On Tuesday, the Dunwoody Community went to the polls to elect the Mayor, three Council members, to renew the HOST & SPLOST funding for sales tax and to decide the fate of the $60 million dollar bond referendum for the City to build parks, paths and have money available for land acquisition for girls softball.
All incumbents were re-elected, SPLOST & HOST passed easily and the park / paths bond failed in ten of the thirteen precincts.
I saw a few conversations regarding low turnout so I compared the latest data against previous Mayoral elections and 2023 looked to have a higher turnout vs the contested Mayoral election in 2019. I'm guessing preliminary / partial election totals were quoted regarding the low turn out as DeKalb County seemed to publish the results slower than in the past, even though they started counting the early voting totals at 3 pm on election day vs waiting for the polls to close.
Thursday, November 9, 2023
Dunwoody Election Results, Mayor & Incumbents relected as $60 Million Parks & Paths measure fails.
Tuesday, October 17, 2023
Dunwoody City Council Meeting Video - 2024 Budget & Beyond Conversation
The Dunwoody City Council met on October 16th to have the first 2024 Budget hearing and handle other business. As most residents only learn of what happens at Council meetings via second hand news reports, I thought I would highlight what I thought was an important meeting, primarily as we discussed the future financial plans of the city. The second read and scheduled vote on the 2024 Budget will be happening at our next meeting, Monday October 30th.
Here is a link to the proposed 2024 Budget that cleared the budget committee.
https://jkheneghan.com/city/meetings/2023/Oct/10162023_Budget_Hearing.pdf
I have uploaded the meeting video to my server space and I will highlight a few conversations that I think you should watch; not that I am purposely skipping any other topics, participants, Mayor or Council-member statements or other public commenters as not being relevant; please do watch the entire meeting. Mayor Deutsch and Stacey Harris both gave touching remarks regarding the horrific events happening in Israel, the support of the community and the Dunwoody Police Department.
Please go to the Vimeo page to watch the meeting video, and if you click the "Read More" link you will see the same description and text as I state below, but the beauty is that the meeting time stamps are active and you can watch that segment without scrolling through. Closed Captioning is also available, just click the CC in the bottom right corner. I hope this is recap is informational.
In Public Comment, at 6:22 Bob Hickey highlights the need to prioritize police spending and asks us how we are going to rectify deficit spending not only this year but in the coming future. This gentleman's public comment was very germane to the 20224 Budget Hearing and discussions that we were going to have later in the evening on what the Council's plan is for addressing the long term structural deficit.
At 09:20 residents Michael Rock and Erika Harris (both people I know and respect) gave two very different pro-bond statements with Erika asking for the city to spread more bond information with a direct mailer to every resident.
In the City Manager report there is an item where a resident waited an hour for emergency transport and after waiting an extended time, the mother decided to drive their child to the hospital. Deputy Chief addressed my concern and a bit later at 40:49 Mayor Deutsch followed up with the Deputy Chief regarding an additional dedicated ambulance.
At 45:52 Finance Director Richard Platto starts his presentation and discusses the budget process and the numbers. At 1:09:47 Council member Stacey Harris, who served as this years Budget Committee Chair, described what the budget committee (Harris, Seconder & Heneghan) did and our thoughts on expanding the police department and providing raises in 2024 (that are not currently budgeted). Council member Robert Price asked a follow up question and we discussed the assessor's valuations and estimated tax digest when released in May.
At 1:17:40 Councilman Tom Lambert discusses the budget, the need for community investment, an analogy to the Atlanta Beltline which raised the tax digest in that area was made, with the thoughts that same tax digest bump could happen here in Dunwoody thereby, slowing or reversing the structural deficit.
At 1:27:30 Councilman Heneghan questions the Finance Director on revenue breakdowns (Residential / Commercial / Office). Heneghan discusses the city financial outlook as he sees it, locked revenue streams, concern over office vacancy rates, police funding (both the lack of raises and the additional number of officers needed as per professional analysis), the anticipated administrative contract raises in 2026, and finally his concerns over the $3.3 million dollars in the 2024 budget (on top of what might be approved in the $60 million dollar bond) being banked to fund multi-use (10 - 12 ft) paths in front of single family homes. Council member Heneghan agreed with investments in the community are needed especially as related to parks but wishes that Council split the bond referendum into two questions. He like the Finance Director has concerns moving forward and he stated that we have work to do.
At 1:34:33 Mayor Deutsch confirmed with the Finance Director that the $3.3 million being set aside for paths in front of single family homes in this budget is from Capital funds and not Operational funds, therefore can not be used to fund additional police or provide raises. She then went on to discuss if there was ever a drastic downturn (worst case scenario) that budget cuts could be made, she stated that we will take care of our police officers, she would hire 10 more officers tomorrow if we could, she discussed using more non-sworn officers. She discussed the work she is doing at the State Capital regarding EMS & ambulance service rules to free up officer time. She discusses police hiring, retention as a priority, as hiring officers is very difficult. Mayor Deutsch discussed office vacancies, she too has concerns but also sees glimmers of hope.
At 2:08:05 Councilman Seconder outlines how the City staff will work with residents directly affected by City projects. He read a statement from a homeowner who wants the 10 - 12 foot shared use path in their front yard.
