Showing posts with label Impact Fees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Impact Fees. Show all posts

Saturday, May 22, 2021

Dunwoody City Council Agenda for Monday May 24, 2021 (Impact Fees, Stormwater, Dunwoody Village, Open Alcohol, Cares Funding to Non-Profits, Part Time Park Staff, Budget Amendment)

DUNWOODY CITY COUNCIL MEETING
MAY 24, 2021 - 6:00 PM
DUNWOODY CITY HALL, DUNWOODY HALL
4800 ASHFORD DUNWOODY ROAD
DUNWOODY, GA 30338

And via Zoom  Please click this URL to join.   https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82738952233
Or join by phone: Dial:+1 929 205 6099  Webinar ID: 827 3895 2233

Agenda - City Site Agenda

PUBLIC COMMENT
To take part in public comment, please send an email to publiccomment@dunwoodyga.gov. Include your name, your email address, and phone number. You will be placed on a first-come, first-served list for public comment. The first public comment section has a 30-minute time limit. Each speaker is allowed up to three minutes. If time runs out, pre-registered speakers will be called on during the second public comment section toward the end of the meeting. If you don't pre-register, you can use the "raise hand" feature on zoom during the meeting to be added to the public comment list.

PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE (5th grade Junior Troop 16434)

Follow-up Presentation: Impact Fees Overview and Options

Funding Authorization for Phase Two of 1370 Center Drive Emergency Stormwater Repairs 

Sustainability Plan

FIRST READ: Consideration of a Text Amendment to Amend Standards for Entertainment Districts  

A Resolution Amending the Temporary Moratorium On the Acceptance of New Applications for Special Use Approval, Permitted Use Approval, or Building, Land Disturbance Site Plan and Design Review or Other Permits for Any Construction in the Village Overlay District

Approval of Additional CARES Not for Profit Funding and Contract Amendment for additional funding

Resolution to amend the 2021 Budgets for the General, Hotel Motel and Capital Projects Funds

Position Reclassification - Business Retention Manager - approve modified position chart and salary ranges.

Contract Amendment for the Design Services of the Park at Perimeter Center East  

Contract Amendment with Lowe Engineers for Part Time Park Staff

Saturday, May 8, 2021

Dunwoody City Council Agenda for Monday May 10, 2021 (Kim McGrady, Chesnut Environmentalists, Planned Development, LPR Cameras, Sidewalks, Stormwater, Impact Fees, Masks, Lobbyist)

  DUNWOODY CITY COUNCIL MEETING
May 10, 2021
6:00 PM – DUNWOODY CITY HALL
4800 ASHFORD DUNWOODY ROAD
DUNWOODY, GA 30338

Zoom     https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88980449904

Or join by phone: +1 929 205 6099   Webinar ID: 889 8044 9904

Agenda - City Site Agenda

PUBLIC COMMENT
To take part in public comment, please send an email to publiccomment@dunwoodyga.gov. Include your name, your email address, and phone number. You will be placed on a first-come, first-served list for public comment. The first public comment section has a 30-minute time limit. Each speaker is allowed up to three minutes. If time runs out, pre-registered speakers will be called on during the second public comment section toward the end of the meeting. If you don't pre-register, you can use the "raise hand" feature on zoom during the meeting to be added to the public comment list.

Lifesaving Award to Kim McGrady, Colton McGrady and Preston Lyn by the South Walton Fire District

Proclamation Recognition of Save That Ocean club of Chesnut Elementary School (presented by Debi Shendelman of Dunwoody Sustainability Committee)

City Manager's Report (Eric Linton)

Impact Fees Overview and Options   

2010 City Thinking about Impact Fees - 2010 RFP Impact Fees

Jan 2011 Impact Fee Assessment Report

Jun 2011 Impact Fee Report

Aug 2011 Impact Fee Report

May 2012 Impact Fee Reboot and a short discussion in 2016

1st Quarter Internal Audit Report (Bill Mulcahy) w documentation from Audit Committee Meeting.

