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INSIDE
Feathers, flags and flesh
Hail to the Class of ’17
Colorful and exuberant expressions of culture will take center stage when Carnival hits Covington Highway on May 27. A4
We salute the more than 6,000 DeKalb seniors who will receive diplomas or certificates of attendance in the next few days. Section B
Let’s Keep DeKalb Peachy Clean Please Don’t Litter Our Streets and Highways
EAST ATLANTA • DECATUR • STONE MOUNTAIN • LITHONIA • AVONDALE ESTATES • CLARKSTON • ELLENWOOD • PINE LAKE • REDAN • SCOTTDALE • TUCKER
Copyright © 2017 CrossRoadsNews, Inc.
May 20, 2017
Volume 22, Number 3
www.crossroadsnews.com
$500 million SPLOST for roads will be on Nov. 7 ballot By Jennifer Ffrench Parker
The passage of the law was a bi-partisan effort and Thurmond told reporters at a May 17 press briefing that that is important. “I mention unity and cooperation and collaboration,” he said adding that Sen. Fran Miller (R-Dunwoody) was the primary signer in the Senate and Rep. Howard Mosby (D-Atlanta), chair Michael Thurmond of the DeKalb delegation, led the effort in the House. “They worked together in an unprec-
If voters approve, part of the revenue generated by the Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax would be used to repair potholes like this one on Mall Parkway in Stonecrest.
DeKalb residents will get to vote in November on a new Special Option Local Sales Tax (SPLOST) that could yield more than $500 million for road repairs. The referendum will be on the Nov. 7 ballot. If it’s approved, CEO Michael Thurmond said that 85 percent of the funds will be dedicated to fixing DeKalb County roads – filling potholes, resurfacing highways and addressing unmet infrasturcture needs. The SPLOST, which will take the county sales tax to 8 percent, exempts food and medicine. Please see SPLOST, page A2
Curtis Parker / CrossRoadsNews
Sports City complex lures major investments Emory Sports Medicine, mall operators are in By Jennifer Ffrench Parker
Emory Sports Medicine and Urban Retail Properties LLC, operators of the Mall at Stonecrest, will invest $55 million to $60 million in the Atlanta Sports City project coming to the city of Stonecrest. Vaughn Irons, Atlanta Sports City project developer, also said they are acquiring the former two-story Kohl’s department store space at the Mall at Stonecrest that has been vacant since November 2016. In the short term, Irons said the top floor of the 164,000-square-foot building will be used for temporary office space for ASC while the project is being constructed. Urban Retail Properties will invest $45 million to $50 million to create a new gateway entrance and 250,000 square feet of new retail and restaurant space for the mall fronting onto Atlanta Sports City on Mall Parkway. The 1.3 million-square-foot mall’s current grand entry fronts toward Turner Hill Road. Ground breaking for Atlanta Sports City is set for the end of third quarter. Emory will begin offering services from Kohl’s building in the fall and the indoor sports medicine pavilion will begin in the fall of 2018. Emory Sports Medicine, which will be leasing space with Atlanta Sports City, says it is committing more than $10 million to locating an Emory Sports Medicine Center, Emory’s Eastern Metro Regional Offices, and Emory Physical Therapy at Stonecrest. Irons, CEO of Atlanta-based APD Solutions, said the announcements, made May 17 at Decide DeKalb’s Tucker offices, are the first signs of Stonecrest and southeast DeKalb becoming a major employment center. He told the audience of media, Stonecrest elected officials, business, sports and community leaders that they will remember
Craig Delasin, CEO of Urban Retail Properties LLC, and Vaughn Irons, CEO of Atlanta-based APD Solutions, hold rendering of Atlanta Sports City project planned for Stonecrest. Developers are also buying the former Kohl’s building (above). Jennifer Ffrench Parker / CrossRoadsNews
“Retail is real simple. It’s foot traffic, and having the kind of generator that can create this type of foot traffic for the mall is a game-changer.” Craig Delasin, CEO, Urban Retail Properties, LLC
Patrick Henderson, Atlanta Sports Connections CEO, said momentum has been building since the project’s unveiling three months ago. “ The people we have aligned ourselves with over the last couple months and the last couple years, you will be amazed at the quality of service everybody brings to the table,” Henderson said. Zeric Foster, his business partner and Atlanta Sports Connections chief operating officer, said they are very excited about the progress being made toward the promises made at the unveiling. “We are on track with those promises,” Foster said.
their partnership with Atlanta Sports Connections “re-imagines what true integration looks like” between a sports competition development and a major academic sports medicine program. He said that what started as a partnership to serve athletes and their families visiting Atlanta Sports City, to help provide the absolute best environment for comprehensive player development, and to be a beacon of sports science and research has blossomed into a multi-specialty Emory Health Park to service Stonecrest and the eastern metro area. “Today marks a significant first step in turning that vision into a reality and I could not be more excited,” he said. “This partnership will establish an unmatched level of on-site integration of multi-sport athletic competition and training with sports medi-
where they were “when this divergence from our past history happened and occurred.” “Six months ago, many people would say Atlanta Sports City could not have happened,” said Irons, a Stonecrest resident. “This is what sports and recreation can do in order to help the community grow.” Atlanta Sports Connections, which is developing the proposed Atlanta Sports City, unveiled it on Feb. 22. It says the project will bring more than $200 million in Multi-specialty Emory Health Park economic impact to the newly created city Dr. Scott Boden, chief medical officer of of Stonecrest. Emory Orthopaedics & Spine Center, said Please see COMPLEX, page A2