The
AJC, July 28, 2016, page B7 reported that the Dunwoody Development Authority
was considering a deal with Atlanta Office Investment LLC and Transwestern
Development Co. LLC to issue revenue bonds totaling $780 million to build two
additional office complexes at Perimeter Mall.
The
article indicates that the City of Dunwoody would buy these office buildings
from the developers and become the landlord. The Dunwoody Development Authority
held a meeting on July 28 at City Hall to discuss these projects. The Development Authority is a board of 7
citizens, appointed by the Dunwoody City Council to make development decisions.
The City Council does not have veto authority over this volunteer board.
If
this is all true, it removes voter oversight from financial dealings that would
affect their taxes and the Georgia Legislature is responsible for this
“taxation without representation” law we saw operate in the Braves’ stadium
move to Cobb. I’m sure the Georgia
Legislature believes that voters would not approve these deals, so they wrote
the law to circumvent voter interference.
Dunwoody
is a tiny city occupying 13 square miles.
Roswell and Sandy Springs occupies over 40 square miles. The City of
Dunwoody was formed to control zoning and Dunwoody voters should have limited
their charter to zoning like Tucker did.
Dunwoody is “built out” and has very little undeveloped land, so
“in-fill” development is the norm. But
high density in-fill development causes problems, like traffic and the loss of
neighboring property values.
I am
no fan of corporate welfare of any kind, so I wonder why State government has
allowed Private Public Partnerships, outsourcing government duties to
corporations, corporate subsidies and corporate bail-outs. These ventures tend
to fail because they are ill-conceived.
I want
to see government put back in its box to maintain roads and provide sanitation,
sewage treatment and clean water distribution.
Providing
office space for an additional 7500 employees at Perimeter Center Improvement
District (PCID) has its risks. We have just experienced the conversion of
office space to town home development in Dunwoody. The “global economy” is contracting, unsustainable
government debt is growing and US laws continue to encourage moving operations
overseas. It’s not hard to imagine that these office buildings could become
empty as soon as the music stops.
It
appears that investors are playing “musical chairs” with their investments;
waiting to the last minute to pull out of their investments and avoid ‘holding
the bag’. We see this version of ‘hot
potato’ in the markets and the worst place to be is as the landlord of an empty
building.
But if
developers have State laws that allow them to cut and run and voters who are
naïve enough to allow their cities to have “Development Authority’, they will
try to get Development Authorities to help them do that.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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