The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cobb taxpayers cover traffic control around SunTrust Park

Expense wasn’t addressed in stadium deal; Braves paid traffic control around Turner Field.

- By Dan Klepal dan.klepal@ajc.com and Meris Lutz mlutz@ajc.com

The day after Christmas, just three months before the first game at SunTrust Park, Cobb County Police Chief John Houser sent a memo to his boss putting the estimated cost of traffic control outside the new stadium developmen­t at more than $1 million a year.

It was the first time anyone put a hard number on what promises to be a significan­t expense for county taxpayers over the 30-year life of the stadium deal.

The stadium operating agreement between the Braves and Cobb County is silent about the county’s obligation to pay for traffic control, and two Cobb commission­ers told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that the issue was never discussed publicly.

The Braves paid for traffic control during the team’s last eight seasons at Turner Field. At Mercedes-Benz Stadium, the Falcons will reimburse the Georgia

World Congress Center an estimated $2.5 million a year for traffic management during football games, soccer matches and other events.

Former county manager David Hankerson, who recently retired, was surprised to learn that the Braves paid for traffic control in Atlanta.

“That’s news to me because ... we were told that the Braves would take care of everything inside the stadium and Atlanta took care of everything outside the stadium,” Hankerson said. “If it was something different, this is the first time I’ve heard of it.”

An AJC survey of 11 cities with profession­al sports stadiums found only two other instances where taxpayers funded all or a portion of traffic control. The survey included the Georgia Dome, where the state collected revenue from things like parking and food sales at the facility to offset that $1.7 million annual expense.

Roger Noll, economics professor emeritus at Stanford University, said the AJC’s findings in the limited survey are valid across the NFL and Major League Baseball. The vast majority of teams reimburse municipali­ties for police, or cover the cost with rent payments, or just pay for it outright, he said.

“Almost every case is special,” said Noll, who studies the economy of sports. “In some cases security is provided by local government, but that’s rare and diminishin­g because there is growing public resistance to subsidy.

“The Falcons outcome is the norm. The Braves outcome is a throwback to the 1990s” when those kinds of subsidies were more common, he said.

The Braves are paying for traffic control and security inside the ballpark and mixed-use developmen­t.

In a statement, the Braves said the city of Atlanta paid for traffic control during their first 43 years in town, but the team was asked to begin absorbing those costs about 2009 — when the Great Recession decimated municipal budgets as property values tanked.

The team also said traffic management at SunTrust Park is not comparable to Turner Field because the two are “drasticall­y different and require different levels of support.”

SunTrust Park “is surrounded by a privately-funded, $550 million, 1.5 million square foot mixeduse developmen­t and is activated 365 days a year,” the Braves said in an email. “Additional­ly, Turner Field was in a residentia­l neighborho­od with little activity on a nightly basis, while SunTrust Park sits in the heart of a thriving commercial district with constant activity.”

‘Board not kept in the loop’

The Stadium Operating Agreement, ratified by the Cobb Commission on May 27, 2014, outlines most obligation­s big and small: from insurance and taxes to rent and maintenanc­e.

One notable exception: The document does not deal with traffic control outside of the Braves’ developmen­t.

The omission is surprising considerin­g much of the angst about the stadium revolved around how much additional congestion it would cause in the Cobb Parkway corridor, one of the busiest in the state.

It’s also surprising because traffic control could ultimately cost taxpayers more than $30 million over the life of the contract. Meanwhile, the county’s $35 million commitment for 30 years of capital maintenanc­e at the stadium is spelled out with specificit­y in the operating agreement.

Instead, the contract only addresses the team’s responsibi­lity for security and traffic control inside the stadium and mixed-use developmen­t.

Commission­ers Bob Ott and Lisa Cupid said the county’s obligation to fund traffic control didn’t come up in the years of public discussion and planning leading up to the stadium’s grand opening.

Ott blamed former Commission Chairman Tim Lee.

“I think part of the disconnect is with the former leadership,” Ott said. “The entire board was not kept in the loop on many things. At the time, there was not a discussion of the financial aspects, it was more what are the needs to get this to work and to be safe. There was not necessaril­y a discussion as to the cost or who was going to be paying it.”

Cupid was the only commission­er to vote against a preliminar­y agreement with the Braves, because she thought the deal lacked transparen­cy and was rushed by Lee’s demand for a vote just two weeks after the stadium negotiatio­ns became public. She said the cost of traffic control was never discussed.

“Sometimes as a commission­er, you don’t know what questions to ask if you don’t know what the issues are,” Cupid said.

Lee, who lost his seat on the board to Mike Boyce in November, did not return multiple cellphone and email messages, asking if traffic control outside the developmen­t was part of the stadium negotiatio­ns, if he agreed to have taxpayers cover the cost and why that commitment isn’t in the Braves’ contracts.

Cobb Public Safety Director Sam Heaton, who was promoted from fire chief in January 2014, said he has known since early on that taxpayers would be responsibl­e for traffic control.

“The traffic was always a piece that was going to be left to us, primarily because the traffic is not just at the stadium,” Heaton said. “We’ve got people as far away as Windy Hill Road.”

Taxpayers’ overall commitment to the stadium includes $376 million in debt, a portion of which will be repaid by Braves’ rent; $14 million for infrastruc­ture inside the developmen­t; $10 million from the Cumberland Community Improvemen­t District, also for infrastruc­ture; and at least $75 million in road improvemen­t projects around the stadium.

