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Archive for August, 2009

Rev. Jesse Jackson to pray banks will stop being banks

Monday, August 31st, 2009

We giggled when Gov. Sonny Perdue prayed for rain because, well, the whole affair was just silly. Everyone knows God is too busy fighting health care reform and strip clubs to care about a drought.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson, always one for a challenge, is gonna try and one-up Perdue. Tonight outside the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta in Midtown, the founder of the RainbowPUSH Coalition will hold a 6 p.m. prayer vigil. His wish to the heavens? Lord, convince banks to “restructure loans, not foreclose on homes.”

Jackson will be joined by Americans for Democratic Action and the Georgia Coalition for the People’s Agenda. An event organizer told CL that Jackson’s prepared, if need be, to practice some of that good ole fashioned civil disobedience to help raise awareness.

It’s a noble idea, especially here in hard-hit Georgia, home to some of the harshest foreclosure laws for homeowners. But good luck. You might find it’s a helluva lot easier convincing God to make it rain than it is bankers to restructure deals.

Last week’s top posts: CL gets a new owner, the mayoral ‘machine’ malfunctions, and more!

Monday, August 31st, 2009

1. In the auction for Creative Loafing, the winning bidder is … (… these guys. Hey, they seem pretty OK!)

2. The mayoral ‘machine’ goes haywire, Reed fires back (Memo urges Atlanta’s black leaders to rally behind a single black mayoral candidate — to keep a white candidate out of office.)

3. Wendy Whitaker, symbol of flawed sex offender law, rearrested (When she was 17, Whitaker gave one of the most regrettable blow jobs ever.)

4. Sen. Jeff Chapman’s views on water conservation, water wars (Chapman’s one of the Gold Dome’s greatest enigmas — one of the few Republicans who doesn’t march in lockstep with his fellow pachyderms.)

5. Oxendine: Build an interstate through East Atlanta? Let’s talk! (Um, no.)

(Photo by Joeff Davis)

Mayoral candidates to discuss ‘green’ transportation solutions

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Tuesday’s looking to be one of those days just jam-packed with forums.

While Georgia STAND-UP hosts its City Council candidate forum in Southwest Atlanta, a coalition of transportation advocates will be grilling Mayoral candidates about their stances on transit, bicycles and pedestrian friendly streets — and how mobility options other than automobiles could improve Atlanta’s quality of life and economic potential.

Citizens for Progressive Transit, the Atlanta Bicycle Coalition and PEDS are hosting the 6:30 p.m. forum at the Atlanta Regional Commission. Mayoral candidates Lisa Borders, Mary Norwood, Kasim Reed, Jesse Spikes and Glenn Thomas will give their take on the issues. Longtime business columnist and smart-growth advocate Maria Saporta will moderate the discussion.

For more information about the forum, visit the coalition’s website. For directions, click here. You can also try CfPT’s online transit trip planner. The ARC is convenient to three MARTA stations and Five Points bus transfer center. The coalition’s advocacy team will provide free bicycle valet parking.

City Council candidate forum tomorrow in Southwest Atlanta

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Nonprofit think tank Georgia STAND-UP will hold the first of two candidate forums for Atlanta City Hall hopefuls tomorrow in Southwest Atlanta.

The organization’s spent the better part of the year working with more than 160 neighborhood leaders to craft a “community issues platform” that covers such issues as public safety, affordable housing, transportation and economic development in Atlanta. Last month, 17 candidates — including mayoral hopefuls Kasim Reed and Mary Norwood — signed on to the platform. Other candidates will be asked to sign the community issues platform during the forum. (The platform’s too large to upload to the Web. If you’d like to take a gander, shoot me a line and I’ll email it to you.)

Tomorrow’s event, which is free and open to the public, focuses on all City Council At-Large posts and races in Districts 1, 3, 4, 9, 10, 11 and 12. Another forum will be held on Oct. 1 for the mayoral and City Council president races.

The forum begins at 5:30 p.m. at the IBEW Auditorium on Pulliam Street. Click here for directions to the event.

Profile: Louis Jones, server at the Varsity

Monday, August 31st, 2009

“What y’all have?” Louis Jones has heard this greeting nearly every day for 57 years. Born and raised in Atlanta, Jones has served up chili dogs and frosted oranges at the downtown Varsity since before the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

What is the first you do when you come into work at the Varsity?

I have to get the curb set up and get ready to wait on tables. We have to be ready to roll at 10 am.

What made you choose to work at the Varsity? And what made you stay here for so long?

The Varsity was a place that everyone worked at. During the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, this was the place to come if you wanted to make some fast money. And a lot of the time, we had a lot of young ladies that worked here, too, so that was another reason.

