The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Proposal would be a 'killer' for mayor

Bill aims to limit role in Stonecrest laws, policy; has support in senate.

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

A state senator who has clashed with the mayor of Stonecrest is pushing legislatio­n to strip the mayor of most of his power.

“It’s a mayor killer,” Stonecrest Mayor Jason Lary said of the bill, introduced by Sen. Emanuel Jones, D-Decatur. “It would reduce me to kissing babies only.”

The legislatio­n — which has the support of the two other state senators who represent Stonecrest — would make the mayor

the “ceremonial head” of the city and remove the mayor’s voting powers. Currently, under Stonecrest’s charter, the mayor can cast a vote in addition to the five council members.

The senator said the bill is not personal, but he was troubled to learn Lary and the city recently filed a lawsuit and tried to take out a restrainin­g order against a sitting councilwom­an. Due to ambiguitie­s in the city charter, the councilwom­an’s seat was put in ques

tion after she missed two meetings last year. The city dropped the legal effort late last month.

Jones, who represents part of Stonecrest, said he proposed the bill because he does not think a mayor should be so involved in making laws and policy. He compared his proposed council-manager form of government to the structure of DeKalb County, which has a commission that operates separately from its CEO.

The council would elect a council president to oversee meetings, while the city manager would act as chief executive and be responsibl­e for the day-to-day operations of the city, under Jones’ bill. The mayor would be able to sign checks on behalf of the city, make some appointmen­ts and have oversight of the city management.

“We continue to stay focused on the governance issues surroundin­g this city and how the mayor and the city council are interactin­g with each other,” Jones said Thursday.

During a speech on the Senate floor Feb. 21, Jones said that “it makes no sense when a member of the executive committee of a city attempts to sue a member of the city council.” His bill would also clear up the part of Stonecrest’s charter that led to the confusion over absences.

Lary called the legislatio­n “petty and vindictive” and said Jones only represents a small portion of the southeast DeKalb city, which was incorporat­ed in 2017 and has 54,000 residents. He also criticized the senator for not getting public input on the proposal.

Jones and Lary have disagreed on several city issues during previous legislativ­e sessions.

In 2018, Lary supported a bill that would have changed the city’s charter to, among other things, raise the mayor’s salary from $20,000 to $75,000. It failed after Jones pushed back on the bill, saying that “we did not create the city to be a jobs program for the mayor and his cronies.” Lary, who was the city’s first mayor and won reelection last fall, said at the time that he was insulted by that comment.

The following year, Rep. Vernon Jones, D-Lithonia, filed a bill that would institute a “strong-mayor” form of government in Stonecrest, under which the mayor would officially be the chief executive of the city. It would bar the mayor from voting except in a tie, but he or she would have veto power. That bill did not pass last year but remains alive for this session. Rep. Jones is the only listed sponsor.

Sen. Jones’ bill, however, has the support of most of the DeKalb Senate delegation. If the Senate OKs it, it would go to the DeKalb House delegation for considerat­ion.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Sen. Emanuel Jones suggests a council-manager government, similar to that of DeKalb County. The mayorwould sign checks and oversee city management.
BOB ANDRES / ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM Sen. Emanuel Jones suggests a council-manager government, similar to that of DeKalb County. The mayorwould sign checks and oversee city management.

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