Funding Authorization for 4833 Dunwoody Station Dr Stormwater Repairs

Funding Authorization for Sidewalk Construction on Mount Vernon Place Between Mount Vernon Road and Falkirk Drive

SECOND READ: Review and Consideration of a Text Amendment to Amend Standards for the PD, Planned Development, District

Updated Contract Approval of FLOCK Group Inc. - Automated License Plate Recognition

Approval of Lobbyist Contract with Terminus Strategies

Update on Dunwoody Face Mask Ordinance in relation to Gov Kemp's Executive Order

Friday, May 11, 2012

Dunwoody City Council agenda for Mon May 14th

Monday, May 14th
Dunwoody City Hall
41 Perimeter Center East
Dunwoody, GA 30346
Agenda

Proclamation - Chesnut Charter Elementary School

Proclamation - "Click It or Ticket".

Financial Report for the Year Through March 31, 2012.

ACTION ITEM: Resolution Activating the Urban Redevelopment Agency and Appointing Members.

Discussion to Declare Certain Confiscated and Unclaimed Property as Surplus Supplies.

Discussion of Impact Fees.

FIRST READ: Ordinance to Grant Special Land Use Permit to Congregation Ariel, Located at
5227 Tilly Mill Road, Dunwoody, Georgia 30338, Tax Parcel Number is 18 369 03 008.

FIRST READ: Ordinance to Amend Chapter 27, Zoning re: Planned Development Zone District.

Discussion of E911 Fund.

Discussion of Brook Run Park Trail Design-Build Contract.

Discussion of Womack at Vermack Intersection Design Contract.

Discussion of Three Paving Contracts Including Mount Vernon and Chamblee Dunwoody Bicycle and Pedestrian Improvements

Discussion of Contract for Final Design-Tilly Mill at North Peachtree Intersection Improvements.

Project Renaissance: FIRST READ: Ordinance to Transfer Property.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Dunwoody City Council Work Session Agenda for Monday June 13th.

Monday, June 13th
Dunwoody City Hall
41 Perimeter Center East
Dunwoody, GA 30346
7:00 pm - Watch Live

Agenda - City Packet

Authorization for Adjustment to City Attorney Compensation Structure.

Resolution to Authorize a Merit Increase for the City Clerk.

Ordinance to Amend Chapter 4, Alcoholic Beverages, re Sunday Alcohol Sales.

Resolution to Approve the Parks, Recreation, and Open Space Master Plan.
    Brook Run Pg. 42  activity center at front, while back could hold football or soccer

Discussion of TAD Referendum.

Discussion of Bond Referendum.

Update of City Status on Emergency Warning Sirens.

Public Hearing and Ordinance to Amend City of Dunwoody Charter for Reapportionment of Electoral Districts Pursuant to the 2010 Census.

Public Hearing and resolution to Establish an Enhanced 9-1-1 Charge on Wireless Communications, Wireline Communications, Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP) Connections, and Pre-Paid Wireless Services.

Discussion of Parks 2011 Capital Improvement Plan. (Shade at Brook Run Playground)

Discussion of Designated Truck Routes.

Perimeter Center Improvement Districts 10-Year Update Plan by Sizemore Group.

Impact Fee Kick-Off Briefing, (Sandy Springs, Roswell, Alpharetta)

Ordinance to Amend Chapter 26, Section 26-269 (e), Regarding City Sponsorship of Special Events.

Ordinance to Amend Fiscal Year 2011 Budget.

Ordinance Establishing the 2011 Ad Valorem Tax Rate. (Same tax rate since the city started.)

Discussion of Illegal Signs.

EXECUTIVE SESSION for the Purposes of Legal, Real Estate, and Personnel Discussions.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Tuesday's Dunwoody City Council Meeting has Music Hall, Impact Fees, 911 and Four Masterplans on agenda.