How has Atlanta changed since you started working at the Varsity?

Everything we have now in Atlanta is just about brand new. Atlanta used to be nothing but a country town. There was nothing here but red mud. During the days that I was coming up, we raised our own chickens and plowed the fields

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Jim ‘40 Winks’ Maddox announces retirement

Monday, August 31st, 2009
Jim Maddozzzzzzzzzzz

Jim Maddozzzzzzzzzzz

Sleepy Jim is stepping aside. The Dean is done.

Yes, the aged alderman, whose dozing antics can be viewed on the city’s own public-access Channel 26, is finally retiring after 32 years spent warming an Atlanta Council seat.

Maddox, who in recent years had taken to referring to himself as the “Dean of Council,” will turn 75 in October. During his eight four-year terms, he’d transformed his office into a veritable travel agency, crisscrossing the globe as a self-appointed economic development ambassador for Atlanta.

Even in the press release announcing his retirement, Maddox can’t resist boasting about squeezing a few more international destinations out of his gig before he leaves office:

In fact, Maddox will be leaving for Argentina this week, where he will meet with mayors and city council members from South American countries, in an effort to promote Atlanta in economic exchange opportunities. He then heads to St. Petersburg, Russia and Moscow on a diplomatic mission on behalf of Mayor Franklin and the Council.

Why am I being so hard on this poor, tired guy?

Because when I try to think of Maddox’s legacy, I draw a blank. Then the image appears of a bump on a log  —  a log being sawed in half. His Southwest Atlanta district includes the Cascade Road area, long a seat of African American wealth and political power. His constituents include Shirley Franklin, Lisa Borders and, before that, Michael Lomax and countless other movers and shakers.

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Add It Up: Swine flu descends

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Number of Georgia Tech students suspected to have contracted swine flu in the first two weeks of classes: 150

Number of cases confirmed: 12

Number of cases confirmed at the University of Georgia in a 12-day period in August: 20

Percentage of swine flu cases that end in death: 0.4

Percentage of regular flu cases that end in death: 0.1

Percentage of the 1918 Spanish flu cases that ended in death: 2

Percentage of swine flu cases in pregnant women that end in death: 6

Number of people who have died from swine flu in the U.S., since April 2009: 500

Number of people who have died from being hit by a car, truck or bus in the U.S., in 2008: 4,378

Sources: Associated Press, AJC.com, Reuters, MedicineNet.com, USAToday.com, Fatality Analysis Reporting System

Morning Newsdome: This is not a hoax

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Poll: Most Atlantans want smoke-free indoor public places

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Here’s another way Atlanta wants to be like Decatur. From Georgia PIRG:

A new poll, released today by Georgia PIRG Education Fund and the Smoke-Free Atlanta Coalition, shows that 65 percent of Atlanta voters favor legislation that prohibits smoking in all indoor public places, including workplaces, restaurants, and bars.

The poll also suggests that an overwhelming majority of Atlantans (95 percent) consider secondhand smoke to be at least a minor health hazard. Additionally, it found that thirty-four percent of Atlanta voters would view city officials or candidates for city office more favorably if they were to support a supported a city ordinance.

The nonprofit think tank, which surveyed 600 registered Atlanta voters for the poll, says Atlanta City Councilman Jim Maddox has started a task force to examine more stringent smoking policies. (My dear colleague Scott Henry just sang over my cubicle wall that Maddox has announced his retirement. We’re sure the long-serving councilman will get cracking on this issue in no time.)

5 things to do: Monday

Monday, August 31st, 2009

1) Midtown Restaurant Week continues.

2) The Medicine Showdown closes at 14th Street Playhouse.

3) Everest and Cirque du Soleil Journey of Man open at Fernbank Museum’s IMAX Film Festival.

4) Brian Lavelle plays Star Bar.

5) Taking Woodstock continues at area theaters.

See more Atlanta events.

(Photo by Heidi Geldhauser)

Bob Barr accidentally touts single-payer health insurance

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Writing for his AJC blog Friday, Republican-turned-Libertarian Bob Barr touted the overwhelming success and popularity of Canada’s single-payer, government-run health insurance system.

Not intentionally, of course.

Barr was actually trying to assert how lousy Canada’s health care system is. To do this, he noted the number of Canadians he says have sought medical care in the U.S. since Barack Obama’s inauguration:

Since Barack Obama was inaugurated President just over seven months ago, some 17,500 Canadian [sic] have come to the U.S. to receive health care. [. . .] And still there are those in Washington extolling the benefit of a government-controlled, single-payor heath care system .  .  .  like they have in Canada.

