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Jim Walls of Atlanta Unfiltered wins investigative fellowship

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Jim Walls, the former head of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s investigative team and one-man tour de force behind local site Atlanta Unfiltered, has been awarded a $1,000 fellowship from the Investigative Reporters and Editors. Other winners include Jonathan Jones and Anna Sussman, founders of backpackjournalist.org.

Walls, who took a buyout from the paper last year, has been producing outstanding work since joining the blogosphere in March. He’s beat his old paper on numerous stories, sifted through hundreds of public documents, and even been known to get snarky a bit here and there. Says Walls:

This truly is an unexpected honor for which I am very grateful. This also is an opportunity to note that Atlanta Unfiltered would be honored to accept your financial donation to help us keep shining a light on the public’s business. Atlantans clearly place a high value on solid, unbiased, local investigative reporting (Unfiltered received 65,000 page views in the last month alone).

You can help him out by visiting his site and kicking in some cash.  Congrats, Jim.

Atlanta Blogs Today: Yes, it lives

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Ben at Terminal Station tries out a new banner image that actually makes Atlanta look cool. Good posts on how Atlanta Police Chief Richard Pennington should examine the leadership skills of Los Angeles’ chief, who recently stepped down to become a consultant, and whether small grocery stores can survive.

Jim Walls at Atlanta Unfiltered reminds 19 state lawmakers that they need to stop playing coy and file their personal financial disclosure reports — which were due on July 1. See if your elected official is on the list.

Decatur Metro’s now bursting with headline-y goodness.

Doug Richards from Live Apartment Fire returns to the airwaves. Mrs. Live Apartment Fire notes the different ways this will change her life.

Watch this space for GriftDrift’s take on ConstableGate.

Jim Galloway has returned from his well-deserved two-week vacation. Politicians immediately wig out.

Crime is down citywide, but there are pockets where it’s spiked

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Jim Walls at Atlanta Unfiltered dug into Atlanta’s crime statistics for this year and found that, yep, crime is  down citywide. But there are pockets where it’s risen sharply.

Aggravated assaults climbed by more than 50 percent in downtown Atlanta this year, and residential burglaries were up sharply in Buckhead and southwest Atlanta, police statistics show.

Aggravated assault, for instance, climbed 52 percent in Zone 5 (downtown Atlanta), even as it declined by 8 percent in the rest of the city. Auto theft was up 23 percent and bicycle theft up 120 percent in Zone 5 during the same period.

Residential burglaries climbed 54 percent in Zone 3 (Southwest Atlanta) over 2008, the statistics show. In Zone 2 (Buckhead), residential burglaries rose 33 percent. Elsewhere in the city, the number of burgaries was stable or down slightly; in Zone 1 (northwest Atlanta), they were down 28 percent.

More info at Atlanta Unfiltered.

Former Georgia politico Pat Swindall indicted for lying

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

Pat Swindall, a former state representative from DeKalb County who served a year in prison for perjury and had since moved on to manage downtown Atlanta real estate, has been indicted in Fulton County for making illegal campaign contributions.

A Fulton County grand jury indicted Swindall and two other men for making illegal campaign contributions to Atlanta Ciy Councilwoman Joyce Sheperd. It also indicted them for making false statements through concealing the fact that Swindall was the actual source of the contributions made in the names of other people to Sheperd’s 2005 campaign committee.

Shepard, who says she plans on returning the funds, released a statement today saying she was “pleased” with the grand jury’s decision. Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard and frat-tastic Swindall could not be reached for comment, the paper says.

Atlanta Unfiltered’s Jim Walls recently recalled Swindall’s past legal foibles. Click the link and scroll down to view Swindall’s entry on the blogger’s “Crooked Politicians Registry.”

Atlanta Blogs Today: Tragedy, bocce, and goodbye

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Not exactly a blog, but it deserves a shout out. Staffers at UGA’s student-run newspaper the Red and Black worked overtime to provide coverage of Saturday’s shootings. Read their follow-ups here, here and here.

Ben at Terminal Station rips into state Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine’s idea to consider privatizing MARTA.

Jim Walls of Atlanta Unfiltered uses the words “Tyler Perry,” “Tupac Shakur,” and “comp time” all in the same blog post as he delves deeper into the firing of former DeKalb Police Chief Terrell Bolton.

Christa at Pecanne Log spots the hottest trend in spring fashions during historic economic collapses! Recycled ethernet cables! Yay!

Garrett Vonk fires back at Twitta-hatas.

Jason Pye, who says he’s never taken a puff, says decriminalizing marijuana should be on the table. Also: Legalizing marijuana is now more popular than the Republican Party.

Veteran TV journalist and Live Apartment Fire blogger Doug Richards today will pull the tarp off the magical news van to pull a one-day shift in the 11 Alive newsroom. Here’s exclusive video of him training for the adventure.

Travis Fain at Lucid Idiocy wonders if lawmakers have already been forgiven for failing to make progress on transportation funding this year.

