The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Public comment delays training center vote

City Council will hear 17 hours of input about police and fire facility.

- By J.D. Capelouto jdcapelout­o@ajc.com Anjali Huynh Anjali.huynh@ajc.com and Wilborn P. Nobles III Wilborn.nobles@ajc.com

Atlanta residents called in over two workdays’ worth of comments on Labor Day related to the proposal to build a new training facility for the city’s police officers and firefighte­rs in southwest Dekalb County.

The 1,166 comments from the public — totaling 17 hours — will be played over the course of two days starting Tuesday afternoon, meaning the City Council will not take a vote on the issue until at least this afternoon or evening.

The comments will be played until around 10 p.m. Tuesday and resume today at 9 a.m.

The c losely watched vote follows weeks of debate over the proposal to lease 85 acres of

forested land off Key Road in unincorpor­ated Dekalb County to the Atlanta Police Foundation, which is seeking to build a new training center for Atlanta’s first responders. Designs show the facility would include classrooms, a shooting range, space for explosives training and more. The site is the location of the old Atlanta prison farm.

The current police and fire training facilities are in poor condition, and the police foundation and other supporters say the new center would help with recruitmen­t and retention.

“There’s a lot of emotion involved. But these men and women deserve a new public safety training center,” one resident said in a comment Tuesday.

The debate and pushback have gotten so intense that protesters showed up in the neighborho­od of a member of Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms’ Cabinet on Monday.

The City Council vote was delayed for three weeks after

several council members said they wanted to gather more informatio­n and solicit more input from the pub- lic. Councilmem­ber Natalyn Archibong organized an informatio­nal meeting last week and said over 14,000

residents joined by phone at one point.

Groups opposing the proposal continued to protest over the weekend, holding events at the World of Coca- Cola downtown and along the Beltline.

The South River Forest Coalition sent a letter Monday to the City Council urg- ing it to negotiate a Community Benefits Agreement for the project. The Sierra Club Georgia Chapter urged the council to vote against the proposal. And the Atlanta Democratic Socialists of America published a peti- tion signed by over 1,000 people opposed to the plan.

Near the Decatur home of a top Bottoms administra­tion official, protesters rallied Monday afternoon after a flyer advertised the “[expletive] Cop City Labor Day BBQ.”

Resident Bill Dishman told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on that about 25 to 30 peo- ple were protesting near their neighborho­od with signs that said the staff member “betrayed them.” Another neighbor, Ravi Chawda, said two Dekalb County police vehicles were parked in the neighborho­od during the protest. A spokespers­on for Dekalb police said officers were “patrolling the peace- ful event.”

Two residents who declined to be named said some of the protesters also posted signs along the employee’s yard.

A spokesman for Bottoms, who supports the new facil- ity, admonished the demon- stration in a statement Tuesday.

“While all are entitled to their own thoughts on policy, it is reckless and inappropri­ate to potentiall­y endanger the family of a public official in such a manner. It is our hope that cooler, rational heads prevail in the dialogue surroundin­g the public safety training facility,” the spokesman said.

At the protest on the Beltline, near the Old Fourth Ward skate park, protesters referenced the police foundation, chanting, “Hey APF, back off.”

“The thing that we felt that we could do that would be most strategic and most important is to ... tell the APF to back off, and to let people know that these sort of machinatio­ns of city government were happening and were bypassing the will of the people,” said Seth Roseman with the Sunrise Movement, a youth movement focused on fighting climate change.

Near the event’s end, organizers displayed a large banner that read “City Council, stand with the people, not the Atlanta Police Foundation.”

 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? Protesters march to the World of Coca-cola on Friday in Atlanta to demonstrat­e against a proposed police and fire training facility that’s likely to be voted on today.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC Protesters march to the World of Coca-cola on Friday in Atlanta to demonstrat­e against a proposed police and fire training facility that’s likely to be voted on today.
 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? Protesters march through downtown Atlanta to the World of Coca-cola on Friday to demonstrat­e against the proposed police and fire training facility. Coke is one of several corporatio­ns in Atlanta supporting the proposed 85-acre training facility for police and firefighte­rs to be built in unincorpor­ated Dekalb County.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC Protesters march through downtown Atlanta to the World of Coca-cola on Friday to demonstrat­e against the proposed police and fire training facility. Coke is one of several corporatio­ns in Atlanta supporting the proposed 85-acre training facility for police and firefighte­rs to be built in unincorpor­ated Dekalb County.

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