Atlanta mayor’s first state of the city speech touts early achievements

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms delivered her first State of the City speech Wednesday.

Credit: Channel 2 Action News

Credit: Channel 2 Action News

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms delivered her first State of the City speech Wednesday.

In her first State of the City speech, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms waited until near the end to address her most significant challenge: restoring public trust.

“What has been broken must be fixed,” Bottoms said. “And we will repair the trust between the people who help make Atlanta work and the people for whom work is being done.”

Bottoms touted a wide variety of accomplishments during her first 100 days, including eliminating cash bail at the municipal court, resolving a protracted dispute with Atlanta Public Schools over property deeds and creating a re-entry program that provides jobs to men serving prison terms for non-violent offenses.

Perhaps the most revealing aspect of the speech was a name not mentioned — that of former Mayor Kasim Reed.

Reed helped propel Bottoms into office during the election late last year. But during the past three months, Bottoms attempts to advance her agenda have often been overshadowed by the discovery of questionable dealings by Reed’s administration.

In the past few months, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and Channel 2 Action News have exposed efforts by Reed's staff to frustrate access to public recordsmisleading representations about city records, lavish credit card purchases and subpoenas in a federal bribery investigation for records related to Reed, who did not attend the address.

On Wednesday, Bottoms said she is the process of overhauling the city's ethics policies and hopes to make Atlanta a model for other cities to follow.

She said she would require training for city employees on handling requests made under the Georgia Open Records Act.

Bottoms also acknowledged that the restoring trust will be long process.

“We will continue to work towards finding the right solutions that will change the course of how Atlanta openly and transparently conducts business for years to come,” she said.