The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

We aim to protect your interests

- Shawn McIntosh Deputy Managing Editor

Every day at The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, we strive to bring you news you won’t find elsewhere. We work to tell the stories of metro Atlanta with depth and context and to hold officials and institutio­ns in Georgia accountabl­e for spending tax dollars wisely and upholding the public trust. As we look back on 2018, here are a few notable efforts.

Secret tape

When business executive and former GOP gubernator­ial candidate Clay Tippins felt burned by fellow candidate Casey Cagle earlier this year, he reached out to AJC reporter Greg Bluestein and our reporting partners at Channel 2 Action News. Tippins had secretly taped Lt. Gov. Cagle acknowledg­ing he had backed a bill he considered bad education policy in order to block another candidate for governor from getting campaign donations. The story raised questions about Cagle’s character and how far he would go to win the race. Many believe the revelation of the tape cost Cagle the primary and helped advance Brian Kemp to the general election he would ultimately win.

This reporting was built on Tippins’ trust that Bluestein would recognize the importance of the news and report it fairly. His even-handed coverage led to the exclusive report.

Reveal problems and improve lives

When the newspaper learns about system breakdowns harming those who live in poverty, state care or without advocates, we reveal those problems. Sometimes, the mere existence of a news story can resolve a lingering issue for an individual or group.

That happened when reporter Carrie Teegardin told of a Honduran woman who had been separated from her four children for more than a year. She had been deported and her children were held in foster care in Georgia. A misplaced document contribute­d to the delay. The new chief at the Georgia Division of Family and Children’s Services stepped in to address the problem. “Your job is now reflected in the blessings and happiness of a mother that has been reunited with her boys,” the Honduran counsel general’s office wrote Teegardin after the children were flown to Honduras to be with their mother.

Reporter Alan Judd revealed another bureaucrat­ic delay with lasting ramificati­ons. His story of Lucretia Felder, a developmen­tally disabled woman who has been held in state institutio­ns for 42 of her 44 years, revealed the challenges facing the state’s behavioral health system. Threatened with federal oversight, Georgia has promised to transform care for people with mental illness and developmen­tal disabiliti­es by moving long-warehoused patients like Felder from institutio­ns to homes of their own. Those who remained in institutio­ns were supposed to have their cases reviewed annually by a judge. In Felder’s case, no review had occurred since at least 2008 and she had been moved into increasing­ly restrictiv­e settings. In May, about six weeks after Judd’s original story, a judge reviewed Felder’s case. “I want to live my life on the outside,” Felder told the judge. The judge gave the state three months to get her out of a medical prison unit and into her own home, with appropriat­e state support.

On Veterans Day, reporter Bo Emerson told the story of Krystina Brown, 32, a Navy veteran who was living in her car with her two dogs, sleeping in a Cobb County parking lot while holding down a full-time job. Brown’s situation, part of a larger story about homeless women veterans, touched readers, who wanted to donate money and gifts. A follow-up story directed readers to several organizati­ons that help veterans.

Serving as readers’ watchdog

Readers tell us one of our most important roles is watching out for how elected officials and others uphold the public trust – or don’t.

A stunning example this year was our continuous reporting on the administra­tion of former Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed. If you missed the stories, read reporter Dan Klepal’s in-depth report on the front page.

One story written by our state budget expert, editor James Salzer, almost certainly influenced lawmakers to lower state tax rates. Salzer wrote about a $3.6 billion windfall the state would receive as a result of changes in the federal tax code. At the time he wrote the story, officials did not have a plan to return that money to taxpayers. Within weeks of publicatio­n of Salzer’s story, the picture had changed and legislativ­e leaders were pushing a measure to cut income tax rates and increase deductions. Some other ways we served as a watchdog for readers this year:

■ Kelly Yamanouchi revealed how Reed’s administra­tion pushed through promotions of close colleagues of the mayor in the final days of his term.

■ Tia Mitchell wrote about the DeKalb County commission­ers’ secretive process to raise their own salaries by 60 percent. The attorney general’s office later said the move was illegal. but the ruling came too late to reverse the raises.

■ Reporter Johnny Edwards opened another chapter in the sorry record of Georgia regulatory boards’ protection of consumers when he reported that the Georgia Board of Massage Therapy rarely acts after licensed massage therapists are accused of sexual violations of their clients.

■ Ty Tagami and Eric Stirgus revealed how the leadership at Georgia Tech could have prevented ethics violations that roiled the university this year.

■ Meris Lutz reported the fallout after a community ignored the warning signs that a beloved coach was a child molester.

■ Reporters Arielle Kass and J. Scott Trubey reported on complaints that Roswell was secretive about plans for a large tennis center to be built in Big Creek Park. Once it was public, the proposal was withdrawn.

■ Teegardin and Judd revealed a terrible breakdown in oversight of a teen released after serving time for armed robbery. Jayden Myrick was on probation in a special program when he was charged in the shooting death of former Atlantan Christian Broder.

Providing context and understand­ing

Some stories go beyond the news of the day to illuminate larger issues, providing context and understand­ing to the trends of our time. That includes digging into local versions of national stories.

This year with the #metoo movement in full swing, we examined the lack of accountabi­lity for mistreatme­nt of women in Georgia.

Janel Davis in March reported a system of laws and policies has kept sexual harassment claims involving those who work in the state Capitol mostly hidden, and left many women reluctant to speak up.

Reporters Jennifer Peebles, Chris Joyner and Johnny Edwards over the summer and fall found the state government of Georgia often fails at its handling of allegation­s of workplace sexual harassment. In a multi-part series, they wrote of shoddy tracking of cases and investigat­ive processes that mistreat women when they report cases. Governor-elect Kemp has pledged reforms in this area.

We also put a lot of effort into in-depth reporting on concerns about voter issues, including Mark Niesse and Maya Prabhu’s report on voting precincts across Georgia being closed before elections, and Niesse’s explainer on why some voting machines sat unused on a busy election day.

And as cities across the South wrestled with what to do about Confederat­e monuments and icons, reporter Rosalind Bentley took a look closer to home. Her report on a stalled effort to address divisive symbols in Atlanta reignited efforts to rename Confederat­e Avenue, which is now named United Avenue.

We work hard to tell stories like these, stories that make us a better place by holding officials accountabl­e, revealing problems that can be solved and providing context to the news.

We’ll keep working at it in 2019. Please keep reading.

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