The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Critic ousted from police training site panel

Committee cites outspokenn­ess, not opposition.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

The most outspoken member of a committee helping to guide plans for a controvers­ial Atlanta police and fire training facility was ousted by her colleagues last week.

Leaders of the committee say the move was not about Lily Ponitz questionin­g the commitment to environmen­tal testing and other due diligence at the site, or her general opposition to the developmen­t that’s slated for 85 forested acres in unincorpor­ated Dekalb County.

But some other committee members, activists and at least one public official say that’s what it seems like.

“If they had played everything out and Lily continued to be sort of a more scrutinizi­ng or dissenting opinion, it doesn’t mean that the whole system shuts down,” Dekalb County Commission­er Ted Terry, who appointed Ponitz to the panel, told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on. “It just means that one of the citizen appointees doesn’t ultimately agree with the final site plan.”

The community advisory committee was created by the Atlanta City Council last October, shortly after it approved the ground lease necessary for the Atlanta Police Foundation to build the sprawling new police and fire training facility on city-owned land along Key Road, just across the Dekalb County line.

The deal was approved after months of debate and one meeting with about 17 hours of public comments, the majority asking officials to shoot down the proposal. The committee was subsequent­ly framed as a way for residents — and particular­ly those from the Dekalb neighborho­ods immediatel­y surroundin­g the site — to help make the training center as palatable as possible.

Vocal critic

Ponitz, who has a background in environmen­tal engineerin­g, quickly became the most vocal critic on the committee. She repeatedly raised questions about environmen­tal testing going on at the sprawling site, which is a former prison farm, and accused the developmen­t team of “misleading stakeholde­rs” about its thoroughne­ss.

Earlier this year, the committee adopted a rule prohibitin­g members from speaking to the media. Ponitz continued to do so, even writing a guest column for local news site Saporta Report.

“The challenge rested in the methodolog­y,” committee co-chair Alison Clark told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on of Ponitz’s ouster. “Instead of coming to the committee and addressing her various concerns, through the process with the committee which would’ve allowed us to have appropriat­e debate and discussion, the arguments were always made in the media.”

The committee is also meant to provide advice, not oversight, Clark said.

Fellow co-chair Sharon Williams said during last week’s meeting that Ponitz “disparaged the work of the committee and ... the work of our technical team” and that her dismissal was made “in accordance with our bylaws and in coordinati­on with Atlanta city legal counsel.”

A replacemen­t for Ponitz will be appointed by the City Council’s Public Safety and Legal Administra­tion Committee, officials said.

Ponitz said she did bring concerns to the committee but also took them elsewhere because it was “important for transparen­cy” to make them as public as possible.

“While the democratic process, as I see it, would involve tapping community expertise and diversity of opinion, the majority of this committee was content, and in fact protective of, operating as an extension of the police foundation-dominated media narrative,” Ponitz wrote in a statement provided to the AJC.

At least three members of the committee expressed support for Ponitz during

last week’s meeting, and said they had received many emails from residents asking for her not to be removed.

“I just seems to me,” member Amy Taylor said, “that we’re here to serve the community and taking Lily off the committee would probably have even bigger impact than some of the things out there in the press.”

The vote on Ponitz’s removal was ultimately held “by exception,” with no roll call and only “no” votes directly counted. Ponitz said she’d still be on the committee if a more traditiona­l vote had been held and abstention­s had been counted.

She said she plans to speak with Atlanta’s integrity officer about the method used.

The actual developmen­t, meanwhile, appears to be inching nearer to the constructi­on phase.

Clark, the advisory committee co-chair, said the updated site plan is more or less finished. She touted several recommenda­tions put forth by the committee that were adopted by the police foundation. Those include relocating a firing range to an area farther away from residentia­l neighborho­ods and removing altogether plans for explosives testing at the facility.

The site is located in Dekalb, but the county has little say over the project and how it moves forward because it’s on city-owned land. The county does have to approve land disturbanc­e permits, which it has not yet done.

Rob Baskin, a spokesman for the Atlanta Police Foundation, said the organizati­on expects final permitting approval in the next six to eight weeks.

‘Diligent review’

A Dekalb spokesman, meanwhile, said the land disturbanc­e applicatio­ns were ”under a comprehens­ive and diligent review” by “a full range of county department­s.”

“We cannot (and would not) forecast when that review will be completed based on the size and complexity of the proposed project,” the spokesman wrote in an email.

Developers did, however, recently receive a temporary work permit to install a fence encircling the training center site. Baskin said the barrier is currently under constructi­on.

The fence is aimed largely at keeping out activists who have built treehouses on the property and otherwise tried to stop work from moving forward. The “forest defenders” have frequently clashed with police and work crews on the property; at least two Molotov cocktails were thrown in the direction of officers attempting to clear the site last month.

One advisory committee member, Anne Phillips, recently characteri­zed escalating acts of resistance — which include destroying machinery and vandalizin­g the offices of constructi­on contractor­s tied to the project — as “reactions to Ms. Ponitz’s writings.”

“From the articles and all of the insinuatio­ns, we have had people who have begun to be violent in ways that we’ve never seen before,” Phillips said during Tuesday’s meeting. “Destroying property, making threats against people and their families.”

The various actions taken by activists and “forest defenders” are not exactly new, even though they have, for a variety of reasons, gained more public notoriety in the weeks since Ponitz wrote her column for the Saporta Report.

Activists have targeted the site for months and there have been “more than 30 violent incidents” reported since the start of this year, Baskin said.

Terry, the Dekalb County commission­er, said Ponitz’s removal actually has the potential to inflame the situation even further.

“That just adds more fuel to the extremists. They say, ‘See? The process is rigged,’” and feel violence and intimidati­on are their only recourse, he said.

 ?? AJC FILE ?? Opponents of an Atlanta police and fire training facility have made their feelings known at the Dekalb County site with graffiti and other acts of resistance, which include destroying machinery and vandalizin­g the offices of contractor­s tied to the project.
AJC FILE Opponents of an Atlanta police and fire training facility have made their feelings known at the Dekalb County site with graffiti and other acts of resistance, which include destroying machinery and vandalizin­g the offices of contractor­s tied to the project.

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