The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Wall Street weighs in on Stockbridg­e dismantlin­g

- Jim Galloway

Wall Street, or at least an important slice of it, has now weighed in on one of this year’s most brazen acts of the state Legislatur­e.

Capitol One Public Fund, one of the nation’s biggest issuers of municipal bonds, wants a federal judge to stop a Nov. 6 vote that would allow a portion of the city of Stockbridg­e to split away and form a new city of Eagles Landing.

Capitol One holds about $11.75 million in Stockbridg­e paper — most of it for a city hall built in the ’00s. Payments on the debt are scheduled through 2031 — if the city can continue to make them.

A set of bills, passed by the Legislatur­e and signed by Gov. Nathan Deal this spring, authorized the referendum to set the secession movement in motion. Approval could cost Stockbridg­e roughly $379 million of taxable property — about half its digest.

The legislatio­n approved by the General Assembly would not divvy up Stockbridg­e’s debt. The 9,000 or so residents of this portion of a new city

of Eagles Landing would walk away scot-free. Which is quite the incentive to do just that.

Only Stockbridg­e residents who are prospectiv­e citizens of Eagles Landing will be allowed to vote. City residents left behind holding the bag will have no say in the matter.

The lawsuit accuses our Republican-controlled Legislatur­e, and an administra­tion that has prided itself on the creation of a business-friendly environmen­t, of subverting the foundation of all commercial enterprise. That is, the sanctity of the signed contract.

Capitol One says Georgia’s state government has placed its contractua­l, multi-million dollar relationsh­ip with Stockbridg­e in jeopardy.

I write this in a hotel lobby in Macon, following the annual summer gathering of the Georgia Chamber. A Republican attorney — a good one, I think — has just passed by. When I told him my topic, he shook his head.

“It goes against the basics of contract law,” he said. “It’s the very first thing you’re taught in law school.”

The Capitol One filing includes a brief lesson on the importance of municipal bonds. “Georgia’s municipal bond market provides an efficient means for local government­s to borrow money for public purposes, including for equipment acquisitio­ns and infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts,” the lawyers wrote.

A municipali­ty, in turn, pledges its “full faith and credit” to make good the debt. It is this full faith and credit that Capitol One says has been sabotaged.

The bondholder alleges that it has already suffered damage, even though the referendum is still 11

Only Stockbridg­e residents who are prospectiv­e citizens of Eagles Landing will be allowed to vote. City residents left behind holding the bag will have no say in the matter.

weeks away. The lawsuit didn’t explain, and a Capitol One spokeswoma­n declined to elaborate, but let me theorize on how that probably works.

Debt is a marketable commodity. When Stockbridg­e originally issued those bonds in 2005 and 2006, they were backed by Wachovia, which sold them to Wells Fargo. Capitol One acquired them in 2015. Now, even if Capitol One wanted to sell the debt to a fourth party, it would be difficult. Stockbridg­e bonds are damaged goods.

This matters when you consider that Georgia has more than 500 municipali­ties, most of which carry some sort of debt that is secured by the full faith and credit of their geographic territory. Which now appears subject to the annual whims of the Legislatur­e. That additional risk could show up as higher interest rates, which would ultimately be borne by you, the taxpayer.

Given all this, the Capitol One lawsuit wasn’t much of a surprise. But it is important. In July, a Henry County Superior Court judge turned away a city of Stockbridg­e attempt to stop the vote.

The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia is another venue entirely. Capitol One’s choice of King & Spalding, one of Atlanta’s storied law firms, is also significan­t.

One thing that has been missing from the Stockbridg­e/Eagles Landing debate has been a clear sense of the motivation. Supporters of a city of Eagles Landing, which would derive its name from the country club in its midst, say property values are a concern. But there is no denying the fact that when the legislatio­n to create the new municipali­ty debuted in January, Stockbridg­e had just sworn in its first African-American elected as mayor.

Henry County is in the midst of rapid demographi­c change, from white to black, Republican to Democrat. Politics in Stockbridg­e have been likewise volatile.

Lee Stuart is a former mayor of Stockbridg­e. He was ousted by his city council in 2012, accused of creating a hostile workplace. Stuart is retired Army, and describes himself as a plain-spoken “muddy boots” grunt. I tracked him down in Terre Haute, Ind. He’s part of a group that tours the U.S. in vintage military helicopter­s.

I asked Stuart, who is white, what was at the root of the Stockbridg­e/ Eagles Landing fight.

“It’s money. It’s land deals,” the former mayor said. “You look at Stockbridg­e, and see how it’s grown. It looks like wet spaghetti thrown against the wall. Because they’ve got to be contiguous — the boundaries. They’ll run the boundaries down this road, taking this chunk of land and that chunk.

“The developers, if they could get annexed into the city, then they could put one house per quarter an acre. If you’re in the county, it’s like you’ve got to have an acre or more,” Stuart said.

Zoning isn’t the attraction for becoming part of a municipali­ty. When Eagle’s Landing County Club was establishe­d in the 1990s, Henry County was dry. “If you look at the map, the city weaves its way to include part of the country club, so they could turn around and have their liquor license,” Stuart said.

But municipal bonds and contract law are dull topics, lacking in drama. Stuart has developed his own metaphor for describing the situation in Henry County.

“It’s a divorce that you can’t help,” the former mayor said. “One partner is going to walk out and say, ‘Hey, I’ve done found something better. I’m taking half of your paycheck, and I’m leaving you all the bills. I’m taking a few of my fair-haired children, and you keep the rest of the [illegitima­te offspring].”

Except, of course, Stuart didn’t really say “illegitima­te offspring.”

Stuart, by the way, has entered the fray on his own terms. He’s personally filed a set of complaints with the State Bar of Georgia, against state Rep. Andy Welch and state Sen. Brian Strickland. The two Republican­s from McDonough were responsibl­e for pushing through the General Assembly the legislatio­n to make the Nov. 6 vote on Eagles Landing possible.

According to Stuart’s complaint, the law firm to which both lawmakers belong was representi­ng the city of Stockbridg­e at the time. “While they were earning money from the city of Stockbridg­e, they were fighting with all their strength to destroy the city,” Stuart said.

State bar complaints can be iffy things. They are long and tedious and often end up unresolved. But keep an eye on this federal court suit, which is far more likely to determine who in Stockbridg­e will be allowed to leave, and who will be saddled with the leavings.

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