The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Candidates pitch their credential­s

Atlanta business leaders hear from contenders for job.

- By Leon Stafford lstafford@ajc.com

Three candidates hoping to succeed Kasim Reed as Atlanta’s next mayor say the city may be reaching its ceiling on sales tax increases while two others said they are open to the idea of a metro area casino.

“I am open to the conversati­on, but I think it is highly unlikely that I could be convinced that a gaming facility downtown would be the appropriat­e thing for the city,” Peter Aman, former COO for the city of Atlanta under Reed, said of bringing casinos to Atlanta. “Great cities generally do not have downtown gaming.

“I do think, however, we should examine the possibilit­y of gaming out by [Harst field-Jackson Internatio­nal] airport,” he said.

City Council President Ceasar Mitchell said he supports a referendum that will let voters decide. But any casino must first prove it will complement Atlanta’s arts community, not hurt it.

The two men and nine others hoping to land the city’s top job in November met Thursday to pitch their credential­s to members of the Committee for a Better Atlanta, a coalition that advocates on behalf of the business community.

Those in attendance also included former Atlanta City Councilwom­an Cathy Woolard, Fulton County Commission Chairman John Eaves, state Sen. Vincent Fort, former Atlanta Workforce Developmen­t Agency head Michael Sterling and Atlanta City Councilmem­bers Keisha Lance Bottoms and Kwanza Hall. Atlanta City Councilwom­an Mary Norwood had a prior engagement and was not able to attend, her

campaign said.

The CBA also included candidates Laban King, Elbert “Al” Bartell and Debra Ann Hampton, who say they have been overlooked in other forums.

The questions took on a broad number of topics, including transporta­tion, police recruitmen­t and retention, education, NPU’s and homelessne­ss.

But there was a catch. The candidates, who took to the stage in groups of three or four, only had 30 seconds to respond.

When asked what she would do about housing affordabil­ity, Woolard said she would create a cabinet-level position to address the issue. The city needs to determine what housing choices make sense in neighborho­ods and the extent of the need.

“We would access what those numbers are and then employ private sector incentives,” she said.

Bottoms, Hall and Fort said there is a limit to how high Atlanta’s sales taxes should go. Reed has proposed a onetenth of a penny increase in the city’s sales tax to support the arts. That would add to the nine-tenths of a penny increase Atlanta voters agreed to last year for MARTA improvemen­ts and the purchase of additional property for the Atlanta Belt Line.

The city’s sales tax is now 8.9 percent.

Bottoms said there is a price to creating a great city with a vibrant arts community, but that city leaders have to demonstrat­e its value if it wants residents to dig deeper in their pocketbook­s to pay for it.

“As long as we are good stewards of the money, people will support funding,” Bottoms said.

But Fort said there needs to be a process in place to make sure the proceeds are evenly distribute­d. He said he is concerned that not every community will see the benefits of the transporta­tion spending.

“There is a healthy skepticism in the city of Atlanta in many neighborho­ods about whether the bonds from the referendum and the two T-SPLOSTs have been used correctly for all parts of the city,” he said.

 ?? DAVID BARNES / DAVID.BARNES@AJC.COM ?? Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed will be stepping down from his position. Eleven candidates hope to replace Reed in November’s election. Last week, candidates pitched their ideas for the city’s future to the Atlanta business community.
DAVID BARNES / DAVID.BARNES@AJC.COM Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed will be stepping down from his position. Eleven candidates hope to replace Reed in November’s election. Last week, candidates pitched their ideas for the city’s future to the Atlanta business community.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / AJC ?? Atlanta mayoral candidate Peter Aman, former chief operating officer, says it is “highly unlikely” he would support a downtown gambling facility.
HYOSUB SHIN / AJC Atlanta mayoral candidate Peter Aman, former chief operating officer, says it is “highly unlikely” he would support a downtown gambling facility.
 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL ?? Atlanta mayoral candidate Ceasar Mitchell, the city council president, says he supports allowing residents to decide on downtown gambling.
STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL Atlanta mayoral candidate Ceasar Mitchell, the city council president, says he supports allowing residents to decide on downtown gambling.

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