The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

City investigat­es home built after developmen­t moratorium

Offifficia­l resigns amid questions of affordable housing policy violation.

- By Stephen Deere stephen. deere@ ajc. com

A senior attorney in the Atlanta solicitor’s offiffice has resigned amid questions about a new home built and sold in Grove Park — a westside neighborho­od subject to Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms’ moratorium on new developmen­t.

Attorney Andrew W. Hughes, who was a senior assistant city solicitor, is the registered agent for a company that purchased a vacant lot at 1907 Baker Road for $ 38,000, and then built a 3- bedroom, 2,677- square- foot home on the property that recently sold for $ 411,000.

The purchase of the lot, constructi­on and sale of the home all occurred after Bottoms set in place the moratorium designed to prevent real estate speculatio­n and preserve affordable housing around the new Westside Park. It is a piece of the mayor’s promise to create or preserve $ 1 billion in affordable housing.

The mayor’s offiffice began investigat­ing the permitting process surroundin­g the constructi­on, after The Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on raised questions about it, according to city records.

Palmerhous­e Properties, the company that employs the agent who sold t he house, has also launched an internal investigat­ion. Agent Anthony Thomas fifiled an affidavit with the city swearing that he was the owner of the property and intended to occupy the home for at least 12 months. The permit applicatio­n lists the project name as “Thomas’s house.”

Palmerhous­e co- founder Tom Ellicott emphasized that all of the company’s 2,200 agents are independen­t contractor­s, but are still “obligated to abide by all federal, state and municipal laws and we take the matter very seriously.”

The moratorium allows for owner- occupants to improve their own properties, and for new constructi­on or renovation­s of existing properties. Owners must submit affidavits swearing the improvemen­ts are for affordable housing, or that they intend to occupy the new structure.

Hughes confirmed to the AJC that he was the registered agent of the company that purchased the lot. As a senior city solicitor, Hughes specialize­d in code violations — such as those that run afoul of Bottoms’ moratorium.

He declined to discuss any other details regarding the deal.

City Solicitor Raines Carter did not return a phone message seeking comment.

Thomas told the AJC that the home was always intended for another buyer. He hung up on a reporter after being confronted with informatio­n from the affidavit.

Amenity with a catch

For years, the city promised that the Westside Park would provide a much needed amenity to underserve­d neighborho­ods around it, such as Grove Park. But during that time period, Grove Park’s population dropped by roughly 50%, mostly due to the demolition of a large apartment complex, according to an internal city report last year.

Grocery stores closed. Banks shuttered. Many homes became uninhabita­ble.

Meanwhile, speculator­s swept up parcels anticipati­ng the rise in values that would accompany the new park. More recently, developers have been renovating and building new luxury homes throughout the neighborho­od.

Today, Grove Parks’ streets are a patchwork of renewal and decay — new residences with marble kitchen countertop­s sit next to houses with caved- in roofs.

About half of the neighborho­od’s population rent their homes, according to census data, and more than 70% spend at least 30% of their income on housing costs.

It’s unclear who purchased the home built by the LCC registered to Hughes. Although real estate websites indicate that the sale has closed, Fulton county real estate records have not been updated to identify the buyer.

“Thi s moratorium was designed to provide ti me and a plan to help protect our legacy residents from displaceme­nt,” said Atlanta City Councilman Matt Westmorela­nd, one of the council’s most passionate champions of affordable housing. “That it was violated by a City employee, taking actions which will accelerate that very displaceme­nt, is both unreal and unacceptab­le.”

A day after the AJC raised questions, the city’s planning department last week issued holds on the various constructi­on permits for the property, despite the structure having already been built.

“Property may be in violation of the Westside Moratorium affidavit,” the city’s Planning Department records say, adding that a certificat­e of occupancy will not be issued until further investigat­ion.

It is unclear what the hold on the certificat­e of occupancy means for the buyer. No one answered the door when a reporter knocked last week. Hughes lives in a home roughly 200 feet away.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? This 3- bedroom home at 1907 Baker Road recently sold for $ 411,000 but city records say a certificat­e of occupancy will not be issued until further investigat­ion.
CONTRIBUTE­D This 3- bedroom home at 1907 Baker Road recently sold for $ 411,000 but city records say a certificat­e of occupancy will not be issued until further investigat­ion.

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