The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Emissions from future FDA lab concern Perry

Agency: Safety and environmen­tal record of its labs is ‘excellent.’

- By Rodney Ho rodney.ho@ajc.com

Tyler Perry says he’s been steaming since 2018 about plans for a future government laboratory near his expansive movie and TV studio at the former Fort Mcpherson in southwest Atlanta. And now he says he’s concerned about potential environmen­tal risks to the neighborho­od.

A U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion lab has been planned for the former Army Forces Command building since 2018; the agency previously said it would relocate its current human and animal food testing operations from Midtown and 350 employees.

Perry has long opposed the lab, blasting the Mcpherson Implementi­ng Local Redevelopm­ent Authority, or Fort Mac LRA, which sold the building for $17 million to a developer. He has called that deal “shortsight­ed” and said the lab could hinder future developmen­t in the area. He also said he could have put the land to better use for the predominan­tly African American neighborho­od nearby.

In an interview with The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on last week, Perry ratcheted up the criticism.

Perry said he made a comparable bid to purchase the land in 2018 and he was befuddled why the authority chose Easterly Government Properties and the FDA over him.

Perry said his concerns were spurred by a recent conversati­on with the company that designed his studio building, a firm he said has experience building similar labs.

“I hear smokestack­s will emit pollution into the air,” he said. “There’s a VA hospital right next door. I’m told the smoke is harmless but I grew up in New Orleans in ‘Cancer Alley.’” (”Cancer Alley” is the nickname for a stretch along the Mississipp­i River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans which contains more than 150 petrochemi­cal plants and refineries.)

“I have a major issue with a building of that size being used in that capacity,” Perry added. “They’re releasing chemicals into the air in a Black neighborho­od. It’s environmen­tal racism. I’m very angry about it.” The FDA denied those claims. “FDA’S mission is public health. The safety and environmen­tal record for the current FDA Atlanta laboratory located in Midtown Atlanta, as well as all the FDA laboratori­es, is excellent,” according to an FDA spokespers­on. “All the current safety practices will be continued at the new Atlanta laboratory at the former Fort Mcpherson site. Additional­ly, the Atlanta laboratory is and will remain a low emission facility.”

An Easterly representa­tive also said Perry is mistaken that the building will have smokestack­s. Rather, they use Strobic fans that are part of “a safe and clean exhaust system and can be found on the roofs of hospitals, medical facilities, and other laboratori­es. They can be easily researched online. The current FDA laboratory, located off Peachtree Street in the heart of Midtown, also has exhaust fans on its roof.”

Perry said the semantics don’t matter, adding: “They still emit pollutants.”

John Hziczo, an engineer who runs a Hoschton-based firm that helps companies comply with FDA standards, said “the exhaust systems of their proposed facility would not be a concern with diligent validation of the specified design and detailed review of the operationa­l protocols.”

The Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division spokespers­on Sara Lips said the agency has no permits or applicatio­ns for permits on file for either the current FDA facility in Midtown or the one planned at Fort Mcpherson. Lips said this is likely because the proposed facility does not require a permit. Lips said the state agency cannot say definitive­ly because it has no informatio­n about the processes or the equipment used.

The new FDA lab was supposed to be finished by 2021, but because of the pandemic and changes in funding priorities, the space has not yet been built out and ground may not be broken until the end of this year. Currently, an Easterly spokespers­on said it is now targeting completion in 2025, with the number of anticipate­d employees scaled back from 350 to 200 to 250.

‘Full speed ahead’

Perry purchased 330 acres of what was once nearly 500 acres of Fort Mcpherson in 2015 for $30 million, four years after the 126-year-old Army post shut down. He held a star-studded grand opening in 2019 following the opening of 12 soundstage­s and an array of other backlot

structures such as a White House replica, a jail, an air- plane terminal, a mansion, a functionin­g diner and a trailer park.

The Forces Command building, also known as FORSCOM, was one of the largest buildings on the Fort Mcpherson campus and is a critical component to any developmen­t outside the gates of Tyler Perry Studios.

When Perry bought the land for his campus nearly a decade ago, the author- ity and then-mayor Kasim Reed promised a communi- ty-centered developmen­t on the remaining Fort Mcpherson land. That, so far, hasn’t happened.

“The building has been sitting vacant and has been an eyesore for years,” Perry said, adding that the FDA lab is hardly an efficient use of a building of nearly 400,000 square feet.

Perry has had a challeng- ing past with the Fort Mac LRA. There have been times when the sides worked ami- ably together. At one point, Perry nearly pulled out of his initial deal to buy Fort Mcpherson land. At other times, Perry has told the AJC and other media outlets that he would no longer pursue deals with the authority only to re-engage when properties came available that he wanted.

Perry and then-mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms were highly critical of a former deve l opment team t hat wanted to build a mixeduse community on about 145 remaining acres of the former Army post. That project was scuttled and now a new team led by Bishop T.D. Jakes is leading the project.

A Fort Mac LRA spokesman and the authority’s chairman did not respond to requests for comment.

Last week, Perry said he is open to buying the FORSCOM property from the government.

But Easterly said in a statement that isn’t likely to happen.

“Easterly is committed to fulfilling its contractua­l obligation­s with the U.S. Government under our signed, non-cancelable, 20-year lease agreement,” the company said. “We look forward to delivering a state-of-the-art laboratory for this important federal agency. We also look forward to being part of the Fort Mac community alongside Mr. Perry.”

While his studio, which often has more than 2,000 employees on-site on any given workday, is not open to the public, Perry has promised for years to build an open entertainm­ent district on nearby property. Perry said in his AJC inter view t hat the project will include restaurant­s, a Georgia film and TV museum and a 4,000seat theater.

Those plans, he said, “are moving full speed ahead,” now that he has officially closed on the 37 acres of additional property for $8.4 million. “I’m looking to break ground in eight to 10 months.” Like the reset timeline of the FDA lab, Perry said he hopes to have a grand opening in 2025.

 ?? COURTESY ?? The former Forces Command headquarte­rs will be home to offices and laboratori­es for the Food and Drug Administra­tion. Tyler Perry says building such a lab in a Black neighborho­od is environmen­tal racism.
COURTESY The former Forces Command headquarte­rs will be home to offices and laboratori­es for the Food and Drug Administra­tion. Tyler Perry says building such a lab in a Black neighborho­od is environmen­tal racism.
 ?? INVISION/AP 2017 ?? Actor-filmmaker and author Tyler Perry is unhappy about the FDA lab planned near his TV and movie studios at Fort Mcpherson in Atlanta.
INVISION/AP 2017 Actor-filmmaker and author Tyler Perry is unhappy about the FDA lab planned near his TV and movie studios at Fort Mcpherson in Atlanta.

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