The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bottoms urges city to unite

City’s 60th mayor is sworn in, declares faith in ‘Atlanta magic.’ In speech, Bottoms promises to address economic inequality.

- By Stephen Deere sdeere@ajc.com

After months of a brutal campaign, Keisha Lance Bottoms finally was able to bask in a hard-won victory when she was sworn in as Atlanta’s mayor on Tuesday.

Bottoms stood on a stage before 2,500 people at Morehouse College’s Martin Luther King Jr. Internatio­nal Chapel and declared that “Atlanta magic” could be just as real as the “black girl magic” that helped her beat fellow Atlanta City Councilwom­an Mary Norwood in the Dec. 5 runoff.

But the city needs to unify before it can realize its true potential, she said.

She said she was thrilled to be only the second female mayor in Atlanta’s history.

The first woman to hold the position, Shirley Franklin, who supported Norwood, was the only one of Atlanta’s five living former mayors who did

not attend Bottoms’ inaugurati­on.

While Bottoms made a few personal revelation­s, her first speech as Atlanta’s 60th mayor was mainly a continuati­on of her campaign.

In addition to Bottoms, City Council President Felicia Moore, the rest of the council and 10 municipal court judges were also sworn into office.

Leave no one behind

Bottoms was elected partly due to the support of her predecesso­r, former Mayor Kasim Reed, who is credited with shoring up the city’s finances over his two terms in office.

Among Reed’s accomplish­ments: eight consecutiv­e credit ratings increases, record reserves of $200 million and 18 regional or national headquarte­rs relocation­s to Atlanta, according to the mayor’s staff.

But it was Reed’s perceived shortcomin­gs, not his successes, that seemed to color much of the election.

Despite the city’s strong financial position and a flourishin­g business community, his critics complained that some people were left behind.

According to the Equality of Economic Opportunit­y Project, a child in Atlanta born to parents whose income is in bottom 20 percent has a 4.5 percent chance of reaching the top 20 percent income bracket.

During the campaign, Bottoms pledged to address that.

“It’s no secret that we have economic disparity in Atlanta,” Bottoms said. “That’s why the theme of my campaign was ‘Keep Atlanta moving forward, leaving no one behind.’”

Reed leaves City Hall

during a federal bribery investigat­ion that in September resulted in a guilty plea from the city’s chief procuremen­t officer, Adam Smith. Reed, who has not been named as a suspect, has vowed to cooperate with the investigat­ion.

Bottoms has promised sweeping ethics reform.

“Our process is broken,” Bottoms said a press conference following the inaugurati­on. “Any time you have a procuremen­t director who is charged with taking bribes, there’s an issue.”

Delivering on a promise

But Bottoms also appeared to take a step back from one significan­t commitment that she made during her campaign.

In the days before last month’s runoff, Bottoms pledged that her administra­tion would, on day one, end a long and bitter public real estate feud between the city and the Atlanta Public Schools.

In the 1970s, when the Atlanta Public Schools split from the city of Atlanta, the city retained the deeds to school properties. As the district tried to sell off property

it no longer needed, Reed sought to attach conditions to the sales, so that a portion of the property would be redevelope­d for affordable housing.

The school district objected, and the disagreeme­nt prompted a lawsuit. At a political forum, Bottoms pledged to turn over the deeds to the schools on her first day in office. But she said Tuesday that she lacked the authority to take that action on her own.

“I looked forward to having a conversati­on with APS and with City Council and with our law department,” she said at the press conference. “I am committed to working to resolve that immediatel­y ... It remains a priority.”

An unforeseen path

During her speech, Bottoms mentioned her ancestors, former slaves who came to Atlanta in search of opportunit­y.

“I stand here this afternoon carrying the hope of the slave,” she said, drawing on a famous poem of the late Maya Angelou.

Bottoms is the daughter of the late soul singer Major Lance, whose addiction

issues resulted in a prison stint. Bottoms said on Tuesday she had no idea how influentia­l her father was until the advent of the internet allowed her to watch him on old television shows, such as “Soul Train.”

Bottoms said she wished that becoming mayor was the culminatio­n of a lifelong dream. But it wasn’t.

“The truth is, it was never a path I imagined for myself,” Bottoms said.

She said her passion for public service found outlets in her church, in her profession­al roles as a lawyer and judge and then as a member of City Council. Bottoms said it was only “after much soul searching and prayer” that she decided to run for mayor. At the end of her speech, she began a series of refrains with the words: “Only in Atlanta.” One referenced Martin Luther King Jr. Another told of the city’s success in landing the 1996 Olympic games. The last one involved herself. “And, only in Atlanta, could a young girl named Keisha ...” But the crowd cut her off. They rose and cheered for the woman with a first name that has an ethnic ring, whom everyone could finally call “Mayor.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Surrounded by her family, Keisha Lance Bottoms is sworn in as Atlanta’s 60th mayor during the Atlanta mayoral inaugurati­on at Martin Luther King Jr. Internatio­nal Chapel at Morehouse College in Atlanta on Tuesday.
ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Surrounded by her family, Keisha Lance Bottoms is sworn in as Atlanta’s 60th mayor during the Atlanta mayoral inaugurati­on at Martin Luther King Jr. Internatio­nal Chapel at Morehouse College in Atlanta on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and Florida A&M University President Larry Robinson (center) celebrate during Bottoms’ inaugurati­on. Bottoms graduated from Florida A&M, which has a large number of alumni in the Atlanta area.
Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and Florida A&M University President Larry Robinson (center) celebrate during Bottoms’ inaugurati­on. Bottoms graduated from Florida A&M, which has a large number of alumni in the Atlanta area.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Members of the Atlanta City Council are sworn in during the Atlanta mayoral inaugurati­on at Martin Luther King Jr. Internatio­nal Chapel at Morehouse College in Atlanta on Tuesday.
ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Members of the Atlanta City Council are sworn in during the Atlanta mayoral inaugurati­on at Martin Luther King Jr. Internatio­nal Chapel at Morehouse College in Atlanta on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Atlanta City Council President Felicia Moore makes closing remarks following the mayoral inaugurati­on.
Atlanta City Council President Felicia Moore makes closing remarks following the mayoral inaugurati­on.

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