The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

City faults spending by Zoo Atlanta

CEO pay, expansion cost, lack of minority vendors among issues cited.

- By J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

Simmering tensions between Zoo Atlanta and a government oversight board boiled over this week when a key adviser to Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms criticized the ballooning cost of a major zoo expansion and blasted no-bid contracts and a failure by the zoo to meet requiremen­ts to hire minority-owned vendors.

Officials with the Atlanta Fulton County Recreation Authority also took aim at the pay of

zoo President and CEO Raymond King, whose total compensati­on more than doubled from 2013 to 2017 to nearly $630,000, putting him among the highest-paid zoo leaders in the nation.

“It’s a bigger picture than these loans, it’s the overall governance over there and making sure the money, the public money, is being spent the way we’re being told it’s supposed to be spent,” said Alvin Kendall, a consultant to

the authority board and adviser to Bottoms.

The scathing critique came Tuesday during a rec authority board meeting where members were briefed on progress at the zoo’s Grand New View and Savanna Hall expansion. Most of the expansion is funded by donors, but a portion involving loans and state and federal historic tax credits is pending board approval.

For months, the authority has requested detailed financial records to vet the deal, but the zoo has been slow to respond, said Kerry Stewart, the authority’s executive director. No zoo officials were present for Tuesday’s board meeting.

The expansion includes a five-acre addition to the elephant habitat and a glitzy ballroom and banquet hall. It was initially proposed for $38 million, but the cost has increased to $56 million, nearly 50%. Board members were told the increased cost is in part due to steel tariffs and litigation involving trees.

But what started Tuesday as a walk-through of the complicate­d financing turned into a nearly hourlong discussion about the zoo’s business practices.

At issue were decisions by zoo leadership to hire its main constructi­on contractor — Winter Johnson Group — without a bid. The authority also believes concession­s and catering contracts were improperly extended to the Savanna Hall complex without bids, which the zoo disputes.

The zoo also has failed to meet a clause in its 2017 lease amendment to use minorityan­d women-owned vendors for 35% of its capital and operating purchases, Kendall said.

Zoo spokeswoma­n Rachel Davis said King was traveling and unavailabl­e for an interview. Neither Davis nor King answered questions emailed by the AJC and Zoo Chairman John Ripoll did not respond to a request for comment.

In an emailed statement, Davis said, “Integrity and collaborat­ion are values we hold dear at Zoo Atlanta.

“In the spirit of both these values, we have long been engaged in ongoing and productive conversati­ons with the Atlanta Fulton County Recreation Authority about various matters,” the statement said. “We are continuing to work with our partners at the Recreation Authority.”

Zoo Atlanta is managed by the nonprofit Atlanta Fulton County Zoo Inc., but the land is owned by the city. The rec authority has oversight of the zoo and as of 2017 must approve all contracts greater than three years in length or $1 million in value.

Zoo operations are largely funded by membership­s, donations, ticket sales and concession­s.

But city taxpayers fund $21.8 million in bonds used for prior zoo upgrades and financing for Atlanta’s famed pandas.

The zoo doesn’t pay any operating revenue towards its bond debt currently, but would if annual attendance is sustained above 900,000 as many hope will happen after new facilities are complete.

Cox Enterprise­s, the parent company of The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, is a zoo donor and a corporate executive is a member of the zoo board. The James M. Cox Foundation also has donated at least $250,000 to the Savanna Hall expansion.

In 2014, the zoo and then-Mayor Kasim Reed announced plans to expand the zoo and its African Savanna habitat. The Cyclorama, the giant circular painting depicting the Civil War Battle of Atlanta, would move to Atlanta History Center, and the zoo would take over the building as part of its expansion.

The city, meanwhile, agreed to build a new parking deck that ultimately would become a $35 million structure including a rooftop restaurant.

That parking deck project was awarded through competitiv­e bid to Winter Johnson, a joint venture of Winter Constructi­on and the minority-owned Johnson Constructi­on Services, but the habitat expansion was not.

Doug Selby, the lawyer for the authority, said the constructi­on contract “requires bidding.”

“Their president acknowledg­ed their process were not followed,” Selby said.

King told Kendall if he could go back and open the matter for bidding he would, Kendall said.

City Councilwom­an Carla Smith, who represents neighborho­ods surroundin­g the zoo, said many of the issues raised by the authority were news to her, including the failure to meet disadvanta­ge business contractin­g goals.

“They are supposed to follow the same rules that everyone else in the city follows,” Smith said. “They know this.”

Smith said she was aware of King’s compensati­on package. King has been CEO of the zoo since 2010. He’s been widely hailed as a prolific fundraiser and annual zoo attendance grew about 11% since from 2013 to 2017.

“I’m wondering what some of the regular employees make,” Smith said.

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