The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Moore becomes voice of outrage at City Hall

- Jim Galloway Political Insider

One can’t exactly compare it to Martin Luther pinning his “95 Theses” to a chapel door, but there’s no question that something different in Atlanta politics happened at 9:31 p.m. last Monday.

That’s when the newly elected president of the Atlanta City Council nailed a terse statement to her Facebook page, atop a news account of more than $500,000 in bonuses that had been handed out to a select group of city employees, wearers of ugly sweaters and talented lip-sync artists in the waning days of the Kasim Reed administra­tion.

Her message: “Former Mayor Reed, What you have done is illegal and disgusting. Felicia A. Moore”

Moore would stand in front of TV cameras the next day and say much the same thing. Through a spokesman that afternoon, Reed replied that the bonuses were entirely legal and appropriat­e — rewards for valuable workers who had helped put the city on “its best financial footing in 40 years.”

But by Wednesday, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms had sent her chief of staff to a meeting of the city council’s finance committee, a session dominated by questions from

Moore, to contradict her former mentor. Marva Lewis conceded that the raises doled out by Bottoms’ predecesso­r were indeed “excessive.”

Historical­ly, Atlanta city council presidents are dismissed as the unglamorou­s vice presidents of City Hall. It has been ages since any council president dominated a daily news cycle. Felicia Moore dominated the week, as a pent-up voice of outrage reacting to the indictment­s, search warrants and distastefu­l revelation­s that have rained down on 68 Mitchell St.

“I’m really concerned. I get emotional sometimes about it because I’m very sad, and then other times, very angry. I believe this scandal ... is probably going to be one of the larger ones we’ve ever seen,” Moore said Monday in an interview with longtime journalist Maynard Eaton on “Newsmakers Live,” a weekly interview show conducted in an Atlanta nightclub.

Eaton asked about the racial implicatio­ns of the scandal. “It’s about green,” replied Moore, who was a 20-year veteran of the council before her election as president last year. “Plenty of people who are white have gone to prison as well. It’s about greed. It’s about some greedy people. It’s about green.”

The Facebook post that Moore addressed to the former mayor came later that night.

There is the fact that, with the pugnacious Reed no longer in the building, his longtime critics — and Moore has been among them — feel freer to express their discontent. Within the confines of City Hall, in fact, the former mayor’s name has been disappeare­d. He is no longer Kasim Reed. He is “the Previous Administra­tion.”

Some of Moore’s sudden prominence is circumstan­tial, and thus perhaps also temporary.

In her first three months in office, Bottoms has proven herself nonconfron­tational and cautious, yet she has already notched some achievemen­ts. The new mayor has settled a long-standing property dispute between the city and the Atlanta Public School system. She’s completed the purchase of 4.5 miles of unused railroad corridor to complete a key section of the BeltLine.

But on April 5, Mitzi Bickers, a former director of human services in the Reed administra­tion, was indicted on federal bribery charges. Shortly afterward, Bottoms asked for resignatio­n letters from 26 top-ranking city officials. The mayor is still sorting through them, deciding whom to keep and whom to send packing.

There is also the fact that the Bottoms administra­tion is now plowing through requests for public records from the media that had been long ignored by the Reed administra­tion. A criminal investigat­ion is underway, and compliance by Bottoms has required the new administra­tion to take a back seat to the bottled-up revelation­s.

Monday was a case in point. That’s when the mayor’s office handed over documents that spelled out the bonuses handed out as Reed finished his second term, including $36,000 in raffle drawings and $31,000 for holiday party winners of contests for lip-syncing and ugly sweaters.

That led to front page headlines and Wednesday’s finance committee meeting, which stretched for nearly four hours. Though not a formal member of the committee, Moore sat in — and peppered Bottoms’ aides with questions.

At one point, the council president began reading a hasty online news report alleging that the GBI was at that moment raiding city offices, and that city attorney Jeremy Berry had fled the building. Moore was quickly told that this was not true.

GBI agents were in the building to arrange interviews, but no records were seized, and Berry was in a meeting off-campus. (Moore would later correct the record on her Facebook page, without apology.)

Despite that interrupti­on, the meeting continued.

Moore noted that Bottoms had accepted the resignatio­n of Jim Beard, the city’s chief financial officer, who will continue to serve until May 17 — when he returns from a training program at Harvard University, for which the city paid $60,000 last fall.

“He’s not an inexpensiv­e employee. I’m sure that he has knowledge that could be helpful to us,” Moore conceded. “But we don’t get the benefit of any of that training now that he’s resigned. To me, it’s just kind of messy.”

Also during that never-ending meeting, Moore and other council members were told that a law department memo justifying the bonuses had disappeare­d — collateral damage from the recent ransomware attack on the city’s computer system.

The Bottoms administra­tion has proposed hiring outside counsel to investigat­e the bonuses — attorneys who would be chosen by the law department. “I will listen to the auditor and the ethics officer,” Moore said later. “I won’t give much credence to the law department, particular­ly when the law department is party to this whole thing with a memo they can’t find.”

Moore wasn’t done with the week’s spotlight. The next morning, the council president took her outrage to a breakfast meeting of the Buckhead Business Associatio­n. Also there was Mary Norwood, who lost to Bottoms last year in the mayoral runoff, just as she had lost to Reed eight years earlier.

Over the eggs and toast, Moore delivered one last piece of eyebrow-raising news — about that ugly sweater contest. One of the winning sweaters had Norwood’s image on it, she said.

Felicia Moore dominated the week, as a pent-up voice of outrage reacting to the indictment­s, search warrants and distastefu­l revelation­s that have rained down on 68 Mitchell St.

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