Tuesday, February 15th
Dunwoody City Hall
41 Perimeter Center East
Dunwoody, GA 30346
7:00 p.m.
Voting Session followed by Work Session
Watch Live

Voting Agenda and Full Packet from City
Work Session Agenda and Full Packet from City

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Dunwoody to discuss Impact Fees, Massage Regulations, Animal Control, Park Rules and DeKalb 911 negotiations on Monday.

Monday, January 10th
Dunwoody City Hall
41 Perimeter Center East
Dunwoody, GA 30346
7:00 p.m. - Watch Live
Agenda

Friday, August 6, 2010

Agenda for Monday, August 9th - Dunwoody City Council Work Session

Monday, August 9th
Dunwoody City Hall
41 Perimeter Center East
Dunwoody, GA 30346
7:00 p.m. - Watch Live
Work Session Agenda

Friday, June 11, 2010

City of Dunwoody starts to explore impact fees on future development.

The City is evaluating the merits of initiating an Impact Fee Program as a means to address the effects of new developments and their associated infrastructure impacts on the City of Dunwoody. This Request for Proposals (RFP) asks consulting services providers to break down the cost assignments into five individual tasks with both task specific and a total project cost.

The objectives of this project are

1. To assess the following public facility categories for a City of Dunwoody Impact Fee Program:
  • Roads, Streets and Bridges;
  • Police, including Radio Transmission Facilities;
  • Fire, including Emergency Medical and Rescue Facilities (services currently are provided by DeKalb County;
  • Storm Water Management Facilities;
  • Parks, Open Space and Recreation Facilities; and
  • Libraries and related Civic Facilities.
2. To develop an impact fee program:
  • that is in compliance with Georgia law and State guidelines;
  • that is tailored to the unique needs of Dunwoody;
  • that can be readily understood by the public and local decision-makers; and
  • will fit seamlessly into the City’s administrative and accounting procedures.
This RFP process is specifically designed to complete an initial Impact Fee Assessment addressing each of the eligible public facility categories. The City may wish to proceed with the preparation of documents regarding the elements needed to put impact fees in place for those facilities that the Mayor & City Council determine to be feasible. If there is acceptance in moving forward towards the adoption of an impact fee program for the City of Dunwoody, the selected firm(s) will be requested to complete preparation of the first annual CIE update required by the Georgia Department of Community Affairs (DCA).

The RFP is structured such that Task 1, the Impact Fee Assessment is the only element of the RFP that will be authorized for completion. All other Tasks will require authorization by the City to proceed.
Dunwoody RFP Impact Fees

Monday, May 24, 2010

Tonight is the Public Hearing on the Dunwoody 2030 Comprehensive Land Use Plan

City Council Meeting
Tonight @ 7 pm

Dunwoody City Hall
41 Perimeter Center East

Tonight the City Council has a full agenda but half way though the night we will be holding a public hearing on the Comprehensive Land use plan that we as a City have been discussing for the last year.  Countless meetings have been held, surveys taken, e-mails written & read and now that the comp plan has passed the committees of the Community Council, Planning Commission and the Comp Plan Steering Committee; the ball is now in the court of the City Council. 