At 2:13:30 the Mayor closes the meeting with comments that if the HOST & SPLOST ballot items don't pass, that your tax bill will go up. She had an interesting comparison between Sandy Springs and Dunwoody Tax bills which shows the differences of Fulton vs DeKalb and then the special financing requirements placed on Dunwoody during incorporation. The Mayor said that we will need to look closely at the fiscal reality that the City is in, reviewing the restrictions of incorporation and the promises made at the start of the city.
Wednesday, October 11, 2023
Dunwoody Ballot Questions ($60 million Bond, $59 Million SPLOST II and the EHost Tax Reduction for Homeowners) Open House - Thursday 6 PM at City Hall
Thursday October 12th
6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.
Dunwoody City Hall
4800 Ashford Dunwoody Road
Dunwoody, Georgia 30338
The City of Dunwoody will hold a Ballot Questions Open House from 6:00 to 8 p.m. on Thursday, October 12, 2023 at Dunwoody City Hall, Dunwoody Hall, 4800 Ashford Dunwoody Road, Dunwoody, Georgia 30338.
Residents are invited to stop by to learn more about the ...
City of Dunwoody Bond Referendum, general obligation bond not to exceed $60 Million for parks and recreational areas, greenspace and trails. Bond Package approved by Council
Wildcat Park & Homecoming Park Master Plans
Winters Chapel Multiuse Trail Phase II
N. Peachtree Road Multiuse Trail
DeKalb SPLOST II is a continuation of the 1% percent sales tax bringing $59 Million to Dunwoody over the next six years. The DeKalb video here does a nice job explaining the SPLOST II & Host.
Equalized Homestead Option Sales Tax (EHOST) is a continuation of another 1% percent sales tax to reduce taxes to homeowners.
all of which will be on the ballot for the General Election on November 7.
An activity table for kids will be available and suported by volunteers from the Youth City Council at Dunwoody High School.
Friday, September 29, 2023
DHA to hold meeting Sunday night, 7:30 pm to discuss City of Dunwoody $60 million dollar bond referendum.
Assistant city manager Jay Vinicki will make a presentation on the particulars of the bond. We will also have a Q&A session. I hope you make plans to attend at the location below.
Sunday, October 1st - 7:30 p.m
City Annex Building at Shallowford & Peachford Rd
4470 N. Shallowford Road
Dunwoody, GA 30338
Sincerely,
Bob Fiscella
President, Dunwoody Homeowners Association
Bond Package approved by Council
Sunday, May 21, 2023
Dunwoody City Council Agenda for Monday May 22, 2023 (Master Path Plan, 60 Million Dollar Bond Referendum, additional ambulance, Walmart & Total Wine Alcohol Violations)
DUNWOODY CITY COUNCIL MEETING
May 22, 2023 - 6:00 PM
DUNWOODY CITY HALL - DUNWOODY HALL
4800 ASHFORD DUNWOODY ROAD
DUNWOODY, GA 30338
Agenda 6 pm - City Site Agenda
City Council meetings are live-streamed on the City of Dunwoody’s Facebook page.
They are also available for viewing (no two way communication) on Zoom,
https://dunwoodyga-gov.zoom.us/j/82324264973 or phone +14702509358,,82324264973#
You can access the video after the meeting on the City of Dunwoody’s YouTube page.
Public comments - in person 3 min each / 30 min max with additional at end of meeting if needed.
Georgia GMIS (Government Management Information Systems) "Spirit of GMIS" award presentation
Open Public Hearing on Consideration of Suspension or Revocation of Alcoholic Beverage License for Walmart #2360, 4725 Ashford Dunwoody Road, Dunwoody, Georgia 30338, Licensee Stefon Damoz Nima, License Number 4327
Open Public Hearing on Consideration of Suspension or Revocation of Alcoholic Beverage License for Total Wine & More, 124 Perimeter Center West, Dunwoody, Georgia 30338, Licensee Tabitha Favors, License Number 3751
Consideration of Award of Wrecker Services Contract to Brown and Brown
Consideration of the Path Foundation / Dunwoody Master Plan for Trails
Womack / Chamblee Dunwoody Road Ceramic Mural Funding
Funding Authorization for Autaco Development to Construct Phase I of the Vermack Path Adjacent to Dunwoody High School
Approval of an Amendment to the Georgia Transportation Infrastructure Bank (GTIB) Agreement for the Grant Awarded to the Westside Connector Project
Consideration of the Intent to participate with U.S. HUD & DeKalb County CDBG program
Call for an Election for $60 Million General Obligation Debt for Parks & Paths
Vietnam War Memorial Donation - Brook Run Veteran Memorial
Drive Lane Paving for Two Bridges Park
North Shallowford Road Path Project Design Contract
Edge City 2.0 Update May vs Edge City 2.0 Update January
Articles below related
to Edge City by Atlanta Business Chronicle, - I have been arguing condos
over apartments for years and these articles finally lean that way.
How Dunwoody is plotting sustainable growth, with empty-nesters in mind
Shape our future:' Dunwoody to craft plan for reenergizing Perimeter Center
Saturday, April 8, 2023
Dunwoody City Council Agenda for Monday April 10, 2023 (SLUP Decision, $55 Million Bond discussion) and a Recap of City Retreat Discussions.
