The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Inside City Hall
PROMISED CABINET SHAKEUP BEGINS, AS 4 DEPARTMENT HEADS EXIT
It was mid-november, and one of your City Hall insiders asked then-candidate Andre Dickens during a debate if he planned to replace any existing cabinet members shortly after taking office. “I have individuals in my head whose resignation I would ask for,” Dickens said during the Atlanta Press Club debate. “There will be only a few that I know of that I will retain.”
Since Dickens took office, we’ve been looking out for when that shakeup might happen, and who would be affected. We got answers last week, when we got word that four top department heads were leaving their posts: Planning Commissioner Tim Keane, Chief Procurement Officer Martin Clarke, Parks and Recreation Commissioner John Dargle and Human Resources Commissioner Jeffrey Norman.
Over the past few weeks, we heard some of those names thrown around as possible casualties of the transition at City Hall. We’ll also note that some turnover is normal when a new mayor takes over (Bottoms made every cabinet member turn in their resignation 90 days into her term).
What’s significant are the areas where Dickens wants fresh leadership — he has especially mentioned procurement as a department where he wants to see reform. And as he was running for mayor, Dickens pushed back on rezoning proposals by Keane’s planning department.
Speaking of Dickens’ inner circle: His close network of advisers was rounded out Friday when the mayor’s office announced it had hired Odie Donald as chief of staff.
Donald, a Douglass High and Georgia State grad, is returning to his native Atlanta after serving as city administrator for the Augusta-richmond County consolidated government for the past 15 months.
According to local news reports in Augusta, Donald had a three-year contract
there, and tensions ran high among the commissioners after the news was announced. “I just don’t understand what happened,” one Augusta commissioner said. “It seems to me like maybe he’s in a hurry to get back to Atlanta.”
Before Donald starts his new City Hall gig Feb. 28, his Tedxcollierheights Talk from early 2020 is worth a watch.
ICYMI: Team Dickens is confident that several longstalled affordable housing developments will move forward after the mayor pitched a resolution to a years-long legal dispute between the city and a prominent developer last week. We’re now on the lookout for more specifics about the deal, and the breakdown in pricing for the new housing.
Also, the AJC’S Chelsea Prince has a writeup about the recent rash of nightclub shootings in Atlanta, and how Atlanta police are working on a plan to present to the mayor’s office.
The Atlanta City Council is mourning the death of Larry
Dingle, the former clerk of council who worked for the city from 1969 to 1990.
“During his decades-long career as a police officer, the first African American Clerk of Council, and attorney, he was known as a considerable talent that received many honors and distinctions. We are so deeply grateful for his service to our city and extend our sympathies to his family and to all those who admired him,” the Council said in a statement Sunday.
Council corner: The City Council met at 1 p.m. Monday, and considered legislation to add members to the still-dormant Public Safety Commission. The Council also asked MARTA to give them a report on the funding for the expansion of the Campbellton Road Corridor and Greenbriar Transit Hub projects (more on that later).
What’s coming up: Today at 5 p.m. Council members Marci Collier Overstreet, Antonio Lewis and Andrea Boone are hosting a town hall following MARTA’S announcement that it plans to build a bus rapid transit line — instead of light rail — along southwest Atlanta’s Campbellton Road. The officials are pushing for more investment in the corridor.