The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Rough Landing: Cannibaliz­ation of Stockbridg­e just can’t happen

- Bill Torpy

Gov. Nathan Deal has not been afraid to use his veto when the Legislatur­e, in all its wisdom, passes a bill that needs to be strangled and quickly buried.

Two years ago, he shot down a “religious liberty” bill to avoid a business-sapping controvers­y. He also stopped the campus carry gun law (although a year later he allowed a watered-down version to become law).

Both were big-time Republican issues but Deal, who’s retiring soon, likes to say he does what he thinks is right, not politicall­y popular.

This year he’s being asked to kill a bill that could threaten cities across Georgia. A group of well-heeled residents around the south half of Stockbridg­e want to carve off the lucrative chunks of the city to create a new municipali­ty called Eagles Landing, named for the local country club (the club uses an apostrophe).

New cities have popped up all over metro Atlanta in the past 14 years, as voters call for smaller government that is closer to the people. Often, such moves are about self-interest, about grabbing what you can when it comes to a good tax base and leaving those left behind to make do with what’s left.

This is that, although worse. This includes gutting an exist-

ing city and using it as the bones for a new city.

Stockbridg­e officials have hollered loudly. The move would remove 9,000 of their 28,000 residents and take half the city’s revenue, according to a report from the University of Georgia’s Carl Vinson Institute.

This effort sets a dangerous precedent. Never before has a new city grabbed parts of an existing city as its base.

Last year, state Rep. Ed Rynders, R-Albany, chair of the House Government­al Affairs Committee, said the “extremely unique” bill made him “nervous.”

“We don’t want to create a situation where a neighborho­od can jump ship every time someone threatens to raise property taxes,” he said. “We’ll be seeing cities do this all the time.”

Rynders eventually fell in line with fellow Republican­s pushing the legislatio­n.

But the problem, as Rynders pointed out, is that once Pandora’s jewelry box is opened, the richer parts of towns across Georgia could secede and create their own fiefdoms. City of Buckhead, anyone?

Not surprising­ly, a racial element surrounds this effort, some Eagles Landing opponents argue.

Last fall, Stockbridg­e residents — 56 percent of them black, 23 percent white, 11 percent Asian — elected the city’s first black mayor, Anthony Ford. All five council members, who are elected at-large, are black.

Eagles Landing supporters say that has nothing to do with their movement and the new city would be diverse — 47 percent black, 39 percent white, 8 percent Asian.

Opponents said they had a gotcha moment when Susan Clowdus, an Eagles Landing leader, told legislator­s: “The demographi­c makeup of the current city of Stockbridg­e has kept some businesses from coming to the area. With the developmen­t of the proposed city, the demographi­cs change.”

One can take that as black and white. But a reading of Eagles Landing literature makes it seem more green.

“High-end retail and other businesses look at the demographi­cs before they come into an area to

be sure the area can support their products. The median household income of Stockbridg­e is approximat­ely $58,000,” the group says. “Since our area has a median household income of $128,570, they will come and it will help all of Henry County.”

Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s, Cheesecake Factory, Capitol Grill, Fab’rik, J.Crew and Pottery Barn were a few of the many businesses proponents mentioned that would prefer the $128K households over the $58K households.

Vikki Consiglio, an Eagles Landing leader,

told me the “silent majority” of the area’s residents are now flooding her in-box with excitement over the proposed city.

She accused Stockbridg­e leaders of bending the law. She said the City Council held a public meeting this week to talk about the upcoming referendum but would not allow the media to come. Actually, Stockbridg­e officials told me about the meeting but said the church where it was held asked people not to shoot photos. (I did anyway.) A TV crew lingered outside.

Stockbridg­e officials, Consiglio said, are using “fear and intimidati­on” to thwart the Eagles Landing effort in a referendum this November. She accused them of wrongdoing by using taxpayer money to send postcards to residents living outside the city.

It may seem odd that a city government would send literature about an election to residents who live outside the city. But the legislatio­n allows only Stockbridg­e residents living inside the Eagles Landing footprint to vote. The two-thirds of Stockbridg­e residents not in the proposed Eagles Landing would have no say.

Worse, it allows residents not living in Stockbridg­e, but who would be part of Eagles Landing, to vote to de-annex that chunk of the existing city.

I called state Rep. Wendell Willard, a Republican who was a founder of Sandy Springs in 2004. He doesn’t like what’s going on.

“I thought it was a bad policy move to remove people from the city without the voice of those people,” he said. He noted that a majority of Stockbridg­e residents would have no say in what happens to their city. And a large number of non-Stockbridg­e people would be allowed to vote in the referendum, which would de-annex half of that city’s tax base and also form a new city.

“If it could happen here, it could happen somewhere else,” Willard said. “That’s why the bond underwrite­rs fear things like this.”

Oh yeah, Bond Buyers magazine, the bible of the blue-chip investment crowd, last week carried a story headlined, “Georgia’s small city de-annexation bill raises red flags for the state’s municipali­ties.”

The story noted that, “Attorneys for bondholder­s who own $13.03 million of (Stockbridg­e’s bond) debt have warned the city that potential litigation and default lies ahead if the legislatio­n is approved.”

Deal’s office says the Guv will study the bill before deciding what to do.

Deal likes to tout himself as the Friend of Business and loves bragging about Georgia’s AAA bond rating.

I’m sure he wouldn’t want investment bankers and their lawyers screaming bloody murder.

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 ?? BILL TORPY / BTORPY@AJC.COM ?? Eagles Landing, the proposed city that would be carved out of the city of Stockbridg­e, is distinct from Eagle’s Landing, the country club.
BILL TORPY / BTORPY@AJC.COM Eagles Landing, the proposed city that would be carved out of the city of Stockbridg­e, is distinct from Eagle’s Landing, the country club.

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