COMMUNITY
Educator, statesman, activist
SPECIAL SECTION ity PG ommun C Wellness takes center stage
Gil Turman, a former DeKalb County educa tor who later fought to protect quality of life in South DeKalb neighborhoods, has died. A4
CrossRoads News’ 13th annual Health and Well ness Expo brings health care provid ers and other resources to the Mall at Stonecrest. Inside
ss Expo & Wellne p.m. h lt a e H ual -5 13th Ann 7, 2018 • Noon Jan. 2
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Volume 23, Number 38
www.crossroadsnews.com
Reductions in homelessness makes Georgia a national leader By Rosie Manins
Homelessness is on the decline in metro Atlanta more than in any other major U.S. city, and at least $110 million is being channeled toward more efforts to help the region’s most vulnerable residents transition off the streets and shelters into permanent homes and jobs over the next five years. The biennial point-in-time counts of Georgia’s and Atlanta’s homeless population show significant decreases in homelessness overall and among many sub-groups of homeless people like families and children. On Jan. 26, volunteers, including 80 in DeKalb County, found 3,572 homeless
people in metro Atlanta, a 12 percent decrease from January 2016. In 2011, Atlanta’s homeless population was 5,987. DeKalb County counted 460 homeless people, continuing a trend of decreasing homelessness. In 2016, DeKalb counted 473 homeless people, down from 684 in 2015, and 841 in 2014. However, DeKalb found that more people were sleeping in unsheltered locations than in transitional housing, a reversal of 2016, when it had more people in transitional housing than on the streets. Allen Mitchell, DeKalb County’s director of Community Development, said the number has been trending downwards because of collaboration and communication among
the groups that work with the county’s homeless population. “We have a lot of people working on coordinated intake and providing permanent supportive housing with wraparound services,” Mitchell Allen Mitchell said. “We have boots on the ground working with the people on the streets and we have a system to back it up.” So on Jan. 17, one of coldest days that shut down schools and most DeKalb County offices, only four families showed up at three warming stations operated at DeKalb fire
stations. Nationally, on that cold January night in 2017, half of all people experiencing homelessness in the United States, did so in one of five states: n California (25 percent or 134,278 people) n New York (16 percent or 89,503 people) n Florida (6 percent or 32,190 people) n Texas (4 percent or 23,548 people), and n Washington (4 percent or 21,112 people). Across Georgia, volunteers found 10,174 homeless people, down 2,735 or 21.2 percent from a year earlier. Please see HOMELESS, page A6
Angry residents demand answers on Sam’s Club Workers, vendors and members question officials
A capacity crowd squeezed into the 185-seat Stonecrest Library auditorium to question Walmart Stores Inc. officials about the abrupt closure of the Stonecrest Sam’s Club on Jan. 11.
By Jennifer Ffrench Parker
Sam’s Club and Walmart officials got an earful from angry workers, club members, customers, vendors, and South DeKalb residents who packed a Jan. 16 town hall meeting to express displeasure with the retail giant’s abrupt closure of its Stonecrest store on Jan. 11. Several hundred people descended upon the Stonecrest Library auditorium for the meeting. Inside the 185-seat auditorium, it was standing room only. Outside, there were more than twice as many people who couldn’t get inside the meeting or into the library’s parking lot. Both sides of Klondike Road were lined with cars for nearly a mile in both directions. Speaker after speaker said that Arkansasbased Walmart Stores Inc. disrespected the community when it closed the store at 2994 Turner Hill Road without any warning. “Why no consideration for the people,” asked a woman who identified herself as Mrs. Banks. “This a slap in the face of a community that has supported you.” The Sam’s Club is first of two Walmartowned stores closing in the new city of Stonecrest. The company is also closing the Walmart Neighborhood Market at Panola Road and Covington Highway on Jan. 30. It posted “closing” signs on Jan. 5 at that store, unlike what it did at the Sam’s Club store. Several employees told Sam’s Club Market Manager Chaneta Montoban and Walmart’s community affairs manager Glen Wilkins, who attended the meeting, that they left work the night of Jan. 10 and returned the next day to find the store closed. Sabrina Meadows, who worked at the closed club, said she received a letter by FedEx at 7 a.m. on Jan. 11.
Jennifer Ffrench Parker / CrossRoadsNews
“I got woke up to be told we have no job,” she said. Helen, a longtime greeter at the club, said she was a month from completing 20 years with Sam’s Club and could not believe the company treated her like that. “I didn’t get my letter till 1 p.m.,” she said. “You should have had enough respect to tell us. You all were wrong to treat us this way.” Another employee said he left the club at midnight on Jan. 10. “Nobody knew about it,” he said. “Why didn’t you tell us?” Wilkins said he didn’t have an answer for him. “There is no really good way to close a store,” he said. “There is no easy way to do it.”
Asked if the Stonecrest store was treated in this manner because it is in a minority community, Wilkins said that all 63 stores were closed without warning. “No club or managers knew,” Wilkins said. Glen Wilkins “Everyone was treated the same way. Communication with the clubs happened on that day.” The Stonecrest store, which opened in 2003, is the only one in Georgia that closed. Wilkins said the store was closed “purely off the numbers and financial performance” and that individual store performance is
proprietary and would not be released. Stonecrest Mayor Jason Lary said as busy as the store was, he was baffled how it could close. “I don’t understand it as many people who shopped there,” he said. “I don’t know how this happens.” James DeFriece, owner of DeFriece Distribution which supplies Sam’s Club with bread, said he dropped off supplies at the store at 7 a.m. on Jan. 11 and was called later in the day to return and pick them up. “I will lose $50,000,” said DeFriece whose Stonecrest-based company has been a vendor at the Turner Hill store for four months. “I am already on my last leg. You are going to Please see WALMART, page A2