The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

After hasty campaign, 3 cityhood efforts fail

Voters say no to East Cobb, Vinings and Lost Mountain.

- By Brian Eason brian.eason@ajc.com

Much of Cobb County will remain unincorpor­ated after voters overwhelmi­ngly rejected efforts by Republican state lawmakers to create three new cities.

Covering many of the northwest Atlanta suburbs’ most affluent communitie­s, the proposed cities of Lost Mountain, East Cobb and Vinings were billed by supporters as the only way to preserve their spacious suburban neighborho­ods in the face of a rapidly developing — and increasing­ly diverse — Cobb County.

But resounding­ly, voters elected instead to preserve something else: Their independen­ce from a city government.

In unofficial results Wednesday morning, East Cobb was defeated in a landslide with 73% of voters opposed, three years after a similar effort was withdrawn over a lack of community support.

West Cobb voters defeated the Lost Mountain cityhood effort 58% to 42%, while Vinings, a community of just 7,000 people, rejected cityhood by 255 votes, with 55% opposed.

From the outset, the movements evoked comparison­s to cityhood efforts that have proliferat­ed across metropolit­an Atlanta over the last few decades.

Starting with Sandy Springs in 2005, a number of communitie­s that are wealthier, whiter and more conservati­ve than their surroundin­g areas have formed their own cities in a rebuke of their Democratic-led county government­s.

In Cobb, after decades of

conservati­ve control, Republican­s began suffering losses in state and national races in 2016, before losing control of the county commission by a landslide in 2020.

David Shock, a Kennesaw State University political science professor who studies local government, said the Cobb cityhood movements may have failed where others succeeded because the campaign was based on abstract fears of Democratic control, rather than any tangible gripes about the county government.

“Sandy Springs had a multidecad­e list of grievances with (Fulton) County,” Shock said. In Cobb, “most

residents have been happy with county government and

county services for decades.”

Some critics believe the cityhood campaigns’ tactics may have played a role in their defeat.

After Republican state lawmakers moved up the elections from November to May, cityhood supporters frequently promoted misinforma­tion in town halls and campaign mailers, casting Democratic Chairwoman Lisa Cupid as a threat to suburbia, and claiming without evidence that high density apartments and crime were coming for their neighborho­ods.

“Use your hatred (for Democrats) and vote along these lines,” is how Bob Lax, an East Cobb Republican who opposed cityhood, described

the pro-city campaign.

Dora Locklear, the leader of West Cobb Advocate, which campaigned against Lost Mountain cityhood, recalled speaking with an elderly woman the day before the vote.

“She said: ‘I just realized that we have been lied to, and I’m so mad,’ ” Locklear said. “... I really think that there is a portion of people who voted no because they were not happy with how it was done.”

In a statement provided to the AJC, East Cobb cityhood leaders doubled down on criticisms of cityhood opponents and county leaders, who they said tried to prevent a vote from happening at all. Cityhood opponents

unsuccessf­ully sued to have the referendum­s struck from the ballot, while county officials had asked that the vote be held in November to give staff more time to prepare for the election and study the impact to public services.

“Although the county and opposition didn’t want citizens to vote, the community had their voices heard,” the statement said. “Make no mistake; the facts have not changed. East Cobb will be under increasing growth and tax pressure from Cobb County to urbanize our community . ... Cobb’s policy direction explains why the county worked so hard to stop the cityhood effort(s).”

State Rep. Ginny Ehrhart, R-powder Springs, a leader of the Lost Mountain cityhood movement, and Vinings cityhood leader Taryn Bowman did not respond to messages seeking comment by the AJC’S publicatio­n deadline.

In an interview, Cupid said the election’s outcome “speaks for itself.” But, she added, the movements may provide lessons for county leaders on how to address unmet needs of residents, such as waste collection.

“One thing that’s more immediate that we have been mulling for sometime is transformi­ng our policies around waste,” she said. “It wasn’t until the cityhood movements, though, that it revealed that citizens were willing to go to the extent of creating a municipal waste service” in some parts of the county.

A fourth cityhood movement, that of Mableton in South Cobb, will be on the ballot in November. But the political dynamics are different. A less affluent, majority-black area, Mableton earned near-unanimous support from the state Legislatur­e unlike the three others, which were approved largely along party lines.

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? A political sign in favor of Lost Mountain cityhood is seen in Cobb County in April. Voters on Tuesday elected instead to preserve something else: Their independen­ce from a city government.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM A political sign in favor of Lost Mountain cityhood is seen in Cobb County in April. Voters on Tuesday elected instead to preserve something else: Their independen­ce from a city government.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States