The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Moore presses need to tackle spike in crime

Council president says as mayor she’d be ready to ‘get something done.’

- By Wilborn P. Nobles III

Atlanta City Council President Felicia A. Moore tackled the city’s crime wave in a new mayoral campaign video released Monday.

“Crime is out of control in Atlanta,” Moore said in a video. “Homicides were up 58% last year. 58%. That’s unacceptab­le.”

Moore is challengin­g incumbent Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms in the Nov. 2 race, as the current administra­tion faces criticism about a lack of effort in combating crime. Residents and business leaders want Bottoms to take more aggressive steps to combat crime after a 7-year-old girl was fatally shot in December in Buckhead.

The council president told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on that if she’s elected mayor, she would launch a search for a permanent chief of police, hire more officers to fill openings in the department and address disciplina­ry issues on the force with oversight and accountabi­lity as the main focus.

A spokesman from the Bottoms campaign told the AJC the mayor hasalready declared gun violence a public health emergency, and she’s tackling the issue of rising violence as an “absolute top pri

ority.”

Atlanta Police are working with the FBI and other partners to crack down on gangs and guns, the spokesman said, and that work, as well as work to address public safety is “happening around the clock.”

Some residents praised Bottoms as the “public safety mayor” when she enacted a 30% pay raise for police officers and 20% increase for firefighte­rs. Her national popularity also soared last year when she delivered an impassione­d plea alongside police and public figures during unrest in downtown

Atlanta following Black Lives Matter protests.

But 2020 broke records as Atlanta’s deadliest year in decades. Bottoms previously told the AJC that the pool of police chief candidates is too diluted to find a permanent chief while many other cities are searching as well.

Bottoms accepted the resignatio­n of Police Chief Erika Shields during the civil unrest. Shields went on to be hired as chief of the Louisville Metro Police Department, whose officers were responsibl­e for Breonna Taylor’s death — one of the incidents that led to nationwide protests.

A Bottoms campaign spokesman told the AJC that Bottoms will not politicize the search and appointmen­t of a police chief.

“While others focus on campaigns and politics, the mayor’s first priority is making our city safe,” the spokesman said.

On Monday, the AJC reported that President Joe Biden is holding a virtual fundraiser for Bottoms on Friday afternoon. Bottoms played a prominent role in prompting Biden’s run for office, and this is the first campaign fundraisin­g event he has headlined since being sworn into office two months ago.

The mayor and the Atlanta City Council recently enacted several reform efforts in the city’s police force, ranging from training reviews to changes on the city’s police review board. Bottoms recently stressed her efforts are motivated by compassion rather than politics.

“It’s something I continue to focus on and take very seriously, not for purposes of reelection, but because this is my city,” Bottoms said during a virtual news briefing in January. “The care and concern I have about crime in this city extends far beyond any race that I’ll be a part of.”

But more needs to be done, Moore said, adding the public deserves more “constant, transparen­t” communicat­ion on what’s happening citywide.

The police hired 115 recruits last year, but Assistant Police Chief Todd Coyt recently told the City Council that Atlanta’s force is down 436 officers. Moore said the fire department is also understaff­ed and overdue for equipment updates.

“There’s not a department in this city that doesn’t feel neglected,” Moore said.

Additional­ly, Moore said, “we still have a federal corruption probe. That cloud is still over city government and there’s still much more that needs to be done to make sure that corruption doesn’t continue in the city.”

The council president called crime the main issue, but stressed her mayoral “todo list” is long, with priorities that include fixing the city’s crumbling infrastruc­ture and the need to maintain fiscal stability.

Moore also said her main tenets are “transparen­cy, ethics and accountabi­lity,” adding that she will be an “actively engaged, hands-on” mayor who will interact with residents and public employees alike to ensure the community knows that she understand­s what’s happening in the city.

“After I’ve served 20 years as a council member and now going on my fourth year as a council president, I’m ready to be in a position to get something done,” Moore said.

 ??  ?? City Council President Felicia Moore (left) is running for Atlanta mayor against incumbent Keisha Lance Bottoms.
City Council President Felicia Moore (left) is running for Atlanta mayor against incumbent Keisha Lance Bottoms.

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