Press conference before council meeting |
On Tuesday, Jan.17th, one day after Atlanta
celebrated MLK day, Turner Field Community Benefits Coalition (TFCBC) residents
and students packed City Hall to speak out against Turner Field stadium
purchasers. On Dec.31st, 2016, Georgia State University and its
development partners closed a purchase deal to acquire Turner Field stadium and
its surrounding lots. This deal, however, did not include the detailed Community
Benefits Agreement TFCBC has researched and arranged over the past two years.
GSU and Carter Development have taken a stance of non-negotiation, and no-CBA,
despite active outreach by Turner Field residents to the contrary. The refusal
to include a Community Benefits Agreement in the purchase deal, first through
the sale by the City, and later in the purchase by GSU, has created a climate of
non-negotiation. Without a CBA, there is no guarantee that development in and
around Turner Field will not displace families, nor economically benefit residents
who remain. The welfare of the Turner Field Neighborhoods, and especially its
most low-income residents, has been dramatically de-prioritized by the City of
Atlanta, and their future neighbor, Georgia State University.
Students join residents at the MLK march the day before |
In response to these actions of disregard, on Tuesday, residents
and students spoke out. Protest began when Mayor Kasim Reed took the podium at
City Hall. Dozens turned their backs in silence to Reed, who has overseen the
stadium’s sale and its subsequent (mis)allocation of purchase funds. They
remained standing throughout Reed’s speech, physically filling most of the
audience space. Reed exited the council, but not TFCBC’s protest.
Community members turn their back as Mayor Reed speaks |
Residents and students again took the floor during public
comment. For nearly four hours, Morehouse and Spellman College students,
Peoplestown residents, GSU students, NPU-V district chairs, and Housing Justice
League organizers spoke out against the CBA’s absence in the Turner Field
purchase deal. Senator Vincent Fort detailed the history of the Turner Field
neighborhoods, and how the purchasers’ refusal to sign a CBA was only the
latest in a string of unfriendly developments. “The residents of Peoplestown
and beyond have been put under the thumb of developers for far too long. Their
priorities for their community need to be raised up. The Turner Field
Neighborhoods demand a Community Benefits Agreement that acknowledges their
humanity. No CBA, No Deal!”
“Without the CBA in the sale of Turner Field, the community
was not promised safety, not promised job security, not promised the right to
stay in their homes. It is violent that the City of Atlanta would undertake
such a sale, in complete disregard of residents’ welfare,” noted Agnes Scott
activist Idil Hussein.
Throughout the comment session, speakers gave statements of
high intensity that directly addressed the City and GSU’s failure to negotiate
with residents. Spellman activist Eva Dickerson indicted City Council
representatives as unsatisfying black female role models, and highlighted the
need for non-official black woman activists to take on leadership and direct
political change. GSU activist Sam Hogan recorded dissatisfaction with Georgia
State University and Carter Development for continuing to undercut residents.
HJL staff member and tenant organizer Sherise Brown demanded greater transparency
from the City in its development negotiations. “The City only met with a few
residents from Summerhill during the purchase negotiation…and the same with GSU
and Carter. This hand-picking of residents does not give other neighbors the
opportunity to voice their concerns…and it leads to purchase deals like this
one, with no CBA.”
Morehouse activist and ATL is Ready organizer Avery Jackson
noted during public comment, “This loud, clear-spoken collection of students
standing alongside black communities against city-wrought gentrification…this
is the new unchained, unregulated politics of 2017. We are not here to ask
questions or demand change. We are here to re-set the negotiation table so that
community voices can never not be heard.”
Public officials and development stakeholders have often
argued that any Community Benefits Agreement negotiation is cost-prohibitive. But,
they fail to acknowledge that the investments and priorities addressed by the
CBA could be funded entirely from the sale proceeds of Turner Field.
“The sale has thus far generated at least $30 million in
revenue, but has been invested into another corporate-sponsored stadium rather
than the Turner Field Neighborhood communities. Eminent domain law has been
used as a tool of urban gentrification, allowing the City to land-grab from the
Turner Field neighborhoods,” noted Housing Justice coordinator Tim Franzen and
PRC president Columbus Ward. Short of revising the eminent domain ruling and
regaining land, TFCBC members seek to orient the development process in ways
that would benefit the community. Repaved streets, better insulated schools,
and more fresh produce-carrying grocery stores would all be small examples of such
a process, and indeed, are the objectives of a CBA.
Students sit-in during City Council meeting |
After the speakout ended, students took to the chamber
floors for a sit-in. They broadcast a Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King speech as
councilmembers conducted their affairs, twirled car keys, drew silent attention
to Councilwoman Carla Smith, and altogether unsettled business as usual. This
creative resistance will amplify if and as the Turner Field purchase deal moves
forward without a Community Benefits Agreement. TFCBC activists are redoubling
their commitment to stop inequitable development in their community.
Spelman only has one "l". Just FYI
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