By Rep  Mike Jacobs
Drive north on Peachtree Road and Peachtree Industrial Boulevard through   Brookhaven, Chamblee, Doraville and into Dunwoody and the view is  startling.  Shopping centers are empty like the ghost towns of the Wild  West.
Town Brookhaven is finally sprouting major anchor stores, but is having   trouble filling its smaller retail store fronts. Chamblee Plaza? Nearly  empty.  The new “Super H Mart” center adjacent to the GM site? It’s  nearly empty,  too.
The CoStar Group, a national real estate analysis firm, says the vacancy   rates of retail, shopping centers and offices in North DeKalb are at   catastrophic levels when you compare them to the national average. With  so many  empty store fronts, why would county officials push so hard to  use our tax  dollars for a supersized mixed-use project at the site of  the former GM plant in  Doraville?
Consider this:
-In the North DeKalb zip codes 30319, 30338, 30340, 30341, 30346 and  30360,  the vacancy rate for shopping centers is 23 percent compared to  14 percent in  DeKalb County as a whole and 10 percent in the City of  Atlanta.
- The vacancy rate for North DeKalb office buildings is 24 percent  compared  to 18 percent in the county overall and 20 percent in the City  of Atlanta.
- Retail vacancy rates are 17 percent in those zip codes, 11 percent in   DeKalb overall, and 9 percent in Atlanta, according to CoStar.
The county’s elected officials are considering using a special  allocation of  $36 million in federal stimulus bonds on the 165-acre GM  site with visions of  creating another Atlantic Station. These bonds  come with a high price tag to the  taxpayers. DeKalb officials would use  the stimulus bonds as a $36 million “gift”  to an out-of-state  developer, New Broad Street of Florida.
Worse yet, county taxpayers would have to pay the principal and a   majority of the interest on these bonds. It’s very likely that means  higher  property taxes for you and me because the county doesn’t  otherwise have the  money to make the payments.
In ordinary times, the developer wouldn’t have to rely on county  taxpayers.  There would be more private investment to help finance the  project. But these  are no ordinary times. We’re in the midst of the  worst commercial real estate  market in memory. Private investors don’t  want to provide the financing for an  overly ambitious mixed-use project  consisting of shopping, apartments and  offices. The county wants the  taxpayers to step in and do what private investors  won’t do: bear the  risks of this project.
If a new restaurant, retail shop or gas station, for example, wants to  open  for business, investors take the risk whether it prospers or  fails. The same  should be true for this project. DeKalb taxpayers are  not a bank. They are not  in the business of providing corporate welfare  to jump start a project the  private sector would never finance.
This is the most ambitious project we’ve ever seen county officials  attempt  to tackle, and it comes during a deep recession. It is not the  taxpayers’ job to  finance the next Atlantic Station and add to the  already glutted market a new  supply of retail and commercial space.
The definition of insanity, according to Albert Einstein, is doing the  same  thing over and over and expecting different results. We should  heed the lessons  of the “real estate bubble” and steer clear of risking  taxpayer funds for  further overdevelopment. After the bubble has  burst, don’t use our tax dollars  to create another bubble!
There are two final things to consider:
1. The GM site ultimately will be redeveloped if the county does not   intervene. It’s arguably the most valuable parcel of available  commercial  property in the county. It’s on a major highway (I-285), a  major north-south  artery (Peachtree Industrial), and a MARTA station.  In better economic times,  something that private investors and market  forces will support will be built  there. I’m confident of that.
2. These particular stimulus bonds are supposed to be used for public   infrastructure projects, not for private development. When used  properly, they  are a cheaper way of financing these projects. The  county already has a list of  infrastructure needs a mile long, not the  least of which is the water and sewer  system upgrades that they plan to  fund with massive increases in our water  bills. The bonds could be  used to defray those costs. They also could be used  for projects such  as street repairs, new sidewalks, intersection upgrades, and  parks.
The DeKalb County Board of Commissioners will  vote on this matter tomorrow, Tuesday, August 24.
Commissioner Elaine Boyer has pledged to vote against it. I encourage  you to  contact the other six county commissioners (Rader, Johnson,  Barnes-Sutton, May,  Gannon, and Stokes) and urge them to vote “no” as  well. In particular,  Commissioner  Jeff Rader appears not to have taken a position as of yet. You can   find the commissioners’ telephone numbers and e-mail addresses by clicking here.