DUNWOODY CITY COUNCIL MEETING
April 10, 2023 - 6:00 PM
DUNWOODY CITY HALL - DUNWOODY HALL
4800 ASHFORD DUNWOODY ROAD
DUNWOODY, GA 30338
Agenda 6 pm - City Site Agenda
City Council meetings are live-streamed on the City of Dunwoody’s Facebook page.
They are also available for viewing (no two way communication) on Zoom,
https://dunwoodyga-gov.zoom.us/j/83571238287 or phone +14702509358,,83571238287#
You can access the video after the meeting on the City of Dunwoody’s YouTube page.
Public comments - in person 3 min each / 30 min max with additional at end of meeting if needed.Stage Door Theater Presentation (Justin Ball)
City Manager's Report (Eric Linton)
Funding Authorization for 2146 Brendon Drive & 5175 Hathburn Court Storm Repairs
Resolution - Readopting Ethics Principles and Pledges for Purposes of Being Re-certified as City of Ethics
Approval of a Contract for Citywide Pavement Assessment Update
SECOND READ for SLUP 22-03: Special Land Use Permit to Allow a 7 Resident Personal Care Home at 1822 Mount Vernon Road.
Discussion of Capital Needs and Potential G.O. Bond Call
- Retreat Update from March discussions.
I hope everyone had a relaxing Spring break from school & enjoyed the holidays with family whereby you are now ready to return to the normalcy of April & May, with everything that it brings (Lemonade Days, Food Trucks, better weather & end of the school year). My family drove to Chicago to see our parents who are getting up in age therefore my city blogging / informational duties fell behind a bit.
On March 22 & 23, the City Council met with representatives of Canton, GA and then regrouped in Dahlonega, GA for internal discussions on numerous topics. Here are the official minutes from the retreat that will be approved Monday and let me point out that the last several pages of that document outline the action items for staff & council. All of the documents used in the retreat are listed below but let me highlight a few.
The Dunwoody's Own Direction document starts us off with our goals from the Comprehensive Plan and how we have been working towards them this year vs last years accomplishments. We discussed changing city demographics, improved diversity opportunities, our work on Dunwoody Village improvements, and Pedestrian Safety.
We discussed Public Safety with Chief Grogan, the push for EMS changes and police staffing needs that we believe will be detailed in the upcoming Berry-Dunn Report.
We discussed Communications, specifically improved public engagement & feedback on citizen Code Enforcement & See Click Fix issues and then we discussed how to improve City Contracting of large public works projects for better results.
The 15 million dollars of Federal Funding / American Rescue Plan was discussed, we went over the expenditures. Council requested assurances that expenditures will be made within the Federal timelines and on appropriate allowed subjects.
Bond Referendum - The last big item we discussed was the funding of Capital Projects and whether a Bond referendum is appropriate for this coming November. A citizen committee was convened to discuss this topic and made a list, the City Council may finalize the list of desires and call the question to hold a referendum, but it is the citizens who will need to approve or deny the call to raise taxes for capital improvements. The capital discussions have routinely been around the improvement of Parks, Transportation / Street Intersections, and multi-use Paths.
I am against the City's construction of 12 ft wide concrete paths in front of single family homes and I prefer three referendum questions so that citizens (like me) could vote for some projects and possibly against others but it appears that may not be the plan? Ideas on path locations are not set in stone and at the retreat some path ideas being pushed previously were removed (probably because of the backlash) and new ones were being added without vetting to to public nor having any engineering designs to really discuss the proposals. The Chesnut community has been vocal for needed improvements on North Peachtree between Dunwoody Village Apartments and Peachtree / Brook Run, therefore this idea was just added for a new trail and as much as I want improved infrastructure for safety, I still believe a 12 ft concrete path is overkill. The other new addition calls out Dunwoody Village path improvements but I believe it is really a 12 ft concrete trail along Chamblee Dunwoody from Womack to the new Austin Park. Neither of these projects have been engineered, vetted, or even discussed with the nearby residents.
I raised concerns on the one question idea, I raised the fact that we just received 7 million dollars from the sale of land on Shallowford that was originally intended for parks; therefore the City should plan for spending that money prior asking the citizens for more. Finally I still have long term budgetary concerns based on the rising cost of government operations (Public Safety in particular) and general maintenance vs the possibility of an unstable business tax base when we have several large office buildings vacant. The last item on Monday nights agenda will initiate a discussion for a $55 million bond referendum whereby a single question will be brought in front of the citizens.
City Retreat Minutes & File Location for Retreat Attachments
00a Meeting Agenda 3-22-23.docx
00b Meeting Agenda 3-23-23.docx
01a Dunwoody's Own Direction.pptx
01b Canton Road Map Details.pdf
01c Last Year's Recap.pptx
02 Public Safety.pptx
03 ARP.pptx
04 Diversity Opportunities.docx
05a Committee Education and Acknowledgement.pptx
05b Dunwoody Training.pptx
06a Capital.pptx
06b Previous SPLOST Referendum.pdf
06c Previous Bond Presentation.pptx
07 Dunwoody Village.pptx
08 Safe Streets.pptx
09 Communications.pptx
10a Constituency Repsonse Customer Service
10b Contract Flow Chart.docx
10b Liquidated Damages and Traffic Control
99 APPENDIX
99 BONDS
Retreat_Minutes_04102023_approval.pdf
Tuesday, March 21, 2023
City of Dunwoody "Retreat" schededuled for Wednesday & Thursday of this week at the Forest Hills Resort & Conference Center in Dahlonega
AGENDA
DUNWOODY CITY COUNCIL
SPECIAL CALLED MEETING
MARCH 22 & 23 2023
ETOWAH RIVER PARK PLAYGROUND
600 BROWN INDUSTRIAL PARKWAY
CANTON, GEORGIA 30114
CANTON CITY HALL
110 ACADEMY STREET
CANTON, GEORGIA 30114
AND
FORREST HILLS RESORT
CONFERENCE CENTER
135 FORREST HILLS ROAD
DAHLONEGA, GEORGIA 30533
Wednesday Call-In Information - starting at 2 pm.