17,500 people. That’s abooot enough Canadians to fill a hockey arena, eh?

But there are 33 million people in Canada. Bob Barr is telling us 99.91 percent of Canadians will not seek medical care in the U.S. this year. If anything, Barr’s number proves Canadians overwhelmingly prefer their own health care to American healthcare.

Keep in mind Canadians are wealthy and mobile. 75 percent of Canadians live within 100 miles of the U.S and 1.4 million Canadians made overnight visits to the United States in June alone.

With millions of Canadians traveling to the U.S. annually, 17,500 is a shockingly low number.

Some perspective: If a mere one-percent of Canadian visitors to the U.S. sprained an ankle, chipped a tooth, needed Flonase, had a heart attack, choked on a sandwich, or bought prescription sunglasses while visiting the U.S., the number of Canadians receiving medical care in the U.S. annually would be somewhere in the 150,000-200,000 range.

Canadians clearly prefer their system to ours.

Some more perspective: How many Americans travel abroad for medical care?

A Deloitte survey estimates 750,000 Americans traveled abroad in 2007 for medical care. By next year, Deloitte estimates 6,000,000 Americans will go overseas for medical treatment.

750,000 to 6,000,000 is a wide range. But using the Bob Barr Method of Measuring Health Care Satisfaction by Tallying Medical Tourism®, it means America’s 300,000,000ish citizens are 277 to 2,222 percent more likely to travel abroad for health care than Canadians are to travel to this U.S, and therefore much more dissatisfied than Canadians.

Bob Barr is an accidental socialist.

(Photo by Joeff Davis)

Photo of the Day: Beer bath

Sunday, August 30th, 2009


The “world’s greatest beer” was available at the 6th Annual German Bierfest on Aug. 29 at Woodruff Park. Atlantans flocked to the late-summer event with friends, family, and colleagues to enjoy a great glass or two (or five )of German culture. Over 30 different German beers were poured.

Check out more photos of the Bierfest.

(Photo by Jessica Cargle)

Grant Park robbery, déjà viewed — UPDATE

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Dan and Alyssa Kopp’s surveillance video of their Grant Park home being robbed last fall was such a hit they’ve made a sequel.

If you were among the more than 37,000 people who watched the first video on YouTube, you’ll recall that it shows three perps checking out the house, kicking in a side door and carrying out a mammoth flat-screen TV. They were in the house less than 30 seconds.

Aided by tips from video-viewers, police raided a house in nearby East Lake a few days later, nabbing six suspects and retrieving eight stolen flat-screen televisions, three laptops and several digital cameras.

Well, apparently someone didn’t get the memo that the Kopp home is rigged with cameras. Alyssa just alerted me that their house was broken into again this past Friday. This time it was four suspects, but the MO was exactly the same: ring the doorbell, kick in a door and then, in and out in less than a minute.

And, as you’ve no doubt guessed, the robbers were again captured on tape (or, more likely, hard drive). Judging from the video below, it looks as if the Kopps have installed even more cameras than they had last year. Also, this time, no flat-screen.

It’s a pisser to be robbed twice in less than a year, but Alyssa is optimistic:

Since we were so successful in catching them last time, we are asking for the media’s assistance again in getting these pictures and the video circulated far and wide in the hopes that we’ll have the same luck.

I think we can help you out there.

(more…)

Clarence Turner ends City Council Post 1 At-Large campaign

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Clarence Turner, one of eight candidates running for Atlanta City Council Post 1 At-Large, says he’s ending his bid for office.

From a Turner campaign press release:

After careful consideration and deliberation, I have decided to end my pursuit for the Atlanta City Council Post 1 At-Large seat in this 2009 election. My decision is based on personal and financial readiness.

So what will I do now? That’s a great question. I will now redirect my efforts to more grassroots initiatives such as the nonprofit my wife and I established, The Turner Family Foundation, which we will use as an umbrella for initiatives like providing micro-grants to youth artists for art supplies. We will also be operating the annual Y.O! forum through our nonprofit. I also plan to get more involved with my friend’s like ATAC, Making the Transition Inc., Neighbor In Need and many more.

He also says he’s looking forward to spending more time with his wife and daughter. He hasn’t decided to make an endorsement in the race. Incumbent Councilman Ceasar Mitchell is vacating the seat to run for City Council President.

Turner’s full announcement is after the jump.

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Streetalk: Why is Atlanta a good Dragon*Con host?

