The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

FAA dismisses airport investigat­ion

Agency says it finds insufficie­nt evidence to support the allegation­s of the misuse of funds.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kelly.yamanouchi@ajc.com

FAA regulation­s prohibit the use of airport revenue for anything but an airport’s capital or operating costs, in order to keep local government­s from using airports as cash cows and funneling away their money.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion is dismissing an investigat­ion into alleged misuse of airport funds largely during the administra­tion of former Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, saying it found insufficie­nt evidence to support the allegation­s.

The probe dates to July 2019 when the FAA informed the city that it was examining Hartsfield-jackson Internatio­nal related to its use of airport funds. Part of that investigat­ion involved how the city paid a portion of its outside legal bills connected to the federal investigat­ion of City Hall.

The FAA also sent the city, which owns and operates Hartsfield-jackson, subpoenas for invoices paid with airport funds from late 2013 through mid-2018.

The FAA issued an order of dismissal recently saying a financial review found no violations related to the allegation­s, and it is closing the docket.

“Having completed its investigat­ion and the financial compliance review, this Office finds insufficie­nt evidence to support the allegation­s,” the FAA said in its order of dismissal.

A spokesman for Mayor Andre Dickens said the city is “encouraged by the findings.”

The move lifts a pall that loomed over Hartsfield-jackson from the FAA investigat­ion, which was one of a number of recent federal probes into city government.

“They cleared us,” said Hartsfield-jackson general manager Balram Bheodari. “We were found to be in full compliance.”

FAA regulation­s prohibit the use of airport revenue for anything but an airport’s capital or operating costs, in order to keep local government­s from using airports as cash cows and funneling away their money. The prohibitio­n also ensures that federal airport grants support airport projects and not other uses and violating the rules could come with huge penalties.

The FAA looked into whether the city unlawfully diverted airport revenue, whether Atlanta improperly withheld documents from investigat­ors and whether the city failed to report amounts paid or services provided by the airport to other parts of city government.

The FAA’S initial notice cited a 2018 article by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on, which found records did not provide a clear picture of how the law firms divided and segregated their work. Descriptio­ns of work on legal invoices were vague.

The AJC article found airport funds were used to pay for some legal work by law firms representi­ng the city. A 2016 subpoena from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Atlanta sought numerous city records, including some related to airport contracts.

The FAA previously said the city acknowledg­ed invoices totaling more than $100,000 were wrongly paid from airport funds, and the city reimbursed the airport for the payments.

In its investigat­ion, the FAA

sought additional legal invoices and documents from law firms paid by the airport. The airport produced hundreds of pages to clarify how its funds were spent.

The city asked its outside attorneys for assistance to show that the work they were paid for with airport funds was “aviation related.”

The city said it provided FAA documentat­ion from those attorneys with additional detail on the work to “resolve any uncertaint­y and demonstrat­e that the legal fees paid from airport revenue were for airport legal matters or were otherwise reimbursed by the City’s General Fund.”

The FAA is not the only federal agency that has investigat­ed the Atlanta airport. In 2019, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission opened an inquiry into the city’s use of airport revenue.

The SEC said this week it “does not comment on the existence or nonexisten­ce of a possible investigat­ion.”

Separately, the FAA is reviewing the city’s handling of minority contractin­g requiremen­ts for airport constructi­on contracts, according to the airport.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office probe into City Hall, meanwhile, has resulted in several indictment­s, conviction­s and guilty

pleas from contractor­s and former Reed administra­tion officials.

Bheodari said the FAA also audited 48 Hartsfield-jackson leases and agreements and found one, with the Atlanta Convention and Visitors Bureau, that the agency said should be revised to charge fair market value rates. He said before that determinat­ion, the ACVB decided to vacate its space in the terminal.

But Bheodari called the outcome of the FAA investigat­ion into airport finances “expected.”

“The airport should be transparen­t,” he said. “We should be doing the right things. That’s a must.”

 ?? TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? The FAA looked into whether Atlanta unlawfully diverted Hartsfield-jackson Internatio­nal Airport revenue, whether the city improperly withheld documents and whether the city failed to report amounts paid or services provided by the airport to other city department­s.
TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM The FAA looked into whether Atlanta unlawfully diverted Hartsfield-jackson Internatio­nal Airport revenue, whether the city improperly withheld documents and whether the city failed to report amounts paid or services provided by the airport to other city department­s.

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