The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Proposed deal reached in housing lawsuit

Housing authority reaches potential end to dispute over land sale.

- By Willoughby Mariano wmariano@ajc.com

Atlanta Housing Authority reaches tentative deal to end dispute over sale of land where public projects once stood.

Atlanta’s housing authority has reached a tentative deal to end a two-year dispute over the sale of land where the city’s public hous

ing projects once stood. The agency filed suit in 2017 to stop its longtime developmen­t partner The Integral Group from acquiring the properties. Sales

contracts did not require Integral to build affordable housing on the sites.

The potential settlement, which was reached Dec. 18, allows Integral to acquire the property and requires it to provide affordable housing, said company attorney Wayne Kendall, who did not provide details. It is vindicatio­n for the developer, he said.

“The whole narrative that this was going to be a sweetheart deal was false,” Kendall said.

The chair of the housing authority’s Board of Commission­ers stressed that it must vote on the proposal before it goes into effect. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t must also give its written approval.

“Atlanta Housing would like to get this behind us,” Dr. Christophe­r Edwards said in a written statement.

The proposed settlement is part of a winding down of tensions among the authority, Integral and Renee Glover, the agency’s former head.

A long-running partnershi­p between Integral co-founder Egbert Perry and Glover was key to transformi­ng AHA’s derelict housing projects into mixed income properties during the 1990s and early 2000s. But Glover and former Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed did not see eye to eye, and she left the agency in 2013.

Before her departure, Glover signed options agreements with Integral that set forth terms under which the developer would acquire sites on and around the former Capitol, Carver, Grady and Harris homes.

Glover and Perry said the options were part of a longstandi­ng agreement that would give Atlanta Housing a chance to profit from future developmen­t at the sites. But the arrangemen­t alarmed the agency’s new leadership, which argued that the terms would have the effect of subsidizin­g market-priced housing for the affluent as the city was reckoning with an affordable housing crisis.

A flurry of lawsuits between Atlanta Housing, Integral, Perry, Glover and other parties has since cost the authority millions. In November, Atlanta Housing approved a settlement with Glover that would give $1.3 million to her and her attorneys.

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