The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta mayor sends home 7 senior staffers

Moves help Bottoms separate herself from former administra­tion.

- By Stephen Deere sdeere@ajc.com and J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms shook up her administra­tion on Friday, announcing the

departures of several holdovers from former Mayor Kasim Reed’s government, further separating herself from her predecesso­r.

Earlier this month, Bottoms demanded the resignatio­ns of 27 of her most senior staff — from Police Chief Erika Shields to Watershed Commission­er Kishia Powell.

Bottoms accepted the resignatio­ns of former Communicat­ions Director Anne Torres and Chief Financial Officer Jim Beard almost immediatel­y.

But more than two dozen other top city officer ia lswai ted forword of their fates during a tumultuous three weeks at City Hall that included revelation­s about federal subpoenas for Reed’s credit card purchases; potentiall­y illegal bonuses that Reed approved days before he left office; and text messages exchanged by Reed’s top communicat­ions officer that appear to violate state public record laws.

On Fr i day, Bot toms announced five others would move out of City Hall, including City Attorney Jeremy Berry, Atlanta Housing Authority President and CEO Catherine Buell, Parks and Recreation Commission­er Amy Phuong and Chief Resilience Off iffic er Stephanie Stuckey.

“I will continue to assess the breadth of skills, experience­s and leadership traits needed to complete my leadership team, and will announce my nomination­s to fill these and other positions in the coming months,” Bottoms said in a statement. “I am excited about the successes that lie ahead, and appreciate the service of these individual­s to the City.”

Staunchest of allies

Of all the departures, Berry, Beard, Buell and Torres were among the staunchest of Reed’s allies, known for faithfully executing his orders.

Reed appointed Berry, a former Dentons lawyer, to the city’s top legal position this past April. For the past several months Berry was responsibl­e for overseeing outside counsel who were gathering informatio­n to respond to federal subpoenas in an ongoing bribery investigat­ion.

In less than a year in his position, he had become ensnared in a Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion inquiry into violations of the state’s open records act.

An Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on investigat­ion in March found that in response to a public records request for legal bills in the bribery investigat­ion, Berry produced compilatio­ns of invoices instead of the actual invoices without disclosing what he had done.

Experts told the AJC the actions ranged from unethical to potentiall­y criminal.

In a statement, Berry called the position “the dream job I never knew I wanted.” He said he was grateful for the opportunit­y to work on initiative­s “that will leave a lasting legacy on the City.”

Among them: ending cash bail at the municipal court, the annexation of Emory University, the renovation of Phillips Arena, the sale of the Civic Center, and helping to end the long-running deed dispute between Atlanta Public Schools and the city.

‘We can hold whatever we want’

Torres joined Reed’s communicat­ions team in 2012, assumed the role of director in 2014. But Reed’s commitment to open government came into question over his fifinal year in offiffice as a federal corruption probe swirled around city.

Last month, the AJC and Channel 2 Action News reported on texts by Torres’ deputy, Jenna Garland, who coordinate­d the delayed release of records with a Watershed Department communicat­ions staff ff ff ff ff ff erin response to an open records request by the station.

On Thursday, the media outlets reported on similar texts by Torres, that show she tried to stopAtlant­aBelt- line CEO Brian McGowan from comp lying with an open records request and even instructed himto ignore the advice of the organizati­on’s attorney.

“If she wants to work for the media, then she should leave her position,” Torres wrote in a Sept. 27 text about a request for McGowan’s employment contract. “We can hold what ever we want for as long as we want.”

McGowan and Beltline General Counsel Nina Hickson resisted Torres’ pressure and complied with state law.

In response to questions about the texts, Torres called the minter-employee banter.

Bottoms campaigned partly on transparen­cy and open government and this month announced plans for a website that would allow the public to sift through all city expenditur­es.

‘Transition externally’

Buell was appointed Atlanta Housing Authority president and CEO in 2016 after a battle between Reed and the previous housing authority chief, Renee Glover.

Glover, who ran AHA for nearly two decades, decentrali­zed lowincome housing in Atlanta, moving residents into mixed-income commu- nities. Glover made Atlanta amodel for national housing policy, but also earned criticism for gentrifica­tion and for giving staff excessive salaries.

Reed and Buell, meanwhile, pursued litigation against Glover and prominent Atlanta developer Egbert Perry over land deals during Glover’s tenure. This week, the city dropped a lawsuit alleging Glover and Perry forged a backroom deal to build upscale homes on 80 acres of vacant landset aside for low-income residents.

Glover on Friday called the lawsuit “knowingly false and politicall­y motivated.”

When Bottoms demanded resignatio­ns of her Cabinet members, Buell did not resign, saying the Housing Authority commission­ers, not the mayor, appoint her. Neverthele­ss, Bottoms’ announceme­nt on Friday said Buell would “transition externally.”

In a statement on Friday, Dr. Christophe­r Edwards, chairman of the Atlanta Housing Authority Commission, said the panel had informed the mayor that Buell would be leaving her position.

South Africa trip

Bottoms accepted Beard’s resignatio­n after the AJC and Channel 2 Action News pub- lished reports about a city donation of $40,000 to a dormant nonprofifi­t created to raise money for affordable housing.

The source of the funds was represente­d as a raise Reed turned down and left with the city for charity. But the $ 40,000 donation came back to the city in a check dated March 5 for ad if rent purpose: to cover some of the expenses of a controvers­ial trip Reed and staffff members took to South Africa in the spring of 2017.

The maneuver seemed to be an attempt by Reed to fulfill a promise he made to have private donations reimburse taxpayers for some of the trip’s expenses. Beard sent an city invoice to the nonprofifi­t from his private email address.

After news reports about he transactio­n, federal prosecutor­s issued a subpoena for records related to the deal.

When Bottoms accepted Beard’s resignatio­n in a letter on April 11, Beard was attending a six-week executive training program at Harvard University.

The city paid $ 60,000 for the training in July, after Reed approved it. But it won’t benefifit taxpayers. According to Bottoms’ letter to Beard, his last day is May 18, the day after the programend­s.

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