Join from a PC, Mac, iPad, iPhone or Android device:
Please click this URL to join. https://dunwoodyga-gov.zoom.us/j/82809829280
Or One tap mobile:
+14702509358,,82809829280# US (Atlanta)
+14703812552,,82809829280# US (Atlanta)
Or join by phone:
US: +1 470 250 9358 or +1 470 381 2552
Webinar ID: 828 0982 9280
Thursday Call-In Information - starting at 8 am.
Join from a PC, Mac, iPad, iPhone or Android device:
Please click this URL to join. https://dunwoodyga-gov.zoom.us/j/89255205932
Or One tap mobile:
+14702509358,,89255205932# US (Atlanta)
+14703812552,,89255205932# US (Atlanta)
Or join by phone:
Dial(for higher quality, dial a number based on your current location):
US: +1 470 250 9358 or +1 470 381 2552
Webinar ID: 892 5520 5932
DUNWOODY CITY COUNCIL SPECIAL CALLED MEETING
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Wednesday & Thursday of this week the Dunwoody City Council and Staff will be meeting for two days to discuss high level planning topics in order to set future work topics. Council gets no read ahead documents but I am guessing many of the same topics from last year will be covered this year. The agenda published at the moment is only for Wednesday but it does include a Zoom link to watch (or maybe just listen) but I am unsure if that same link will work for Thursday too?
The retreat conversations really start at 2 pm on Wednesday in Dahlonega and I would expect the day to be done by 6 pm therefore with only four hours, I am guessing we will be talking about everything but finances. Council spends the night there and guessing we start the Thursday meeting at 8 am kicking off the topic of finances and future project funding, followed by other topics not completed on Wednesday.
The Zoom link is different each day as shown above, see the city agenda page details on each day.
These meetings are open to the public and the press, and hopefully we will have both in attendance to report on what we are discussing. There is always a slim chance that even though we plan to stream the meetings that there may be technical difficulties with the internet, therefore having in person reporters to report these events is a feather in the cap to the news agencies who cover. Last year, the Crier had a reporter there both days and probably stayed close overnight. PS: even if the streaming system were to crap out the meetings are recorded by the City Clerk and could be obtained immediately after the meeting.
Read the retreat recap document from January 2023 to see what we accomplished in 2022 but also note what we have put off or kicked down the road. In 2022 we put off a call for a General Obligation Bond for Capital Projects and a Special Tax District for Parks & Police for operational expenses. I believe both topics may be back on the retreat agenda for council to come to a consensus about possibly adding these items to the ballot in November of 2023?
Immediately below I am re-posting document links from the May 23, 2022 meeting where city finances and possible bonds were discussed.
City of Dunwoody Millage and Bond Rate Discussion and comparable rates in DeKalb the possible list of projects - Bond FAQ - Steps to Bond Referendum
Remember how just a few months ago I said our 2023 budget looked like an ugly baby? We need to determine the capital desires of the community and the correlating operational expenses (more parks/more maintenance expenses) vs (fully staffed Police Department at appropriate salary / benefit level is an expense we can not compromise on) with inflationary pressures on a tax digest that has limited escalating raises. Because Dunwoody was one of the first cities to break away from a County to incorporate, we were given very tight financial constraints that other newer cities do not have. 14 years after incorporation we have rising inflation, rising costs but also have a home valuation freeze, a 1 mil tax reduction that was a replacement for a credit that was given back, but the reduction stuck, and we are now at our maximum ad valorem tax rate on real property of 3.04 which by my reading of the Charter would need the approval of the Citizens to increase that general tax rate. Tough decisions & discussions on finance are coming.
All of these conversations will be taking place in the future as I am always concerned of the viability of our many office towers as leases come up for renewal and the pressures to have employees work from home seems to grow. A vibrant office district in Perimeter Center is what we all desire as it is an economic engine that also fills the restaurants, the stores, raises demands on housing and also adds to the tax base which lowers the burden on the residents who live here. We need a vibrant mix and the Mayor and City Council have been working on that goal since day one of incorporation.
No formal votes are typically taken at retreats, therefore no matter what happens at the retreat, Council will be holding public hearings or informational meetings before any final policy is enacted while at a formal city council meeting in the future.
Sunday, January 8, 2023
Heneghan evaluation of Dunwoody City Council Agenda for Monday January 9, 2023. Short meeting / important topics, Finances, Paving, Dunwoody Village, Signs, City Manager Report
DUNWOODY CITY COUNCIL MEETING
January 9, 2023 - 6:00 PM
DUNWOODY CITY HALL - DUNWOODY HALL
4800 ASHFORD DUNWOODY ROAD
DUNWOODY, GA 30338
Agenda 6 pm - City Site Agenda
City Council meetings are live-streamed on the City of Dunwoody’s Facebook page.
