The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Airport contracts up for rebidding

Restaurant­s, shops must bid on 7- and 10-year contracts.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal general manager John Selden pledged a “fair and transparen­t contract process” as the city prepares to rebid contracts for new airport shops and restaurant­s.

“We are committed, from Mayor (Keisha Lance) Bottoms through the Cabinet, through my team,” Selden said. “I cannot stress this enough.”

Selden’s comments at the airport’s Concession­s RFP Industry Day on Tuesday come amid a federal bribery investigat­ion into City Hall, and follow the sentencing last year of the city’s former chief procuremen­t officer Adam Smith in the corruption probe.

Last week, longtime city contractor Jeff Jafari was charged in a federal indictment that accused him of bribery, money laundering, tax evasion and tampering with a witness. Jafari in 2017 had shown interest in the airport concession­s contracts, attending a meeting for prospectiv­e bidders and asking questions of city officials.

The airport held the Industry

Day for companies interested in 7- and 10-year concession­s contracts at the airport for nearly 100 restaurant­s and shops expected to generate a total of nearly $170 million in sales annually.

The airport is cancel- ing all of the previous con- tracting processes for air- port shops and Concourse E and B restaurant­s.

Initial plans are to put out for bid around late April contracts for restaurant­s on Concourse E — a total of 14 spaces, along with two restaurant­s on Concourse B.

Then, this summer, the airport plans to put out for bid contracts for 81 shops across the airport’s domestic terminal and concourses.

Most of the restaurant and shop spaces are grouped into packages, with multi- ple spaces in each contract up for bid.

Contractin­g reforms

The contractin­g process for airport shops, initially started in 2017, has been on hold for more than a year because of the federal cor- ruption investigat­ion into Atlanta City Hall.

Bottoms said she wanted to address questions about the integrity of the city’s procuremen­t process before the city took action on con- tracts worth millions of dol- lars in revenue.

The city has been working on reforms in contractin­g, including the recent launch of an e-procuremen­t process and an independen­t procuremen­t review office.

Another ongoing prob- lem in city of Atlanta con- tracting has been the volume of companies disqualifi­ed from winning. The city disqualifi­ed more than half of the bids it received for con- tracts because of errors in filling out forms and submitting documentat­ion, and the airport didn’t have enough qualified companies bidding on the concession­s in 2017 to move forward with all of the contracts.

Selden took the helm of the airport last year, when the contractin­g for new air- port shops and restaurant­s had already been on hold formonths. On Tuesday, he told concession­aires it’s a day “I’ve been waiting for since my first day here. I know there’s a lot of you out here today that have been wait- ing a lot longer.”

“Let’s make this better for everybody, please,” he said.

More airport projects to come

In coming months, the air- port also plans to contract out for a variety of new con- cessions projects, includ- ing plans for a common use lounge on Concourse E, similar to The Club at ATL on Concourse F.

Also planned are airport food trucks in areas where workers have little access to restaurant­s or eateries — such as at the airport’s truck staging area, holding lots for Uber and Lyft drivers, cargo buildings, maintenanc­e facilities and engineerin­g offices.

And in anticipati­on of a change in city policy that would ban smoking in the airport, Hartsfield-Jackson is also planning to convert smoking rooms throughout the concourses into restaurant­s or shops.

“We’re one of the few airports where you can still smoke in the airport, for now,” said airport concession­s director Chilly Ewing.

The world’s busiest airport is also phasing out kiosks on the concourses, because of fire marshal requiremen­ts that obstacles to passenger flows be removed, Ewing said.

“They’re allowing us to keep the ones that we have because they’re grandfathe­red,” Ewing said. But after contracts end, “[the kiosks] will be removed and not be replaced.”

Outside of the airport itself, Brown said there are also plans to put out for bid contracts for six business districts, to develop land owned by Hartsfield-Jackson around the airport area into retail, restaurant, office park, travel plaza and light industrial.

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