Last week I raised a few questions in a post as to the amount and density of residential units that the comp plan would allow in the Perimeter Center.  I wasn't comfortable with the language in the current draft because we were relying on standards set in the 2005 Livable Centers Initiative report which encourages unbridled growth of residential units in the area without any consideration of public infrastructure.  I suggested to modify that section to lessen the reliance on that report and I received a number of comments from various people that stated that my suggestions would be setting the City up for lawsuits and stagnation.
Comment 1: The overwhelming majority of the comments stated "No Growth" quite emphatically. Unfortunately, that doesn't work as the people will come and we won't have planned for it because we prefer to stick our head in the sand and the politicians will be all to glad to follow. In the end we won't have "No Growth" or "Smart Growth", just growth by lawsuit.
To answer comment 1, I did hear that a majority of the residents wanted little or no growth, especially in the apartment arena.  Within the next 20 years as this report tries to plan for, I am sure the number of apartment units will be going up while the number of single family homes will remain fairly consistent.  My concern is over the language of the LCI report which pushes for unbridled residential growth without any consideration of infrastructure, greenspace or amenities to serve those residents.  I am asking if this 20 year plan, written as it is, allows an open development checkbook for residential high rises much the way the O&I loophole allowed the construction of five story apartment complexes without any oversight?  If that is the case, now is the time to address the issue. 
Comment 2: Your conservative approach and fear of the LCI is somewhat misplaced.  While an additional 5,000 apartments will be opposed by everyone, we must make sure that Perimeter is allowed to grow as it will be our only way to grow the revenue within Dunwoody.
To answer comment number 2, after reviewing maps of Perimeter Center and the full 2005 LCI report, the item that jumped out to me was that almost all of the residential development except for a few town homes happened on the DeKalb / Dunwoody side of the lines.  Maybe DeKalb has already done our fair share of implementing the LCI residential plan in Perimeter Center for a while and we should now focus on other uses for the Perimeter area like hotels, Class A office space and mixed use (with the appropriate mix of uses) that will serve the city residents and the business community well. 
Comment 3: I'd be in favor of all the development possible in the PCID if they addressed the stress this growth will put on schools. All it would take is for the PCID and its corporate members to form a committee to meet and plan with the DeKalb School Board. If they show some effort of wanting to be proactive in regards to school capacity, I'd support them immediately.
I'm told we aren't suppose to tie zoning issues to school capacity or location yet it is my belief that the LCI study which talks quite a bit about transportation failed to take into account the current and future school locations as it relates to those increased transportation needs.  Maybe someday these issues will be resolved by the DeKalb County School Board adding another school in the area or by some other means but until then schools alone can not be a deciding factor.

A neighbor said that impact fees were drastically needed for the impending large developments near the mall and though they can not be used for schools, they can be used for amenities to the residents and business that would be joining our fair city.  Based on a chart found on the GA Department of Community Affairs website, DeKalb County currently has impact fees for Roads, Parks & Rec, Public Safety and Libraries, therefore the city should start exploring these options soon.  I also found and enjoyed a Master's Thesis written in 1995 by Ms. Patricia Toner, the wife of Mike Toner the Pulitzer Prize winning journalist from the AJC which discusses the history of impact fees and even mentions the growth of Perimeter Mall.

Pattie Baker and Rick Callihan also wrote a blog posts regarding their observations of the comp plan and tonight's impending meeting.  Please check them out, read the comp plan and possible amendments and just maybe I will see you at the meeting tonight.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

What kind of Dunwoody does the current residents envision? Now is the time to act.

The article below was written by Mr. Bob Dallas in October 2007 and was one of my earliest posts on this blog. I am using it again because on August 3rd there will be a comprehensive Land Use Meeting to discuss future density within the City of Dunwoody and your input is greatly needed.

Question - What is the optimal future uses of Dunwoody Village, Georgetown & Shallowford areas in order to redevelop the properties into viable livable communities? What type of shopping districts should they be and what level of residential should be included, if any? Your input is critically important and because of that, I will be advertising this meeting several times in the next couple of weeks. Please mark your calendars.

The following editorial written by Mr. Bob Dallas of the DeKalb Planning Commission was published by the Dunwoody Crier in a condensed version several weeks ago. In light of the major projects that are being proposed in Dunwoody, while the County refuses to pass impact fees that would directly affect traffic & infrastructure improvements; I thought that this article needed to be shared.

