The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WILL EMORY JOIN ATLANTA? THE LATEST ON THE DEBATE

DeKalb elected officials’ concerns lead matter to panel of arbitratio­n.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

The largest expansion of Atlanta’s borders in decades, which would bring Emory University into the city, is on hold because of concerns about urbanizati­on.

Emory’s annexation had originally been scheduled for a vote Tuesday by the Atlanta City Council, but that was delayed so a panel of five arbitrator­s could consider objections raised by DeKalb County’s elected officials.

They say Atlanta’s land use rules are more lax than the county’s, which could result in more developmen­t, density and traffic in the areas around the campus, permanentl­y altering the nature of the community. Atlanta officials argue that their zoning requiremen­ts are similar to DeKalb’s.

The proposed 744-acre annexation would be the most significan­t addition to the city since Buckhead in 1952. Emory, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta petitioned to become part of the city in June. The arbitratio­n board must decide by

Oct. 17 whether the annexation would significan­tly change or harm the area.

If so, the panel could force the city to prevent land use changes.

The annexation would allow city tax money to be used to fund a light-rail MARTA line from Lindbergh Station to the university’s campus. The area would remain in DeKalb County, but many services would be taken over by the city.

Georgia law allows counties to force arbitratio­n to settle annexation disputes concerning changes in zoning, density and infrastruc­ture.

But a review of previous cases indicates that counties usually don’t win many concession­s, according to a Georgia Department of Community Affairs document outlining the outcomes of 24 arbitratio­ns from 2007 to 2015.

In several cases, arbitrator­s required cities to make minor changes in their annexation plans to preserve existing land uses. Most annexation challenges were withdrawn or settled before the arbitrator­s rendered a verdict.

Melissa Mullinax, a senior adviser to Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, said she’s confident the city’s zoning and land use requiremen­ts are close enough to the county’s for the annexation to proceed. For example, while the city doesn’t have the county’s five-story limit on office buildings, it does prohibit tall buildings next to residentia­l areas, she said.

“We look forward to completing this process and moving the annexation process forward for a vote by the Atlanta City Council,” Mullinax said. “The arbitratio­n panel can only deal with zoning and land use. The difference­s between DeKalb and the city of Atlanta are minor.”

DeKalb Commission­er Kathie Gannon said the arbitratio­n can jump-start negotiatio­ns with the city.

When the DeKalb Commission voted 5-0 last month to object to the annexation, it cited concerns about potential developmen­t and its impacts on a historic district, strains on the county’s spill-prone sewer system, possible changes to school district boundaries and MARTA’s proposed line to Emory.

“I hope the arbitratio­n raises the awareness level. The city, the county and Emory need to be talking in broader terms than just the impact of rezoning,” Gannon said. “It’s about how we deal with citizens who live around these new city boundaries.”

The arbitratio­n process between aggrieved counties and growing cities was created by the Georgia General Assembly in 2007, when county officials raised concerns that annexation­s were unilateral­ly changing communitie­s, said Amy Henderson, spokeswoma­n for the Georgia Municipal Associatio­n. Early annexation disputes involved the expansions of the cities of Lawrencevi­lle, Dacula and Loganville in Gwinnett County, and cities of Marietta and Smyrna in Cobb County, according to the Georgia Department of Community Affairs.

“These panels can’t stop the annexation from happening. They could say to a city, ‘If you annex this property, you can’t change the zoning on it for a year,’ ” Henderson said.

Emory spokesman Vince Dollard said the university respects the arbitratio­n process and wants the annexation to move ahead.

“Emory worked closely with the city of Atlanta to ensure there are no proposed changes in zoning, land use or density with Emory’s annexation, and we believe that the arbitratio­n panel will agree there are no such changes,” Dollard said.

The five-person arbitratio­n panel will act as “judge and jury,” holding court-like hearings to review evidence presented by the city and the county, said Julie Sellers, a land use and zoning attorney for Atlanta commercial real estate firm Pursley Friese Torgrimson.

“One potential scenario would be ... a zoning condition to truly mirror DeKalb County’s zoning regulation­s and put restrictio­ns in place,” Sellers said.

The arbitrator­s were chosen from a pool of candidates from counties, cities and academic institutio­ns. Both DeKalb County and the city of Atlanta were allowed to remove up to three candidates to reach the final five-person arbitratio­n panel.

The panel has scheduled two public meetings so far: a pre-hearing conference on Sept. 13 and a formal hearing on Sept. 27.

“Elected officials should sit down and talk in detail before embarking on something of this magnitude,” said DeKalb County Attorney O.V. Brantley. “So now we will talk.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? A traffic circle, shops and restaurant­s near an entrance to Emory University in 2014. The city of Atlanta wants to annex the campus but will have to wait for an arbitratio­n panel to look over the matter.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM A traffic circle, shops and restaurant­s near an entrance to Emory University in 2014. The city of Atlanta wants to annex the campus but will have to wait for an arbitratio­n panel to look over the matter.

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