The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Small businesses get airport boost

Half of contracts for concession­aires aimed at single small locations.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

As Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport puts contracts up for bid for new restaurant­s, half of the contracts are designated for small businesses.

The airport concession­s business is dominated by longtime concession­aires and large multinatio­nal firms with hundreds of locations around the world that have expertise in operating in the unpredicta­ble, security-restricted, round-the-clock environmen­t of an airport.

That can make it difficult for small local restaurate­urs to win a contract at the world’s busiest airport.

Many concession­s also have been put on hold for years because of a city hall corruption investigat­ion among other problems.

Hundreds of restaurate­urs and concession­aires filled a hall at the Georgia Internatio­nal Convention

Center on Thursday to hear city and airport officials present details on the contracts.

“I’m trying to get in” to the airport, said Theo Burnett, who owns Golden Krust restaurant franchises in Lawrencevi­lle and Conyers. “If I can get Caribbean food in there, that would be great . ... I’ve been trying for a long time, to be honest with you.”

Among the 10 Atlanta airport food and beverage contracts up for grabs, five of them are for single locations designated for certified small business enterprise­s that have $38.5 million in annual revenue or less.

About two dozen locations are up for bid. Proposals currently are due March 25 from companies interested in competing for the 10 -year contracts with a potential 3-year renewal. The city plans to award contracts this year.

The contracts designated for small business enterprise­s are for small eateries and bars, as well as one contract in a new space on internatio­nal Concourse E for an ‘“internatio­nal gourmet bistro.”

The internatio­nal gourmet bistro would sell prepared food such as cheese, olives, bread, baked goods, artisan dishes and ethnic food options, pasta salads, gourmet gifts and other items often found at gourmet markets, according to airport documents.

Other contracts are for multiple locations around the airport, including one for the food court on Concourse E.

Among the questions at Thursday’s meeting was whether the contractin­g could be delayed due to political issues. A state Legislatur­e attempt to take over the Atlanta airport from the city is expected to come up during the current legislativ­e session, and the federal investigat­ion into City Hall continues.

“There’s objectives and goals that we’re trying to reach,” said contractin­g officer Philippe Jefferson. “At this point the schedule is what it is.”

Some of the contracts for spots on Concourses E and B have been on hold for years. It’s been more than three years since the contracts for restaurant­s on Concourse E, including upscale restaurant One Flew South, were supposed to end. The existing contracts have been extended multiple times.

The airport started a contractin­g process for the Concourse E spots in 2016, but the process was put on hold after then-Mayor Kasim Reed’s firing of airport manager Miguel Southwell, and amid a federal investigat­ion into Atlanta City Hall corruption.

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms pledged in late 2018 to rebid the contracts in 2019, but it wasn’t until this year that the city put the contracts for Concourse E and other locations up for bid.

Airport concession­aires are often major campaign contributo­rs to political candidates. In 2017, controvers­y over concession­s contracts up for bid during Atlanta mayoral campaigns contribute­d to the delay of contractin­g. Still pending since then is the rebid of contracts for retail shops throughout the airport.

Some of the contracts for spots on Concourses E and B have been on hold for years.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? It’s been more than three years since the contracts for restaurant­s on Concourse E, including upscale restaurant One Flew South, were supposed to end. The contracts have been extended multiple times.
CONTRIBUTE­D It’s been more than three years since the contracts for restaurant­s on Concourse E, including upscale restaurant One Flew South, were supposed to end. The contracts have been extended multiple times.

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