The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Stonecrest mayor downplays officials’ recent resignatio­ns

- By J.D. Capelouto jdcapelout­o@ajc.com

The mayor of Stonecrest is pushing back against allegation­s that there is a management problem in City Hall after three top officials resigned in a span of three months.

Since December, Stonecrest’s city attorney, city clerk and city manager have announced their retirement, The Atlanta Journal-Consti- tution reported Wednesday.

On Thursday, Mayor Jason Lary said personnel are in place to continue running DeKalb County’s newest city until permanent replacemen­ts are hired for the key roles.

“I have a well- o iled machine here, and we’re doing just fine,” Lary said in an interview Thursday. “There’s nothing concern- ing or odd about what’s happening around here.”

Some questioned whether the high-ranking turnover sent a message of misman- agement within Stonecrest.

“It’s never a good sign when you have to start over,” Coun- cil Member Diane Adoma told the AJC.

But Lary boiled it down to the business of politics, explaining that all three offi- cials left the city for individ- ual, personal reasons.

City Manager Michael Harris is leaving to work as the assistant tax commission­er for Henry County, Lary said. Harris’ resignatio­n, which he announced publicly after Monday night’s City Council meeting, is effective March 8.

Before the city hires a new manager, Lary said he and other staff members will take over Harris’ tasks.

“We have staff that can cover t hose issues with regards to what he was doing,” he said.

Former City Clerk Brenda James left about a month ago to take another job closer to her home in Fayette County. Lary said the city hired an interim clerk who served as the clerk in Lithonia for five years.

Former City Attorney Thompson Kurrie Jr. named a successor in December and still works with the city as a “trusted adviser,” Lary said.

Kurrie, James and Harris were the first people to hold their respective positions after Stonecrest voted to become a city in 2016.

Staff resignatio­ns in city government are fairly common, especially among peo- ple who have been with the city since the beginning, Georgia Municipal Associatio­n spokeswoma­n Amy Henderson said.

“It’s just kind of the nature of city government that there is turnover,” Henderson said.

However, she said it’s “a little unusual” that all three are leaving around the same time.

“That just could be because the circumstan­ces worked out that way,” she said.

 ?? CASEY SYKES / CASEY.SYKES@AJC.COM ?? Mayor Jason Lary said personnel are in place to run the city until replacemen­ts are hired.
CASEY SYKES / CASEY.SYKES@AJC.COM Mayor Jason Lary said personnel are in place to run the city until replacemen­ts are hired.

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