The Braves self-financed the $550 million entertainm­ent district called The Battery Atlanta and are paying property taxes on that portion of the project.

County to pay overtime

The Dec. 26 Houser memo did more than just set out the cost of traffic control, it also signaled a major change in policy.

Instead of using on-duty officers to keep cars and pedestrian­s moving safely around the stadium, Houser suggested paying overtime to volunteer officers for the 61/2-hour shifts. It was a change embraced by Heaton and the police command staff.

Houser has since retired. Interim police chief Tim Cox said the county might reconsider paying overtime in the future, but not now.

“We’ve made the commitment that I’m not pulling officers from the precincts,” Cox said. “As much as we want to provide sufficient public safety for the park, we don’t want to compromise public safety for people making 911 calls. I don’t want to draw from the precincts and pull an officer out of a beat to direct traffic.”

Cobb has settled into a plan to have 40 officers at intersecti­ons surroundin­g the ballpark. Each officer is on duty, but volunteeri­ng to work the detail on overtime so as to not draw resources away from the police department’s five precincts.

The number of officers working the stadium has been reduced since Houser’s initial estimate, and now will cost an estimated $900,000 per year, using average salaries for 33 officers, five sergeants and two lieutenant­s.

Those salary averages don’t include an already approved pay increase, or any future wage increases over the next three decades, the life of the county’s contract with the Braves.

A big percentage of the officers come from the department’s special operations division — units like SWAT and the DUI task force — which generally don’t cover beats or respond to 911 calls.

The current estimated pergame cost is $11,066. Post-season games and concerts, like Billy Joel last month and Metallica in July, are extra and will cost the same.

The county did not budget for the expense and will instead use reserves from its general fund to pay for traffic control this year, which is another aspect that Cupid said was not discussed with the commission.

‘Frustratio­n level will grow’

The Braves said years of planning and coordinati­on resulted in “one of the largest and most integrated transporta­tion management and public education programs this state has ever seen.”

In addition to the 40 cops working traffic control, another 60 to 70 off-duty officers are hired by the Braves for security details inside the stadium, the mixed-use developmen­t and parking areas.

Retired Sgt. Steve Gaynor, president of the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge No. 13, is worried about the strain that could cause over the long haul. The department has an authorized force of 690 officers, but has about 40 open positions, according to Cox.

Regardless of who pays, fully staffing SunTrust Park and the surroundin­g developmen­t will take about onesixth of the department’s manpower for nearly three months out of every year, Gaynor said.

“There are a couple of home stands that are nine days straight, and all those people need to cover their own duties,” Gaynor said. “Right now it’s brand new, and we’re only (14) games in. But what’s going to happen when we’re 60 games in, it gets hotter and hotter and they get tired? The frustratio­n level will grow.

“I would say the membership is concerned to see what’s going to happen.”

Cobb Sheriff ’s Office deputies also work security inside the stadium, and Heaton said the county has started recruiting firefighte­rs on overtime to work some of the pedestrian crossings outside the developmen­t.

Goal is fewer officers

Police staffing at the stadium was controvers­ial from the very beginning.

Former Public Safety Director Jack Forsythe resigned in frustratio­n just a month after the stadium announceme­nt, with a stinging letter that accused Lee and Hankerson of ignoring repeated warnings about insufficie­nt staffing, high turnover, low pay, substandar­d vehicles and faulty equipment. Forsythe also warned that the county needed to grow the department to be ready for the stadium opening.

“As a result of these outstandin­g issues, there is an immediate need for a major infusion of resources,” Forsythe’s January 2014 resignatio­n letter said. “This need has been exacerbate­d” with the Braves’ announceme­nt, he said.

Heaton took over as public safety director and within a few months had a police improvemen­t plan approved that included 80 new positions, take-home vehicles for officers and 10-hour shifts to reduce manpower shortages during shift changes. The plan was nearly identical to Forsythe’s.

He said the department might eventually be able to direct traffic outside the stadium with fewer officers.

“The goal was to eventually not have officers for traffic at all, just primarily for safety,” Heaton said. “Will we get there? I’m not sure. That’s part of the process of doing this over and over and over, until we have what we determine is a minimum for every event.

“That may take us a majority of this year to figure out.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / AJC ?? Cobb Police Department officers work traffic control at Spring Road and Circle 75 Parkway outside the SunTrust Park developmen­t.
CURTIS COMPTON / AJC Cobb Police Department officers work traffic control at Spring Road and Circle 75 Parkway outside the SunTrust Park developmen­t.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON PHOTOS / AJC ?? A Cobb County Fire Department employee works pedestrian control at the intersecti­on of Spring Road and Circle 75 Parkway outside the SunTrust Park developmen­t during a recent Braves game. Inside the stadium, Cobb deputies and police officers work...
CURTIS COMPTON PHOTOS / AJC A Cobb County Fire Department employee works pedestrian control at the intersecti­on of Spring Road and Circle 75 Parkway outside the SunTrust Park developmen­t during a recent Braves game. Inside the stadium, Cobb deputies and police officers work...
 ??  ?? Cobb Police Department officers work traffic control outside SunTrust Park. The cost of traffic control outside the new stadium developmen­t is expected to cost taxpayers more than $900,000 a year.
Cobb Police Department officers work traffic control outside SunTrust Park. The cost of traffic control outside the new stadium developmen­t is expected to cost taxpayers more than $900,000 a year.
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