They are also available for viewing (no two way communication) on Zoom,
https://dunwoodyga-gov.zoom.us/j/83571238287 or phone +14702509358,,83571238287#
You can access the video after the meeting on the City of Dunwoody’s YouTube page.
Administration of Oath of Office to Officer Mario Umana
Public comments - in person 3 min each / 30 min max with additional at end of meeting if needed.
Final Recap of 2022 Retreat and City Council Goals and Actions
Approval of December 13, 2022 City Council Special Called Meeting Minutes - Meeting with State / DeKalb Legislative Representatives
FIRST READ: Consideration of Text Amendments to Chapter 20, Signs
Chamblee Dunwoody Road, Village Crossroads Project Traffic and Overhead Utility Discussion
Contract for 2023 Pavement Resurfacing
Expiring MARTA Bus Shelter Contracts
Happy New Year and I hope everyone's holiday season was joyous spending time with those you love, staying warm and dry as the days are now getting longer. This meeting starting at 6 pm looks short because many of us (and staff) may have other plans for later that evening but that doesn't mean important things aren't being done. First we are adding another police officer to our ranks and we are getting closer to being fully staffed, welcome Officer Umana.
Read the retreat document, look at what we accomplished in 2022 but also note what we have put off or kicked down the road. In 2022 we put off a call for a General Obligation Bond for Capital Projects and a Special Tax District for Parks & Police for operational expenses. I believe both may be back on the agenda in the coming months, to be possibly be added to the ballot in November of 2023?
Immediately below I am re-posting document links from the May 23, 2022 meeting where city finances and possible bonds were discussed.
City of Dunwoody Millage and Bond Rate Discussion and comparable rates in DeKalb the possible list of projects - Bond FAQ - Steps to Bond Referendum
Remember how just a few months ago I said our 2023 budget looked like an ugly baby? We need to determine the capital desires of the community and the correlating operational expenses (more parks/more maintenance expenses) vs (fully staffed Police Department at appropriate salary / benefit level is an expense we can not compromise on) with inflationary pressures on a tax digest that has limited escalating raises. Because Dunwoody was one of the first cities to break away from a County to incorporate, we were given very tight financial constraints that other newer cities do not have. 14 years after incorporation we have rising inflation, rising costs but also have a home valuation freeze, a 1 mil tax reduction that was a replacement for a credit that was given back, but the reduction stuck, and we are now at our maximum ad valorem tax rate on real property of 3.04 which by my reading of the Charter would need the approval of the Citizens to increase that general tax rate. Tough decisions & discussions on finance are coming.
All of these conversations will be taking place in the future as I am always concerned of the viability of our many office towers as leases come up for renewal and the pressures to have employees work from home seems to grow. A vibrant office district in Perimeter Center is what we all desire as it is an economic engine that also fills the restaurants, the stores, raises demands on housing and also adds to the tax base which lowers the burden on the residents who live here. We need a vibrant mix and the Mayor and City Council have been working on that goal since day one of incorporation.
Please read the City Managers Report as it is eye-opening in many ways, the City does so much behind the scenes and I have nothing but admiration for the staff and police officers who make this City function everyday. You may have heard about the shooting between two knuckleheads at the mall, I don't know more than anyone else, but I do know Dunwoody PD showed up in force, handled the situation and brought the person responsible into custody. Please be aware of your surroundings but don't let knuckleheads make you fearful of living your life, Perimeter Mall and Dunwoody is still a safe place to be.
City Council had a special called meeting on a day I was out of town to talk to our State Legislators, I'm sorry I missed as the minutes tell me topics but not specifics. If I'm lucky I hope to attend a few DeKalb Delegation meetings down at the Capital as I think they take place on Mondays at Noon and I can't think of a more entertaining lunch.
Monday is a first read (just discussion / not approval) of an update to our Sign Ordinance which looks like minor tweaks and administrative fixes. I have a couple of days to read & evaluate the proposed changes, if there are issues with the proposed changes please let me (us) know as I value your input.
There is a discussion scheduled to talk about the pedestrian improvements in Dunwoody Village as I (and a few others) pushed back on the proposed design as there is a lot of money being planned to be spent whereby there wouldn't any vehicle throughput improvements through the intersections of Chamblee Dunwoody & Mt. Vernon. Staff has looked at modifying the proposal and did not find a way to improve traffic flow with out negatively impacting (obtaining) business properties. Staff also received an 8 million dollar estimate to bury electrical lines as part of the project and at the moment we do not have the funds for that idea to move forward. It looks like the original plans without any traffic improvements, is back on the table.
The proposed improvements presented in March 2022 consist of a cycle track and wider sidewalks on both sides of Chamblee Dunwoody Road from Womack Road to Roberts Drive. The cycle track will be separated from the vehicle travel lanes and raised to the level of the sidewalk. A landscape buffer with street trees and lighting will separate the cycle track from the sidewalk. In areas, such as in front of the farmhouse, where the public right of way is not as wide, the buffer width will be reduced and landscaped without street trees. The proposed design for the roadway generally maintains the lane configurations as they currently exist with the exception of removing one of the southbound through-lanes south of Mount Vernon Road. In areas north of Mount Vernon Road where a center turn lane is not needed, the turn lane would be converted to a landscaped median with the goal of adding greenery, calming traffic and creating safer pedestrian crossings.
