The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Firms compete for shops in retail revamp at airport

80 retail spots are up for grabs, split up among 10 contracts.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

Sixteen companies are competing for contracts to open new shops at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal in a massive revamp of retail outlets at the world’s busiest airport.

City officials aim to choose winners and finalize contracts before the end of the year — and before Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed’s term ends in January.

The companies are competing for more than 80 retail spots around domestic terminal and concourses, split up among ten contracts.

Firms that threw their hats into the ring are HG ATL Retailers JV, Paradies Lagardère, the Marshall Retail Group, NewsLink of ATL LLC, DNC SSI ATL LLC, GA Travel Partners, Airport Retail Concession­s Group, Crews of California dba Airport Retail Management, Hojeij Branded Foods, Duty Free Americas, National Concession­s Management, Soul Vegetarian, Select Food Group, Stellar Partners, Business Traveler Service Inc. and Swift Inc., according to City of Atlanta documents.

Concession­aires often form joint ventures including minority firms to compete for airport contracts.

The number of locations in each package varies from two to more than 20 in a single contract, with a term of seven years and a potential three-year renewal. Anywhere from one to six companies are competing for each contract.

A contract to operate seven locations totaling 5,207 square feet on Concourses B and D attracted a proposal from only one company, HG ATL Retailers JV. In the past, the city has canceled and restarted procuremen­ts because it said there were not enough qualified companies competing for the contract.

The contract that attracted the most competitor­s has six companies vying to operate three locations totaling 5,871 square feet on Concourses B and C.

The airport shop contracts have become political issues and part of a dispute in the Atlanta mayoral campaign race.

Early on, some concession­aires raised concerns that the city is rushing the contractin­g process as Reed’s term nears its end.

Then, Atlanta City Council President Ceasar Mitchell, who is running for mayor, called for Reed and the city council to support a moratorium on the approval of city contracts that begin services in 2018 until the next council and mayor can weigh in.

The proposal sparked a battle of words between Mitchell and Reed.

This week, after former City of Atlanta chief procuremen­t officer Adam Smith pleaded guilty in a federal bribery investigat­ion, Mitchell reaffirmed his proposal for a moratorium on non-emergency contracts, “especially the multi-year, billion dollar airport concession­s contracts that do not expire until

well over a year from now,” he said in a written statement.

Although a number of airport contracts have been put on hold for months or even years, officials said they aimed for a “very aggressive” schedule to award the contracts in October and execute leases in December. On Wednesday, procuremen­t officer Mano Smith said the city plans to stick with that schedule.

Some concession­aires had said they needed more time and raised questions about political uncertaint­y from a new regime coming into City Hall. The city delayed the deadline for companies to submit proposals from Sept. 6 until Sept. 27.

 ??  ?? City officials aim to choose winners for contracts for shops at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal and finalize contracts before end of the year — and before Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed’s term ends in January.
City officials aim to choose winners for contracts for shops at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal and finalize contracts before end of the year — and before Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed’s term ends in January.

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