Atlanta slated to begin $125,000 study on improving area near Falcons stadium - SaportaReport

Atlanta slated to begin $125,000 study on improving area near Falcons stadium - SaportaReport


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Atlanta is poised to embark on a study costing up to $125,000 on how to involve residents of the Westside communities, near the Falcons stadium, in code enforcement and flooding issues.


The study is to be funded with a grant from a program named City Accelerator, which is a project of Living Cities Foundation. The foundation is an initiative of Living Cities and Citi


Foundation, and it’s funded similar studies in other cities.


The Community Development Committee of the Atlanta City Council approved the project Tuesday, setting it up for expected adoption by the full council at its July 20 meeting.


Councilmember Cleta Winslow, who sponsored the legislation, said the money will help pick up the community engagement process that dwindled after the city authorized up to $200 million in


city bonds to help pay for the stadium’s construction.


“These are funds that are needed in areas that have much need, especially Vine City, English Avenue, outlying areas such as Castleberry Hill,” Winslow said. “We need to encourage community


engagement to make sure we’re listening to the residents and pulling together to put together the best projects we can, that will reinvigorate these neighborhoods.


“We started with the community benefits [discussion], which kind of trailed off,” Winslow said. “There’s a need to go back in … and reengage and make sure we have all the stakeholders there,


and cast a winder net than with the community benefits plan.”


Community benefits are considered to be a variety of programs intended to make certain that neighborhoods around a publicly funded project benefit from the project. Benefits often will


include programs to train and hire community residents.


Atlanta is not required to fund a matching grant to claim the funding from City Accelerator, according to the legislation. The program is to be administered by the mayor’s Office of


Innovation Delivery and Performance, in partnership with various city departments and unidentified external partners.


This is Atlanta’s objective for the grant, according to a summary of the city’s application posted on governing.com:


The Westside Future Fund was formed as a partnership of Invest Atlanta and the Arthur Blank Family Foundation. Its board of directors was announced in December by Reed and the Atlanta


Committee for Progress, a group of business leaders that advises the mayor on various issues.


The purpose of the Westside Future Fund is to, “secure a stronger, healthier future and spur job creation, civic engagement and business investment for the historic neighborhoods of Vine


City, English Avenue and Castleberry Hill,” according to Reed’s statement posted on the organization’s website.


The Westside area is to benefit from a total of $30 million in allocated funds.


The Blank Foundation authorized $15 million through its Westside Neighborhood Prosperity Fund. The money is to promote, “economic development, improved safety and lower crime, better


education and a greater focus on healthy communities,” according to its website.


Invest Atlanta authorized $15 million from the Westside Tax Allocation District, money which by statute had to be invested in the Westside area where it was collected.


March 2015: “The city enabled these failures by placating political factions instead of taking responsibility for helping to transform the shattered neighborhoods…”


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I would be curious as to what the $125K will be spent on. There already is a built in system of community engagement via regular NPU and neighborhood community meetings.


Councilmember Winslow said she was uncertain what the money will be spent on. That’s because city is still in the process of obtaining the grant. Atlanta has collected the first installment,


$25,000. Winslow said money could be spent to retain a facilitator, similar to the process she said was used during planning for civilian use of Fort McPherson.


As someone who lives in Vine City, I’d love for the area to gentrify faster.


The local NPU and community meetings are disasters filled with internal infighting, more than most NPUs and community orgs.


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