The 2023 paving plan is moving forward (as the streets have been planned and scheduled for repaving in a past 3 - 5 year plan) and we are spending close to 3 million dollars to pave 15 lane miles of streets. Looking at the map, we are doing well to pave the worst first and it won't be long before every public street in Dunwoody would have been paved.
Finally we have a contract to consider on MARTA Bus Shelter advertising. I like shelters where needed, I dislike the advertising & signage that is sometimes not appropriate for single family neighborhoods & near schools. Would you believe that I raised this very topic ten years ago, argued that we were not under contract with MARTA nor the Advertising company, converted several signed shelters to non-signed; while agreeing to allow a few advertising shelters in place in commercial zones where appropriate. We now have all contracts prior in place expiring and they are up for renegotiation. What should we do?
Sunday, July 24, 2022
Dunwoody City Council Agenda for Monday July 25, 2022
DUNWOODY CITY COUNCIL MEETING
July 25, 2022 6:00 PM
4800 ASHFORD DUNWOODY ROAD
DUNWOODY, GA 30338
City Council meetings are live-streamed on the City of Dunwoody’s Facebook page.
They are also available for viewing (no two way communication) on Zoom,
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83627259977 or +14703812552,,83627259977#
You can access the video after the meeting on the City of Dunwoody’s YouTube page.
Public comments - in person 3 min each / 30 min max with additional at end of meeting if needed.
Presentation of the Carnegie Medal to the Family of Kim A. McGrady
Report of Capital Committee with items discussed.
Project Agreement with the Georgia Department of Transportation for the North Shallowford Road Path Project
Contract with TSW for Final Design of Gateway Signage
Authorize the Purchase of Replacement Firearms for Police Department
Approval of Qualified Agencies for American Rescue Plan Funding
Authorize Specialized Unit Pay for Police Department
Dunwoody Road Sidewalk Construction Bids
Contract Award of Consulting Services for Study of Police Department
Request Approval for Disposal of Seized Property
Request Approval for the Disposal and Transfer of Obsolete Rifle Plates and Armored Helmets
Thursday, July 14, 2022
City of Dunwoody calls special Capital Committee meeting for Friday morning to discuss possible bond items Nov 2022 referendum.
DUNWOODY CAPITAL COMMITTEE
SPECIAL CALLED MEETING
JULY 15, 2022 - 8:00 AM
DUNWOODY CITY HALL - CM CONFERENCE ROOM
4800 ASHFORD DUNWOODY ROAD
DUNWOODY, GEORGIA 30338
In person only - no video. Come join us.
Agenda - City Site Packet Items
Friday morning at 8 am, a special called meeting of the Dunwoody Capital Committee will meet to discuss if the City of Dunwoody is prepared to ask the citizens of Dunwoody to vote in favor of a tax increase to complete a specific list of projects. We will be comparing the lists previously discussed in committee against lists and edits that were discussed in open Council session on July 11th.
The Committee members as named by the Mayor are myself, Catherine Lautenbacher and Joe Seconder and as we are just three of the seven members of Council, I see us as a working group for ideas as the decisions / ideas raised in that committee meeting are not binding and could be easily overturned by the full council.
Monday July 11th there was a detailed discussion as to where each member of Council outlined where they were on the idea of a proposed bond. I missed that meeting as I was in Chicago caring for an ill parent and I was not allowed to video into the meeting as Georgia State Law allows Council a maximum of two allowances of remote attendance unless under a city wide declared emergency or a medical condition of the Council Member. Councilman Joe Seconder also missed the meeting because of a death in the family.
If I was in attendance this last Monday I would have stated (what I said at the previous meeting) that I have concerns over us being ready to present a comprehensive, fully vetted, bond list to the community and that I believe we should start working towards that goal for a November 2023 decision by the citizens.
Between now and then, Council should put forward a reimbursement resolution for infrastructure and parks planing, engineering, utility & sewer work on several of the projects so that the residents can see what they will be getting for the money and that way we will be shovel ready soon after the election / bond referendum. This reimbursement resolution was mentioned on Monday and it would be the equivalent of us moving forward asap on all projects and the delay of the year wouldn't slow the development of the parks as that work should be done anyway and with this method the citizens would know what to expect at future parks and the costs between now and then could be rolled into the bond if successful.
Looking at the list that was raised by Asst City Manager Jay Vinicki at the July 11th meeting, was previously discussed by the Capital Planning Committee and a number of the projects were parred back by Council comments on the 11th. I will list my concerns / thoughts on the original list of 17 items below.
1. Roberts Drive Park - Shows Girls Softball there and that was the last vetted plan, Changes? Nothing has been vetted recently, there has been no public meetings announcing possible changes?
2. Land Acquisition - nice to put in bond, not needing to use but what if we were offered needed green space or Post Office in Village? It would be nice to have ability to get those funds but this is fully conceptual and Council could not know if really needed or not. Big Trust by citizens to vote yes.
3. 4. 5. Trail development, especially 12 foot paths in front of single family residential are in question and will not be part of a 2022 bond if council moves forward. Several Council members met with the PATH Foundation recently and are looking for ways to put more paths though our community and may be proposing other ideas soon.
