The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Stonecrest council meets without mayor

Members vote to accept Jason Lary’s medical leave.

- By Zachary Hansen zachary.hansen@ajc.com

Stonecrest City Council moved on without its mayor Monday.

It was the Dekalb County city’s first regular meeting since Mayor Jason Lary announced his medical leave, which took place shortly after an investigat­ion revealed allegation­s of widespread abuse and mismanagem­ent in the city’s coronaviru­s relief program.

According to the council and city manager, Lary did not provide anything in writ- ing about his medical leave other than issuing a news release, which pushed back on the malfeasanc­e accusa- tions and announced he was stepping away due to recurring cancer.

“The mayor has said it in the public, but he has not officially notified the city, so there’s nothing of record,” City Attorney Winston Denmark said during Monday’s meeting.

To make it official, the council unanimousl­y voted to accept Lary’s leave of absence, which is indefinite until he chooses to return. The mayor did not provide a timeline for his expected return. Mayor Pro Tem George Turner will per- form mayoral duties in Lary’s stead.

Lary is among several peo- ple implicated in an alleged scheme to misuse $6.2 million of federal COVID-19 relief funds, including potential kickbacks. He denied any wrongdoing, refused to resign and added that he and other city officials — many of whom have been fired and replaced — did the best they could given the short time frame to use CARES Act funds.

During Monday’s meeting, newly appointed City Manager Janice Allen Jackson looked forward to a second wave of coronaviru­s relief funds. She said Stonecrest is poised to receive between $10 million and $17.3 million as soon as June, which would need to be spent by 2024.

“That definitely works to our advantage because that really allows us to go through that planning process to really see what would best serve the residents of our community and how you want to meet those needs,” Jackson said.

Turner added the city needs to be as transparen­t as possible during the next round of federal relief disburseme­nt — given how misuse allegation­s tainted the city’s prior program.

The council recently gave Denmark, who conducted the CARES Act investigat­ion, permission to continue look- ing into the matter, and it expanded his approval Monday to cooperate with “the appropriat­e authoritie­s.”

In relation to the CARES Act investigat­ion, the city also clarif i ed i ts designated marketing organi- zation (DMO) during Monday’s meeting. According to the investigat­ion’s findings, Lary and other city leaders allegedly misinforme­d grant recipients that the city had a DMO and that 25% of grant awards should go to it for marketing purposes.

However, that company — Visit Us Inc. — has no relation to the city, and the investigat­ion never found that any marketing services were provided in return for the checks. The full amount given to Visit Us by the 138 grant recipients remains unknown, but The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on has records showing the company received at least $90,000. Two other companies also received money from grant recipients in similar deals, according to the investigat­ion.

The council voted to partner with Discover Dekalb, the DMO for the county and multiple other Dekalb cities, for the next six months. According to Stonecrest’s charter, the city must contract with at least one private DMO as a way to use 40% of the city’s hotel and motel tax income.

“This would be a shortterm solution to get in compliance while we put in a formal process to search for a longer-term solution for us,” Jackson said.

 ?? Federal BEN GRAY FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Stonecrest Mayor Jason Lary is among several implicated in an alleged scheme to misuse $6.2M of COVID-19 relief funds.
Federal BEN GRAY FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Stonecrest Mayor Jason Lary is among several implicated in an alleged scheme to misuse $6.2M of COVID-19 relief funds.

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