The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

First leader of city’s DOT, appointed in 2019, resigning

Search for Josh Rowan replacemen­t will be nationwide.

- By J.D. Capelouto jdcapelout­o@ajc.com

Josh Rowan, the first leader of the Atlanta Department of Transporta­tion, is resigning after serving more than two years in his role.

In an interview with The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on, Mayor Andre Dickens confirmed Rowan tendered his resignatio­n effective July 1, an unexpected departure for a critical department leader.

Former Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms appointed Rowan in late 2019 to lead the transpor- tation department, which had been officially created a few months earlier, after Dick- ens proposed the idea as a councilman.

Dickens plans to launch a national search for his replacemen­t. The mayor did not disclose the reason for Rowan’s departure, saying he didn’t want to speak for the commission­er, though Dickens said he understood his reasoning and accepted his resignatio­n. Rowan did not respond to requests for comment late Monday.

“I’m glad for the time that Josh was here,” Dickens said, adding that he did a good job of getting the department up and running.

The department, known as ATLDOT, handles pothole repairs, road repaving and redesigns and a host of other transporta­tion-related issues. Rowan was seen as aligned with the mayor on various transporta­tion issues, includ- ing the city’s Vision Zero ini- tiative — a policy designed to eliminate traffic fatalities and injuries by reducing vehicular speeds, among other strategies.

A former constructi­on firm executive, Rowan joined the city in March 2019 to lead Renew Atlanta, the city’s infrastruc­ture improvemen­t program.

His departure comes weeks before an election in which Atlanta residents are voting on a $750 million infrastruc­ture package that would put millions toward transporta­tion improvemen­ts. Dickens said residents can trust the city will deliver on the proposed projects due to the focus his administra­tion is putting on improving budgeting and procuremen­t processes.

ATLDOT now becomes the sixth city department in need of a permanent leader. Dickens said shortly after he took office that he was launching searches for Cabinet members overseeing the procuremen­t, parks, planning and human resources department­s. And police Chief Rodney Bryant announced his retirement last month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States