6. Citywide Sidewalk completion on major thoroughfares is an idea that many residents could get behind, it would probably serve a wider segment of the community including those who do not live near the other parks that are listed for improvement. There is a sidewalk map listing possible sidewalk ideas that may not be universally liked as it may include little known personal paths across private land or follows creeks (also on private land). This map has ideas but not hard plans as far as I am concerned and would need further vetting.
7. Brook Run future development will be parred way back to include a few more restrooms, pavilions, sand volleyball area near treetop and additional handicap parking near the music bandshell. There is also an ask to rebuild the maintenance facility near the back gate and based on what I know, I agree that it should be done, unfortunately staff has not vetted that need publicly, there are no plans, drawings or costs vetted either. The Brook Run Master Plan should be amended, updated and the scope of the work on the maintenance facility should be engineered to be shovel ready in the future.
8. Vermack Park - not sure this park has been fully vetted nor shovel ready but guessing the planning is further along than Roberts. Water features / splash pads are being removed from Brook Run Plans and there was talk of moving it to Vermack and/or adding several of them around the city including Windwood Hollow.
9. Peachtree Middle School turf - Dunwoody has a 20 lease on the football field at PCMS and the field is in really bad shape to where we can not maintain it to our standards, therefore since we have already invested in the lease, the lights, a storage facility that it would make financial sense to turf that field so that the usable playable hours greatly increases and the field could be used for Lacrosse and Football as those spaces are also in high demand. This idea is not applicable for a bond because first an IGA modification would be needed with DeKalb Schools and there is an argument that we don't own the land therefore should not improve the land but putting a twenty year turf on a twenty year lease sounds acceptable to me as a win / win situation. This project can be done with city funds outside a bond.
10. 285 right of way trail - waiting for more GDOT planning and the topography / elevation changes along the highway are huge therefore mainly because of timing, this can not be part of a bond.
11. Peeler Trail along Waterworks - cutting down trees to overlay a 12 ft path over the current 6 ft path makes no sense to me and it would remove the beauty and remove the functionality. Not going on a bond.
12. Dunwoody Art Center Spruill Expansion - Done. City already allocated 1 million dollars for expansion. No Bond needed. No Bond.
13. Dunwoody Nature Center Expansion - Done. City already allocated 1 million dollars for expansion. No Bond needed. No Bond.
14. Dunwoody Nature Center Board Walk Replacement - City was granted storm water funds from the Federal Government and this fund can cove this work. No Bond.
15. Dunwoody Cultural Center (Library) parking lot redo / once expansion is complete (or when all the heavy trucks are done, this can be completed. (We may need to plant a few trees too.) Based on the timing this should not be on a 2022 bond as it wouldn't happen until 2024?
16. Waterford still needs a playground (contractual agreement with the neighborhood for donation) and we can add that to bond if needed, the boardwalk over the marsh might be able to be completed with stormwater funds so maybe this doesn't need to be on a bond?
17. There are plans to rebuild / renovate the Brook Run Veterans Memorial but as this was built by DeKalb County as a County memorial - they may be paying a large portion. Talks are on-going - not on a bond.
The charts above and below have some costs of the projects and some estimated on going costs for maintenance but I'm not sure I can trust either? There may be possible major changes to Roberts Park, those costs are up in the air. Brook Run changes and a redo of the maintenance shed, costs up in the air. Things need to be better planned before these small items be presented to citizens.
Another aspect of capital funding is not only reviewing what was presented but also what is missing. Who is not being served by our proposals? If we are going to raise everyone's taxes, shouldn't there be some equity of added amenities and benefit for all aspects of the community? What are we doing for Seniors, babies, people with disabilities? Are we serving those with the greatest need or are we serving those in parks where it is is easy to do so no matter if all the residents don't need or want the amenity? Where are the gaps in service? Is there something else that we should be funding?
Maybe we as a city need to purchase four ambulances with city funds and find a way to have them supplement DeKalb County's EMS system without DeKalb completely abandoning their responsibility to provide service? Maybe we need (or just want) to buy two leaf sucker trucks and provide the service the City of Chamblee provides? The on going costs of running those ambulances / leaf sucker machines is where the problem really hits us long term, the bond can buy us stuff but everything after that is all on us.
The City of Dunwoody is now at our maximum operational millage with the tax increase ratified earlier this week, therefore operational costs for everything needs to be evaluated.
Having just raised the tax rate for all citizens, I am very reluctant to do it again for these back of the envelope ideas that have not been completely flushed out.
Maybe next year as far as I am concerned, but I am only one vote.
Monday, July 11, 2022
Dunwoody City Councilman Heneghan thoughts on 12 foot city paths and delaying possible bond referendum for improved list of projects.
Councilman John Heneghan questions 12 foot path plan, suggests path reduction and increased tree / shade coverage.
Facebook video - starting at 05:19:52 to 05:26:00
Councilman John Heneghan thoughts on possible Bond Referendum and plans that need to be finalized before asking citizens to consider tax increase.
Facebook video - starting 06:12:10
On June 13th the Dunwoody City Council had a 6 plus hour city council meeting with important topics being discussed with very few citizens in the audience but that being said the meetings are recorded and the meeting of June 13th can be replayed at a later point.
