media outlets may access each platform through the Council’s website at citycouncil.
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Execs invested in Hall
In February 2010, some of Atlanta’s top business leaders realized they had a problem. For a decade, they had aligned themselves with Beverly Hall, the superintendent of Atlanta Public Schools. They willingly accepted Hall’s story line of rebirth in an urban school system.
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Atlanta gets grant for call center
Atlanta is one of five cities named Thursday by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and his Bloomberg Philanthropies to share in $24 million to design and implement programs to meet pressing civic needs. Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed confirmed that the city will receive $1.
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Scandal fuel testing debate
Atlanta’s school cheating scandal, one of the largest in U.S. history, has launched a national discussion about whether the increased use of high-stakes tests to rate educators will trigger similar episodes in the years ahead. Pressure to meet testing targets was a major reason cheating took place in 44 Atlanta schools involving 178 educators, according to a state investigation released last week.
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‘I will do it,’ vows APS interim chief
Erroll Davis knew he had a mess on his hands when he agreed three weeks ago to temporarily lead the beleaguered Atlanta Public Schools. How big of a mess only became apparent last week with the release of a report implicating 178 teachers and principals in a cheating scandal of national proportions.
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APS Timeline
The Atlanta Public Schools cheating scandal began to unfold in December 2008.
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A study of what went wrong
Veteran teachers understood that changing students’ CRCT answer sheets was expected at Gideons [Elementary School]. They changed the answer sheets of the students taught by newer teachers until the new teacher was trusted to be brought into the cheating scheme.
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District attorneys weigh charges
The Atlanta schools cheating case is now in the hands of three local district attorneys, who must decide whether the scandal is also criminal. District attorneys in Fulton, DeKalb and Douglas counties said they are reviewing the voluminous report by state investigators and will decide whether to seek indictments.
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Hall says she's accountable
Former Atlanta Public Schools Superintendent Beverly Hall accepted responsibility Friday for her failure to prevent rampant cheating on standardized tests. But, in an op-ed piece that will appear Sunday in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Hall cautions the public not to condemn the entire district for actions of a few.
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Scores rise, fall at some schools flagged for cheating
Several metro Atlanta schools under investigation for cheating on state achievement tests saw student performance decline as districts and the state expanded security measures to prevent test tampering. Metro area school officials said strategies that include testing monitors in classrooms and policies that forced teachers to switch classrooms during testing give them confidence the results of the 2011 Georgia Criterion Referenced-Competency Test reflect actual student achievement.
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Parks Middle an example of problems
Christopher Waller worked miracles. Or so Beverly Hall seemed willing to believe. As principal of Atlanta’s Parks Middle School, Waller awed his bosses with the most dramatic of school transformations. Before Waller took charge, 1 percent of Parks’ eighth-graders exceeded expectations on the state’s curriculum test.
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Widespread unethical behavior
The governor’s special investigation shows a school system in which unethical — and potentially illegal — behavior pierced every level of the bureaucracy, allowing district staff to reap praise and sometimes bonuses by misleading the children, parents and community they served.
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Criminal charges could follow APS report
State investigators have uncovered a decade of systemic cheating in the Atlanta Public Schools and conclude that Superintendent Beverly Hall knew or should have known about it, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution has learned. In a report that Gov. Nathan Deal planned to release today, the investigators name nearly 180 educators, including more than three dozen principals, as participants in cheating on state curriculum tests, officials said over the weekend.
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Thousands protest immigration law
Eighteen-year-old Myra Cerecero said she wakes up every morning praying her parents made it home safely. "I'm living in a constant state of fear they'll be picked up," said the daughter of illegal immigrants. The American-born Loganville teen was among roughly 10,000 to 15,000 people, according to Capitol police, who jammed the streets of downtown Atlanta Saturday morning to voice their opposition to House Bill 87, Georgia's crackdown on illegal immigrants.
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School board removal law OK'd
The U.S. Department of Justice on Tuesday approved a new law that gives Gov. Nathan Deal the power to suspend the entire Atlanta school board for jeopardizing the city district's accreditation. With that consent, state school board members will hold a hearing that involves the local nine-member board no later than July 31.
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MARTA extension eyed
A transit study funded by the state and business organizations finds public support for a rail system – including a Kennesaw-to-Dunwoody line, and a northern extension of the MARTA Red Line – to serve the northern suburbs of metro Atlanta, Channel 2 Action News reports.
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Georgia Tech president selected by Obama for commission
President Obama tapped Georgia Tech President G. P. "Bud" Peterson Friday to serve on a committee tasked with keeping the country globally competitive. Peterson and five other college presidents were appointed to the steering committee for the Advanced Manufacturing Partnership, an initiative to help manufacturers improve cost, quality and speed of production.
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State to get serious on crime reform
Todd Markle, executive counsel to Gov. Nathan Deal, state Rep. Jay Neal, R-Lafayette, Fulton County Chairman John Eaves and Clayton County Chairman Eldrin Bell all agree Georgia has to quit just locking up drug offenders and non-violent criminals. It costs too much and released offenders can't find jobs.
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Reed, mayors, meet with Obama
Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed was in Washington on Monday, joining other mayors to meet with President Barack Obama. According to a report from the White House, the subject was the economy. Joining Reed were other cities' leaders, including Detroit Mayor David Bing, Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx and Joe Riley, the long-serving mayor of Charleston, S.
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