The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fulton commission­ers hope to mend difference­s with APS

They aim to work out disagreeme­nt on how tax incentives doled out.

- By Vanessa Mccray Vanessa.mccray@ajc.com and Ben Brasch ben.brasch@ajc.com

Atlanta Public Schools will get to keep its spot on Fulton County’s developmen­t authority board for now.

But county commission­ers want to meet with school board members and city officials to work out their difference­s about how to run the agency, which approves tax incentives for constructi­on projects that APS says have reduced school property tax revenue by millions of dollars.

Fulton County Commission­er Marvin Arrington on Wednesday backed off his proposal to strip APS of its future seat on the board, a four-year term that begins June 1.

Arrington’s concern stems from the school district’s repeated calls to restrict where and how the developmen­t authority doles out tax breaks. His initial solution? Boot the school district’s yet-to-be-named representa­tive from the agency’s board.

But at a Wednesday meeting, Arrington softened his approach. Commission­ers instead decided to invite the school board and Atlanta City Council to meet.

“I would rather see these entities working together than working to try to oppose each other,” said Arrington, who represents­a district in southern Fulton.

Atlanta school board Chairman Jason Esteves said he’s willing to talk to county officials “about how we can be more equitable in how these tax incentives are granted.”

“As long as APS tax dollars are at stake, APS deserves a voice,” he said.

For years therehas been friction between the school district and the county developmen­t agency.

APS officials contend tax abatements awarded by the developmen­t authority reduced the school system’s revenue by millions of dollars in recent years.

District officials said the agency hands out too many tax breaks in “red-hot” areas such as Midtown and Buckhead, where APS officials don’t believe public money is needed to spur luxury developmen­ts.

Others agree, including one of Arrington’s fellow commission­ers who has called for greater scrutiny of the agency’s deals.

“A lot of those projects

would have happened without the tax abatements. So, what we really did was give away APS money, city of Atlanta money and Fulton County general fund money that wasn’t needed,” said Commission­er Lee Morris, whose district includes Buckhead.

Nearly two years ago, to address those concerns, APS was promised that it would get a representa­tive on the nine-member board, starting in 2021.

Since then, school officials continued to criticize

the developmen­t agency.

In October, the school board unanimousl­y approved a resolution calling for the agency to stop handing out incentives for projects located within the city. The city’s economic developmen­t arm, Invest Atlanta, should be the only one giving those tax breaks in the city, APS argued. The Atlanta City Council also approved a resolution making the same case.

And for at least two straight years, APS has made it a legislativ­e priority to try

to restrict the tax breaks handed out by the county agency to only “those projects that would not be developed otherwise.”

Arrington said critics need to be educated about the benefits of the developmen­t authority, including jobs and future tax revenue generated by projects.

“I don’t think everyone sees the full picture. I think they’re looking at the shortterm loss, but they’re not looking at the long-term gain” he told commission­ers.

 ?? PHIL SKINNER/AJC FILE ?? District officials think Fulton County’s developmen­t authority board (shown here in 2019) hands out too many tax breaks in hot developmen­t areas such as Midtown and Buckhead.
PHIL SKINNER/AJC FILE District officials think Fulton County’s developmen­t authority board (shown here in 2019) hands out too many tax breaks in hot developmen­t areas such as Midtown and Buckhead.

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