Funny how Burrell Ellis can find taxpayer money to give to a private developer on a losing cause, but can't find the money to pay police officers for holidays they work. Labor Day is just a few days away. Then comes November.
 
11 comments:
I wonder how much CEO Ellis stands to make out of this proposed deal???????????
Look at Sutton-Barnes using her county issued P-Card to buy personal items. I wonder why this is taken for granted.She makes a 1000 thousand dollar purchase in 2009. I guess Christmas time was here.
Then you have to look at who the commissioner was.
Every land deal makes someone rich if a Commissioner is involved. This has the smell of something foul.
Hey is this another Kevin Ross deal? He is in everything DeKalb does with someone to profit.
I have worked with the Economic Development for the last decade and have found them to be a colossal pain in the ass.
Hiding under the CEO's office as irreplaceable but non-productive in their mission of economic growth and stimulous in DeKalb commercial development.
I think they have brought in two successful projects in 10 years bringing in about 100 jobs while wasting 30 million in funding and providing 30 jobs to the politically connected and unproductive.
Economic Development is a target rich environment for any reporter willing to investigate.
Apparently none of the DeKalb politicians have ever studied any management theories. One of the first things you learn is happy employees = productive employees. Giving the employees what they need to get the job done goes farther than pay only. If the County is looking to invest $35 million in tax payer money, then the wise thing to do would be to invest in the County employees, specifically public safety. Instead, these knuckleheads want to gamble on a project where there is no guarantee from the investor. Since when should tax payer money be used to buy property FOR a private business??? Then again, investing in employees is not a savvy vote-buying scheme.
In these hard economic times place the gambling issue before the voters of this state and it will pass. Then Open up a "mixed use" casino & tourism center and turn Atlanta (and DeKalb) into the Las Vegas of the south. You even have a small airport nearby to support its growth. Think of the tax revenues and secondary jobs it would produce. If you did this then all of Atlanta and north Georgia would live and breathe again and we would all benefit. You have all those dollars spent all over the southeast in Biloxi, Pearl River, Shorter, Cherokee, and New Orleans etc anyway. Why not have folks send them here. And for those who think that it will bring "vice & crime" into the area, look around you and tell me what you already see! Just a thought from an old retired Dekalb Police Officer.
The deal just got voted down. To gain some insight into this, look at Ellis official bio on the county website. Take note of the law firm he is a partner at, Epstein Becker Green. Now take note of what law firm was to handle the legal work on this project, which would go into the millions, Epstein Becker Green. Lastly, take a look at CEO's bio and see what his specialty in his law practice is. Real estate development law.
Total coincidence I am sure. Right.
The GM project is at the wrong time and the wrong place. The wrong time is the current recession, the wrong place is north DeKalb.
The developers don't understand DeKalb politics. North DeKalb is aggressively ignored by DeKalb government because DeKalb rulers know who lives in N. DeKalb, only rich white people! (If you exclude the huge Hispanic and Asian population)
This project was a bummer from the beginning. Raising local taxes even minimally to support the redevelopment of rich white N. DeKalb is not a happening thing in DeKalb. Not only that, it was just a bad deal for DeKalb county government and citizens accepting most of the financial risk and exposure. If the project was a good risk then the developer would of found the financial backing for the entire project. As the deal stood, the county was accepting most of the risk while the developer made all the profit.
This commentary was well written. How can we afford to build new developments when we have so many vacant and empty developments in such close range. It reminds me of what happens to malls and strip-malls when newer and larger developments open down the street or in some cases next door.
We used to have our office on PIB back in 2007 and our office park (we were in the Gwinnett portion that faces the Dekalb portion of the former Sonny's and QT), our office park was begging tenants to come in and ditto for the ones next door.
Jimmy Carter is still blighted, Johns Creek is congested and PIB has empty office parks and shopping centers. Sonny's BBQ even left so what makes Dekalb think this was the magic bullet. The numbers never added up.
Well, Doraville PD can go back to writing their tickets as their economic stimulus package for their portion of PIB.
I appreciate Rep. Jacobs commentary. BUT the truth of the matter is. .. Rep. Jacobs added language to HB203 that ALLOWS DeKalb County to use the stimulus bonds to purchase real estate and enter into a public private partnership. DeKalb hired lobbyists and sent representatives to the Gold Dome to make this happen and have bragged about their success with the "Jacobs Amendment". Perhaps Rep. Jacobs did not understand at the time the impact to taxpayers, perhaps the bigger goal was to ensure D'woody received their parks and fire station at fire sale prices.
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