The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Senate panel backs an airport authority

Idea for Hartsfield-Jackson overseer will face fight from city.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

A state Senate study committee recommende­d Thursday the state consider creating an authority to oversee Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport.

The idea, however, will continue to face stiff opposition from the city of Atlanta, which runs the airport, and from Delta Air Lines officials. It’s unclear how successful any legislatio­n might be once the session begins in January.

The Atlanta airport has come under scrutiny from some state lawmakers amid a federal bribery investigat­ion into City Hall that resulted in the city’s former chief procuremen­t officer being sentenced to prison, lawsuits over airport contractin­g and a Federal Aviation Administra­tion probe into the possible misuse of Hartsfield-Jackson revenue.

The airport, “as an economic engine for the state, it dwarfs anything else we have,” said the study committee chair, state Sen. Burt Jones, R-Jackson, as the committee reviewed its final report Thursday. “You cannot continue to have indictment­s, investigat­ions and things that have taken place that’s really, quite frankly, kind of embarrassi­ng for the state as a whole.”

He has also said that a state-op-

erated airport authority could better examine the possibilit­y of creating a second commercial airport, an idea Atlanta-based Delta has rejected in the past.

Jones said the committee is recommendi­ng the Georgia Legislatur­e “take a serious look at putting forward legislatio­n that both chambers can agree on, as well as something they feel the governor’s office will sign.”

Some committee members said they wanted to avoid the term “takeover,” and Jones said he wants to continue discussion­s with city of Atlanta officials.

“We’d rather have a partnershi­p in this,” Jones said. “I think long term, a business enterprise authority, much like our ports and [Georgia World Congress Center], is in the best interests of the state as a whole.”

Atlanta officials and Delta Air Lines, however, are opposed to a shift in control of the airport away from the city. Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms recently told the editorial board at The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that she told Gov.elect Brian Kemp that she does not want the state taking over the airport.

“I felt like we had been heard,” Bottoms said about that discussion with Kemp.

Atlanta officials have contended that a provision in bond and airline lease documents restricts any change of control of Hartsfield-Jackson. But the committee’s report says those issues, while com- plicated, are not “an insur- mountable hurdle.”

The Senate study committee, which launched in the summer and has held five meetings, voted in favor of approving the recommenda­tions in the report.

Jones said the authority idea “seems to have some pretty good traction in the Senate,” and he plans to meet with the House speaker and key members of the House leadership on the matter.

“We’ve got to look and see what is plausible in the House,” he said. “It is a Herculean task regardless.”

Not everyone on the Sen- ate study committee was as enthusiast­ic about the idea of a change in governance of Hartsfield-Jackson.

“Have we gotten a couple or three black eyes as a result of the missteps that have happened? Yeah, no denying,” said state Sen. Valencia Seay, D-Riverdale. “But that is few among the masses . ... We know that on every level of government, if you peel back enough layers, you’re going to find something.”

Seay said she believes the committee’s scrutiny of the airport has already resulted in the city taking steps toward reform. She added that in her Clayton County district, where most of Hartsfield-Jackson sits, some are questionin­g: “Why they want to take over [the airport] when the mantra has always been local control?”

Robert Highsmith, an attorney representi­ng the city of Atlanta, said evidence presented to the committee dated back decades.

“There was no evidence from the past decade to support a governance change,” Highsmith said. “It’s my view that a majority of the members of the General Assembly will want to see more before moving forward with legislatio­n.”

Atlanta City Councilman Matt Westmorela­nd, who attended the Senate study committee’s meeting Thursday, said he is interested in ideas to make the airport stronger.

“But I’m a believer that the structure [the airport has] is working,” Westmorela­nd said.

Delta CEO Ed Bastian has also voiced support for the airport’s current governance structure under Atlanta, whose leadership has long had a close relationsh­ip with the carrier that dominates Hartsfield-Jackson.

“It is the best run airport in the world, and the city has done a fine job managing it,” Bastian said. “Could it be improved in terms of governance, transparen­cy. ... Absolutely. And I think the mayor is fully on board with that.”

“My suggestion is that we continue to support the city, and support the increased level of transparen­cy, continue to work arm-in-arm with the mayor,” he said. “I think that the city is committed to making some of the changes to ensure that it doesn’t get caught in some of the financial issues that the airport has been corrupted by in the past.”

Over the years, the city of Atlanta has faced lawsuits alleging cronyism in the awarding of airport contracts, including in concession­s contract challenges and in a yearslong lawsuit over an airport advertisin­g contract.

After more recent questions about airport concession­s contracts, Bottoms earlier this month said she plans to rebid those contracts once the city has “cleaned up the procuremen­t process” under its new chief procuremen­t officer.

 ?? PHOTOS BY PHIL SKINNER ?? Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport, the world’s busiest airport, handles more than 100 million passengers. It is owned and operated by the city of Atlanta.
PHOTOS BY PHIL SKINNER Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport, the world’s busiest airport, handles more than 100 million passengers. It is owned and operated by the city of Atlanta.
 ??  ?? State Sen. Valencia Seay, D-Riverdale, said she believes the scrutiny of the airport has already resulted in the city taking steps toward reform.
State Sen. Valencia Seay, D-Riverdale, said she believes the scrutiny of the airport has already resulted in the city taking steps toward reform.
 ?? PHIL SKINNER ?? State Sen Brandon Beach speaks during a meeting of the Senate Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport Operations and Authority Creation Study Committee on Thursday.
PHIL SKINNER State Sen Brandon Beach speaks during a meeting of the Senate Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport Operations and Authority Creation Study Committee on Thursday.

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