The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fulton board taps brakes on incentives

Developmen­t agency scrutinize­d on past tax breaks.

- By J. Scott Trubey scott.trubey@ajc.com

The Developmen­t Authority of Fulton County for many years seldom heard a proposal for a tax break it didn’t like.

But a financial scandal and public scrutiny of the agency’s incentive deals coupled with an overhaul of the authority’s board appears to have brought a sea change. In recent months, an agency known for its deference to developers and big businesses is starting to push back.

From January 2018 to this past May, the DAFC board heard 86 proposed tax breaks and turned down just one, an Atlanta Journal-constituti­on analysis shows.

But since June, following a series of investigat­ive reports by AJC and Channel 2 Action News, DAFC approved just one tax break, for a distributi­on center in Union City. The authority in that time rejected one proposed tax break for a project near the Beltline and pumped the brakes on two others.

Earlier this month, the developer of Ponce City Market temporaril­y withdrew a proposal for an $8 million property tax break for the popular Beltline attraction that apparently did not have the support needed to pass. Jamestown Properties said it would take public and board feedback for its second phase and return with a new proposal.

The board also tabled considerat­ion of a $3.7 million incentive for a second Beltline project on the site of an unpermitte­d landfill after board members appeared to be deadlocked on the matter.

In August, the board rejected a requested $4.4 million tax break for another Beltline-area project — an apartment project at Piedmont Avenue and Piedmont Circle — even though it had given the same developer preliminar­y approval just a few months earlier.

That decision came after an AJC investigat­ion found DAFC provided preliminar­y or final approval for more than $328 million in tax breaks since 2018. Most went to projects in favorable markets such as Midtown or on the Beltline.

Several members of Atlanta’s legislativ­e delegation have called for reforms to DAFC, with at least one calling for its dissolutio­n. Legislatio­n to curb DAFC’S operations could come next year.

Anna Foote, a former board member of Invest Atlanta and a critic of DAFC, said the changes come as board is under “extraordin­ary scrutiny.” The past six months exposed that DAFC didn’t have policies and other guardrails in place to prevent abuse of its finances, Foote said. In recent months, the authority has instituted new rules related to board compensati­on and governance.

But while DAFC might be tightening now, the agency must fund its operations and staff, Foote said, which could put pressure on the organizati­on. DAFC earns the bulk of its operating revenue from fees it charges developers as part of the tax break deals.

“Just because you’ve started down that path doesn’t mean you stay there,” she said.

New controls, new focus

Among the findings of the AJC and Channel 2 investigat­ion was that former Chairman Bob Shaw and former board officers Samuel Jolley Jr. and Walter Metze were paid lavish per diems or stipends, sometimes multiple times per day. The Fulton County Board of Commission­ers later could find no evidence per diems were ever authorized.

Shaw, who was up for reappointm­ent, was also later revealed to have had a secret job at DAFC while serving as chairman. Shaw withdrew from considerat­ion following the reports.

In recent months, the board, under new chairman Michel “Marty” Turpeau IV, enacted further ethics and financial controls.

What’s more, so far this year the Board of Commission­ers has appointed five new members to the nine-member board. A change in the authority’s bylaws granted one representa­tive each from Atlanta Public Schools and Fulton County Schools. That helped address criticism that while school systems fund an outsize portion of tax incentives to businesses, they had little say in authority decisions.

DAFC also has taken steps to improve transparen­cy. In the coming months, the board is expected to create a more formal structure for evaluating projects. Sarah-elizabeth Langford, the authority’s new interim executive director, has been tasked with developing new incentive tools to help smaller businesses and poor areas.

Turpeau said DAFC is “moving toward a more intentiona­l focus on affordabil­ity, community benefits, (minority- and femaleowne­d businesses) and quality developmen­t for underserve­d

areas of our county,” while recognizin­g the authority

serves the whole of Fulton. “Our board is comprised of knowledgea­ble community leaders who each bring their unique experience and perspectiv­e about economic developmen­t and how to use incentives to benefit Fulton County,” Turpeau said in an email.

Still, DAFC faced backlash earlier this month after the AJC published a story about proposed incentives to Jamestown for the second phase of Ponce City Market.

“Fulton developmen­t authority, fresh off a scandal, not making a great case for its own existence,” state Rep. Josh Mclaurin, D-sandy Springs, said in a quote-tweet linking to the AJC story. “Dissolve it.”

Jamestown withdrew the request prior to the Nov. 16 meeting.

 ?? JAMESTOWN PROPERTIES ?? The developer of Ponce City Market temporaril­y withdrew a proposal for an $8 million property tax break for the popular Beltline attraction.
JAMESTOWN PROPERTIES The developer of Ponce City Market temporaril­y withdrew a proposal for an $8 million property tax break for the popular Beltline attraction.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB. SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Under Michel “Marty” Turpeau IV, the Developmen­t Authority of Fulton County enacted ethics and financial controls.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB. SHIN@AJC.COM Under Michel “Marty” Turpeau IV, the Developmen­t Authority of Fulton County enacted ethics and financial controls.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States