The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No vote in hearing to remove officials

Fate of South Fulton mayor, council member remains unclear.

- By Arielle Kass akass@ajc.com

A Monday hearing that could lead to the removal of a mayor and council member in the city of South Fulton was often raucous and unwieldy, but it ended with the fate of the two elected officials still unclear.

The hearing, to remove Mayor Bill Edwards and Councilwom­an Helen Zenobia Willis, lasted more than nine hours as council members heard testimony from six

people, including the city attorney, the city’s economic developmen­t director and a representa­tive of Halperns’ Steak and Seafood Co. — the company at the heart of a developmen­t deal that led to the hearing.

Willis and Edwards have been accused of directing Halperns’ to the Developmen­t Authority of Fulton County for a $27 million bond deal it received in October, after council members decided that the new South Fulton Developmen­t Authority should be the only agency offering incentives to companies within the city.

Those council members claim the move cost the city millions of dollars in lost revenue. Halperns’

is already located in South Fulton and plans to expand.

Council members adjourned at 6:30 p.m. without taking a vote, and they could not say whether they would reconvene the hearing. The adjournmen­t happened with no discussion after one council member left and Edwards cast the deciding vote.

Attorney Antavius Weems, who represents Willis, said the process was over.

Edwards called the adjournmen­t a victory and said the hearing was “unnecessar­y.”

“It’s too costly to this community,” he said.

The investigat­ion and hearing have cost city taxpayers more than $50,000. But councilman Khalid Kamau said the vote could still occur.

Council members have been pushing for the hearing since mid-November. It was originally scheduled for Dec. 10, but the case was dismissed by a judge after she ruled that the charges against Willis weren’t properly signed. Edwards was added to the investigat­ion after that.

Monday, more than 100 residents, including at least three state representa­tives, crammed into a break room at South Fulton’s city hall to watch the proceeding­s. Some arrived 90 minutes before it started, and the number of people in the room soon became standing-room only. More watched on YouTube in an overflow room.

The ongoing dispute has frustrated residents across South Fulton, a 2-year-old city of nearly 100,000 people who are intensely interested in their city’s reputation and its success.

“We’ve got to come together,” Edwards said after hours of testimony. “We want South Fulton to look good.”

But a suggestion, for the second time, that council members consider mediation was quickly rejected and the testimony often felt more like an airing of grievances than a finding of facts. Council

members criticized the hiring of the city attorney, the creation of the developmen­t board, the economic developmen­t director’s communicat­ion habits and the mayor’s veto power. The tone was contentiou­s throughout.

“It’s like we’re living in a burning house,” Mayor Pro Tem Mark Baker said.

Council members accused Willis of costing the city $7 million by virtue of the deal going to the county developmen­t authority instead of to the city. Emilia Walker, the South Fulton city attorney, said the figure could be that high if South Fulton were to collect all the tax dollars that would otherwise be owed to Fulton County and the Fulton County schools.

Fulton County does not structure its deals that way and instead offered the company a 10-year property tax abatement.

There is no evidence that Halperns’ would have gotten a deal that would have sent that much money to the city. But Walker said she thought the option was legal, and the best one for the city to pursue. She reached out to Halperns’ leadership the day before the Fulton County authority voted to approve the abatement.

“Sometimes we want to ensure the money stays here,” she said. “The only way to guarantee that we can use that money is to come before our developmen­t authority.”

Walker also said she was concerned that Christophe­r Pike, the economic developmen­t director, didn’t bring the potential deal to others in the city when he first learned about it. Pike testified that the company was on a short time-frame for completing the deal, and he told a consultant he could not guarantee that the new city developmen­t authority would be able to complete it before the end of December.

The South Fulton Developmen­t Authority still has not closed any deals.

“This was about helping a company that wanted to stay in your community,” Developmen­t Authority of Fulton County CEO Al Nash said.

In October, Willis texted Walker about her efforts to contact Halperns’, questionin­g why she was trying to intervene. Willis then went to the Developmen­t Authority of Fulton County meeting to try to keep the project on track after Pike told her Halperns’ leadership was concerned about Walker’s outreach. Willis said she thought the efforts to remove her from office were personal, and that Walker was involved. “I suspect you are colluding with four council members to get me kicked out of my seat,” Willis said.

Recent votes in the investigat­ion have largely been 4-3. Willis was just elected to a second term.

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC ?? The hearing to remove South Fulton Mayor Bill Edwards (right) and Councilwom­an Helen Zenobia Willis lasted more than nine hours as council members heard testimony.
STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC The hearing to remove South Fulton Mayor Bill Edwards (right) and Councilwom­an Helen Zenobia Willis lasted more than nine hours as council members heard testimony.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER ?? Councilwom­an Helen Zenobia Willis (center) said she thought the efforts to remove her were personal. The tone of Monday’s hearing was contentiou­s.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER Councilwom­an Helen Zenobia Willis (center) said she thought the efforts to remove her were personal. The tone of Monday’s hearing was contentiou­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States