Dunwoody is at a crossroads that can best be described as a tale of two cities. The question is: as more people move to Dunwoody, will it remain family oriented or will it shift to a singles orientation? As a 24 year resident of Dunwoody and 10 year member of the DeKalb County Planning Commission, I believe we should maintain our family friendly orientation. But it is the collective opinions of those who live in Dunwoody which matter and should be voiced to our public officials that will set the course for Dunwoody’s future.

Today, one part of Dunwoody can be described as being mostly made up of family homeowners with kids who want to attend the good schools serving the community. The other part has been the Perimeter market that is made up of the Atlanta region’s largest office market and a high end shopping district. This mix has traditionally worked well because the family environment readily mixed with the retail and the office market was convenient to the family breadwinners. Neither of these nonresidential uses produced significant negative impacts on the family uses.

That mix, however, is changing. As estimated by the Atlanta Regional Commission over 2.5 million new people will move to the Atlanta region over the next 20 years. Much of that influx of residences will be absorbed by areas where work and transit centers are located. As the largest office market, that places Perimeter in the bull’s eye of residential growth. Estimates of this growth range from 10,000 to 50,000 to 100,000 additional people moving into the Perimeter area. The increase is also guided by the two MARTA rail stations which are designed to encourage higher density uses within their vicinity.

Over the past five years we have already seen this impact in Dunwoody and Perimeter. Including the units under construction, approximately 5,000 apartment and condominium units have been built. That translates to approximately 7,500 or more additional people. These projects have tended to be relatively small, with less than 450 units per project.

As you have read, the two projects before the Planning Commission and DeKalb Board of Commissioners are substantially larger. The GID-High Street project across from the Dunwoody MARTA station includes 1,500 condominiums and 1,500 apartments; The Novare project cattycorner to the Dunwoody MARTA station includes 900 condominiums. On top of these projects, in the offing are two more projects—that we know about—which will add an additional 730 residential units. This does not include the projects on the Sandy Springs side of the Perimeter area and projects that are now just whispers, but sure to come. Many of the residential units will be 30 stories and the projects, if designed and built correctly, will include many pedestrian friendly features, grocery stores, and open spaces that support this level of density. Envision cities like Boston, Denver, Portland and Vancouver that have many people living within walking distance of where they work and play to understand the level of density being proposed.

A basic tenet of high density residential growth is ensuring a cross section of age demographics live in the area. Simply stated, it is important to ensure one age demographic does not dominate the growth. This is because the alternative result produces too many negative consequences.

For example, if all the residential units were designed for young singles, you also get a preponderance of businesses that cater to them, namely the night clubs, bars and events that naturally go along with this market demographic. Think of Midtown Atlanta or Buckhead for nearby examples of catering to the young singles market. Unfortunately when such uses dominate an area, they become incompatible for families, kids and empty nesters. They also create public safety issues, e.g. impaired driving, which the community is then forced to address.

In contrast, with a mix of age demographics development becomes more balanced. Uses friendly to kids temper uses designed for singles and encourages uses designed for empty nesters. In other words, you end up with a mix of residential and commercial uses working together, not to the exclusion or detriment of the others. Fortunately, Dunwoody and Perimeter have the potential to attract all age groups. This is not a case where the market can only attract one age demographic.

Some have suggested families will not want to live in high density residential. I only point to the above referenced cities for examples of just that, e.g. business professionals and medical residents with kids wanting to live near offices and Pill Hill and not wanting the obligations of a yard and house maintenance. Remember, it wasn’t long ago when people suggested families wouldn’t live in town homes. We now see they do, just as they will in the higher density units.

The other major impact of residential growth is experienced by the local schools. This has been ameliorated in part by the Dunwoody Homeowners Association’s, Planning Commissioners’ and Board of Commissioners’ insistence that the majority of residential units remain owner occupied. This helps to ensure our new neighbors have a more than a transient interest in our community. The parents and kids of the new homeowners are just like the parents and kids of the homeowners who currently live in Dunwoody; educated and interested in ensuring their kids receive a good education.

