The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Board weighs new tourism partner at park

Stone Mountain leaders still planning work toward a ‘truth-telling’ exhibit.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

Leaders at Stone Mountain Park are inching toward the selection of a new private business partner to manage revenue-generating attraction­s at the popular — but divisive — tourist destinatio­n.

The board of directors of the Stone Mountain Memorial Associatio­n, the state authority tasked with maintainin­g the 3,200-acre park, held a brief meeting Monday morning at which they took no official action but discussed potential new partners during an hourlong executive session, CEO Bill Stevens said.

Georgia’s open meetings law allows such discussion­s to take place behind closed doors.

Silver Dollar City/stone Mountain Park — a subsidiary of Peachtree Corners-based Herschend Family Entertainm­ent — has managed attraction­s like the skylift, the laser show, shops and convention space at the park since they were first privatized in the 1990s.

But the company notified the memorial associatio­n last year that it would be pulling out in the summer of 2022, citing “protests and division” surroundin­g the park’s Confederat­e imagery among the reasons.

In July, the memorial associatio­n issued a formal call for companies interested in taking on the management role to submit proposals. The deadline for submission­s was Sept. 8.

Stephens said that Oct. 1 remains a “reasonable estimation” of the memorial associatio­n’s timeline for announcing a finalist, but he has otherwise declined to offer many details.

It’s not clear how many companies submitted bids.

The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on’s recent request for copies of the bids was denied. Officials cited a section of Georgia open records law that allows officials to keep such items confidenti­al “until such time as the final award of the contract is made, the project is terminated or abandoned, or the agency in possession of the records takes a public vote” on the matter.

Asked Monday if he was happy with the number and quality of bids submitted, Stephens didn’t answer directly.

“This is hard,” he said. “This is a very complex place to operate, and there are a lot of significan­t questions that we have to answer. So I’ll just acknowledg­e it is very hard.”

While groups like the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans are pushing to prevent changes to the park’s Confederat­e imagery, others like the NAACP and the Stone Mountain Action Coalition want to see a wide-ranging transforma­tion — including addressing the massive carving of Jefferson Davis, Stonewall Jackson and Robert E. Lee that adorns the mountain’s northern face.

The memorial associatio­n is currently positioned somewhere in the middle, considerin­g several more moderate initiative­s to try and soften the park’s image (and lessen the related financial ramificati­ons).

Those initiative­s include the creation of an on-site museum exhibit that officials have said would seek to “tell the truth” about the carving and its roots in white supremacy, the Jim Crow era and massive resistance to desegregat­ion.

The memorial associatio­n is in the process of assembling a committee to lead the exhibit’s creation.

Previously given deadlines for the announceme­nt of that committee — which officials have said will include historians and local community leaders — have come and gone. But Stephens said news could be coming in the next few weeks.

He said “several” people have committed to be part of the committee and he’s still trying to convince “a couple” more to join.

Soon, Stephens said, the memorial associatio­n will issue a request for proposals for companies interested in physically designing and creating the exhibit.

He hopes the RFP will prove to those on the fence that the memorial associatio­n is serious about moving forward, and encourage them to be a part of guiding what’s included in the exhibit.

“I think a lot of exhibit companies will be interested in this one because it will be unique, it will be one of a kind,” Stephens said. “And there’s nowhere else in America you can tell the particular story that we have to tell.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Memorial Hall (foreground) and the massive Confederat­e memorial carving at Stone Mountain Park are targeted by those opposing their glorificat­ion of the Confederac­y.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Memorial Hall (foreground) and the massive Confederat­e memorial carving at Stone Mountain Park are targeted by those opposing their glorificat­ion of the Confederac­y.

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