Decatur Metro. Leon’s Full Service. And late-night drunken bocce. Discuss.

FlackAttack bids adieu at Tondee’s Tavern.

Other exciting links feel free to post them in the comments.

Perdue signs TAD legislation

Friday, April 24th, 2009

The new bill clamps down on what local government officials can consider a “blighted” area.

From Dave Williams at the Atlanta Business Chronicle:

Only neighborhoods truly in need of taxpayer-funded redevelopment would qualify as tax allocation districts under legislation signed this week by Gov. Sonny Perdue.

The legislation, designed to accompany a constitutional amendment ratified by Georgia voters last fall, tightens the definitions of “blighted” and “deteriorated” areas under the state’s TAD law.

Under the new law, only neighborhoods marked by substandard buildings, high vacancy rates and high poverty and unemployment could qualify as TADs. That way, only properties too unattractive to lure private investment could be redeveloped with TAD money.

School boards — which chip in the largest chunk of funding if they participate in a TAD — still have a choice as to whether they want to participate in the projects.

The tough economy has forced some cash-strapped school systems to renegotiate — or even rethink — their roles in TADs. Atlanta Public Schools and Atlanta Development Authority officials are in talks to split nearly $18 million that had already been generated from the Beltline TAD prior to a 2008 state Supreme Court ruling that said TADs were unconstitutional. (The school board says it still supports the Beltline, just that it wants to begin kicking in money this year.) Gainesville City Schools recently voted to opt out of a TAD in which it initially planned to participate.

Atlanta Public Schools fights TAD legislation

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Jim Walls at Atlanta Unfiltered reports:

Atlanta Public Schools are fighting changes to a bill that would let local boards earmark school tax money for Tax Allocation Districts to pay for non-school improvements.

A Senate committee last week amended the bill to say a board’s approval in years past would be sufficient. No new vote would be needed.

But school board chair LaChandra Butler Burks, in a letter to Sen. Horacena Tate, says the change would cost APS $18 million. The letter did not explain how that estimate was calculated.

The APS letter asked Tate to fight to remove the retroactive language, and to vote against the bill if the language could not be deleted.

Walls has Burks’ letter to Tate posted. No telling if the controversial bill, House Bill 63, has hit the Senate floor yet.

Senate weighs controversial TAD bill today

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

If you thought the debate over whether school boards should participate in redevelopment projects ended with a Constitutional referendum on the November ballot, you were sorely mistaken.

Last Thursday, a state Senate finance committee quietly amended House Bill 63, a piece of legislation meant to iron out details about tax allocation districts, or TADs. TADs use bonds, which are later paid off by increased property tax values in the redeveloped area, to pay for roads, bridges, sewers and schools. They were the go-to option for redevelopment projects in Georgia — think Atlantic Station — until last year’s state Supreme Court ruling that said their use of school taxes was unconstitutional. In November, voters approved an amendment that would allow school systems to participate in TADs.

The Senate committee added an amendment to the bill, which has already unanimously passed the House, which would allow Atlanta Public Schools to circumvent a vote and automatically opt back into the Beltline, the 22-mile loop of parks, trails and transit proposed to circle Atlanta’s urban core. If so, the school system would contribute an estimated $850 million in school tax dollars to the project over the next 20 years, as it agreed to do in 2005. (Atlanta Unfiltered’s Jim Walls, the first blogger to jump on the story, has the language posted.)

The Fulton County Taxpayers Foundation, which fought the Beltline TAD, lashed out at the amendment, calling it an “outrageous abuse of the Atlanta taxpayers.” and casting Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle as the author of the language.

(more…)

Atlanta Blogs Today: Road elves loose in Georgia!

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

Jim Galloway, proving yet again that he knows the true secrets of Georgia politics, reveals the identities of the mysterious “8 to 10 industry and government officials” who handpicked a Gold Dome transportation bill’s laundry list of people-moving projects. Damn road elves.

Decatur Metro reports on community gardens in his hamlet and annexation concerns. Also, is Decatur Mayor Bill Floyd thinking about a run for governor?

If you’re a card-carrying Young Republican, Shep at Peach Pundit recommends you not vote for Rachel Hoff to lead your organization. Also, Erick the Editor is jousting via email with one of his fellow Macon City Councilmembers.

Griftdrift gives us the rundown on the most recent episode of GPB’s “Lawmakers.” He reports that Sen. John Wiles, R-Marietta, wants to crack down on novelty ID suppliers who alter the completely innocent and never-used-for-illicit-purposes cards. (Those guys can alter the ID? I had to use nail polish remover.)

Veteran journalist Jim Walls, a 28-year veteran of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution — and the editor behind some of the paper’s finest investigative work — rolls out his new investigative journalism website. Today he’s got more details about a sealed court case involving unfortunately named Gwinnett County businessman Richard Tucker. There’s also some questions about campaign contributions to state Rep. Pam Stephenson, D-Decatur.

There’s much more on the Internetz, buckos. If you came across something local that’s worth scoping out, post it below in the comments.