While the DeKalb County School Board has not been responsive to the growth, we should not let this tail wag the bad development dog. This would occur if we simply gave the School Board a pass by saying all future development should be designed for young singles. As noted, we would then have to contend with the non-family oriented lifestyle that will follow.

Arguably, the reason the DeKalb School Board has been unresponsive is because we have not held it to the same standard of scrutiny as developers. Think how Dunwoody would be today if the DHA had said 20 years ago “you can’t fight developers, so just let them build what they want”. We should hold the DeKalb School Board to the legal standard it bears, namely it must build adequate school facilities to accommodate the growth. If it does not, then just like we have successfully sued developers in the past, we should bring suit to force construction of adequate school facilities.

Eventually the new Dunwoody elementary school will be built and with 900 seats, it should eliminate the trailers at Vanderlyn and Austin elementary schools. By definition, the new school will involve redistricting of these schools lines. But the new school alone will not accommodate the anticipated growth. What is needed is to draw the Perimeter school lines, before the residential units are built, into the closer Nancy Creek and Montgomery elementary school districts. This would allow these current under-capacity buildings to be utilized and not entail any of the existing Vanderlyn and Austin area from having to be redistricted except as to the new Dunwoody school.

It is also important that the new Perimeter construction be as energy efficient as possible. While many worry about global warming, very real electrical power substation expansion has already hit home. Crier readers are very familiar with Georgia Power’s construction of a new power substation at the intersection of Ashford Dunwoody and Perimeter Summit roads and the neighborhood’s unsuccessful effort to prevent its construction. This substation is being built to accommodate the above referenced growth. Only by assuring the new development is as energy efficient as possible will it be possible to delay or eliminate another substation from being built in the future—perhaps in Dunwoody.

Fortunately, the GID High Street project has agreed to over 25 DHA imposed conditions. The Planning Commission requested and the applicant agreed to the following: 1) 25,000 sq. ft. community center(s), with a minimum 8,000 sq. ft. coming on line with the first phase. The community center(s) would be owned and managed by the residential (both rental and owner occupied) associations; 2) 20% of the owner occupied residential units are to be 3 bedrooms or above; 3) 40% of the residential units shall have balconies, with 70% of the residential units on the forth floor or lower having balconies; 4) the buildings shall be LEEDS or GA Power Energy Wise (or comparable) certified. The Planning Commission unanimously approved this project with the foregoing conditions.

In contrast the Novare project has not agreed to any conditions. At the DHA’s board meeting, its representative stated “the project is designed for singles and is not suitable for kids.” Novare was opposed to the following conditions: 1) 20% of the owner occupied units are to be 3 bedrooms or above; 2) tadd at least 25,000 retail to the stand alone parking deck to accommodate a grocery store and to shield the look of the parking deck; 3) to be pedestrian friendly, eliminate the 32 pull in/out parking spaces in front of the retail and replace with one row of parallel parking spaces and expand the amount of open space (with either hardscape or landscape) in front of the retail; 4) the buildings shall be LEEDS or GA Power Energy Wise (or comparable) certified (although Novare did agree as to the office spaces). The Planning Commission voted to defer this application for a full cycle.

There are some who say we should simply let the market decide what gets built. That is a red herring and if they were honest, they would say there should be no zoning controls in the first instance. The only question is whether Novare (and subsequent projects) will change its product to be family oriented. The statement only the market should determine what gets built goes against DHA’s requirement that limits apartments, DHA’s adding conditions of zoning to the GID (and others) project, DHA demanding WallMart not operate as 24 hours per day, DHA demanding an overlay district to protect the Georgetown look of the Dunwoody commercial district, to name a few.

Finally, while inclusion of singles into the mix is a good idea, having the products dominated by singles (or any other age demographic) is not. I can assure you what will follow the exclusive singles product is the singles night life which has permeated Buckhead and Midtown, and all of the public safety issues that go with it. In contrast, family orientation will incorporate a sustainable mix that includes a variety of retail uses.

