Posted inPolitics & Policy

Public Utility Commissions Are Exceptionally White. It’s Hurting Black Residents.

As the new head of a group of conservation voters in Georgia, Brionté McCorkle wanted to sit down with regulators who oversee the state’s utilities to talk about carbon emissions. But when she got a meeting with one of those regulators, she realized there were deeper problems. The regulator she spoke with didn’t understand the […]

Posted inEducation, Elections, Uncategorized

What Community Members Are Looking For in APS Board Elections

This story was produced in collaboration with Atlanta Civic Circle. Early voting starts in less than a month for Atlanta School Board Elections, with 10 candidates vying for your vote — and the opportunity to help shape the city’s public school system. These elections have extremely low turnout but come with high stakes — especially […]

Posted inCity Politics

Two City Council Members Will Push to Put ‘Cop City’ on the Ballot

Two Atlanta City Council members are drafting legislation that would put plans to build the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center, dubbed “Cop City,” up for a ballot referendum in November. Their efforts come in the aftermath of the city attorney announcing on Monday that officials would not begin to verify the 116,000 signatures collected by […]

Posted inVoting

Why Voting Rights for People with Felony Convictions Matters

Kareemah Hanifa is an Atlanta-based community organizer and activist who helps people with felony convictions restore their voting rights. She leads the Inner-City Muslim Action Network’s No Taxation Without Representation campaign, fighting state laws that bar many Georgians with criminal records from casting ballots.  But Hanifa was advocating for people behind bars decades before she […]

Posted inCity Politics

Will Council Members Who Voted to Fund ‘Cop City’ Lose Black Support?

Controversy over the Atlanta City Council’s decision to fund construction for the divisive public safety training center — nicknamed “Cop City” by critics — continues this week as activists in opposition prepare for an entrenched political battle. Stop Cop City organizers launched their week of action over the weekend, with events planned through July 1. […]

Posted inCity Politics, Jobs, Public Services

Atlanta’s City Planning Leaders Are Struggling to Hire People. They’re Not Alone.

  Could change be in store for Atlanta’s Neighborhood Planning Unit system?  At a recent budget hearing for Atlanta’s Department of City Planning, leaders discussed the program aimed at giving residents a voice in how policy decisions affect their communities. Leaders of the department — responsible for long-term planning of how the city will look […]

Posted inCity Politics, Economy, Jobs, Public Services

What We Heard at the Budget Hearing for Atlanta’s New Department of Labor

Workforce development leaders from the office of Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens are making final preparations to open the first city-run Department of Labor and Employment Services in July. Last week, Odie Donald II, Mayor Andre Dickens’ chief of staff, laid out plans for the new department during its inaugural City Council budget briefing. Donald has […]

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