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Jennifer & Neil, Chicago: We’re Helga and Olav from Stupendgarden. We’re a beer girl and beer boy. We’re really impressed with the ambassadors and the greeters. We’ve never seen that before. It was very welcoming. We went to McDonald’s in Buckhead and people were very accepting of our differences. Chicago has three comic book conventions, but because it’s so large and there’s so many other conventions, it’s too spread out. It doesn’t have that homey feel that it does here. You wouldn’t feel as welcom[ed] in Chicago as you do here, although we love Chicago. Go Cubs!

Raven & Treg, Cincinnati: We love it. You guys have an amazing bus system. It’s clean, efficient. Cincinnati has nothing like it. And no one yells at you on your buses. In Cincinnati, law enforcement wouldn’t cooperate. They tried to have the Botcon [Transformer] Convention there and it was horrible. When the world comes to an end, you’ll want to move to Cincinnati because everything there happens 10 years later. The bus here runs every 15 minutes. Awesome. With Cincinnati, half the time they don’t know what they’re doing. And your hospitals are awesome. We got in and out in less than two hours. The doctors were so efficient and so clean.

Sascha & Lance, Walnut Hill, Fla.: Atlanta is a pretty central location. It’s a major city but it still has that Southern hospitality. That makes it appealing to people coming from out of town. MARTA is wonderful — although it is a little uncomfortable when you get on in full costume. They do look at us like we’re crazy, but they’re nice. Though we did scare a little girl this morning. The transportation in Orlando is awful. This is the biggest convention in the South and we enjoy being in Atlanta so much.
(Photos by Jeff Slate)

5 things to do: Sunday

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

1) Last chance to check out this year’s Atlanta Underground Film Festival!

2) The Summer Shade Festival is at Grant Park.

3) Comedian Chris Hardwick performs at Laughing Skull Lounge.

4) Opening Exchanges showcases the talent of local performers on an outdoor stage at the Arts Exchange.

5) TCM’s Summer Under the Stars ends with Lolita at Starlight Six Drive-In.

See more Atlanta events.

(Photo courtesy Darren Herczeg)

Photo of the Day: Pole technique

Saturday, August 29th, 2009

Pole dance instructor Brianna MacDowell at 411 studio in East Atlanta where she teaches women how to use pole dancing for fitness and self esteem.

Check out more photos of the pole dance instructor.

(Photo by Joeff Davis)

Word: Black, like us

Saturday, August 29th, 2009
Kasim Reed

Kasim Reed

Earlier this week, a memo by African-American political operative Aaron Turpeau calling on black leaders to join forces to ensure the election of a black mayor injected controversy into, well, the mayor’s race.

“The view that the times are too serious to stand on the sidelines is absolutely correct from the perspective of a black mayor at all cost. In fact, if a white candidate were to win the 2009 mayoral race, it would be just as significant in political terms as Maynard Jackson’s victory in 1973.”
— Turpeau, from his memo

“These tactics divide the very community that has made Atlanta emerge as a leading city in the South and dishonors the legacies of Mayors Maynard Jackson, Andrew Young, Ivan Allen, Sam Massell, and William Hartsfield.”
— Mayoral candidate Kasim Reed, in an Aug. 27 press statement

“I reject the analysis offered by Aaron Turpeau. He is absolutely wrong. I oppose anyone, of any race, who would distract us from what is important today.”
— Candidate Lisa Borders, in an Aug. 27 press statement

“Mary’s take on all of this is that she is who she is and people are going to judge her on her ideas, value and ability.”
— Roman Levit, campaign manager for candidate Mary Norwood, as quoted Aug. 27 by the AJC

(Photo by Joeff Davis)

5 things to do: Saturday

Saturday, August 29th, 2009

1) Eminent Domain: The Piñon Canyon Project opens at Composition Gallery.

2) The Red Bull Soapbox Race comes to town.

3) Alton Brown and Ted Allen team up for Good Eats Live at Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre.

4) German Bierfest invades Woodruff Park.

5) Drummer KJ Sawka plays 529.

See more Atlanta events.

(Photo by Kaylinn Gilstrap)

Kirkwood crime rally minutes away

Friday, August 28th, 2009

At 6 p.m., hundreds of Atlanta residents, politicians and community activists are expected to begin an anti-crime rally in Bessie Branham Park off Delano Avenue in Kirkwood. The ralliers are responding to last week’s shooting of Kemmeth Hagen, 5, who was gunned down outside of his home on nearby Ridgedale Road. Hagen was shoot three times in the torso while mowing his lawn, reportedly by a man attempting to steal his weed-wacker.

If you miss this event, Atlantans Together Against Crime is holding another rally Monday evening in the Kirkwood Village.