With this development at Dunwoody’s front door, we have a choice. We can make it the best of times for Dunwoody’s future. Or by doing nothing, it will become the worst of times. That is why it is important you voice you opinion by calling our DeKalb Board of Commissioners and let them know you want each and every project to be family friendly and that the Novare project has to change to meet Dunwoody’s family, not the other way around.

Bob Dallas is a District 1 Planning Commissioner for DeKalb County.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Is Dunwoody flirting with disaster and other neighborhood tidbits.


With the amount of unknowns that the Dunwoody City Council is dealing with in setting a budget, some might say that we are flirting with disaster but my gut tells me that our City Manager Warren Hutmacher and his skilled staff will bring us very close to our financial targets. None the less, we the City Council have always taken a very conservative view in our financial planning and are questioning all discrepancies.

If Ms. Shari O'Halloran the Owner of Mudcatz Bayou Bar & Grill has her way, the Pavillion in Dunwoody will be a major music venue with a stage, dance floor and capacity to hold between 300 and 400 people with one of the possible first acts being Molly Hatchet. (Shari, please save me two seats up front.) Link to News Story.

I missed the first Dunwoody Elementary School PTO meeting on Monday (because of a four hour city council meeting) where the election of the PTO officers were taking place. I believe congratulations are in order to the proposed board whom I am guessing is now the newly elected board. Since my boys will be attending this school for the next four years, I look forward to working with Co-Presidents Peggy Stecker & Kevin Cameron, VP's Marian Sheffield & Paige Ratonyi, Secretary Kim Fobas, Treasurer Kim Mc George & Financial Secretary Richard Starks.

Someone was looking Dunwoody Maps, try here and then here.

Dunwoody / North Atlanta Tweetup on Wed April 29 from 6 - 10pm at Cafe Intermezzo 4505 Ashford-Dunwoody Road Dunwoody, GA. Sponsored by Atlanta Business Radio & the North Atlanta Tweeters. Unfortunately @dunwoodynorth has a son's baseball game and will not be in attendance.

I had the pleasure of using the services of Dunwoody Personal Computers for a little computer assistance and I highly recommend Adam, he's great and does fast efficient work. 404-702-3726.

For a website that is based on transparency, I tip my hat to a relatively new site that is doing great investigative work, http://www.atlantaunfiltered.com. The recent story on Terrell Bolton is top notch investigating and now the story has been picked by the AJC, WSB TV and the DeKalb Officers site.

Last chance to join the Dunwoody North swim team on Thurs. Info here.

Brook Run Dog Park Work Day - Saturday from 9 - 11. Link.

I was just notified that the Dunwoody PD responded to a 3 car vehicle accident and the writer of the e-mail stated that it took less than 4 minutes to have two cars on scene. Outstanding !!

Audio from Monday's four hour city council work session. Agenda
04202009_audio1.mp3 Start, Sustainability & Farmer's Market

04202009_audio2.mp3 Single Stream Recycling
04202009_audio3.mp3 Comprehensive Plan

04202009_audio4.mp3 Impact Fees

04202009_audio5.mp3 Boyken Update

04202009_audio6.mp3 Water Leaks on Private Property

04202009_audio7.mp3 Stream Buffer, Retaining Walls, Signs

04202009_audio8.mp3 DeKalb County Water Restrictions - Car Wash

04202009_audio9.mp3 March Financial Report

04202009_audio10.mp3 Storm Water Fees & Credits

04202009_audio11.mp3 Business Tax - Income Returns

Sunday, April 19, 2009

City of Dunwoody Work Session Agenda - April 20, 2009

Monday, April 20 2009 at 7 p.m.
Dunwoody United Methodist Church
1548 Mt. Vernon Rd, 30338
Agenda
Executive Session for the purposes of legal, real estate, and personnel discussions.