City of Atlanta Chief of Staff to return to coporate life

City of Atlanta Chief of Staff Marva Lewis will leave City Hall at the end of March to return to the private sector. CONTRIBUTED

City of Atlanta Chief of Staff Marva Lewis will leave City Hall at the end of March to return to the private sector. CONTRIBUTED

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms announced that Chief of Staff Marva Lewis will leave City Hall at the end of March, according to a press release. Lewis, who suspended her corporate career in 2017 to serve as campaign manager for then-candidate Bottoms, will be leaving City Hall to return to the private sector.

“Marva Lewis has been and remains a trusted advisor. Her leadership guided our Administration through a successful first year and I am excited to see what her future holds,” said Mayor Bottoms. “Upon entering City Hall, Marva promised us one year. During that time, her focus on driving results, executing our vision and building strong relationships both internally and externally helped ensure that we have the right people and priorities in place to effectively govern.”

Lewis will work closely with Mayor Bottoms to ensure a smooth transition, along with the successful execution of Super Bowl LIII, the 2019 State of the City meeting, and priority initiatives.

In her role as Chief of Staff, Lewis is one of the highest-ranking advisors to the Mayor, overseeing top personnel, policy and legislative matters. Since assuming the position in January 2018, Lewis has provided strategic leadership and organizational direction resulting in:

The development and implementation of strategic priorities anchored in the Mayor’s vision for an affordable, resilient and equitable city

The recruitment, hiring, and onboarding of best-in-class executives to serve in the Mayor’s Cabinet

The unanimous passage of the City’s FY2019 budget by the Atlanta City Council

The passage of the historic Gulch redevelopment plan, including the development of historic public and private partnerships to ensure economic development and broad, meaningful public benefit

The launch of the 100,000 Opportunity Youth Initiative in partnership with Starbucks to drive workforce development and community engagement

The transfer of 44 real estate deeds to Atlanta Public Schools

The recommitment to a Citywide culture of ethics, transparency and collaboration

Lewis has also overseen key City functions including external affairs, international relations, immigrant affairs, communications, human trafficking elimination, human services, constituent services, cultural affairs, film and entertainment, and special events.