The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Group quashes incentive for Beltline project

Authority changes mind on $4.5M subsidy for housing.

- By J. Scott Trubey scott.trubey@ajc.com

The Developmen­t Authority of Fulton County (DAFC) on Tuesday shot down a proposed tax break for luxury housing along the Atlanta Beltline and voted to overhaul the governance of its board, a pair of actions that reflect a changing of the guard for the controvers­ial agency.

DAFC also identified a familiar name as its sole finalist to be interim executive director — Sarah-elizabeth Langford, a well-known real estate lawyer, daughter of a civil rights leader, Georgia Board of Regents member and ex-wife of former Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed.

DAFC, long criticized as a rubber stamp that grants lucrative tax breaks for projects in well-off parts of the county, deadlocked in a 4-4 vote, turning down the $4.5 million subsidy for Fairfield Residentia­l, which had received preliminar­y approval just a few months ago.

But much has changed since that time.

In a series of investigat­ive reports since early June, The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on revealed a culture of loose financial oversight at DAFC under the leadership of former chairman Bob Shaw. Board members awarded themselves per diems or stipends that elected county commission­ers later determined might not have been legal.

Shaw resigned from the board and in recent months four new members have joined.

Earlier this month, an AJC analysis showed DAFC gave preliminar­y or final approval to more than $328 million in tax breaks since the beginning of 2018, with the overwhelmi­ng majority going to projects in hot markets like Buckhead, Midtown and the length of the Beltline loop.

One of those projects granted preliminar­y approval was Fairfield Piedmont, the proposed developmen­t of 392 apartments on the site of a former extended-stay motel at 1944 Piedmont Circle NE.

To comply with the city’s inclusiona­ry zoning rules, the project proposed 59 workforce housing units, or ones affordable to a family of four earning about $69,000 per year or 80% of the Area Median Income.

But the developer said the incentive would not produce additional affordable units beyond those required by zoning. Instead, developers said extraordin­ary costs such as demolition of the dilapidate­d hotel, severe topography issues and environmen­tal remediatio­n would cut into potential profitabil­ity of developing the site.

Developer Tommy Brunson did not dispute the apartment market is hot, particular­ly near the Beltline. But he said some $7 million in pre-developmen­t costs not covered by the incentive could cause returns to fall below the threshold desired by institutio­nal investors.

“It makes this project infeasible from an economic standpoint in this market,” Brunson said.

But authority members Tom Tidwell and Kyle Lamont said some of the developer’s remediatio­n cost can be covered by state brownfield tax credits.

Three residents submitted public comment in favor of the project, saying the site is currently a haven for drugs and other crime. Two residents spoke against it. One, Julian Bene, a longtime critic of DAFC, said Atlanta’s school children should not bear the brunt of a tax break for luxury apartments.

Board chairman Michel “Marty” Turpeau IV voted in favor and was joined by state Sen. Brandon Beach, the board’s vice chairman, Treasurer Sam Bacote and Johns Creek Mayor Mike Bodker.

Lamont, Fulton Schools Superinten­dent Mike Looney, Atlanta Public Schools executive Erica Long and Tidwell voted against the project.

It was only the second DAFC board vote against incentive in recent memory and the first since 2019.

Board changes

Last month, Tidwell and a majority of the board pushed to start discussion­s on a number of changes to how DAFC is managed and how it vets projects. The board also started discussion­s for a deep probe into the authority’s finances under former leadership.

Among concerns is the power of the board’s executive committee. DAFC bylaws establish a five-member executive committee that holds significan­t power and can conduct some business on its own.

That committee can have a quorum of as few as three members, with as few as a two-member voting majority. The executive committee sets policies for the full board and has in the past hired lobbyists and a public relations firm on the authority’s behalf.

On Tuesday, Tidwell pushed again for a change that would make the executive committee a four-member recommendi­ng body rather than a committee that can approve contracts and other authority business without input of the overall board.

The board approved the change by a 5-3 vote, with Beach, Looney and Turpeau opposed.

The DAFC board also approved plans for a deeper review of its bylaws and internal processes to be led by Bodker with a report in 60 days.

Langford sole finalist to be interim leader

Turpeau, who in addition to chairman has served for several months as interim executive director, has promised to relinquish the staff role by the end of August.

The authority on Friday published a news release naming Langford as sole finalist to be the next interim leader. “Sarah-elizabeth has both the experience and the drive to lead our developmen­t authority forward in our desired focus to create more economic developmen­t opportunit­ies in South Fulton County, including quality, safe affordable housing to ensure community retention,” Turpeau said in a news release.

According to her bio, Langford is listed as president of Five Points Developmen­t, an affordable housing company. The Howard University law school graduate also has worked in the government of Washington, D.C., and as an officer at National Church Residences.

“Throughout my career, I’ve focused on economic developmen­t as a means to serve people and communitie­s. I look forward to keeping Fulton County competitiv­e with other markets as we also seek to bring equitable economic opportunit­ies and benefits to our diverse communitie­s across Fulton County,” Langford said.

A board vote is expected next month. Langford’s role is considered interim as the authority expects to conduct a search for a permanent leader, said Turpeau, who added that Langford is not disqualifi­ed from seeking that role

The board also hired longtime community improvemen­t district executive Tad Leithead as a consultant.

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