The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Inside City Hall

Council speakers may have shorter wait.

- Got tips, tricks or just want to say hello? Email us at riley.bunch@ajc. com and wilborn.nobles@ajc.com.

Atlanta residents who make the trip to City Hall to speak in front of council members are often in for a surprise when they have to wait, sometimes more than an hour, before they are able to.

At the start of every full council meeting, lawmakers honor community members with proclamati­ons — a performati­ve process that eats up time before public testimony. Council members run through a slog of speeches detailing acts of bravery, dedication to community service or notable sports victories before any piece of legislatio­n is read.

Critics say the showboatin­g is undemocrat­ic and dissuades residents from voicing their concerns.

During the full council meeting last Monday — when nearly 300 people waited to speak against the proposed public safety training facility — proclamati­ons ended after more than an hour. On April 17, proclamati­ons took closer to two hours.

A new ordinance introduced by the Committee on Council moves the proclamati­on section of council meetings to 11 a.m., ahead of the usual 1 p.m. start time. The change is part of an effort to encourage public participat­ion while still allowing noteworthy Atlantans to be honored for their actions.

It’s not the first time the proclamati­on process has been questioned. In 2016, Atlanta City Council President Ceasar Mitchell stipulated that only three proclamati­ons per meeting would run no longer than 15 minutes. And no council member could perform more than two per meeting.

MARTA woes: MARTA and City Council are still butting heads after the agency postponed its regularly scheduled quarterly presentati­on in front of the Transporta­tion Committee. President Doug Shipman gave scathing remarks in their absence.

“This briefing that we receive quarterly is not a courtesy,” he said. “It is not tradition. It is actually part of the intergover­nmental agreement between the city and MARTA that was signed in 2020.

“This is a very, very disappoint­ing moment. And I trust and I hope that this is not a precedent that is going to be set.”

The rift doesn’t look like it’s going away anytime soon. Shipman drew attention to the fact that MARTA made a presentati­on to Fulton County last Wednesday.

Destinatio­n Tomorrow:

That’s the name of a Black Trans-led LGBTQ+ center in Atlanta. It’s also a recipient of Atlanta’s largest investment in the transgende­r community. The group received $25,000 to open an LGBTQ mentoring pilot program in Atlanta.

“This grant will allow us to expand our services and help to fill the undeniable gap of resources for trans and gender nonbinary/nonconform­ing individual­s in the South,” said founder and executive director Sean Ebony Coleman. “This

signifies a growing recognitio­n of the unique challenges faced by our community.”

--

Eyes on 2025: Mayor Andre Dickens is only two years into his first term, but the mayor already has updated his campaign website for his reelection bid. The page previously outlined his 2021 campaign promises under an “issues” tab, as well as his endorsemen­ts and media stories. That was all replaced this year with a review of 2022 and his administra­tion’s progress in addressing crime and other matters last year.

Dickens has maneuvered himself into being a prominent voice for the Democratic Party and recently was announced as one of 50 high-profile Democrats taking on leadership roles in President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign.

Members of Biden’s 2024 Campaign National Advisory Board will have a prominent role in spreading campaign messaging and engaging voters, according to Biden’s campaign. U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock is the only other Georgia Democrat in the bunch.

 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? Atlanta City Council President Doug Shipman was irked when MARTA postponed its regularly scheduled quarterly presentati­on in front of the Transporta­tion Committee. The briefing “is not a courtesy,” he said. “It is actually part of the intergover­nmental agreement between the city and MARTA.”
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC Atlanta City Council President Doug Shipman was irked when MARTA postponed its regularly scheduled quarterly presentati­on in front of the Transporta­tion Committee. The briefing “is not a courtesy,” he said. “It is actually part of the intergover­nmental agreement between the city and MARTA.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States