Mike Dobbins book signing tonight at Tech Square

Friday, August 28th, 2009
Mike Dobbins

Mike Dobbins

Transit and mobility wonks itching for something to do early this evening are in luck.

At the Technology Square Barnes & Noble at 6:30 p.m., Georgia Tech professor Mike Dobbins will sign his new book Urban Design & People.

Why are we so giddy about this event? Dobbins is one of the metro Atlanta’s smartest — and wittiest — transportation and urban planning maestros. He’s also one of the few people not afraid to speak his mind about the Beltline or the importance of affordable housing.

In the recently published book, the a former Atlanta planning commissioner offers a common-sense look, complete with historical examples, at the process behind creating public spaces. Dobbins also places a strong emphasis on the important role communities play in making those decisions. It’s an excellent primer for planners and laypeople alike, told by a narrator with nearly 40 years experience in his field. (You can read a chapter from the book here.)

(Courtesy Georgia Tech)

Is the Turpeau memo racist?

Friday, August 28th, 2009

Judging from many Fresh Loaf commenters, the answer to that is, “Duh!”

But that wasn’t my first reaction when I read the instantly notorious memo by longtime political operative Aaron Turpeau, which calls for black leaders in Atlanta to rally behind a single black mayoral candidate in order to avoid seeing the election of Mary Norwood.

To me, the memo wasn’t racist so much as it was a plea for naked self-interest — although arguably wrong-headed, outdated and certainly politically incorrect.

Let me explain. I’ve always defined racism as the belief that there are inherent differences — character, intellect, ability, etc. — between people that directly result from race. Racism can be in the form of conscious prejudice — Jews are greedy, blacks are lazy, white men can’t jump, etc. — or the vague sense that one person is in some way inferior to another simply because of the color of his skin.

But I don’t think Turpeau was motivated by the kind of racism defined above. In fact, he was quite clear in explaining his goal:

There is an unstated assumption that having a black mayor in Atlanta is equal to having a black social, economic and political agenda or at least someone in office who would be sensitive to that agenda if not a full promoter of that agenda

In other words, having an African American mayor is a benefit to black Atlantans and their “agenda”; therefore, blacks should take steps to ensure that City Hall stays black.

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Wendy Whitaker, symbol of flawed sex offender law, rearrested

Friday, August 28th, 2009

Wendy Whitaker, the Harlem, Ga., housewife who was the subject of a 2006 CL cover story about Georgia’s then-new — and constitutionally shaky — sex offender law, has been arrested for failing to register a new address.

Whitaker is the lead plaintiff in a three-year-old lawsuit challenging the law by the Atlanta-based Southern Center for Human Rights.

In 1997, when she was 17, Whitaker was convicted under Georgia’s antiquated sodomy law — overturned the next year by the U.S. Supreme Court — for performing oral sex on a 15-year-old classmate. She was sentenced to five years probation and has had to register annually as a sex offender ever since.

At the time the suit was filed, Whitaker had been forced to move from her new house because it was too close to a church day-care. The law’s residency requirement prohibits registered sex offenders from living within 1,000 feet of a school, playground or other place where children congregate.

Since then, several provisions of the law have been struck down or enjoined, including measures that criminalized homelessness among sex offenders; forced sex offenders to leave homes they’d bought before the law was passed; and prohibited sex offenders from volunteering at church. The bulk of the draconian law — authored by state Rep. Jerry Keen, R-St. Simons — remains in force as the lawsuit languishes in federal court.

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Morning Newsdome: About that law…

Friday, August 28th, 2009

Oxendine: Build an interstate through East Atlanta? Let’s talk!

Friday, August 28th, 2009

Good morning, John Oxendine, Georgia Republican gubernatorial candidate. What bad ideas do you have for us this morning? Oh, you think we should talk about building a “parallel downtown connector” that could plow through most of East Atlanta! OK. Lemme just first clean up all this coffee I spit all over my desk.

Oxendine pitches the idea — along with a Western Bypass, a new Northern Arc, and a couple of other projects that will most likely never get built — in this campaign video.

Building a massive asphalt artery through some of the city’s most vibrant neighborhoods isn’t going to win Oxendine any support inside the perimeter.

But this pie-in-the-sky idea, which will most likely never happen, could win the gubernatorial hopeful points with the North Fulton crowd, a tried and true Republican enclave that’s thought to most likely favor Karen Handel. The Ox says that people who live in the Ga. 400 and I-85 corridors — unlike potential voters in Cobb County — don’t have the luxury of bypassing the city.

But anything to get Georgia out of gridlock, right?

(H/T to Jim Galloway)