The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Adviser appeals training center permits

Filing basically seeks hearing by Dekalb zoning appeal board.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

A member of the committee tasked with helping guide the future of Atlanta’s public safety training center is challengin­g the recently issued permits that cleared the way for constructi­on.

Another member of the same citizen committee, which Atlanta and Dekalb County leaders recently touted as a valuable source of community input, resigned following last month’s fatal shooting near the training center site — and is questionin­g the group’s worth.

“I think there’s a lot of people who are on the committee who are fine with it and didn’t feel like it was our place to raise questions or push back on how things are being done. And that we were just kind of there to hear them give updates on what was being done,” said Starlight Heights resident Nicole Morado, who resigned Jan. 18, the same day Manuel “Tortuguita” Teran was killed while allegedly exchanging gunfire with state troopers near the training center site.

Initial land disturbanc­e permits for the $90 million, 85-acre training center were approved by Dekalb’s planning department last week, about 11 months after they were requested.

The permits allow grading, clearing and infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts at the site. Some of that work appeared to begin Monday morning.

Later the same day, online news publicatio­n Saporta Report first reported that Amy Taylor, another member of the community stakeholde­r advisory committee (CSAC), had formally challenged approval of the permits.

Jon Schwartz, an attorney working with Taylor, later provided The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on with a copy of the related documents, which accuse the city and county of overlookin­g existing restrictio­ns on sediment discharges and exaggerati­ng the amount of green space that would be preserved.

Schwartz also confirmed that the challenge was filed in collaborat­ion with the South River Watershed Alliance, a local environmen­tal advocacy group that raised similar issues before the permits were granted. He did not provide further comment.

It was not immediatel­y clear if and how the matter would proceed, or if it would have any immediate impact on work already underway. But Taylor’s filing is effectivel­y a request for a public hearing in front of Dekalb’s zoning board of appeals.

According to that board’s schedule, the earliest the matter could be heard is April 12.

Documents suggest Taylor has standing to appeal because she lives within 250 feet of the training center site.

“The county received the appeal for the Land Developmen­t Permit for the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center yesterday and it is under review,” a Dekalb County spokespers­on said in an emailed statement. “It would be inappropri­ate to comment on the substance of the challenge.”

The training center site, which would host facilities for Atlanta’s fire and police department­s, is in Dekalb but owned by the city. Dekalb officials, therefore, have no real say on the project beyond the administra­tive permitting process.

Dekalb officials previously released a timeline of the steps taken during that process, with CEO Michael Thurmond suggesting it produced “protection­s and enhancemen­ts (that) are really above and beyond the developmen­t policies and procedures of our county.”

Among other things, officials have said constructi­on of the facility would have “double erosion control.”

The idea behind the stakeholde­r committee, meanwhile, was to bring individual­s who live near the training center site together to provide input and try to make the developmen­t as palatable as possible for neighbors. Officials have said regularly that the committee was not tasked with weighing whether the training center should be built at all.

Various recommenda­tions made by the committee — including relocating the firing range away from residentia­l neighborho­ods, removing a planned explosives range altogether and moving the site’s primary entrance off Key Road — have been accepted during the site plan design process. They were also included in the memorandum of understand­ing signed last week by Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens and Thurmond.

Morado said she was glad those items were considered but called the overall situation “definitely not ideal.”

“Knowing real victims aren’t getting protection from authoritie­s because they’re preoccupie­d removing protesters or protecting a land developmen­t site seems shortsight­ed and an improper use of resources,” she said.

Morando said she disagrees with the use of force against protesters at the site.

“Just not agreeing with that kind of use of force, and knowing that someone’s child was taken from them because they wanted to save a forest, just didn’t sit well with me,” she said.

It’s possible that Taylor’s future on the advisory committee is up in the air as well.

While the situations differ, a now-former member named Lily Ponitz was dismissed from the committee last June after publicly questionin­g environmen­tal testing at the training center site, even publishing a guest column in the Saporta Report.

At the time, committee Co-chair Alison Clark said the issue was with how Ponitz expressed her dissent. Bylaws name the chair as the committee’s “designated spokespers­on.”

Clark said in a text message Tuesday she didn’t know how the situation would “ultimately be received by committee members” but Taylor hadn’t been “disparagin­g and/or challengin­g the work of the CSAC as (Ponitz) did.”

“Personally, I don’t think it becomes a problem as long as her work on the committee is done with an understand­ing of our role separate and apart from her appeal to the county,” Clark said.

She said the committee is “still doing valuable work.”

Its next meeting is set for Feb. 21.

Initial land disturbanc­e permits for the $90 million, 85-acre training center were approved by Dekalb’s planning department last week, about 11 months after they were requested.

 ?? JOHN SPINK/JOHN.SPINK@AJC.COM ?? Law enforcemen­t was out en masse Monday at the site of Atlanta’s proposed public safety training center as woods were cleared in anticipati­on of constructi­on. SWAT teams from the Atlanta and Dekalb police department­s, plus Georgia State Patrol troopers and representa­tives from other agencies, were at the site in southwest Dekalb.
JOHN SPINK/JOHN.SPINK@AJC.COM Law enforcemen­t was out en masse Monday at the site of Atlanta’s proposed public safety training center as woods were cleared in anticipati­on of constructi­on. SWAT teams from the Atlanta and Dekalb police department­s, plus Georgia State Patrol troopers and representa­tives from other agencies, were at the site in southwest Dekalb.

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