The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Council will offer proposal to fight city corruption

Compliance office plan for handling allegation­s to be unveiled today.

- By Stephen Deere sdeere@ajc.com

Atlanta City Council members will unveil their own proposal to clean up corruption at City Hall today.

The proposal would create an independen­t compliance office to police allegation­s of public corruption or other violations of city, state and federal law as it applies to city employees, elected officials and city vendors.

The office would have an initial budget of $1.4 million and a staff of six that includes a compliance officer, a deputy compliance officer, two executive assistants and two investigat­ors. It marks the most sweeping effort to date by city leaders to address concerns that have swirled around City Hall for more than two years as federal prosecutor­s have investigat­ed allegation­s of corruption.

The plan would provide a new level of independen­t oversight of city government. The compliance office, which would have sub- poena power, would be overseen by an independen­t seven-member board with a mix of lawyers, accountant­s and other profession­als. The members would be recommende­d to the mayor by various local, state and national organizati­ons such as the Atlanta Bar Associatio­n, National Associatio­n of State Auditors and the Associatio­n of Certified Fraud Examiners. The council would have final say to confirm the members.

Council President Felicia Moore authored the legislatio­n and it is expected to be officially unveiled at a 10:30 a.m. news conference today. Ten other council members have put their names on the proposal as sponsors.

Over the past year, as new details emerged about allegation­s of corruption under former Mayor Kasim Reed, leaders on the city council and Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms have grappled with how to restore the public’s confidence in city government. The council’s proposal this week is the most stark example of the city’s legislativ­e body exerting its authority on the issue.

Moore said the new office

would fill a significan­t void in the city’s ability to stop fraud, corruption and abuse.

She cited a recent example of the city’s law department hiring lawyers at $900 per hour to investigat­e how a former council member was put on the city’s payroll just after leaving office in violation of Atlanta’s charter. The attorneys did not determine who was ultimately responsibl­e and some council members criticized their report for being incomplete.

“We would have someone who could have investigat­ed it,” Moore said. “It wouldn’t have cost us $900 an hour.”

The Bottoms administra­tion’s efforts to root out corruption have occasional­ly been questioned for a perceived lack of independen­ce. Emails from City Attorney Nina Hickson showed her asking one of the $900-per-hour lawyers how to “finesse” an explanatio­n to the city council about why the city selected the firm.

When Bottoms created a transparen­cy officer to help the city comply with the Georgia Open Records Act, the position still fell under the mayor’s authority.

A spokespers­on for Bottoms’ administra­tion on Tuesday said it was too soon to comment on the legislatio­n from the council members.

“We just received the legislatio­n and are in the process of evaluating it,” a spokespers­on said in a statement.

Under the proposal from the council, the compliance officer would initiate investigat­ions after receiving complaints and provide reports with findings and recommenda­tions. Moore said the reports would be provided to the council and the public.

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