The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

How race for mayor in Doraville is shaping up,

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

It’s a crowded contest for mayor in Doraville, where three current or former City Council members are chal- lenging the incumbent for her post.

The Nov. 5 election will see Mayor Donna Pittman face off against Joseph Geierman, Tom Hart and M.D. Naser to be the leader of the historical­ly industrial DeKalb County suburb.

The congested race — plus four competitiv­e races for council — is a sign of the growth Doraville has seen over the past several years, and the potential the diverse city has moving forward.

Pittman has been mayor for eight years, and Naser currently represents District 2 on the council. Geierman was elected to the City Council in 2017 and recently resigned to run for mayor. Hart was on City Council more than a decade ago and has previously attempted three failed bids for mayor.

“We have always been an industrial city,” Pittman said at a forum for the mayoral candidates last week. She celebrated recent develop- ment projects across the city, including Assembly, now being built at the shuttered General Motors plant. “The developmen­ts that are popping up over at General Motors, that is a catalyst for the rest of the city . ... We are rebranding our city.”

Geierman and Hart were critical of the current leader- ship, saying people around metro Atlanta have a nega- tive view of Doraville, and the city should act to shed that stigma. Naser did not attend the forum.

“One of my top priorities is getting started on downtown Doraville,” Geierman said, alluding to several acres of city-owned land next to the Doraville MARTA station. “It’s almost criminal that we haven’t done anything with it in all this time.”

The area, located between New Peachtree Road and Buford Highway, is home to a number of city buildings including City Hall, the Municipal Court and the library. Pittman said developing the area into a livework-play district requires money the city doesn’t have right now.

Hart suggested the city government has a spend- ing problem and “has lost its way.” He said he wants to make City Hall more transparen­t and the biggest prob- lem is the lawsuits facing the city.

Since the 1990s, Doraville has acquired a reputation as a ticket-heavy city with speed traps around I-285 and a petty code enforcemen­t division. Some motorists and Doraville homeowners filed a lawsuit last year accusing the city of funding itself on the backs of those snared in its municipal courts.

“You can forget about your hopes and dreams if you have a city that is bankrupt,” said Hart, a former chemist. He wants the city to settle the lawsuits as soon as possible.

Naser, who works in the DeKalb County Sheriff ’s Office and was elected to the City Council in 2015, is prioritizi­ng public safety and fiscal responsibi­lity in his campaign. On his website, he pledged to lower the residentia­l garbage fee and criticized the tax deal that led to the ongoing redevelopm­ent at the old GM plant.

“After almost four years on the Doraville City Council, I am unhappy with the way the city is being run,” Naser said. “It is time for new leadership that can rally the community, treat our citizens and employees with dignity, and respect and make Doraville a better place to live.”

With an estimated population of 10,500, Doraville straddles the Perimeter near the interchang­es with Peachtree Industrial Boulevard, Buford Highway and I-85. The Buford Highway corridor contribute­s to its diverse population; more than half of the city’s residents identify as Hispanic, about 15% are Asian and 11% are black, according to Census estimates.

The city has several largescale projects in the works that promise to bring new residents and businesses. Developers say Assembly will become a mini-city with hundreds of residentia­l units and offices supporting 15,000 jobs. Mixed-used developmen­ts are also slated for the Village at Tilly Mill Crossing and the site of a former Kmart on Buford Highway.

Pittman hopes to continue this momentum into her third term, but said the city could benefit from better marketing.

“I disagree that our image is bad,” she said, which drew some laughs from people in the audience at the forum. “Our image is not tainted. We have a very good city. ... Is it perfect? No. Could it use some improvemen­t and much more marketing? Absolutely.”

Her opponents said the city needs to do more to attract developers and fill the empty storefront­s.

“We are neglected in the region,” Geierman said. Developers “have this perception that it’s not some place they want to be. So even if they’re looking at Chamblee they aren’t look- ing at Doraville, which is really a travesty for us, and something that we need to change.”

Early voting is now underway at locations across DeKalb ahead of the Nov. 5 election. If no candidate gets 50% of the vote, it will go to a runoff in December.

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