The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

City clerk: Council candidate meets qualificat­ions, can run

- By Adrianne Murchison adrianne.murchison@ajc.com

The head of Alpharetta elections said accusation­s a City Council candidate is ineligible to run for office are unfounded. But the accuser said he intends to pursue the matter further.

City Council candidate Donna Murphy has met the qualificat­ions to run and serve in office, according to state law and the city charter, Erin Cobb said in a Tuesday state- ment. Cobb, who is also city clerk, announced her decision Tuesday following a pub-

hearing on the matter that was held Monday.

“I feel it was purely political and it was personally diffi- cult,” Murphy said Wednesday.

Murphy, 61, is running for City Council Post 1 against incumbent Donald Mitch- ell. Her candidacy was ques- tioned by Clifford Martin, a longtime resident. He alleges Murphy doesn’t live in the city, as required to run for office, and filed an official challenge to her qualificat­ions. Martin, 66, ran for City Coun-

twice in recent years and has told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on he is acting as a concerned citizen in raising objec- tions to Murphy’s eligibilit­y.

Murphy lives in downtown Alpharetta on Commerce Street. But Martin submit- ted 2021 notices from the Forsyth County Board of Assessors to the city clerk that indicate a homestead property tax exemption for property Murphy and her husband own in Cumming. Homestead tax exemptions are granted on a person’s primary residence.

Forsyth County guidelines require only one of them (Mur-

’s husband) make the Cumming home their primary residence to qualify for the homestead exemption, Murphy told the AJC. The apartment she is leasing in Alpharetta is in her name only.

According to Cobb, an attorney for Murphy provided cop- ies of Alpharetta rent leases in her name, rent checks utility bills and her voter registra- tion card showing her Commerce Street address.

Martin told the AJC he con- tinues to believe Murphy is ineligible based on a Forsyth County applicatio­n for homestead exemption that she signed in 2016.

Martin said he plans to take action through the Secretary of State’s office to have Murphy’s voter registrati­on card invalidate­d.

“That would prohibit her also from running or serving,“Martin said.

Murphy said that if she hasn’t contacted Forsyth County to let officials know that she resides in Alpharetta, it was an unintentio­nal oversight.

“I’m a legal (Alpharetta) resident and I proved it,” she said. “This makes people not like politics or the political process. Its so sad and unfor- tunate.”

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