At this meeting there was a discussion on possible multi-use (bike, walk, scooter) 12 foot path plans on Tilly Mill between Mt. Vernon and Womack whereby staff wanted Council to decide whether advanced planning documents should be created for either the East Side (Congregation Ariel) or the West Side (JCC) and staff recommended the East side because of a number of factors and I agreed with that proposal for doing the advanced planing there, mainly because of the high number of walkers commuting to and from Congregation Ariel. Once the advanced drawings are created, staff meets with every affected property owner / subdivision to work out issues where the city would be changing the area within the City's right of way.
Residents in various sections of the city where these 12 foot wide paths are planned are worried & upset with the city as this is not what they want on their property or abutting their community. This is probably the number one topic of emails received by the City Council in the last month as there has been numerous concerns of safety, security, loss of privacy, changes to subdivision entrances, loss of trees & landscaping and the fact that a 12 foot concrete sidewalk without any shade is just an ugly amenity that no one wants.
At the June 13th meeting I questioned 12 foot path widths, asked for reductions and dedicated landscaping plans for each segment of proposed paths. When City surveys state that residents say they want paths, I believe they are dreaming of tree lined, shaded paths in Brook Run Park and not a 12 foot area in front of their home where trees and vegetation was removed from landscaped areas that will now be devoid of tree or shade coverage to install that 12 ft wide concrete path. I think my point was understood by staff and members of Council but unsure where this topic is going. If any path advanced plans or drawings remove tree canopy I would also want those advanced planning documents to show the needed landscaping and replaced tree shade to make this amenity beautiful and desirable to walk, and if this landscaping is not part of the plan, then I believe we would have failed in the planing and construction of the project.
Because of the numerous email inquiries and opinions being raised regarding paths, I have started doing research as to path width reductions, minimum requirements and other cost savings that could still facilitate movement yet be a reduction on the impacts to the homeowners being directly affected. In one document, I see a possibility of 6 ft paths (sidewalks) being acceptable and if these paths (sidewalks) were installed on both sides of the street it might alleviate the fears of the citizens that these 12 foot path plans being pushed by the Staff & Council might do more harm to the community than the proposed long term benefits.
As there are numerous technical journals and documents on the subject, I do trust staff's professional opinion about what is legal and proper when exploring best practices for paths, unfortunately having the proposed wide paths squeezed into our tight right of way, leaves little or no room for the beauty and shade that makes walking such paths desirable. If we can't find consensus on Council for what size paths are appropriate on single family neighborhood streets, that allows for adequate shade coverage, I will be reviewing the plans moving forward for such amenities prior to me voting for the construction of such paths.
At the very end of the evening of the 13th, just before midnight, the Dunwoody City Council discussed feedback from Bond Referendum Town Hall Meetings. I have posted my audio clip from that discussion as I believe we need to narrow the scope of the projects as to what is really needed and can be constructed in a reasonable time frame. We need to better flush out our park designs so the residents have a better idea what amenities will be included at each park and if all of that is completed in the next six months then we can restart the bond referendum discussions for a possible vote in November of 2023.
This same type of Capital Project List discussion is again slated for deep into tonight's meeting and unfortunately I will be unable to attend to weigh in on the matter as I am back in Chicago for a short trip taking care of an ill family member; therefore I figured I would restate my opinion that I believe we as a city are not ready to move forward with a bond referendum at this time. That being said, there is still much to discuss, facts to review and I am interested in what my fellow Council members bring to the table; therefore my mind is open to any and all possibilities.
Friday, July 8, 2022
Dunwoody City Council Agendas for Monday July 11, 2022 (Proposed Millage Rate Increase, Police Pay Raise, Funding expansion of Spruill & Dunwoody Nature Center, police firearms)
DUNWOODY CITY COUNCIL MEETING
July 11, 2022 8:00 AM & 6:00 PM
4800 ASHFORD DUNWOODY ROAD
DUNWOODY, GA 30338
8 AM Agenda for special called - City Site Agenda
City Council meetings are live-streamed on the City of Dunwoody’s Facebook page.
They are also available for viewing (no two way communication) on Zoom,
https://dunwoodyga-gov.zoom.us/j/82912711270 or +14702509358,,82912711270#
Public Hearing for Establishing 2022 Millage Rate
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6 pm Agenda - City Site Agenda
City Council meetings are live-streamed on the City of Dunwoody’s Facebook page.
They are also available for viewing (no two way communication) on Zoom,
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81765648093 or +14703812552,,81765648093#
You can access the video after the meeting on the City of Dunwoody’s YouTube page.
Public comments - in person 3 min each / 30 min max with additional at end of meeting if needed.
City Manager's Report (Eric Linton)
Public Hearing and ACTION ITEM: Resolution Establishing the 2022 Millage Rate
Lease Agreement with Georgia Power for Streetlights on Chamblee Dunwoody Road
Request for Approval of On-Call Stormwater Engineering and Design Contract
Approval of a Right of Way Agreement with Brookfield Properties for the Ashford Dunwoody Commuter Trail Phase I Project
Approval Police Pay Raise - Amendment of City Position Allocation and Compensation Chart
Agreement concerning Funding for Expansion Spruill Arts Center and Nature Center
Project Agreement with the Georgia Department of Transportation for the North Shallowford Road Path Project
Contract with TSW for Final Design of Gateway Signage
Capital Project List Discussion & Bond Financing Options
Authorize the Purchase of Replacement Firearms for Police Department
Authorize Dunwoody Police Pay Raise and Specialized Unit Pay